Rajat Gupta appeals to overturn conviction

New York: Rajat Gupta, an India-born former Goldman Sachs director, who was freed rlast month after a 2-year jail term on insider trading charges, has approached a US court to overturn his conviction, arguing that there is no evidence to show that he “received even a penny” for passing confidential boardroom information to his friend.

In an exhaustive brief filed in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals yesterday, 66-year-old Gupta’s team of lawyers argued that the judgement of the Manhattan district court finding Mr Gupta guilty of insider trading “should be reversed” and his “conviction should be vacated.”

Gupta’s appeal comes on the back of a landmark ruling by the Manhattan appeals court that for an insider trading conviction prosecutors must show that a defendant received a personal benefit for passing illegal tips. Gupta’s lawyers have cited the ruling that led to the reversal of insider convictions of hedge-fund managers Todd Newman and Anthony Chiasson in December 2014.

“As this Court has noted, not every disclosure of corporate information violates the insider trading laws. Given the stakes in a criminal case, and the apparently boundless use being made of the securities laws by prosecutors, this Court in Newman imposed a clear rule: The tip must be shown to have been part of a quid pro quo agreement,” the lawyers wrote in the brief.

“Rajat Gupta was severely prejudiced by the erroneous instruction. The government lacked evidence showing Mr Gupta received even a penny from his alleged wrongdoing. There was no quid pro quo,” they said.

Jailed in June 2014 in Devens, Massachusetts, Gupta was freed after receiving credit for good behavior against his 30-month sentence, according to Patrick McFarland, a manager for the Federal Bureau of Prisons program in the New York area which is overseeing Gupta. McFarland declined to provide more details.

A former McKinsey & Co. managing partner, Gupta is the highest-profile executive convicted in a U.S. crackdown on insider trading at hedge funds. Since August 2009, federal prosecutors in New York won 80 convictions. Gupta was found guilty in 2012 of passing illegal tips to Rajaratnam, a co-founder of the Galleon Group LLC hedge fund. He told Rajaratnam about Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s $5 billion investment in Goldman Sachs and the bank’s financial results for two quarters in 2008.

NY Consulate celebrates 155th Birth Anniversary of Rabindranath Tagore

New York: The Consulate of India in association with the Tagore Society of New York organized an event at the Consulate to celebrate the 155th birth anniversary of Rabindranath Tagore on May 7. The event was attended by a large number of enthusiastic crowds owed by the life and times of one of the greatest sons of India.

The evening began with the singing of Indian national anthem composed by the great Rabindranath Tagore followed by presentation of other Tagore songs by members of Tagore Society of New York. Consul General Ambassador (Mrs.) Riva Ganguly Das during her address recollected some of her personal involvements surrounding Tagore during her postings as a diplomat in various countries and noted how Tagore’s ideology was recognized and the affection people have for him around the world. The program featured ‘Glimpses of Rabindra Sangeet’, a presentation by members of Tagore Society.

The program efficiently compered by Renee Lobo, community activist and TV journalist and New York City Commission on Human Rights had variety of singers devoted to Rabindranath Tagore and ended with a dinner.

Cox and Kings Global Services Starts Serving As India Passport/Visa Application Center In New York

NEW YORK CITY: The Consulate General of India, New York has begun accepting Indian passport applications through the new India Passport Application Centre (IPAC) in New York, which will be operated by M/s Cox and Kings Global Services with effect from May 9th 2016 (Monday). A service fee of US$ 19.95 (inclusive of all taxes) per application will be charged at the IPAC in addition to applicable passport fee.

The IPAC in New York is located at M/s Cox and Kings Global Services (CKGS)
5th floor, 336 West, 37th Street, New York 10018; Website: www.passport.in.ckgs.us

The hours of operation include: Monday to Friday: Submission of passport applications: 0900 hrs. – 1530 hrs; Collection of processed passports:1530 hrs. – 1800 hrs; and Call Centre and Information Desk: 0900 hrs. – 1900 hrs.

The India Passport Application Centre in New York, which wass operated by M/s BLS International Services Limited has closed its operations on May 6th 2016 (Friday).

Return of processed passports: Renewed passports for all passport applications accepted by BLS will be returned to applicants by BLS through walk-in collection or through postal dispatch, where the applicant has chosen for postal delivery. For passport applications under processing at the Consulate during the transition period, renewed passports will be returned to the applicants by the Consulate General of India, New York. Applicants are advised to check tracking status of their applications on BLS website. BLS will also inform all those applicants by email whose renewed passports will be returned directly by the Consulate. In such cases, renewed passports will be available for walk-in collection at the Consulate [3 East, 64 Street, New York 10065] or will be dispatched by post, where the applicant has chosen for postal delivery.

All applicants who have submitted their passport applications to BLS IPAC are advised to check status of their application on the BLS website and make immediate arrangements to pick up their renewed passports from BLS, if they are now available at the BLS IPAC.

In order to avoid any inconvenience, applicants who are not in immediate need for renewal of their passports are advised to submit their passport applications to the new IPAC on or after 9 May 2016 (Monday). For further information / clarification, applicants may send an email to the Consulate at < helpline@indiacgny.org >

Sudarsan Raghavan of The Washington Post wins Asia Society Osborn Elliott Journalism Prize for Landmark Series on Afghanistan

NEW YORK, NY: Asia Society announced today that Sudarsan Raghavan of The Washington Post has won the 2016 Osborn Elliott Prize for Excellence in Journalism on Asia, for a landmark, year-long series of articles on Afghanistan. Selected by an independent jury, Raghavan’s winning stories include investigative, profile, analysis and frontline reporting. The “Oz Prize”—a $10,000 cash award—is presented annually to the best example of journalism about Asia during the previous calendar year.
On behalf of the Oz Prize Jury, Chair Marcus Brauchli commented: “When President Barack Obama announced on Dec. 28, 2014, that combat operations would end in Afghanistan, Sudarsan Raghavan set out to explore the complex legacy and many challenges facing the country. His compassion in reporting on lives changed and generations lost, matched with his courage traveling the breadth of a land still at war, resulted in the most powerful kind of journalism: engaging, human and beautifully written.”
“Both Sudarsan Raghavan and The Washington Post are to be commended for this powerful series of stories on Afghanistan,” said Asia Society President and CEO Josette Sheeran. “From a portrait of a female cab driver in Mazar-e Sharif to an expose on the U.S. funding of Afghan militias, Raghavan’s stories have provided critical reporting at a momentous time. Asia Society is proud to honor this work.”
Raghavan said of his effort: “I wanted to explore the legacy the United States was leaving behind, as well as the challenges ahead for Afghanistan, its leaders and the United States military. In particular, I wanted to chronicle the conflict’s human dimension, its impact on the Afghan people.” The award will be presented at a luncheon honoring Raghavan on Thursday, May 26, 2016 at Asia Society in New York.
The Jury also praised “the wide range and ambition” of this year’s entries for the prize. In particular, it cited investigative journalism by the Associated Press, which exposed in damning and incontrovertible detail the practice of slavery in the fishing industry of Southeast Asia, and The Wall Street Journal, which revealed that hundreds of millions of dollars in a government-run investment fund were siphoned off for Malaysia’s Prime Minister. Both pieces of reporting have had significant repercussions and resulted in official investigations around the world. The Jury also praised the work of journalists from around the region whose work appeared in national or regional publications.
Sudarsan Raghavan is currently The Washington Post’s Cairo bureau chief, and has reported from more than 60 countries. He covered the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, radical Islamist movements and global terrorism. He has also covered the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the 2011 Arab revolutions, and 17 African wars. He joined the Post in 2005 after working mostly in Africa for Knight Ridder, The Philadelphia Inquirer and Newsweek. He is the recipient of a George Polk Award, three Overseas Press Club Awards and the Livingston Award for international reporting.
The Oz Prize Jury is chaired by Marcus Brauchli, managing partner of North Base Media and former editor ofThe Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal. The Jury also comprises: Carroll Bogert, President, The Marshall Project; Dorinda Elliott, editorial and communications director, Paulson Institute; Michael Elliott, former Deputy Managing Editor, TIMEMei Fong, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author; Bobby Ghosh, Managing Editor, Quartz; Alec McCabe, Americas Team Leader for Training, Bloomberg News; Somini Sengupta, UN Bureau Chief, The New York TimesNorman Pearlstine, Executive Vice President and Chief Content Officer, Time Inc. is Chairman Emeritus of the Oz Prize Jury.
The Oz Prize honors the late Osborn Elliott, legendary journalist, author and former editor-in-chief of Newsweek. Elliott was a leading figure in the field of journalism who became one of the earliest practitioners of “civic journalism”—the deliberate focusing of the journalistic enterprise on urgent issues of public policy.

New York Indian Film Festival Concludes, Showcasing Indian Cinema To World

New York, NY: The 16th annual New York Indian Film Festival (NYIFF) held its inaugural gala May 7, at the Skirball Center for Performing Arts. Billed as the oldest, most prestigious Indian film festival in the U.S., this year’s smorgasbord of independent, art house, alternate, and diaspora films, screened over the period May 7-14, includes 40 screenings (35 narrative, 5 documentary), all seen for the first time in New York City. In addition, the festival also featured five programs of short films.

“It was a very exciting night,” Shivdasani said. “We never actually had a language film for opening night. This was a complete departure and what that means is we are getting bolder,” she laughed. Baretto is an emerging filmmaker and neither the director or the cast are well known. “Still we had a lovely opening,” Shivdasani said.

Numerous film-makers with their cast appeared on the red carpet speaking about their films. Celebrities spotted at the gala included author Salman Rushdie, filmmaker Mira Nair, author and actress Madhur Jaffrey, India’s Consul General in New York Riva Ganguly Das, and author Suketu Mehta.

The 7-day festival highlighted various cinemas of India’s different regions, all subtitled in English. Among the languages this year were Hindi, Bengali, Marathi, Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam, Telugu, Assamese, Haryanvi and Urdu.

New York Indian Film Festival Concludes, Showcasing Indian Cinema To World“Each of these language films have been gems,” Shivdasani said. “And another thing different in this year’s festival is we’ve never had so many panels before,” Shivdasani noted. Panels where representatives of each of the language films discussed their experiences; an LGBT panel, a new directors panel, among others.

The festival also featured the National Film Development Corporation of India-restored first films of filmmakers, and a three-generations sidebar, films of Bimal Roy, Basu Bhattacharya and Aditya Bhattacharya. Two National Award winners, Famous in Ahmedabad and Daarvatha, were among the 40 or so shorts being screened. The lineup also included 2016 National Award winners, A Far Afternoon, Birds With Large Wings, and The River of Fables, an Assamese language feature film.

The dance troupe, Manhattan Andaaz performed. The master of ceremonies was Sree Srinivasan, chief digital officer of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Aroon Shivdasani, executive and artistic director of the Indo-American Arts Council, which puts the show together, welcomed the guests.

Nair, who is “Face of the Festival” according to Shivdasani, spoke about the growing influence of the festival and dwelt on her new film about Uganda, her second home.

The film, Nachom-ia-Kumpasar (Let’s Dance to the Rhythm) was screened, followed by a discussion with director Bardroy Baretto, producer Angelo Braganza, and actress Palomi Ghosh, moderated by NYIFF Director Aseem Chhabra. The Konkani feature film is a tribute to Goan music and musicians of the 1960s and 1970s, narrated through the emotional rollercoaster of a love story, telling the nostalgic tale of musicians who lived and died unrecognized, unappreciated and unsung.

A high-priced ticket gala benefit dinner attended by some 250 invitees rubbing shoulders with filmmakers and celebrities, concluded the evening. Ghosh, the lead character in the Konkani film, upon request, sang a few songs impromptu at the gala, bringing people to their feet to dance.

Among diaspora films was Good Ol’ Boy, a feel-good, coming-of-age story of Smith, a 10-year old growing up in small-town America in 1979, featuring some well-known actors in Samrat Chakrabarti (Midnight’s Children, The Waiting City) and Poorna Jagannathan (Delhi Belly, Nirbhaya).

Soumitra Chatterjee Bengali starrer, Peace Haven, is the story of three septuagenarian friends who embark on a journey to build their very own mortuary. Multiple award winner and fresh from the international film festival circuit, Parched, is about four ordinary women in rural Gujarat who talk unapologetically about men, sex and life as they struggle with their individual boundaries.

The highlight was the world premiere of Kagaz Ki Kashti (Paperboat), which tracks the life of a down-to-earth, small-town boy, who made it big in the Ghazal world breaking through the norms and mixing western instrumentation. to make this classical genre simple and hummable.

Filmmaker Hansal Mehta’s “Aligarh” was chosen as the closing film of the 16th annual New York Indian Film Festival (NYIFF). The festival, which concluded on Saturday, screens feature, documentary and short films made from, of, and about the Indian subcontinent in the independent, art-house, alternate and diaspora genres every year.

“Aligarh” is based on the real life incident of Srinivas Ramchandra Siras, an academician at the Aligarh Muslim University who was suspended from his job because of his sexual orientation. The film stars Manoj Bajpayee and Rajkummar Rao.

Before attending the fest, Rajkummar took to Twitter on Saturday night and wrote: “Going to one of my favourite cities in the world. New York. ‘Aligarh’ has been chosen as the closing film of the prestigious New York Indian film festival.” Mehta was excited that the American city would witness their “labour of love”. “Aligarh” has been lauded at many film festivals, including Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles, where it received a special mention.

The New York Indian Film Festival (NYIFF) is the oldest, most prestigious film festival screening premieres of feature, documentary and short films made from, of, and about the Indian subcontinent in the Independent, arthouse, alternate and diaspora genres. Seven days of screenings, post-screening discussions, industry panels, award ceremony, special events, nightly networking parties, red carpet galas, media attention and packed audiences build an awareness of Indian cinema, entertain & educate North Americans about the real India, and add to the amazing cultural diversity of New York City. Please visit: the NYIFF website.

Sachin Dev Pavithran Reappointed To Key Administration Post By President Obama

Washington, DC: Sachin Dev Pavithran, an Indian-American has been reappointed by US President Barack Obama as a Member of the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board, a key independent government agency devoted to accessibility for people with disabilities.

Created in 1973 to ensure access to federally-funded facilities, the Board is now a leading source of information on accessible design. “These dedicated individuals bring a wealth of experience and talent to their new roles and I am proud to have them serve in this Administration. I look forward to working with them in the months and years to come,” Obama said in a statement yesterday.

Pavithran was first appointed to Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board in 2012 and has served as Chair since 2015. He is Programme Director of Utah Assistive Technology Programme at Utah State University’s Centre for Persons with Disabilities, a position he has held since 2011.

He has served in a variety roles at the Centre since 2002, including Programme Coordinator and Disability Policy Analyst. He has more than 15 years of experience as a consultant in developing, testing, and training users of assistive technology and accessible websites.

He serves on the Association of Assistive Technology Act Programs National Board, the Research and Development Committee of the National Federation of the Blind, and the National Multicultural Council of the Association of University Centres for Disabilities.

In 2016, Mr Pavithran was selected as one of Government Technology’s Top 25 Doers, Dreamers & Drivers for his accomplishments in using technology to improve government operations.

China, Pakistan join hands to block India’s entry into Nuclear Suppliers Group

China and Pakistan are closely coordinating moves to block India’s entry into the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), media reports say.  Beijing is using Pakistan’s non-starter position with the NSG to block India’s application in the name of parity, stating that it would either support NSG entry for both India and Pakistan, or none of them.

Talking about the China – Pakistan grand strategy to stall India’s admission into the NSG , well placed US sources who work with the NSG said that from all counts it does appear that China and Pakistan are coordinating closely to stop the Indian entry. The sources pointed to the fact that when India sought an information session with the NSG Participating Governments (PGs) at the recent NSG Consultative Group meeting on April 25 and 26, where it would have made a formal presentation to the NSG Group in support of its membership, Pakistan requested for a similar discussion slot with the NSG PGs.

Sources said that even though Pakistan was fully aware that its request would be rejected, it made its application at the cue of China, in order for Beijing to look even-handed when it sought the rejection of both requests on grounds of parity.

Providing an insight into the China-Pakistan plan to stall India, sources say that Pakistan is now going to write to all the NSG PGs about its wish to join the group. This is being done in anticipation of an application by India for NSG membership at the forthcoming plenary session of the group in June.

The Pakistani application, added sources, is “just a decoy” for China to reject both applications on grounds of parity. China knows that Pakistan does not stand a chance at the NSG, and most of the states will reject Islamabad’s application.

By taking the lead in rejecting the Pakistani application along with that of India, China would like to project its position as “neutral” when in reality it is “working in tandem with Pakistan to stall India’s application “.

US sources are disappointed with the Chinese tactics of “using Pakistan’s non credentials with the NSG to settle scores with India”. Informed sources say that this strategy is not a secret and during Pakistan President Mamnoon Hussain’s visit to China in November 2015, China revealed its hand when it told President Hussain that if India is allowed to get NSG membership, China would ensure that Pakistan also joins the group. The Chinese government told President Hussain that “if India is allowed to join the NSG and Pakistan is deprived of NSG membership, Beijing will veto the move and block the Indian entry”.

Sources maintain that true to its word, China is following a plan that will enable it to use Pakistan’s non-acceptance at the NSG to block India’s acceptance. “It is both or none” is the Chinese plan to derail the Indian application, say sources.  Chinese officials at the NSG level have been using the Pakistan card to stop India’s entry into it while appearing to be even handed in China’s relations with India.

Well informed sources also point to comments made by Pakistan’s former permanent representative to the United Nations Zamir Akram who virtually admitted the grand China – Pakistan plan to stall India’s entry into the NSG when, he said, that India will not make it to the NSG despite US support since China was committed to both India and Pakistan joining the NSG at the same time, and would block any move for a unilateral admission of India. He added that chances of India gaining entry into the NSG are virtually nil. The former senior Pakistani official also made it known that Islamabad has “friends at the NSG” who won’t let India enter the group.

US sources have seen through China’s game of “either both or none” in the NSG. They say that India’s non-proliferation credentials can never be compared with Pakistan’s, as Pakistan has a history of “selling Nuclear technology to rogue states like Libya”. They point to the father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb, Dr A.Q. Khan, and his global nuclear trade.

Added to this history, is the fear in the West that Pakistan’s nuclear weapons, especially the tactical version that it is now in the process of developing, can easily find their way into the hands of terrorists, as Pakistan’s nuclear command is extremely vulnerable to penetration by Islamic hardliners.

Well-placed sources say that China is aware of this situation, and is mindful of the fact that Pakistan can never be considered for membership in any global nuclear club, but that won’t stop China from using Pakistan as a “parity token to stop India which is fast emerging as China’s competitor at a global level”.

By rejecting the applications of both Pakistan and India, China is telling New Delhi and the NSG governments that it is “neutral”, when in fact it is working with Pakistan to reject India’s application in the hope that there won’t be an Indian reaction.

US sources say China’s grand plan is to “eat its cake and have it too”, that is reject the Indian application to the NSG on the pretext of “neutrality” between India and Pakistan and then hope that the “neutrality” card will stop any Indian commercial blowback on China.

Giving further insight into the plan, US sources say that China “would be naive to expect that there won’t be an Indian reaction, and especially a commercial one, as China is mindful that India is fully qualified to join the NSG, and by playing the ‘Pakistan parity card’, China is only hurting its own interests with an upcoming economic power, India.”

India confirms it will file 16 solar cases against US under WTO dispute

India will file 16 cases against the US for violating World Trade Organization (WTO ) treaties as certain programs of the United States in the renewable energy sector are “inconsistent” with global norms, the India’s Upper House of Parliament was informed last week by Nirmala Sitharaman, India’s Commerce and Industry Minister.

She said that India believes that certain renewable energy programs of the US at the sub-federal level are inconsistent with WTO provisions, particularly with respect to the obligation under GATT (General Agreement on Tariff and Trade) 1994, Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures and/or TRIMS (Trade-Related Investment Measures) Agreement.

In a separate reply, she said India has appealed before the WTO appellate body on the findings and recommendations of the dispute settlement panel.  To promote domestic manufacturing of solar cells and modules, which is one of the components of the National Solar Mission, India set domestic content requirement for a few of the programs under the mission.

In a separate reply, the minister said India continues to be placed on the priority watch list under the US Special 301 on account of US assessment of Indian intellectual property rights (IPR) protection being inadequate.

“The Special 301 report issued by the US under their Trade Act of 1974 is a unilateral measure to create pressure on countries to enhance IPR protection beyond the TRIPS (Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights) Agreement,” she added.  She made a point that the report which is an “extra territorial application” of the domestic law of a country is inconsistent with established norms of WTO. Last month, releasing its annual 301 Report, the US has said it will continue to put India and China on its priority watch list for IPR.

Obama casts Trump philosophy as one of ignorance, isolation

President Barack Obama cast Donald Trump’s positions on immigration, trade and Muslims as part of an ignorance-and-isolation philosophy that the president says will lead the U.S. down the path of decline. Obama used his commencement speech Sunday at Rutgers University to tear into the presumptive Republican nominee, without ever mentioning his name. Time and again the president invoked specific Trump policies to denounce a rejection of facts, science and intellectualism that he said was pervading politics.

“In politics and in life, ignorance is not a virtue,” Obama told some 12,000 graduates at the public university in New Jersey. “It’s not cool to not know what you’re talking about. That’s not keeping it real or telling it like it is. That’s not challenging political correctness. That’s just not knowing what you’re talking about,” the president said. “And yet, we’ve become confused about this,” he added.

Obama’s rebuke came as Trump closes in on clinching the GOP nomination, raising the prospect that November’s election could portend a reversal of Obama’s policies and approach to governing. In recent days, Trump has started focusing on the general election while working to unite a fractured Republican Party around his candidacy. Democrats are readying for a fight against a reality TV host they never anticipated would make it this far.

Obama has mostly steered clear of the race as Democrats Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders compete into the summer for the nomination. But in speeches like this one, he has laid out themes that Democrats are certain to use as they work to deny Trump the White House. He’s urged journalists to scrutinize Trump’s vague policy prescriptions and not to emphasize what he calls “the spectacle and the circus.”

Trump has barreled his way toward the nomination by emphasizing the profound concerns of Americans who have felt left behind by the modern, global economy, summed up in his ubiquitous campaign slogan of “Make America great again.” He’s called for keeping Muslim immigrants out of the U.S., gutting Obama’s trade deals with Asia and Europe, and cracking down on immigrants in the U.S. illegally. In his speech, Obama told graduates that when they hear people wax nostalgic about the “good old days” in America, they should “take it with a grain of salt.”

“Guess what? It ain’t so,” the president said, rattling off a list of measures by which life is better in the U.S. than in decades past. Yet Obama cautioned that both Democrats and Republicans were responsible for over-magnifying the country’s problems. And he appeared to push back gently on Sanders, whose rallies are packed with young Americans cheering the candidate’s calls to uproot an economic system he says is rigged in favor of the extremely rich. “The system isn’t as rigged as you think,” Obama said.

Looking out at a sea of red and black gowns at High Point Solution Stadium, Obama said the pace of change on the planet is accelerating, not subsiding. He said recent history had proved that the toughest challenges cannot be solved in isolation.

“A wall won’t stop that,” Obama said, bringing to mind Trump’s call for building a border wall between the U.S. and Mexico. “The point is, to help ourselves, we’ve got to help others — not pull up the drawbridge and try to keep the world out.”

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who ran against Trump for the GOP nomination and has since become one of his most vocal surrogates, didn’t attend the president’s speech at Rutgers. Instead, he spent the day at nearby Princeton University for his son’s baseball game — the Ivy League championship.

The president, who returned to Washington after his speech, will deliver a final commencement address on June 1 at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Earlier in May, Obama echoed similar themes about progress in the U.S. when he spoke at historically black Howard University in Washington.

Nuclear Debate on Pakistan in the US Congress

A debate on the policy brief by ARCHumanKind, “The Pink Triangle Threat; Nuclear Proliferation: an assessment”, was sponsored in the US Congress, Washington DC on May 11, 2016, by US Congressman Duncan Hunter Jr.

Internationally renowned American foreign affairs scholar, Walid Phares, and Director of ARCHumanKind, Paulo Casaca animated the debate. Congressman Trent Franks, representing Arizona since 2002, also attended. He has been especially active in the fight against nuclear proliferation, and is one of the most experienced politicians in this field. Several high-level experts and journalists also attended the debate.

During the conference, it was highlighted that Pakistan has the fastest growing nuclear weapons program in the world, and of particular concern was its recent announcement of the development and deployment of tactical nuclear weapons along its border with India. Whereas Pakistan has, in the past, been the primary source of international nuclear proliferation, and gives no guarantee of control on its nuclear weapons, a lighter, more diversified and widespread nuclear device capability, implied by its recent tactical nuclear weapons announcement, significantly increases the risks of a major nuclear catastrophe.

The contemporary nuclear proliferation wave centered in Pakistan was developed through the so called ‘Khan network’ – a mix state, non-state and fanatic corporate multinational that traded clandestine nuclear weapons technology across the world with the help of the Pakistani Army, that allowed both Libya and North Korea to develop their nuclear weapons program.

Speakers present considered nuclear terror proliferation as the most important threat impacting upon humanity today, and argued that this threat has considerably increased following the acceptance, by the major world powers, of the Pakistani nuclear weapons program, and the chilling message this has sent to the international community.

Four Indian-Americans charged with H-1B visa fraud

The couple Sunitha Guntipally and Venkat Guntipally, Pratap “Bob” Kondamoori and Sandhya Ramireddi, allegedly used three California corporations to orchestrate the improper submission of more than 100 H-1B specialty-occupation work visa applications, said the statement from the US Attorney’s Office Northern District of California.

In a 33-count indictment filed last weekend, all the four are charged with conspiracy to commit visa fraud, false statements, mail fraud, obstruction of justice, and witness tampering and aiding and abetting these offences.

The defendants submitted to the government, or caused to be submitted, H-1B visa application materials stating that the foreign workers named in the applications would be placed at specific companies in the US, the statement read. However, those companies either did not exist or never intended to receive the foreign workers named in the defendants’ applications.

The indictment alleges that through their ownership, direction and control of two companies — DS Soft Tech and Equinett — the Guntipallys generated net profits of about $3.3 million and gross profits of approximately $17 million from 2010-2014.

According to the indictment, the husband-wife team founded and owned DS Soft Tech and Equinett where Venkat served as president and Sunitha as vice president of both the firms.

Kondamoori from Nevada is alleged to be the founder and owner of SISL Networks and Kondamoori’s sister, Ramireddi from Pleasanton, is alleged to have been the human resources manager and operations manager of all three companies. In addition, Kondamoori, Sunitha Guntipally and Ramireddi are charged in connection with alleged efforts to conceal the defendants’ conduct.

Manjit Singh Appointed As Member Of President’s Advisory Council On Faith Issues

Manjit Singh, president of Agilious, a software technology consulting firm he founded in 2013, has been appointed by President Obama to his Advisory Council on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships on May 12th.

Singh is the co-founder and chairman of the Board of Directors of the Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund, a national Sikh American advocacy organization.  He served as a member of the board of directors of the Guru Gobind Singh Foundation and also as a member-at-large on the board of the Interfaith Conference of Metropolitan Washington.  He has an M.S. from the State University of New York at Albany and a Bachelor of Engineering from the University of Bombay, India.

“These fine public servants bring a depth of experience and tremendous dedication to their important roles,” President Obama is quoted saying in a White House press release.  “I look forward to working with them.”

Singh has been active in the Washington D.C. metro area Sikh American community since early 1993. Post 9/11, he was instrumental in parlaying SALDEF’s relationships in D.C. to develop and create training videos to educate and inform law enforcement on Sikh Americans. Singh has also appeared in print and on broadcast media including CNN, Fox News, Voice of America, BBC, Al Jazeera, NPR, Washington Post, Washington Times, New York Times, among others, according to his bio on the SALDEF website.

Revathi Balakrishnan Honored By President Obama

Washington, DC: Revathi Balakrishnan, an Indian-American woman elementary teacher at Patsy Sommer Elementary School in Texas was honored by US President Barack Obama at the White House for her excellent work in the field of education. Revathi Balakrishnan, described as a gifted teacher was also named 2016 ‘Texas Elementary Teacher of the Year’.

“It is not work for me. It is actually a passion,” said 53-year-old Austin-based Balakrishnan who has taught in the district’s talented and gifted programs for nine years. Currently teaching math classes in third through fifth grade at Sommer, Balakrishnan, who was honored last week, will now represent Texas in the ‘National Teacher of the Year’ competition.

“I’m an Indian-American, so I think the Indian community is feeling a lot of pride and joy,” Balakrishnan said, adding that about 30 per cent of the students at ‘Sommer Elementary’ are Asian or Indian.

“I feel proud to represent those and I can convince a lot of younger generation Indian kids to turn to teaching for a career. So I feel I can actually have some impact on that,” she said. Balakrishnan has taught at ‘Sommer Elementary’ for six years before teaching at Forest North Elementary for three years.

Originally from Chennai, Ms Balakrishnan was a systems analyst with Liberty Mutual, managing databases and programming for about 12 years before becoming a teacher. Terming her style of teaching as “no nonsense”, Ms Balakrishnan, who earned her economics degree from University of Madras, attributes her success in the field of education to her love of teaching.

She said the excitement of teaching, learning with students and the opportunity to shape students who are the “leaders of tomorrow” drives her. “Not one day is the same, which is what I like. I don’t like structure. I just go with the flow and I love what happens,” Ms Balakrishnan said.

The ‘National Teacher of the Year Program’ identifies exceptional teachers in the country, recognizes their effective work in the classroom, engages them in a year of professional learning, amplifies their voices and empowers them to participate in policy discussions at the state and national levels.

Donald Trump Mocks Indian Call Centers

Republican presidential front runner Donald Trump has used fake Indian accent to mock a call center representative in India during an election rally last week. The real estate tycoon said that he called up his credit card company to find out whether their customer support is based in the US or overseas.

“Guess what, you’re talking to a person from India. How the hell does that work?” he told his supporters in Delaware. “So I called up, under the guise I’m checking on my card, I said, ‘Where are you from?’” Trump said and then he copied the response from the call center in a fake Indian accent. “We are from India,” Trump impersonated the response. “Oh great, that’s wonderful,” he said as he pretended to hang up the phone. “India is great place. I am not upset with other leaders. I am upset with our leaders for being so stupid,” he said.

Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign has slammed the remarks by Trump saying it shows disrespect towards the community and is reflective of his divisive rhetoric. “Donald Trump mocking Indian workers is just typical of his disrespect that he has shown to groups across the spectrum,” said John Podesta, chairman of the Clinton Campaign.

“He has run a campaign of bigotry and division. I think that’s quite dangerous for the country when you think about the fact that you need friends, allies. The kind of campaign he is running breeds disrespect across the globe and breeds division and danger here at home,” he told reporters in Germantown, Maryland after formally launching ‘Indian- Americans for Hillary’, an effort by the community to rally behind the Democratic presidential front runner. Podesta was reacting to Trump’s apparent use of a fake Indian accent to mock a call centre representative in India during a campaign rally in Delaware this week.

Meanwhile, an Indian-American entrepreneur also hit out at Trump, calling his comments “demeaning”. “When Donald Trump fakes the accent of an Indian at the help desk, it is demeaning and demonising to me personally,” said Frank Islam, a top Indian-American bundler in the Clinton campaign who has helped raised more than USD 100,000 for her

UR Rao: 1st Indian in International Astronautical Federation’s ‘Hall of Fame’

Washington, DC: Former ISRO Chairman Prof UR Rao became the first Indian to be given the ‘Hall of Fame’ award by the International Astronautical Federation ( IAF ).  An Isro press note issued said that the award has been given for his “outstanding contribution to the progress of astronautics within the framework of the IAF activities.”

“The IAF award is intended to reward personalities for their contributions to the progress of astronautics and the Federation,” the release added. Speaking to TOI Prof UR Rao said: “I don’t know who nominated me.” Rao, who refrained from speaking more about the award, spoke of what new things needs to be implemented to take the Indian space programme to the next level. The IAF, in a letter to Rao, has said: “It is a true honour for IAF to attribute this award to Prof Rao, who have been for many years an active participant to the success of space in general and of the Federation in particular’.

The IAF Hall of Fame consists of a permanent gallery of these personalities, including a citation, biographical information, and a picture, in a special part of the IAF web presence.  This year’s 67th International Astronautical Congress will be held in Guadalajara, Mexico in September, where Rao will receive the award.

Actor Kal Penn, Neera Tanden Slam Trump’s Policies

Washington, DC: Indian-American star Kal Penn, best known for his roles in Harold & Kumar and The Namesake, says most Americans don’t agree with controversial presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump’s racist views.

“I seriously believe that most of the Americans don’t agree with Donald Trump over his racist, anti-women, anti-LGBT practices. We are not that country. Hopefully elections will prove that,” Penn, who was associate director in the White House Office of Public Engagement from 2009 to 2011, said at the “Cultural Connections in US-India Relations” at the American Center here.

Indian American Neera Tanden led the Hillary Clinton campaign in slamming the economic policies of Donald Trump, the Republican presidential presumptive nominee, and alleging that this poses a threat to the economic future of women and families. “Make no mistake: Trump’s divisive comments about women’s health are a direct threat to our dignity and economic security,” said Tanden, president of the Center for American Progress Action Fund. “Trump is now trying to cover up the bald spots in his economic plan but women can see for themselves and women can see through his comb over,” said Tanden, who was joined by Senator Barbara Mikulski of Maryland.

Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee, expected to be pitted against Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton in November, has been opposed by peoples and critics, and often been tagged “anti-immigrant”, “misogynist”, “racist” and “worse”. During the event, Penn’s 2007 film “The Namesake”, which also stars Bollywood actors Irrfan Khan and Tabu, was screened.

Sharing his experience about campaigning for Obama, Penn said that it would not “weird” for him to shift from acting to politics. “For me it was an honor to get a chance to serve for your country,” said Penn, whose real name is Kalpen Suresh Modi, and is best known for his role of Kumar Patel in the popular “Harold & Kumar” film franchise. He has also appeared on TV shows like “House”, “How I Met Your Mother” and “The Big Brain Theory”.

Kal Penn, who served in the Barack Obama administration, was in India for the shooting of Guneet Monga’s upcoming project “The Ashram”. With Ben Rekhi as the director, the film is an English-language spiritual fantasy thriller set in the mystical world of Himalayan yogis.

“The Ashram” also features Melissa Leo, Sam Keeley, Hera Hilmar and Radhika Apte. Talking about Indian cinema, Penn said he is more inclined towards watching off-beat films, that too of Amitabh Bachchan and Irrfan Khan. He also said that loved watching 2013 film “Mere Dad Ki Maruti”.

Actor Kal Penn, Neera Tanden Slam Trump's PoliciesAccording to Tanden, the trillions in tax cuts for millionaires, billionaires and corporations laid out in Trump’s tax plan would be an enormous boon for the top one percent of earners, made at the expense of working families, seniors and the health of the economy. Trump’s plan would give $3 trillion over 10 years or more than 35 percent of its tax breaks to millionaires, enough money to ensure Medicare and Social Security’s solvency for the next 75 years, repair the ailing infrastructure, or raise every person now living in poverty up to the poverty line. Trump would give multi-millionaires in the top 0.1 percent like himself a raise of $1.3 million a year, or $100,000 a month.

Tanden said Trump still opposes raising the minimum wage because he believes “wages are too high,” and recently said he doesn’t favor a federal floor for the minimum wage, which could leave many workers subject to a lower minimum wage.

Tanden alleged Trump’s ideas are not the only risk his presidency would pose for the economic future of women and families around this country. “His tax plan gives $3 trillion to millionaires, that’s enough to make Social Security and Medicare solvent for 75 years. Women, who rely disproportionately on Social Security, can’t afford such an irresponsible giveaway.”

Congressman Bera’s Father, Babulal Bera, Pleads Guilty To Violating Campaign Finance Laws

Washington, DC: Congressman Ami Bera’s father, 83-year-old Babulal Bera, is reported to have admitted in court on Tuesday, May 10th that he violated campaign finance laws after he was charged with making excessive contributions to his son’s Congressional campaign and often did so in the name of other people. Babulal Bera is reported to be facing a 30-month prison term after pleading guilty to two counts of violating campaign finance laws by funneling contributions to his son’s congressional campaign via straw donors.

The only Indian American Congressman Ami Bera, a physician by profession, is seeking his third congressional term to retain California’s CD 7 seat. Rep. Bera is facing a tough race against Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones, a Republican. Bera said via a press statement issued that he knew nothing of his father’s activities. “I am incredibly saddened and disappointed in learning what my dad did. While I deeply love my father, it’s clear he has made a grave mistake that will have real consequences for him,” said Bera.

“Since I learned from authorities about this investigation, my team and I have cooperated fully with the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Neither I, nor anyone involved with my campaign, was aware of my father’s activities until we learned about them from the U.S. Attorney’s Office and, on the advice of my attorney, I have not discussed this matter or anything else regarding my campaigns with my father,” said the congressman, adding that he has returned the full dollar amount to the U.S. Treasury.

Indian American-Led “Democrats For Truth” Attacks Rep. Ami BeraAccording to charging documents made public via Pacer, Babulal Bera — after donating the maximum amount allowed by law, $2,400, to his son’s first bid for office in 2009 — began soliciting friends and family members to contribute equal amounts, with the promise that he would reimburse them for their donations with his own money. Court papers state that prosecutors have identified 130 improper campaign contributions from 90 donors, in the 2010 and 2012 election cycles, attributable to Babulal Bera.

The contributions were made in the 2009 and 2011 election cycles. In 2009, the elder Bera reimbursed people for more than $225,000 in donations. During the 2011 elections, Bera’s parents donated more than $40,000, court documents show, media reports stated. The fraud was determined from the campaign’s Federal Election Commission quarterly report filings.

The National Republican Congressional Committee immediately called upon Bera to “return dirty campaign cash.” “As new reports reveal that illegal donations helped finance his campaigns, Ami Bera needs to immediately return the hundreds of thousands of dollars of illegal campaign contributions he has accepted,” said NRCC spokesman Zach Hunter. “It defies belief that Rep. Bera was unaware of these activities, and 7th District voters deserve to know the truth,” he added.

At a news conference on May 10, acting U.S. Atty. Phillip A. Talbert said: “Congressman Bera and his campaign staff have been fully cooperative in this investigation. To date, there is no indication from what we’ve learned in the investigation that either the congressman or his campaign staff knew of, or participated in, the reimbursements of contributions.”

The case may be a political setback for Rep. Bera, who has won his two elections with slim margins in what have been billed as one of the most expensive Congressional campaigns in the country. Political analyst Kevin Raggs, speaking to Local TV channel KCRA 3, said stakes are higher this time round for the Democrats because getting a House majority could be in play. “So what happens with Bera’s seat really does have potential national implications,” Raggs contended. As per reports, Babulal Bera signed a plea agreement on May 2, pleading guilty to one count of making excessive campaign contributions and one count of making campaign contributions in another person’s name. Both charges carry maximum penalties each of up to five years in prison or a fine of $250,000 for each count, or both fine and imprisonment. He is scheduled to be sentenced Aug. 4.

According to the plea agreement, prosecutors have agreed not to seek a prison sentence of more than 30 months. They have also agreed not to bring charges against Babulal Bera’s wife, Kanta Bera. Babulal “Bob” Bera — a native of Gujarat — immigrated to California in 1958 to earn a master’s degree from the University of Southern California. Two years later, Kanta joined him, and attended USC to earn her graduate degree. She then worked as a public school teacher. Babulal Bera, is said to told the judge, when asked whether he had broken the law, “I have indeed done the crime.

Ajinka Kelkar charged with criminal mischief in New Jersey

Ajinka Kelkar, a 20-year-old resident of South Brunswick in the state of New Jersey, who allegedly sought to take a revenge on a man who was dating his ex-girlfriend, accidentally targeted the wrong house and caused $10,000 in damage to vehicles parked in the driveway.

According to police, Kelkar damaged five vehicles parked outside a house on Friendship Road in South Brunswick. He was arrested within a few hours after the incident on May 8 after he was seen damaging the vehicles on home surveillance camera. He was charged with trespassing, vandalism and third-degree criminal mischief. He posted $10,000 bail and was released, police said. If convicted, Kelkar faces up to five years in prison.

According to Tapintonet.com, the family members of the house targeted head some hissing air noise around midnight outside, and came out to check. They found that tires of some of the cars, including guests at home, were slahed and one car had obscenities scratched in to its door and fender and called police.

Officers and family members reviewed the home surveillance tape and found that the suspect moments earlier damaging the vehicle in their driveway. Police recognized the image in the videotape at Kelkar. The report said that police went to Kelkar’s residence but were told by his parents he was not home. Later, officers on surveillance outside his home found that Kelkar was inside his home at 6:30am and took him into custody.

Hindu Group in India prays for Trump’s Victory

Donald Trump , the presumptive Republican nominee seems have admirers in India. According to reports, nearly a dozen members of a right-wing Hindu group gathered on New Delhi’s “protest lane” last week to pray for Trump’s victory in the U.S. presidential election.

According to the Associated Press, the group chanted in Sanskrit and made offerings around a small ritual fire and before a picture of the billionaire politician adorned with a red Hindu mark on the forehead. Trump’s call for temporarily banning Muslims from the United States “until we can figure out what’s going on” apparently a positive chord with some in India’s Hindu nationalist movement, the report said.

“The whole world is screaming against Islamic terrorism, and even India is not safe from it,” said Vishnu Gupta, founder of the Hindu Sena nationalist group. “Only Donald Trump can save humanity.” A separate movement of “Hindus for Trump” has also been gaining speed on Twitter and Facebook in recent days.

In months on the campaign trail, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee has made several statements about India both positive and negative. He described the country as a necessary check to nuclear-armed Pakistan but also mentioned India of being among several countries he believes are stealing jobs from the United States

“We’re being ripped off with China, ripped off with Japan, ripped off with Mexico at the border and then trade, ripped off by Vietnam, and by India, and by every country,” Trump said at a rally in February. In a speech in Delaware last month, he mimicked the accent of an Indian call center worker in a speech about the trade imbalance and the job market, later adding — “India is a great place.”

Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy and Andy Schocken On “SONG OF LAHORE”

Two-time Academy Award® winner Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy and Andy Schocken bring their acclaimed documentary SONG OF LAHORE to U.S. audiences this Friday, May 20 with a release that includes theaters in New York and Los Angeles plus national availability on DVD, VOD and Digital HD at the same time.

Song of Lahore, the latest feature-length documentary from filmmakers Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy (A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness – 2015 Academy Award winner for Best Short Documentary) and Andy Schocken (The Last Campaign of Governor Booth Gardner), follows the members of Pakistan’s Sachal Jazz Ensemble, a group of master musicians who find international recognition after decades of opposition from dictators and religious extremists. The ancient city of Lahore was once the center of Pakistan’s thriving film-music recording industry, but that came to an end in the late 1970s under the Islamist rule of General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq. Under the conservative regime, instrumental music was repressed, and entire families of musicians lost their livelihood.  Music came to be seen as a dishonorable profession, and they found themselves quietly continuing the centuries-old practice of passing down ancient musical traditions from one generation to the next behind closed doors.

As government opposition to music eased in the 1990s and 2000s, businessman Izzat Majeed founded the Sachal Studios Orchestra.  He encouraged the group to combine classical Pakistani instruments and techniques with the American jazz he had fallen in love with in the 1950s. Their innovative versions of jazz standards, most notably Dave Brubeck’s iconic “Take Five,” made the orchestra a surprise Internet phenomenon, earning international acclaim and an invitation to perform at Lincoln Center with jazz great Wynton Marsalis and his band. Obaid-Chinoy and Schocken follow the ensemble on an inspiring journey as they struggle to adapt to the unfamiliar strictures of Western music and restore Pakistan’s venerable musical traditions.

The co-directors sat down for this exclusive interview to discuss their new film which features the music of The Sachal Ensemble of Pakistan and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis and examines the lives and the cultural heritage of Pakistan’s classical musicians as they prepare for a concert in New York City. Interview with SONG OF LAHORE co-directors SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY and ANDY SCHOCKEN:

Q: Was music ever banned in Pakistan? 

A: Music was never banned outright, but when General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq took power in 1977 he put in place restrictions on broadcasting non-religious music and dancing. Nightclubs and alcohol were banned, and Zia took steps to shut down the Pakistani film industry, a source of employment for many musicians. At the same time, a more hardline interpretation of Islam became ascendant. As a result, non-religious classical music declined dramatically and musicians lost their former standing culturally, economically and socially. However, even in this oppressive environment, a nascent pop industry grew as a form of protest against Zia’s conservative policies.

Q: After Zia’s reign ended, why did traditional musicians like the members of the Sachal Ensemble still struggle to find work?

A: After Benazir Bhutto took power in 1988, official opposition to non-religious music was overturned. And starting in 1999, under Pervez Musharraf, steps were taken to rebuild the music and film industries. Music grew in popularity, concerts were once again common, and shows on television and radio flourished. However, much of the music that became popular at this time was Western-oriented rock and pop. Opportunities for classical musicians were rare, so many traditional artists had to leave the profession and find work elsewhere.

Q: What are the threats faced by musicians in Pakistan today?

A: After the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan, and the U.S. military engagement in the region, the situation changed again. The Taliban banned instrumental music and dancing in Afghanistan, and as their influence later crossed into Pakistan, similar efforts were made in areas under their control or sympathetic to their strain of Islam. When fundamentalist religious parties came to power in the Khyber-Paktunkhwa region of Pakistan, they banned public concerts, hundreds of music shops were burned, and a number of musicians and dancers were killed. Many musicians fled the region.

Q: What is the situation like for musicians in Lahore?

A: The situation in Pakistan differs widely from region to region. Lahore experiences limited influence from the Taliban, though hundreds have been killed in terrorist attacks there in recent years. There have been some efforts by outsiders to spread anti-music messages in the city, and there have been some personal attacks on musicians. There are fundamentalist agitators who rally opposition to musicians, claiming that music is sinful. As described in the film, the son of guitarist Asad Ali was attacked and had his keyboard smashed. In 2008 bombs were set off at Lahore’s Alhamra Cultural Center during a musical performance by folk musician Arieb Azhar. Because of security concerns it is rare for concerts to be held publicly. Instead, performances are typically held in private hotels or venues with security guards.

Q: Why does flutist Baqir Abbas speak of having to hide the fact that he and his brother are musicians?

A: In many strata of Pakistani society, instrumental musicians are not seen as respectable. Despite the long tradition of music in Islamic society, conservative Muslims consider instrumental music to be obscene. Musicians are often referred to in derogatory terms, and musical families often hide the fact that they’re musicians, so as not to invite opposition or dishonor. Hence, in the film, we see Baqir Abbas playing the flute with his brother in a soundproof room, so as to not bring dishonor to the family.

SONG OF LAHORE

Release date: May 20 (select theaters, DVD, VOD, Digital HD)

Directors: Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy & Andy Schocken

Music: The Sachal Jazz Ensemble and The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis

Rating: PG

Runtime: 82 minutes

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=reMlqvb_WAA

Official Site: www.songoflahoremovie.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/songoflahore

Twitter: https://twitter.com/songoflahore

Global corruption costs trillions in bribes, lost growth: IMF

Public sector corruption siphons $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion annually from the global economy in bribes and costs far more in stunted economic growth, lost tax revenues and sustained poverty, the International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday.

In a new research paper, the IMF said tackling corruption is critical for the achievement of macroeconomic stability, one of the institution’s core mandates.

The Fund argues that strategies to fight corruption require transparency, a clear legal framework, a credible threat of prosecution and a strong drive to deregulate economies.

“While the direct economic costs of corruption are well known, the indirect costs may be even more substantial and debilitating,” IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde wrote in an essay accompanying the paper.

“Corruption also has a broader corrosive impact on society. It undermines trust in government and erodes the ethical standards of private citizens,” Lagarde added.

The paper, titled “Corruption: Costs and Mitigating Strategies,” follows Lagarde’s warning to Ukraine in February that the IMF would halt its $17.5-billion bailout for the strife-torn eastern European country unless it takes stronger action to fight corruption, including new governance reforms.

Lagarde is due to participate in a British government-sponsored anti-corruption summit in London on Thursday that will include U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and other senior officials including the presidents of Nigeria and Afghanistan.

Extrapolating from 2005 World Bank research, the paper estimated that around 2 percent of global gross domestic product is now paid in bribes annually. But it said corruption’s indirect costs are substantially higher, reducing government revenues by encouraging tax evasion and reducing incentives to pay taxes, leaving less money available for public investments in infrastructure, health care and education.

While some argue that bribes are simply grease for the wheels of commerce, the IMF said that corruption often drives investment away from countries where it is rife and boosts lending costs.

Without naming any particular countries, the IMF said that dependence on non-renewable natural resources can often encourage corruption, as well as conflicts over control of them.

In helping its 189 member countries design and implement anti-corruption strategies, the Fund said it emphasizes the need for both appropriate incentives and deterrents.

The paper said stronger anti-corruption laws and prosecution capacity was needed, but also said that reduced regulations can limit bribe opportunities and provide companies more opportunity to grow without them. “Wherever discretion is granted to an official regarding the approval of an economic activity, there is a risk that this discretion will be abused,” Lagarde wrote.

Indian Students Shine In Formula SAE Hybrid Car Design Contest

A group of undergraduate engineering students from Bangalore won second place in design and project management categories at the prestigious International Formula SAE hybrid car design competitions held last week in Loudon, New Hampshire.

In a field of 28 teams from various countries, including Japan, Russia, Taiwan and Canada besides USA, the team from Ashwa Racing Workshop at R.V. College of Engineering in Bangalore won fourth overall position in the competition held May 4-6.

The Formula Hybrid event founded and run by the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College, is part of the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) Collegiate Design Series and is regarded as the most complex and dynamic of the series.

“This was no mean feat given that the 20-member team of undergraduate students that included girls managed, despite time constraints, all aspects of the process of development, including shipping the car to the United States in time for the competition. That is impressive!” Rajat Bhatnagar of Atomic Launch of N.H. that helps companies launch new ventures and facilitates investments, management, product development, said.

The team members met with Riva Ganguly Das, Consul General of India in New York when they arrived in the city en route to Loudon May1 and briefed her about the design and the competition. Bhatnagar said he had been working to take care of the team in N.H. after being requested to do so by the consul general.

The sponsorship, including travel, lodging and food expenses, was borne and shared by Atomic Launch, and the team members. “We finished 2nd in design and project management events and 4th overall out of 28 registered teams. The prototype was designed, manufactured and assembled in Bangalore itself and was shipped all the way to New Hampshire,” Bhatnagar said quoting the students in response to a question. The prototype was shipped to U.S. March 10 and it reached the event site April 28.

The judges at the competition belonged to the Thayer School of Engineering, IEEE professionals, alumni of former Formula Hybrid team and many other people from various walks of life. Motor racing professionals who have been officiating at FSAE events were also part of the organizing committee or were judges.

To a question, the tem said that to build the race-car alongside their academics, it took them 10 months to complete. The cost incurred is around $25000.

RZ-X6H is a series hybrid prototype which is powered by both the motor, Agni-95R and Pulsar 220cc bike engine. The prototype weighs 318kg with a space framed chassis and uses a lithium ion battery with custom BMS (Battery Management System).

The students said the main design goal in building this race-car was performance and the challenge was to abide by the 35.5 MJ energy limit rule and suitably decide on the architecture to increase performance.

The Formula Hybrid Competition is an interdisciplinary design and engineering challenge for undergraduate and graduate university students. They must collaboratively design and build a formula-style electric or plug-in hybrid racecar and compete in a series of events.

This educational competition emphasizes innovation and fuel efficiency in a high-performance application. The Indian team that included Govind Shenoy, Lalith Keerthan, Abdul Rehman, Shamveel Mohammed, Manraaj Singh, Anushree H N, Nikitha Bhushi, Aishwarya L U and Gokul Suresh, will return to the competition next year with an electric car.

Harvey Milk Foundation Honors Bollywood Actress Celina Jaitly

Bollywood star Celina Jaitly, who speaks on behalf of LGBT people in India and all over the world, was honored with the Harvey Milk Foundation’s Lilla Watson Global Champion Medal at the gala co-presented by the Harvey Milk Foundation and The Pride Center at Equality Park on May 13th.

“It’s a great honor to be recognized with this medal from the Harvey Milk Foundation,” said Jaitly. “In spite of the huge strides being made in the U.S. and in many other countries, far too many LGBT people still suffer rejection, harassment and discrimination. In 76 countries – including, my own, India – the law treats gay people as criminals, reinforcing stigma and leaving people vulnerable to blackmail and imprisonment. The work we are doing through the United Nations Free & Equal global campaign is raising awareness and challenging prejudice. It’s a chance to stand shoulder to shoulder with LGBT friends and allies around the world and demand equal rights, respect and recognition. I like to think that Harvey Milk himself would have heartily approved.”

Jaitly, who is an official Champion of the United Nations Free & Equal Campaign, was honored for her advocacy and support for the LGBT rights movement in India. A former Miss India winner and Miss Universe runner-up, she is one of the most visible advocates against the criminalization of same-sex relationships in the world’s largest democracy.

Jaitly wrote recently: “In spite of the huge strides being made in the U.S. and in many other countries, far too many LGBT people still suffer rejection, harassment and discrimination. In 76 countries – including, my own, India – the law treats gay people as criminals, reinforcing stigma and leaving people vulnerable to blackmail and imprisonment. The work we are doing through the United Nations Free & Equal global campaign is raising awareness and challenging prejudice. It’s a chance to stand shoulder to shoulder with LGBT friends and allies around the world and demand equal rights, respect and recognition. I like to think that Harvey Milk himself would have heartily approved.”

“Celina Jaitly is one in a million — a huge Bollywood star and a leading light in the global movement for LGBT equality,” Charles Radcliffe, chief, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, said in a statement. “A stalwart ally of the LGBT community in India for more than a decade, she is, today, playing a central role in UN efforts to fight homophobia and transphobia, globally.”

“Celina Jaitly is an incredible champion of human rights, not just in India, but globally, through her unwavering support of the UN Free & Equal Campaign,” added Stuart Milk, co-founder of the Harvey Milk Foundation and a global human rights advocate. “She is guided by passion, committed to hard work, aided by grace, and the belief that our shared journey is enriched, and not weakened, by our diversity. We are honored that she is traveling halfway across the globe to join us.”

Kailash Satyarthi Presents Keynote Address At TiEcon Conference in California

“I refuse to accept that children should be forced into slave labor. I refuse to accept that we cannot do anything about it. Every child matters,” Kailash Satyarthi, who had received Nobel Prize in 2014 for his humanitarian efforts in freeing young children from slavery and bonded labor, declared during a keynote address at the TiE 2016 conference held at the Santa Clara Convention Center May 6 and 7.

Prior to his address, a video presentation had showed to the audience, Satyarthi’s efforts in freeing a total of 85,755 children from slave labor in India. Most of them had been forced into making handmade carpets in North India. In his quest for freeing the children, Satyarthi has had his legs broken, his left shoulder and head bashed, his house ransacked….and yet he continues to march on undeterred.

Satyarthi recounted his first violent confrontation when he and few aides descended upon an illegal brothel where young kidnapped girls were being trained to be used for prostitution. Satyarthi had gone to rescue just one girl at the behest of her father, but they ended up rescuing a total of 36 young girls. This became his first documented case of his liberation of children. “How can slavery and civilization co-exist?” Satyarthi asked rhetorically. “Child slavery has to be recognized,” he stated emphatically. After graduating with a degree in electrical engineering, the activist gave up a lucrative career in Madhya Pradesh and moved to Delhi “because I was passionate about the cause of freeing enslaved children,” he stated.

The Indus Entrepreneurs held its 24th annual global conference at the Santa Clara Convention Center May 6 through May 7 with some of the world’s brightest minds convening to share their stories and provide advice for up-and-coming entrepreneurs looking to disrupt the market and make a name for their companies. A laundry list of panel discussions on several tracks was bookended by keynote speeches on each of the two days at TiEcon 2016, the theme for which was “Dream. Change. Inspire.” TiE has a global network of 61 chapters located in most major North American, Asian and European countries and cities, with more than 11,500 members across 18 countries.

The Power of Money in Politics

The recent guilt plea by Congressman Ami Bera’s father, 83-year-old Babulal Bera, that he had violated campaign finance laws by making excessive contributions to his son’s Congressional campaign and now facing a 30-month prison term after pleading guilty to two counts of violating campaign finance laws has brought to the fore the discussions about the power of money in the election process in the greatest democracy in the world. While, no one can condone the so-called illegal ways of contributing money to his son’s tough election battle in the state California, Babulal Bera’s action is so insignificant to the way the rich are influencing the elections and their outcomes across the nation.

The Power of Money in PoliticsIn this context, the US Supreme Court ruling in 2013, with the then conservative majority by a 5-4 margin affirming their earlier decision disallowing any limit on corporate election spending, is very significant. Everyone knows the impact of the court’s ruling that has ushered in an era of unprecedented money power that is unleashed on the citizens of this country, influencing their beliefs and voting patterns.

The Supreme Court ruling not only allows individuals and corporations to contribute unlimited money to their respective political parties and candidates, but also they could remain anonymous from disclosing their names and the amount to the public. In the name of the First Amendment, corporations and individuals pour in millions of Dollars into campaigns. The irony is that these biggest donations are given to tax-free advocacy groups of political parties and campaigns in defiance even of the admonition in Citizens United that independent contributions should be disclosed. Congress can — and should — require disclosure of secret donations. The Internal Revenue Service should crack down on political organizations that pose as tax-exempt “social welfare” organizations to avoid current disclosure rules.

The net result of this ruling and its national implications are that rich people are going to buy our elections. Estimates say, the money raised during the 2012 cycle of elections has exceeded an unprecedented three Billion Dollars. If President Obama had vowed to raise a Billion Dollars, his opponent, Mitt Romney raised more money than the President every month since he secured his Party’s nomination.

The 2016 election cycle is going to break all the past records. More than six months before the General Elections, according to a Washington Post report, of the $461.7 million donated so far to support Democratic candidates, 17 percent has been raised by super PACs and other independent groups. The presidential campaign of Hillary Clinton raised $191 million and allied super PACs and other independent groups raised$72.9 million. The presidential campaign of Bernie Sanders raised $184.3 million and allied super PACs and other independent groups raised$4.4 million. Republican Party is not behind in any away. Of the $765.6 million donated so far to support Republican candidates, 55 percent has been raised by super PACs and other independent groups.

This is a blow to democratic governance. It means that  the political process in this country is going to be up for sale. It allows billionaires to buy the political process. Businesses all over the place want to do away with regulation on business practices. The banks and finance companies are for deregulation.  They don’t want government regulation. The corporations that do not want government regulators to monitor their shady deals could pour in millions of Dollars to elect a President or a Member to the Congress or a Senator of their choice and who would favor their unregulated plundering and mismanagement of wealth and ways to generate profits. This is also true with the elected Judiciary members, where there are cases where corporations have poured millions into an election to oust or have a Judge favorable to deregulation elected to the Courts.

It was of some relief to note Justice Stephen Breyer sharing his unwillingness to accept the majority’s belief, expressed in Citizens United, that independent expenditures do not give rise to corruption or even give the appearance of corruption. He also pointed out that the majority conservative Justices had made it plain that they did not have the slightest interest in reconsidering or altering its (unjust) decision.

Democracy is of the people, by the people and for the people, where a majority decide the type of government and leaders they want to rule over the country. However, when money decides who the winner is and the ruling party is going to be, it is not true democracy. A small minority with its money power is able to buy votes, influence elected officials and ultimately has a greater say in policy making. The more the money the rich spend, the more chance they have, they think, of getting their way and of getting policies that are more to their liking. Billionaires come in and spend tens of millions of dollars to defeat a candidate they don’t like or to support a candidate they do like.

The First Amendment is about freedom of speech. It’s not about freedom to spend unlimited amounts of money in an election to buy votes and influence elections and policies. There’s a difference between speaking freely and the sort of influence-peddling that campaign finance reform laws attempt to protect. And in allowing unlimited political spending, this court has opened the door to corruption and to special interest domination of politics. David Axelrod, President Obama’s political strategist, recently invoked a common perception about the 2012 campaign by blaming the Supreme Court for empowering 21st-century “robber barons trying to take over the government.” And that’s not democracy.

3rd International Hindi Conference Held In New York

Ambassador Riva Ganguly Das, Consul General of India in New York inaugurated the 3rd International Hindi Conference , America at the Indian Consulate, April 29. Speaking on the occasion, she appreciated the efforts of the organizers, particularly of the conference coordinator Ashok Ojha for organizing in a short time a conference at which a number of scholars from India are also participating, besides a large number of Hindi scholars, Hindi lovers and Hindi promotes.

Ambassador Das also referred to the efforts of Ministry of External Affairs at promoting Hindi. She said that realizing the importance of Hindi language, MEA has created an independent Hindi section which aims at training diplomats in the use of Hindi and ensures Hindi is given due place in the departmental communications.

The conference was aimed at offering thought-provoking discussions on topics of common interest and entertaining programs including a Kavi Sammelan by leading poets from India and the Diaspora. The conference was organized by Hindi Sangam Foundation in collaboration with the Consulate General of India and various other social and cultural organizations in the Tri-State area. Educational experts, scholars, policy makers, business owners, professionals as well as writers and poets from the U.S., Europe, India and other parts of the world will participate in the conference.

The sessions also included discussions on ‘Teaching Hindi as a heritage language’, ‘Global perspectives of Hindi language and literature’, and ‘Development of Hindi around the world’.

A poetry and essay competition has been organized for students of Middle and High Schools. L.T. Ngaihte, Consul, Consulate General of India will present awards to the winners of the competition.

According to Prof. Gabriela Nik Ilieva, Chief of the Academics Committee, the conference offered unique opportunity for collaboration among stakeholders from various fields including education, business and commerce, art, politics and administration for the growth of Hindi as a world language.

Ambassador Das assured the organizers that the consulate will continue to extend all cooperation in promoting Hindi. Earlier, Conference coordinator Ashok Ojha in his welcome address to the Consul General praised her for her support in organizing the conference. He said he was happy to acknowledge the great support Government of India and Ambassador Das have provided. He added that he was confident the Consulate would continue to provide the all out support for propagating and promoting Hindi. Prof. Heinz W. Wessler, Institute for Linguistics and philology, Uppsala, Sweden delivered the keynote address. Prof. Wessler is born a German. He spoke on Hindi as a language of expression of diverse issues relating to culture, religion and politics.

Speaking in relatively chaste Hindi, given the fact that Hindi is an acquired language for him he said that media whether print or electronic has been helpful in promoting Hindi. He advocated use of common Hindi as spoken by the younger generation. He said there is nothing wrong if some foreign language words are spoken by a person expressing in Hindi. He referred to Munshi Prem Chand’s “Godaan” in which, one comes across the language of common people. He gave details of a number Hindi publications in a number of countries. He also spoke of databases. The video presentation he gave was quite interesting.

Others who spoke on the occasion included Dr. Bejoy Mehta, chairman of board of trustees, Hindi Sangam Foundation; H. R. Shah, president of TV Asia & chairman of Bharatiya Vidya BHAVAN board of trustees. Purnima Desai, trustee of Hindi Sangam Foundation made a thanksgiving reference and said the organizers were moved to receive an overwhelming support for the International Hindi Conference and requested the audience to turn up for all sessions over the next two days, which also includes a Kavi Sammelan conducted by Prof. Bindeshwari (Bindu) Aggarwal. A cultural performance was presented by students of Rimli Roy.

Evergreen TV Asia anchor Vikas Nangia was a delight as master of ceremonies.

The inaugural session was attended by more than 150 scholars, writers, Patrons and lovers of Hindi.

The main objectives of the Third International Hindi Conference 2016, was to continue providing an effective forum for networking among Hindi and other language professionals and supporters. Dr. Manoj Kumar Mohapatra, Deputy Consul General, Consulate General of India, presided over the concluding event of the conference, which will be held on Sunday, May 1. Speakers and supporters of the conference will be honored at the concluding event of the conference.

NYU Tops in Number of International Students in U.S.

Among U.S. schools, New York University, the University of Southern California, Northeastern University, Columbia University and the University of Illinois rank one through five for schools with the highest international student populations. More than 10,000 international students were enrolled at each school in March. As many as 77 percent of all international students were from Asia. The top 10 countries of citizenship for international students included: China, India, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Canada, Vietnam, Japan, Taiwan, Brazil and Mexico.

The number of Indian students in American universities and colleges is over 194,000, a jump of more than 31 percent in one year. “The number of F&M students from India studying in the U.S. grew from 148,360 in March 2015 to 194,438 in March 2016, an increase of 31.1 percent,” according to the latest ‘SEVIS by the Numbers,’ a quarterly report on foreign student trends prepared by Student and Exchange Visitor Program.

There are nearly 1.2 million international students with F (academic) or M (vocational) status studying in the U.S. SEVIS is part of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations. Based on data extracted from SEVIS on March 7, international student enrollment at U.S. schools increased 6.2 percent compared to March 2015.

In March, there were 8,687 U.S. schools with SEVP certification to enroll international students, a three per cent decrease from the previous year, ICE said in a release. According to the report, 82 percent of F & M students from India pursue degrees in a STEM field. STEM stands for science, technology, engineering and mathematics. “More STEM students are from India than any other country,” it said.

On the other hand, 69 percent of all F&M students who pursue mathematics and statistics coursework are from China, it said. ICE report said 40 percent of international students studying in the U.S., equaling almost 479,000 individuals, were enrolled in STEM coursework.

Approximately 417,000 international students from Asia pursued STEM studies, an increase of 17 per cent since March 2015, it added. In March, more than 75 percent of the M (vocational) student population was male. Sixty-four percent of M students majored in transportation and materials moving, with a focus on air, ground or marine transportation.

‘Sanskriti’ South Asian book fair

BOSTON, MA: The Calcutta Club USA and The Boston Pledge presented their Second International SANSKRITI 2016 – Literature, Arts, Theater and South Asian Book Fair on April 24 at Thoreau Elementary School, MA.

Hundreds of viewers decked in the Indian traditional attire gathered in the hall with lots of enthusiasm and eagerness to browse through the book tables and listen to speeches of prominent personalities.

The speakers included Bratati Bandyopadhyay, Shilajeet Mukherjee, Dr. Amit Chaudhuri, an eminent Indian English author and academician from Calcutta, Partha Ghosh, Shobhaa De, a well-known journalist, Srijato Bandopadhyay, a popular poet of the Bengali younger generation and a winner of Ananda Puroskar award in 2004 for his book Udanta Sawb.

The chief guest of the event was Honorable Indian Ambassador to the United States, Arun Singh who delivered his inspiring speech on the Role and Contributions to the American Economy.

The Book Fair commenced simultaneously in the morning in the main hall. The book fair floor was full of book tables that displayed a number of books by leading publishers and sellers like Roy Bookstores, Kolkata; Bodhi Praashan, Jaipur; Tulika Books, Marlboro; Grandparents by Aaria, Nashua, Barely Read Boo, Sudbury; Wellesley Books/Penguin RH; Authors Direct – Worldwide.

This was followed by authors’ ‘Recital & Reading’ session that included Sudipta Bhawmi, Sunayana Kachroo, Partha Banerjee, Anay, Chandu Shah, and Neela Bhattacharya Saxena who recited enthusiastically about their works. All the writers, speakers, artists and directors were recognized with much gratitude for their time and active participation in the event.

Special thanks were given to the sponsors like Billion Bricks, Singapore; H4training, Boston; Urban Public, Denver; Chettinad Grill, Dr. Gauri Dutta, Kohinoor Collections, Raj Dogra Realty, Moksha Spa, A1 Home Medical Supplies, Huntington Learning Center, DOPL, Kolkata; Teamwork Arts, Ltd, Delhi for their encouraging support.

Muslims unite after attack on mosque

New York, NY: A community in Queens is coming together to stand up against hate after several people were injured in an attack inside the Jamaica Muslim Center. Michael Voyard, 26, is charged with assault, criminal mischief and menacing after he allegedly punched several people during afternoon prayer service on April 26. The Queens district attorney says the incident is not considered a bias crime, but the congregants disagree.

“He came inside the mosque, said he was the prophet,” Mohammad Rahman said. “Asking for Koran to show proof that he’s the prophet.” Surveillance video shows what happened when those in Jamaica Muslim Center tried to get Voyard to calm down. “Suddenly, he started punching, kicking to our elderly brothers and then whoever near to him,” Rahman said.

Muslims unite after attack on mosqueThe police say he was high on drugs during the incident, which left several of the mosque members in the hospital. Salem Yafai, 69, suffered severe head injuries. Mazeda Uddin says Voyard went after her as he ran out of the Muslim center.

“He saw the hijab,” she said. “I was screaming. I was looking for help from other people.”

She says Voyard then got into her brother’s car and ripped off the rear-view mirror before running from the area, stripping off his clothes and waiting for the police to arrive.

“I was able to get my officers here immediately, and we were able to arrest this person within minutes,” NYPD Captain Paul Valerga said.

He was taken to Queens Hospital Center for evaluation. He has since been released on bail, which outraged many members of the community. “I would like to request the authorities to take care of this issue seriously, for the sake of harmony and peace in our community,” Rahman said.

“(We need) to protect Muslims and other innocent citizens from this kind of attack.”

Indo-Caribbean Man Beaten By Youth Yelling ‘ISIS’

A young man of Indo-Caribbean origin was attacked by several youth in Astoria, Queens, N.Y., last week, shouting “ISIS, ISIS” and punching and beating him. Police are describing it as a bias crime, according to news reports.

Though the 19-year old victim’s name was not revealed by police, Gothamist newspaper reported his father’s name as Ray Bisram, who told media his son was “traumatized” by the attack. The youth who attacked him were carrying a metal pipe which they threatened to use on him, and a baseball bat.

Bisram told Univision TV, “Right now, he’s kind of traumatized, because, you know, a guy punching him and another guy running with a bat and a iron pipe scream out, you know, racist words and stuff toward him, he’s pretty traumatized because he’s thinking what if they would have hit me with that pipe.”

A little after 1 pm, in broad daylight on April 27, the victim was walking on 10th Street in Astoria, when he noticed three tens aged 17-19, following him. One of them shouted to him calling him an “Arab” and punched him in the fact twice when he turned around. They brandished the metal pipe and baseball bat at him. Luckily, the victim was able to sidestep the metal pipe swung at him.

A neighbor, Ron Garcia was on the street when he saw the attack taking place. “They pushed him up there and that’s when they went to take the swing on the pipe with him,” Garcia is quoted saying in the report “He averted it, like he moved out away and midway to me, and when he made his way to me, that’s when they ran up the block.”

The NYPD has put out a description of the attackers — one male, aged 17-19 years-old, short black close cut hair, approximately 5’6″ tall, 160 lbs, last seen wearing a dark colored two tone sweater with vertical lines, black pants and black sneakers. Another male, 17-19 years-old, approximately 5’9″ tall, 180 lbs., chin strap beard and short black hair, last seen wearing a black jacket, black t-shirt, dark colored blue jeans and black sneakers. The third suspect is around 18-years-old, approximately 5’9″ tall, black hair and a beard, last seen wearing a black hooded sweat jacket with white horizontal stripes, black jeans, grey t-shirt and grey sneakers. Police want anyone with information to call NYPD’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or for Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782). The public can also go to the Crime Stoppers website or text their tips to 274637 (CRIMES) then entering TIP577. All calls are confidential.

Samiya Fagun Wins Congressional District Art Contest

New York, NY: Samiya Fagun, a Bangladeshi student at Newtown High School in Elmhurst, Queens, has been crowned the winner of the fourth annual Congressional District Art Contest, known locally as Meng art contest after U.S. Rep. Grace Meng (D-Queens). Meng announced April 25 that this year’s contest marked the first time that a student of Bangladeshi descent has won the competition.

A total of 46 students – including several others of South Asian descent – from 13 high schools participated in the contest. Meng presented all of them with special certificates of Congressional recognition. More than 650,000 high school students throughout the United States have participated since the competition began in 1982.

The contest, which consisted of entries from Queens high school students, is part of “An Artistic Discovery”, the national art contest sponsored each year by the House of Representatives that showcases the artwork of all Congressional district art contest winners from across the nation.

Beginning this June, Fagun’s winning artwork – along with the winning pieces from art contests in Congressional districts throughout the United States – will be displayed for one year in the historic Cannon Tunnel, a heavily-traveled corridor of the United States Capitol.

Fagun, along with one of her parents, will also be awarded round-trip airplane tickets to Washington, D.C. – courtesy of Southwest Airlines – to join Meng at the opening ceremonies of the national art competition.

The ceremony scheduled for June takes place on Capitol Hill and will recognize Fagun’s exceptional artistic talents as well as those of all the other young artists from around the country. Fagun, 18,  and the winners from each Congressional district art contest will also be eligible for a scholarship from the Savannah College of Art and Design in Georgia. A resident of Elmhurst, Fagun won the competition for her watercolor drawing entitled “Moments of Life.” She emigrated to the U.S. from Dhaka three years ago. She plans to attend City College of New York in the fall and may pursue a major in art.

5¢ Fee on Plastic Bags Approved by New York City Council

The ubiquitous, easily torn, often doubled-up plastic bags from the grocery store — hoarded by dog owners, despised by the environmentally concerned and occasionally caught in trees — will soon cost at least a nickel in New York City. The City Council voted 28 to 20 on Thursday, May 6th to require certain retailers to collect a fee on each carryout bag, paper or plastic, with some exceptions. Mayor Bill de Blasio has expressed support for the measure.

Passage of the bill came after two years of debate and at least one other attempt by the city’s elected officials to charge a fee or tax on disposable bags. The legislation, modeled on similar laws in California and Washington, D.C., encountered an unusual amount of resistance and resulted in what council members said was one of the closest votes in years, on par with the extension of term limits passed during the tenure of Mr. de Blasio’s predecessor, Michael R. Bloomberg.

The vehemence of the opposition could perhaps be traced to plastic bags’ daily presence in the lives of New Yorkers, who often shop for groceries spontaneously and then lug the crinkly bags home to be reused as trash-can liners or to pick up after pets. As with previous measures adopted by the 51-member Council to prohibit smoking in bars and to include calorie information on restaurant menus, the impact of the bag bill, which would take effect in October, is likely to be immediate for millions of people.

That many will be unhappy about paying for bags that have always been free is the point.

“The fee is irritating, which is precisely why it works,” said Councilman Brad Lander, a Brooklyn Democrat and, with Councilwoman Margaret Chin, a Manhattan Democrat, a main sponsor of the legislation. “We don’t want to pay it so we’ll bring bags instead. So the fact that it’s irritating irritates a lot of people.” In New York City, the Sanitation Department has said it collects roughly 10 billion single-use plastic bags a year.

Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj Inspires Thousands In New York Region

Long Island, NY: Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj’s visit to the Tri-State region last week has attracted thousands of his followers to listen the wisdom words that are known to have transformed the lives of people around the world through meditation.

On Friday, April 29th, thousands attended the talk in Hindi at the Amityville Meditation Center on Long Island, by Sant Rajinder Singh Ji , Head of Science of Spirituality (SoS)/Sawan Kirpal Ruhani Mission. Earlier on Wednesday, the spiritual Master inaugurated  the Science of Spirituality New Jersey Meditation Center in Perth Amboy, home to large Spanish and Hindi speaking communities. The center hosts a library, an office, rooms for children and young adults, a book store, and a large kitchen, and of course, a meditation hall.

Acknowledging the multicultural and diverse makeup of the community, Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj said the path of Sant Mat brings together people of all faiths, all cultures, and all walks of life. The unifying thread among all, he said, is our humanity and our search for God. Having a center is a great blessing as it offers the opportunity to come together, sit together, share, and focus on what is truly important in life – our relationship with God.

Sant Rajinder Singh Ji Maharaj’s discourse in the tristate on Sunday, May 1 was on “Meditation to Access Spiritual Realms” followed by initiation. To date, Science of Spirituality/Sawan Kirpal Ruhani Mission has 2059 centers in 54 countries around the world. On Monday, May 2, he gave his second address at the widely respected institution, sponsored by theUNSRC SaluS Well Being Network Club in collaboration with Science of Spirituality. Appropriate to the occasion, his topic was, “Meditation as Medication for the Soul,” based on his book by the same name. The Reverend Susana Bastarrica, president, UNSRC SaluS Well Being Network, and Mr. Vijay Nambiar, Special Advisor on Myanmar to Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon introduced the spiritual Master.

The spiritual Master spoke to an attentive audience about the benefits of meditation, emphasizing that relaxation, stress relief, better concentration, and improved relationships are byproducts of meditation, not its sole purpose. The prime purpose of stilling the body and stilling the mind in meditation is to experience God within ourselves, he told the audience. For more information about the weekend program, please go to www.sos.org/event/nynj.

‘Sikh Project’ To Spread Awareness Of Sikh Identity In U.S.

New York, NY: The backlash against colored people, especially after the 9/11 attacks seems to continue. The Sikhs in the US feel they are more likely to face profiling, bigotry and backlash than the average American because of the two symbols of their distinct identity – beard and turban.

To dispel this misperception and spread better awareness about the religion, a new Sikh art exhibit will be held in New York later this year to showcase the pride taken by the community in their religious and cultural practices. UK-based photographers Amit and Naroop will click portraits of Sikh Americans under “The Sikh Project” mounted by The Sikh Coalition. These portraits will be unveiled around the 15th anniversary of 9/11.

‘Sikh Project’ To Spread Awareness Of Sikh Identity In U.S.The Coalition is the largest Sikh American advocacy and community development organization in the US and works towards the realization of civil and human rights for all people, particularly Sikhs. After their critically acclaimed exhibit in the UK, the two photographers, who are proud of their Sikh heritage, said they are “very excited” about their upcoming exhibition.

“We are very excited! In the US, it will serve as an educational piece as well as an art project as the awareness of the Sikh identity is still misunderstood; so we are hoping it will have a wider impact,” the two photographers told this correspondent in an email interview from New York.

The photography exhibit, which explores the beauty, style and symbolism of the Sikh articles of faith, will include both turbaned men and women and feature a combination of iconic Sikh Americans and a few selected winners.

Speaking about how the idea of ‘Sikh Project’ came to them, the two photographers said it was in 2013 that it struck them when they “noticed men of different backgrounds and ages growing beards for fashion, as part of their identity. Being Sikh photographers, we wanted to show that in our culture, the beard has been a part of the Sikh identity for hundreds of years,” they said in the joint interview.

Talking about the response of the people, the two photographers said it has been “fantastic”.

“The subjects involved have seen the success we have had, so they are excited to be involved. It’s the complete opposite of the UK Singh project as nobody wanted to be involved at first and it took a while for it to build momentum.” They strongly feel that such exhibition will help in showing the Sikh community in the US in a positive light and help fight bigotry they face in their daily lives. “All we can do is to try our best to spread the message. From the response we have had, it appears to have done the job, but there are always more people to reach.”

Holi Celebrations In New York City Showcases Indian Culture

Holi, the festival of colors, was celebrated at the Dag Hammarskjold Plaza in mid-town Manhattan on April 30, as thousands of men, women and children, came to enjoy the festival of colors in what organizers see as a trend toward globalization of the ancient Hindu festival celebrating the onset of Spring. The event attracted a multicultural, international crowd that enjoyed throwing colors and dancing to Indian and fusion music played by live bands, as well as watch groups of dancers perform.

Organized by NYC Bhangra Dance Company & School, the event attracted more than 10,000 people, whose numbers were tracked by the wristbands issued, organizers told Desi Talk. It was the largest of the seven “Holi Hai” events held so far by NYC Bhangra, Megha Kalia, founder of the school said.

“The concept of Holi is catching up all over the world. But it’s also about how you package it,” Kalia said. This was a free, family-friendly, no-alcohol event, the only one of its kind in the city, she said. The event was completely funded by NYC Bhangra, and cost more than $60,000 in total costs, with permits, insurance, etc. making up 30 percent, besides execution, production and cleaning, Kalia said.

“There were people from all walks of life, there was great energy. You really saw the magic unfold before you,” she said describing her experience of merging with the crowds in her Bhangra costume and encouraging groups of attendees, including some very shy kids, take to the floor to dance to the beat. A week before, thousands came to celebrate Holi in Brooklyn that featured a local talent in a music and art festival.

Gujarat And Maharashtra Day Celebrated On Times Square

Gujarat Day and Maharashtra Day, which fall on May 1, were observed through colorful dances and music On the iconic Times Square May 1. On May 1, the Indian states, Maharashtra and Gujarat celebrate thier formation day. It was on this day in 1960 that two states were carved out of the Bombay Presidency: Maharashtra and Gujarat. The states were created  after a series of protests that were part of the Samyukta Maharashtra Andolan that demanded a separate state for Marathi-speaking people.

Gujarat And Maharashtra Day Celebrated On Times SquareThe two-hour event on the iconic Times Square was organized by Jai Bharat Dhol Tasha Pathak USA and Non-Resident Gujarati Community of USA. “Since both the Gujarat Day and Maharashtra Day fall on May one, we thought about organizing a joint celebration,” Manisha

Earlier in the day, Maharashtra Day was separately celebrated at the Indian Consulate before the groups joined hands in Times Square to mark the day. Consul General Riva Ganguly Das and Deputy Consul General Manoj Kumar Mohapatra sent best wishes and support for the celebrations.

Captain Amarinder Singh Promises Solving NRI Issues If Congress Returned To Power

New York, NY: “Punjab is undergoing difficult times at the present, and these difficulties can only be resolved and Punjab’s progress put back on track when Congress government comes back to power,” said Captian Amarinder Singh, Punjab Pradesh Congress Committee President and former Chief Minister of Punjab, while addressing a rally in New York on Saturday May 7, 2016. Stating that the conditions in Punjab are very bad, Capt. Amarinder Sigh said, Sikh leaders themselves are causing harm as some of them will go to any extent for the sake of titles.

He listened to personal issues and general complaints of the nearly 2,000 people in attendance at the rally.  He declared that the properties of NRI Punjabis that have been illegally occupied or confiscated will be freed and given back to the rightful owners.  Once the Conmgress government is established, new rules and procedures will be put in place to resolve NRI problems.  He said he was fully familiar with the problems of the NRIs and has great sympathies for them.

He warned that one has to be cautious of 3 things: White liquor, White Fly and White Topi.  He was critical of both the AAP government in Delhi and the Badal government in Punjab. He lamented that Badal family had ruined Punjab with corruption. In addition, talking about Punjab, he said, inattention to agriculture, joblessness and drug addiction by youth were among the major problems which required careful and urgent social and governmental intervention. He said Punjab was in a dire need for a creative and far-sighted Government and the Congress will be able to deliver that. The backbone of Punjab, the farmer, is in dire shape as their situation is deteriorating and farmers are being forced to commit suicide in alarming numbers.

Capt. Amarinder Singh was on his last leg of his journey in the United States and was addressing a large crowd at the Hilton Hotel in Melville, New York organized under the aegis of the Indian National Overseas Congress, USA headed by President Mohinder Singh Gilzian.

Hon. Sangat Singh Gilzian, MLA from Tanda who, among others, accompanied Capt. Amarinder Singh from Punjab also gave a brief narrative of the deplorable conditions in Punjab and said that Punjab now needed a great leader like Capt. Amarinder Singh to save it from drowning. Hon. Sukh Sarkaria, MLA, Hon. Kewal Dhillon, MLA and Dr. Surinder Malhotra also spoke on the occasion.

Mohinder Singh Gilzian, President of the Indian National Overseas Congress, USA, thanked the audience for coming and participating in the discussions and said that this event brought historic crowd together in New York. Gurmit Singh Gill said that he would take thousands of Punjabi NRIs from USA to Punjab for the 2017 elections. Amongst those who played an active role in organizing the event and making it a grand success included  Karamjit Singh Dhaliwal, President Malwa Brothers Association and Vice-President of INOC, USA, Tejinder Gill and Jasvir Singh Nawanshahr.

According to a press release issued here, George Abraham, Chairman, Mohinder Singh Gilzian, President, and Harbachan Singh, Secretary-General, together with several senior officers of INOC, USA met with Capt. Amarinder Singh before the event, where they discussed some of the important issues and strategies pertaining to the work of the INOC, USA and its resolve to assist in the furtherance of the goal of Capt. Amrinder Singh in his campaign processes. Captain Amarinder Singh expressed deep appreciation for the hard work the group was doing especially in bringing the community together and encouraged Mohinder Singh Gilzian to continue with his good work.

Captain Amarinder Singh Addresses Punjabi Diaspora Across US

New York: Captain Amarinder Singh, former chief minister of the Indian state of Punjab and currently the state Congress chief and MP, was given a rousing reception, when he was invited to address the Punjabi diaspora on May 7th at the Long Island Hilton Hotel in Melville, NY. In addition to Captain Amarinder Singh, the event also hosted the former Maharaja of Patiala.

The leader of the Punjab state Congress Party is travelling through the US to drum up support for the Congress party, which is trying to get back to power in Punjab, where elections are due in February 2017. According to reports, the ruling Akali Dal has lost much of the support and Aam Aadmi Party is gaining ground after winning in Delhi.

Earlier, during an event in Chicago on Friday, the visiting leader said that Punjab desperately needed good governance and this was not the time for experimentation. “Just because some people are telling you that you have tried so and so, now give us a chance does not qualify and entitle them to take over the reins of an important state like Punjab at a critical juncture”, Capt Amarinder told audience in Chicago.

Captain Amarinder Singh Addresses Punjabi Diaspora Across USAnnouncing that it was going to be his last election in 2017, he said, however before hanging his boots, it was his dream to see the smile and shine back on the faces of all the Punjabis, who are otherwise being faced with despair and despondence due to ten year failure of the Akalis. Addressing the Punjabi diaspora and seeking their more involvement and participation in building up Punjab and bringing in change, the former Chief Minister reminded them of their roots and responsibility towards their ancestral place.

“We are glad that all of you have done so well in life and we are proud of you”, he told them, while adding, “now we hope and expect that you will definitely do your bit and help us in re-launching Punjab on the path of progress and prosperity once again”. Later replying to a question, Captain Amarinder said, 1984 was the darkest chapter in the Sikh history which nobody can afford or should forget. “I myself resigned from the parliament and the party over what happened in 1984”, he said, adding, “however Punjab needs to move forward”. He asked as why the Akalis were raking up the issue only during elections and forgetting it the moment elections were over.

Amarinder said, the problem of drugs was very complex and serious saying there were three types of drugs flowing in Punjab. He said, on type of drugs was being smuggled through Pakistan, the other type was coming from Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan and the third and the worst type were the synthetic drugs which were being manufactured locally with the patronage of the Akalis.

“Give me a chance and I will finish this problem, not in four weeks as I have promised, but just one week as I know who all are involved and responsible and it only needs an intent and will to finish it”, he said in response to a question amidst thumping applause.

Captain Amarinder Singh has offered to provide NRI Punjabi doctors, specially psychiatrists and therapists, infrastructure to set up de-addiction centers within the existing government hospitals in all major cities of Punjab, if Congress is voted to power in the state. Addressing a gathering of Punjabi diaspora from Central Califonia at Fresno, Capt Amarinder urged the NRI doctors to work in partnership with him for the rehabilitation of lakhs of

Meanwhile, Captain Amarinder Singh is learnt to have cancelled his scheduled seven-day trip to Canada due to the possibility of facing a case relating to torture in a court in Toronto. The decision came on Saturday after Singh had postponed his arrival in Toronto since he wanted to wait for the court to issue an order before he decided on his course of action.

The case was filed by the activist group Sikhs for Justice (SFJ) on behalf of a Canadian resident who was allegedly tortured during Singh’s tenure as chief minister of Punjab. An official statement released by Singh slammed SFJ’s law fare, saying it was “playing into the hands of the anti-India forces like the ISI to embarrass India and project as if rights violations was the norm of the day in the country (India) like some dictatorships in different parts of the world”. He added, “The government of India, rising above political considerations, must take up the matter with the Canadian government at the highest level.”

UN Owes India $62 Million For Peacekeeping

New York, NY: The United Nations (UN) owes India $62 million – the most it has to pay to any country – for contribution towards peacekeeping operations including troops and equipment, the top official of the world body said. With 7,695 troops, India is currently the second largest contributor among all UN troop contributors to its peace keeping mission around the world. Traditionally, India has been among the largest contributor of troops to UN peacekeeping operations, with nearly 1,80,000 troops having served in over 44 of the 69 peacekeeping operations so far.

As on March 31, 2016, the UN owed troop contributing countries a total of $827 million, including $261 million in troop costs and $480 million for equipment for active missions, Under-Secretary-General for Management Yukio Takasu told reporters here last week.

Of this total, he said the UN owed “the largest amount” of $62 million to India, followed by Bangladesh at $59 million, Pakistan at $49 million and Ethiopia at $47 million. He said money owed to troop contributing nations is “always a source of concern because it is very unfair for them that they provide all the valuable troops, personnel and equipment and they are not reimbursed timely because of financial problems”.

India has repeatedly called for the Security Council to consult troop contributing countries before drawing up peacekeeping mandates given that troops now have to function in increasingly difficult and hostile conflict situations across the world’s hot-spots.

Among the countries that owe the UN money is the US, which has to pay 1.3 billion dollars for peacekeeping and 917 million dollars towards regular budget. Takasu said the world organisation’s financial situation is “sound and positive”, noting, however, that there is “some worry” regarding the areas of regular budget and reserves. “The financial situation of the United Nations is generally sound,” he said.

His overview to the General Assembly’s Fifth Committee, which is tasked with administrative and budgetary concerns, included details on the four main assessment areas of the regular budget; UN peacekeeping operations; international tribunals; and the Capital Master Plan.

Takasu said the organisation’s cash balances were positive at the end of 2015, except for the regular budget, which showed a shortfall of $217 million, which is being funded by a “very small reserve. I think it’s prudent to review the adequacy of the reserves. The regular budget is always tight in the last quarter of the year, and this is expected in 2016. The question is whether the size of the reserve is good enough,” he added.

For the 2015 regular budget, member States were obligated to contribute a total of $2.771 billion, an increase of $159 million from 2014. Payments received were $237 million higher in 2015 than in 2014, Takasu said. Unpaid assessed contributions stood at $1.43 billion as of April 30, 2016, down $163 million from the same period the previous year. For peacekeeping operations, Takasu said the total of unpaid assessments at the end of 2015 was $976 million, reflecting a decrease of $306 million from the previous year.

PM Modi To Address Annual Gala Of USIBC on June 7th

Washington, DC: Prime Minister Narendra Modi will address the annual gala of US-India Business Council on June 7th during his next official visit here, the advocacy group announced here last week. In addition to addressing to the USIBC before who’s who of American corporate sector, he is expected to participate in a roundtable with leading global CEOs, USIBC said.

“It’s a privilege for USIBC to welcome Prime Minister Modi on his fourth visit to the US, particularly in light of the advancement of our countries’ relationship over the past two years,” USIBC president Mukesh Aghi said. “India became the top global FDI destination in 2015 – attracting USD 63 billion – fuelled by Modi’s ability to attract foreign investors and to build a globally competitive environment in India,” Aghi said.

During the annual gala, USIBC will present its Global Leadership Award to the Amazon Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos, and founder and MD of Sun Pharmaceuticals Dilip Shanghvi.
“Jeff and Dilip are two leaders that are shaping the US-India trade ties with their incredible business acumen and have made a lasting impression in integrating India into the global economy,” Aghi said. “We couldn’t think of more qualified icons that are emblematic of the immense potential of our trade relationship. We are honored to be presenting the 2016 Global Leadership Award to them,” he said.

The bilateral relationship has matured significantly over the past a few years, and extends beyond the leadership of the two countries, he said in a statement. Though there has been no official confirmation of Modi’s visit either from the Prime Minister’s Office or the White House, he is expected to visit the US at the invitation of President Barack Obama, who is likely to host him for a State dinner. US House of Representative Speaker Paul Ryan has already invited him to address a joint meeting of the Congress on June 8.

Pranav Patel Charged In Alleged $131Million Stock Market Scam

Pranav Patel, a stock broker of Indian descent has been charged in an alleged $131 million stock manipulation scheme after investigations by a task force set up for President Barack Obama’s war on financial crimes, federal officials announced May 4.

Pranav Patel of Tamarac, Florida, participated along with eight others in the multistate scam “through a dizzying round of unauthorized trades” to pump up the share price of a company with no business operations, Robert L. Capers, the federal prosecutor in Brooklyn said.

The 35-year-old Patel was scheduled to appear later on Wednesday in a federal court in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, for legal proceedings to bring him to Brooklyn for trial. The case involved the NASDAQ-traded stocks of ForceField Energy Inc., which claimed to be a worldwide distributor of LED lighting products.

The nine from four states across the US were charged with securities fraud, conspiracy, wire fraud, money laundering and making a false statement to law enforcement officials.

The charges followed actions by the President’s financial fraud enforcement task force that “was established to wage an aggressive, coordinated, and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes,” Capers’ office said.

The nine, who included Naveed Khan of Staten Island, New York, “designed an elaborate but fraudulent scheme built on lies, kickbacks and manipulated trading activity to defraud the securities markets, the investing public and their clients,” Capers said. “They took a company with essentially no business operations and little revenue and deceived the market and their clients into believing it was worth hundreds of millions of dollars through a dizzying round of unauthorized trades and deceptive promotions.”

“The scheme ended up costing investors approximately $131 million in losses,” according to Diego Rodriguez, the Assistant Director-in-Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) New York Field Office.

The prosecutor’s office alleged that a ForceField official hired Jared Mitchell, the managing partner of a financial firm, to pay kickbacks using offshore bank accounts in 2014 to Patel and four other stock brokers for buying ForceField shares in their client’s accounts to manipulate the price.

The announcement did not identify the official, but Richard St-Julien, who was ForceField’s chairman and founder, was arrested in April last year. He was charged with securities fraud conspiracy. He paid the alleged participants through a Belize-based company in a scheme to manipulate the company’s share prices.

2 Young Volunteers From India Honored In USA

Mahima Varma, 17, of Kolkata and Nikhiya Shamsher, 13, of Bangalore, were honored on May 1st at a gala awards ceremony at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History during the 21st annual presentation of the U.S. Prudential Spirit of Community Awards. Mahima and Nikhiya were presented with special commemorative trophies by Prudential Financial CEO John Strangfeld during the evening event held each year in May to present awards to America’s top two youth volunteers from each state. The honorees were also personally congratulated for their outstanding volunteer service by Academy Award-winning actress Hilary Swank.

Mahima and Nikhiya were named top youth volunteers by India’s Pramerica Spirit of Community Awards program in April. They received awards including an all-expense-paid trip for the special recognition events in Washington, D.C.

Mahima, a class XII student at Loreto House, Kolkata, is the co-founder and regional chair of “Girls for Tomorrow,” a nationwide movement to spread awareness about rape and teach young girls self-defense. In the aftermath of the Nirbhaya incident, Mahima was actively involved in many peace marches and protests. With an understanding that it would take years to change societal mindsets, she and two friends decided to empower girls instead of waiting for change to happen.
With the help of professional teachers, Mahima brings self-defense classes and life skill workshops to girls in three organizations: Udayan, a home and school for children with leprosy, Child Care Home, for girls rescued from red light areas, and Bastee Welfare Center, a literacy center for young mothers.

Nikhiya, a class VIII student at Greenwood High School, Bangalore, has launched two initiatives to educate the underprivileged – “Bags, Books and Blessings” and “Yearn to Learn.” Nikhiya started Bags, Books and Blessings after she realized that there were many children like her who did not have the basic resources to go to school.

She started her donation campaign in school, distributed brochures, put up posters, sent emails to all parents in the school database, and took turns with her friends to visit every classroom to motivate students to donate their schoolbags, textbooks, notebooks, stationery and other items.
Nikhiya also designed a website and urged journalists to spread the word so that more schools would donate. Her efforts yielded results and the donations started pouring in.

When Nikhiya learned that many schools do not have laboratory facilities due to limited resources, she decided to fill this void through fundraising efforts that raised a total of Rs. 4.18 lakhs. So far, Yearn to Learn has set up 11 laboratories in three schools in Bangalore, benefitting 2,250 students. Nikhiya says, “We may not be able to solve the world’s problems, but we can make the little part of the world where we live, a better place.” The Prudential Spirit of Community Awards were created by Prudential in 1995 to encourage youth volunteerism and to identify and reward young role models.

GOP Delegate, Rina Shah Bharara Dismissed After Favoring Clinton Over Trump

Rina Shah Bharara, an Indian American Republican convention delegate, who had said she might prefer Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump has been stripped of her slot. Bharara, 32, was one of 19 people elected at the D.C. party convention in March to serve as delegate to the national GOP convention. She ran as a Marco Rubio delegate and was the second-leading vote-getter.

Republican Party officials also said, Bharara had lied about her residency. According to reports, an investigation determined Bharara is a Virginia resident and therefore ineligible to be a D.C. delegate, said Patrick Mara, executive director of the District of Columbia’s GOP.

Bharara is reported to have acknowledged that she has homes in northern Virginia and the District and that she splits her time between the two, but said her District residency is legitimate. She said the residency issue is a pretext for removal by party officials upset she said she might prefer Clinton over Trump. “This is all because they’re trying to appease people from other states in response to my anti-Trump comments,” she is said to have told the media.

In an interview with The Associated Press Bharara was quoted to have said that she would vote for Clinton over Trump. “I think Hillary would be better for our country,” she said then. “I personally think she is safer than this renegade crazy person.”

NRI Couple In Virginia Convicted for H-1B Visa Fraud

An Indian American couple has been convicted on charges of H-1B visa fraud and will face up to 30 years imprisonment, the Department of Justice has said. Raju Kosuri, 44, and his wife Smriti Jharia, 45, of Ashburn, Virginia, along with four co-conspirators fraudulently applied for more than 800 illegal immigration benefits under the H-1B visa program.

The indictment alleges that Kosuri has set up a network of shell companies that he presents to immigration authorities as independent businesses in need of Indian workers, but which he in fact owns and controls.

It alleged that Kosuri and his co-conspirators use these entities to file petitions for non-existent job vacancies at Kosuri’s data center in Danville, Virginia. The visa fraud scheme involves the forgery of numerous individuals’ signatures on visa petitions and exhibits without their knowledge.

The indictment alleges that Kosuri has generated gross proceeds of at least $20 million over the life of the scheme, the Justice Department said. The indictment also alleged that Kosuri and Jharia conspired with a consultant named Raimondo Piluso to defraud the Small Business Administration, by submitting fraudulent HUBZone applications.

Kosuri, Jharia, and Piluso are alleged to have concealed the true location, ownership, and employees of a business called EcomNets Federal Solutions in order to obtain federal loan and contract preferences, from which they have generated $150,000 in loan proceeds and five contract awards.

Priyanka Chopra Has All Praises For Obama After Meeting In White House

Washington, DC: Actress Priyanka Chopra was elated to meet the “very funny and charming” US President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner here. The 33-year-old actress, who found global recognition with her character Alex Parrish in the American TV series “Quantico”, looked ravishing in a deep-cut, striped black gown at the dinner held on April 30 night.

The actress was among some of Hollywood’s biggest names like Bradley Cooper, Lucy Liu, Jane Fonda and Gladys Knight to have been invited for the special dinner, which will take place at the White House, said a statement from Priyanka’s representatives.

Priyanka also shared a photograph of herself along with the two. The U.S. President looked dapper in a black suit and crisp white shirt which he teamed with a black bow tie, while Michelle Obama looked lovely in an embellished beige gown.

“Lovely to meet the very funny and charming Barack Obama and the beautiful Michelle Obama,” Priyanka captioned the photograph. “Thank you for a lovely evening. Cannot wait to start working on your girls education program,” she added.

Mallika Sherawat Joins To Spread Message Of UN’s World Humanitarian Summit

Mallika Sherawat, a 39-year-old actress from India has been featured in the United Nations’ short video “Impossible Choices,” released on April 28. Sherawat joins a group of celebrities like Daniel Craig, Forest Whitaker, Alfre Woodard, Yara Shahidi and Rosario Dawson, promoting the upcoming World Humanitarian Summit in Istanbul, to be held from May 23-24. The Summit is a call to action by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to reduce human loss and suffering from crises by setting an agenda to make humanitarian action fit for the challenges the world currently faces and will face in the future.

Impossible choices are being made every single day by the more than 125 million people in desperate need of humanitarian assistance around the globe. To spark action ahead of the first-ever World Humanitarian summit, the United Nations (UN) has launched a global, interactive digital experience that aims to inspire commitment to meaningful change in the name of humanity. The digital challenge at ImpossibleChoices.org features a three-minute, online journey based on real experiences people in crises often face. At the end of the online experience, users can share results across their respective social platforms and call upon global leadership to attend the Summit, and take bold action.

Touching on the UN’s Global Goals for Sustainable Development, the celebrities say in the video: “Our global leaders will be asked to make commitments to end the crisis, to put humanity first. Let us commit to end hunger for those in need, to empower youth impacted by conflict, to ensure displaced children still receive an education, to resolve conflict through dialogue and reconciliation rather than violence and revenge, to eliminate the threat of mines and explosive hazards, and to make sure no parent or child has to make an impossible choice.”

Sherawat, along with actress Catarina Furtado, hip hop artist Big Sean, Princess Haya bint al Hussein, Dawson and Craig, go on to jointly say in the video, “If we actually want to make things better, then the choice is clear: We urge our global leaders to show up and take bold action.”

“Arguably one of the most powerful tools at our disposal today is social media — it can give a voice to the voiceless, create instant awareness and drive change in ways never before seen around the world,” said Stephen O’Brien, UN Humanitarian Chief. “With Impossible Choices, we are calling upon the digitally-connected to help create a movement towards showing world leaders that the world is looking to them to make bold decisions and act for the good of humanity.”

In an effort to ensure the campaign maintains the most authentic possible voice, the UN has also appointed 20 Champions for Humanity, a group of influential individuals — from CEOs to photographers, philanthropists to entertainers — to kick-off the Impossible Choices campaign and gather support from within their networks.

The video ends with a plea to petition world leaders to attend the Summit. “Millions are counting on us. Go to ImpossibleChoices.org to tell your leaders to be there and put humanity first,” the celebs urge. For more information about the World Humanitarian Summit, please visit: www.worldhumanitariansummit.org.

Clinton Promises To Appoint More Asian Americans In Her Administration

Washington, DC: Even as both the leading political parties in the United States are wooing the influential Asian American community and seeking to win their trust and votes, Democratic Party’s leading presidential contender, Hillary Clinton has promised to appoint more members of the Asian community in her administration, is she were to win the White House in the upcoming Presidential elections to be held on November 8th this year. “I want to let you know that I will make sure that you are well represented in my administration if I am fortunate enough to be your president,” Clinton said, according to news reports.

In a video snippet of her speech on the Web, the presidential hopeful urged the enthusiastic audience which shouted her name repeatedly, that they needed to join her campaign, adding, “I want you to be involved not just in my campaign, but more importantly, really governing our country in a way that keeps alive the promise of America,”

Indian Americans have been nominated to several key position under the current Obama administration as never been before. Urging them to be more politically active, President Obama praised the Asian community in his keynote address, and took credit for hiring more Asian-Americans than any past administration. “You’re part of the lifeblood of this nation.  You are our teachers and our faith leaders, our doctors, our caretakers, our artists, our shopkeepers, our police officers and firefighters,” Obama said. “You are our soldiers and our sailors, airmen, marines, coast guardsmen, defending our freedom every day. And, increasingly, you are a powerful, visible force in American political life.”

According to Sekhar Narasimhan, founder of the super-PAC AAPI Victory Fund, the takeaway for him from the President’s message was that Asian Americans needed to get moving, get to the polling booths, to make a difference. “Only 56 percent of Asian-Americans are registered to vote, and Indian-Americans probably even less,” said Narasimhan who is also co-chair of the Democratic National Committee’s Indo-American Council. “Indian-Americans are very apathetic, even in the simple act of voting. Our data shows that in the 6 swing states, Nevada, Colorado, Ohio, Virginia, North Carolina, and Florida, we are the margin of victory.”

Comedian and author Aziz Ansari was presented with the Vision Award at the gala, along with actor Alan Yang who was the co-star in his latest feature documentary “Master of None. “We need more minority creators,” Ansari said in his acceptance speech, NBC News reported. “Don’t wait for white people to open the door for you,” he added.

The event was emceed by two Indian-Americans, actor Parvesh Cheena and economist and entrepreneur Sonal Shah. Cheena best known for his role on NBC’s sitcom Outsourced and as the voice of the Transformer Blades on Discovery Family Channel’s “Transformers: Rescue Bots.” Shah is currently executive director of the Beeck Center for Social Impact & Innovation and previously was the director of the White House office of Social Innovation and Civic Participation. The 22nd annual gala was attended by more than 1,000 guests including members of Congress, among them Rep. Ami Bera, D-California, political activists, community leaders, and celebrities as well as White House Champions of Change.

C. Raja Mohan Named Chicago Council’s First Marshall Bouton Asia Fellow

Chicago, IL: Dr. C. Raja Mohan, the founding director of Carnegie India, has been appointed as the inaugural Marshall M. Bouton Asia Fellow of The Chicago Council on Global Affairs. “Given Asia’s increasing global influence and reach, including in Chicago, the Council established the fellowship to explore the region’s economic and political development, a statement issued by the Council stated.

A highly regarded foreign policy strategist from India, Dr. Mohan will visit Chicago from May 9-13 and deliver the Council’s first Marshall M. Bouton Lecture: “American Retrenchment: Implications for India and Asia.” Dr. Mohan also will meet with civic leaders, corporate executives and local scholars to build relationships and share knowledge about critical issues facing Asia and the United States.

“America’s future is increasingly linked to Asia’s, and Dr. Mohan has a unique vantage point from which to assess the importance of this relationship,” said Ambassador Ivo H. Daalder, president of the Council on Global Affairs. “It is critical that we understand what drives Asia and how we can learn from each other in an increasingly interconnected world.”

Dr. Mohan’s visit marks the beginning of the prestigious fellowship, which the Council’s board of directors established in recognition of Marshall M. Bouton, president of the Council from 2001 to 2013. It is awarded to a prominent scholar, former senior policymaker or public intellectual known for contributions to Asia’s economic and political development or international relations who is invited to spend one week as a visiting fellow at the Council.

In addition to his position at Carnegie India, which opened in April 2016 as the sixth international center of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Dr. Mohan is a visiting research professor at the Institute of South Asian Studies at the National University of Singapore and a columnist on foreign affairs for the Indian Express. He was previously a member of India’s National Security Advisory Board and was a nonresident senior associate with Carnegie before he became director of Carnegie India.

From 2009 to 2010, Dr. Mohan was the Henry Alfred Kissinger Chair in Foreign Policy and International Relations at the Library of Congress. He has been a professor of South Asian studies at the Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi and the Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore, and he also served as the diplomatic editor and Washington correspondent of The Hindu. Dr. Mohan has authored several books on India’s foreign policy, including “Modi’s World: Expanding India’s Sphere of Influence” (Harper Collins India, 2015) and “India’s Naval Strategy and Asian Security” (Routledge, 2016), co-edited with Anit Mukherjee.

The Bouton Asia Fellowship adds to the Council’s growing efforts to engage promising leaders from around the world to visit Chicago and exchange ideas with city officials, scholars and corporate leaders. The Gus Hart Fellowship brings emerging leaders from the Latin American and Caribbean region to Chicago, and the Dr. Scholl Visiting Fellow on U.S.-China Relations is awarded to a Chinese scholar, former policymaker or other expert. These visiting fellowships reaffirm the Council’s commitment to convening leading global voices and raising awareness of issues that transform how people, business and governments engage the world.

Satya Nadella, Indra Nooyi, Bhavesh Patel Among Highest-paid CEOs

Bhavesh Patel, CEO of LyondellBasell Industries, has been placed sixth on the list of highest paid CEOs with a total compensation of $24.5 million while PepsiCo’s India Nooyi was at the eighth position with a pay rate of $22.2 million. Nadella, the Microsoft CEO made the cut at 26th position in the 100 highest-paid CEOs list with a total compensation of $18.3 million.

Oracle’s Mark V. Hurd and Safra A. Catz topped the 100 highest paid global CEOs list with a total compensation of $53.2 million each. Robert A. Iger of Walt Disney ($43.5 million), David M. Cote of Honeywell International ($33.1 million), General Electric’s Jeffrey R. Immelt ($26.4 million), Randall L. Stephenson of AT&T ($22.4 million), Rupert Murdoch of Twenty-First Century Fox ($22.2 million) and James P. Gorman of Morgan Stanley ($22 million) made up the top 10.

According to Equilar, the median pay was $14.5 million in fiscal 2015 which grew by three percent from the previous year. As many eight women CEOs made it to the list. “Median compensation for these eight women was $20 million in 2015, while average pay was $22.7 million,” said Equilar. California-based privately held Equilar generates information on executive compensation packages.

Donald Trump Clinches GOP Race

Washington, DC: Donald J. Trump became the presumptive Republican presidential nominee on Tuesday, May 1st, with a landslide win in Indiana that drove his principal opponents, Senator Ted Cruz and Governor John Kasich of Ohio from the race and cleared the way for the polarizing, populist outsider to take control of the party.

After months of sneering dismissals and expensive but impotent attacks from Republicans fearful of his candidacy, Trump is now positioned to clinch the required number of delegates for the nomination by the last day of voting on June 7.

In the Democratic contest, Senator Bernie Sanders rebounded from a string of defeats to prevail in Indiana over Hillary Clinton, who largely abandoned the state after polls showed her faring poorly with the predominantly white electorate. But the outcome was not expected to significantly change Clinton’s sizable lead in delegates needed to win the Democratic nomination.

According to analysts, Trump’s victory was an extraordinary moment in American political history: He is now on course to be the first standard-bearer of a party since Dwight D. Eisenhower, a five-star general and the commander of Allied Forces in Europe during World War II, who had not served in elected office.

Trump, a real estate tycoon turned reality television celebrity, was not a registered Republican until April 2012. He has given hundreds of thousands of dollars to Democrats, including his likely general election opponent, Mrs. Clinton. And, at various points in his life, he has held positions antithetical to Republican orthodoxy on almost every major issue in the conservative canon, including abortion, taxes, trade, and gun control. But none of this stopped him.

While some called for unity, many Republican leaders refrained from falling in line behind Trump, with dozens avoiding inquiries about where they stood or saying they wanted Trump to detail his policies or tone down his language first.

Research Symposium & Poster Contest To Be Held At AAPI’s Annual Convention

(New York, NY: May 4th, 2016) The high quality of medical care humanity enjoys today is the result of centuries of research by physicians, scientists, and the medical professionals investigating the causes and potential treatments for diseases. Insights provided by medical research today promise to lessen the impact of today’s greatest health problems, including diabetes, cancer, and heart disease. When you support and encourage medical research, you are helping medical researchers build the future cures for various diseases, making significant headway in advancing medical knowledge and improving patient care, and thus contributing to humanity to live healthier and longer lives.

Indian American Physicians are way ahead in the medical field, and contribute immensely towards medical research. Encouraging young medical researchers of Indian Origin, “following in the traditions of American Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI), a Research Symposium and Contest with Poster Presentation is being held during the 34th annual convention being organized by the American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin in New York City on Saturday July 2nd at the Hotel Marriott Marquis, Times Square.

Quoting Bill Gates, who had stated that “I believe in innovation and that the way you get innovation is you fund research and you learn the basic facts,” Dr. Seema Jain, President of AAPI, said,  “The contest provides a forum for medical students and researchers in the area of health to showcase their research, exchange ideas, and improve their communication skills while competing for awards and recognition at the annual convention of 2016.” Students, residents, faculty and medical practitioners have been invited to submit their research abstracts and posters for presentation at the 2016 annual convention. The competition is open to both members and non-members of AAPI.

The Research Competition gives students the opportunity to share their research ideas and results during the GHS in a special forum that provides visibility for their work. It also gives students the opportunity to meet with and interact with the attendees at the Convention to share ideas, gain new insights, and understand possible practical applications, while giving students an opportunity to sharpen their communication skills. Above all, it serves to recognize and reward outstanding student research.

“The AAPI Research Symposium is an exciting venue to learn about and present new and exciting research as well as case reports and discussions,” says Dr. Kunj Patel, an organizer of the contest. “Presenting before the Indian physician community adds a personal feel to the event that provides an additional sense of pride. I have presented at many renown national meetings at this point in my career, but my parents were particularly proud of my accomplishments with AAPI.”

The contest is open to all Medical Residents of Indian Origin. The conference promises to feature an exciting educational program with national leaders in medicine. The highly competitive and prestigious completion will give each participant to showcase one’s research by submitting an abstract in one of the following categories: Basic Science; Clinical Medicine; and Clinical Vignette.

The annual convention this year is being organized by AAPI’s New Jersey Chapter. “Many of the physicians who will attend this convention have excelled in different specialties and subspecialties and occupy high positions as faculty members of medical schools, heads of departments, and executives of hospital staff. The AAPI Convention offers an opportunity to meet directly with these physicians who are leaders in their fields and play an integral part in the decision-making process regarding new products and services,” Dr. Jain said.

The deadline for the online submission of one’s entry is 11:59 PM Eastern time on June 1, 2016. Abstracts will be accepted on a rolling basis, with all notices occurring before June 10th, 2016. All presenters must be official registrants for the conference. Expected to be a great day of presentations and discussions, the winners will be awarded with awards. Poster Presentation & Judging will be held on Saturday, July 2, 2016 and the applicants whose works are picked for oral and poster presentations will have free entrance to the research competition.

AAPI, an umbrella organization, representing 130 local chapters, specialty societies and alumni organizations, is the largest ethnic medical organization in the United States. For over 30 years, Indian physicians have made significant contributions to health care in this country, not only practicing in inner cities, rural areas and peripheral communities but also at the top medical schools and other academic centers. Almost 10%-12% of medical students entering US schools are of Indian origin. For more information on the contest, please contact Dr. Kunj Patel (kunj.patel@emory.edu) or Dr. Amar Shah (secretary@aapimsrf.org).

For more details on AAPI and the convention, please visit: www.aapiconvention.org and www.aapiusa.org

Harmeet Dhillon, First Woman Of Indian Origin On Republican National Committee

Harmeet Dhillon has become the first ever woman of Indian Origin to be a member of the powerful Republican National Committee. With election to the nation office  during the California state GOP convention, Dhillon is expected to be charged with representing the California Republican Party during July’s national convention.

The election to the national committee is another milestone to Dhillon, after she had become the first woman to be elected as the party’s vice chair, where she is currently serving in her third year. Her campaign for committeewoman was unopposed, she did receive the endorsement of nearly every major member of the party within the state. Dhillon, who was born in Chandigarh, and is a Sikh, got elected at the California Republican Party convention.

“I don’t particularly like the way that our debates have been structured,” Dhillon said. “I don’t particularly like the timing and the sequence of the primaries in some states, and I think that we need some changes there.”

Harmeet Dhillon, First Woman Of Indian Origin On Republican National CommitteeAccording to her, “Donald Trump, seems to be very popular amongst Indian-American first-generation immigrants. I think when a lot of them came to this country they wanted to become millionaires and they wanted to be real estate barons and (they see him and think) ‘look, that guy did it,’ so there’s a lot of admiration for his business acumen and his success story.”

A nationally recognized trial lawyer, Dhillon, 47, was born in India, but raised in rural North Carolina after her Sikh parents moved to the US. “For the next four years starting in late July, I will help shape the policies of the party of Abraham Lincoln and Harriet Tubman, the party of liberty and opportunity,” Dhillon said in a statement, after the election. Based in San Francisco, Dhillon among other things also sat on the board of the American Civil Liberties Union, and once made a financial contribution to Kamala Harris’ campaign for local office.

Following her clerkship with Paul V Niemeyer of the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, Dhillon’s practice in New York, London, and the San Francisco Bay Area has focused on federal and state commercial litigation and arbitration, with a particular emphasis on unfair competition/trade secret misappropriation, intellectual property (including trademark litigation and internet torts), complex contractual disputes, and First Amendment litigation.

“I could not have done this without the support of a huge number of friends old and new and my family, who have brought me to where I am today. Thank you to my parents Parminder Kaur Dhillon and Tejpal Singh Dhillon for instilling conservative values in me. I am truly honored,” she said.

Medical errors third largest killer in US: Study

Cases of patients mistakenly operated on the wrong leg, administered double the permissible dosage of medicines or not given adequate care could be more common — and have far more serious consequences — than one thinks. A new study published in the BMJ (formerly the British Medical Journal) on Wednesday said that if medical error were a disease, it would be the third largest killer in the US.

There hasn’t been an equivalent study for India, but a Harvard University study in 2013 estimated that 52 lakh injuries occur across India each year (out of the 430 lakh globally) due to medical errors and adverse events. The new BMJ study, conducted by a Johns Hopkins University team, for the first time measures the contribution of medical errors (estimated at 2.51 lakh annually as against 6.11 lakh deaths due to heart disease and 5.85 lakh deaths due to cancer) to deaths in the US.

Medical errors are rarely black or white decisions. “A nurse in an ICU would literally have a split second to decide which injection to give a suddenly serious patient. If a patient turns serious at 3am, she is faced with a situation in which she has three similar sounding and similar looking injections to choose from,” said Dr Nikhil Datar, a gynaecologist and health activist, who set up the Patient Safety Alliance in Mumbai five years ago to promote a healthy dialogue between patients and doctors on unintended medical errors.

There are many such interfaces in the medical world daily. Dr Datar quotes World Health Organization’s statistics that estimated one in 10 hospital admissions leads to an adverse event and one in 300 admissions in death. WHO’s European data shows that medical errors and health-care related adverse events occur in 8% to 12% of hospitalizations.

The biggest contributors to medical errors are mishaps from medications, hospital-acquired infections and blood clots that develop in legs from being immobilized in the hospital. “Approximately 3 million years of healthy life are lost in India each year due to these injuries,” said the 2013 Harvard study.

But Dr Datar gives another point of view. “In the last five years, I have realized that people don’t want to talk about medical errors. There hasn’t been any increase in the awareness about patient safety but there has been a manifold increase in blaming doctors and the healthcare system,” he said.

The BMJ study, meanwhile, said death certificates in the US have no facility for acknowledging medical error. “Death certificates could contain an extra field asking whether a preventable complication stemming from the patient’s medical care contributed to the death.”

Email Data of 272.3 Million Stolen Accounts Hacked: On Sale For $1

Hundreds of millions of hacked usernames and passwords of email accounts, including those from Google, Yahoo and Microsoft are being traded in Russia’s criminal underworld, Alex Holden, founder and chief information security officer of Hold Security, a security expert is reported to have told Reuters.

Described to be one of the biggest stashes of stolen credentials to be uncovered since cyberattacks hit major US banks and retailers two years ago, the discovery of 272.3 million stolen accounts included a majority of users of Mail.ru, Russia’s most popular email service, and other email users, has sent shock waves across the world.

The latest discovery came after Hold Security researchers found a young Russian hacker bragging in an online forum that he had collected and was ready to give away a far larger number of stolen credentials that ended up totaling 1.17 billion records.

Yahoo Mail credentials numbered 40 million, or 15 per cent of the 272 million unique IDs discovered. Meanwhile, 33 million, or 12 per cent, were Microsoft Hotmail accounts and 9 per cent, or nearly 24 million, were Gmail, according to Holden. Thousands of other stolen username/password combinations appear to belong to employees of some of the largest US banking, manufacturing and retail companies, he said.

After eliminating duplicates, Holden said, the cache contained nearly 57 million Mail.ru accounts – a big chunk of the 64 million monthly active email users Mail.ru said it had at the end of last year. It also included tens of millions of credentials for the world’s three big email providers, Gmail, Microsoft and Yahoo, plus hundreds of thousands of accounts at German and Chinese email providers. “This information is potent. It is floating around in the underground and this person has shown he’s willing to give the data away to people who are nice to him,” said Holden, the former chief security officer at US brokerage RW Baird. “These credentials can be abused multiple times,” he said.

As per reports, Holden was previously instrumental in uncovering some of the world’s biggest known data breaches, affecting tens of millions of users at Adobe Systems, JPMorgan and Target and exposing them to subsequent cyber crimes.

Mysteriously, the hacker asked just 50 Roubles — less than $1 — for the entire trove, but gave up the dataset after Hold researchers agreed to post favorable comments about him in hacker forums, Holden said. He said his company’s policy is to refuse to pay for stolen data.

Such large-scale data breaches can be used to engineer further break-ins or phishing attacks by reaching the universe of contacts tied to each compromised account, multiplying the risks of financial theft or reputational damage across the web.

Hackers know users cling to favorite passwords, resisting admonitions to change credentials regularly and make them more complex. It’s why attackers reuse old passwords found on one account to try to break into other accounts of the same user. After being informed of the potential breach of email credentials, Mail.ru Mail.ru said in a statement emailed to Reuters: “We are now checking, whether any combinations of usernames/passwords match users’ e-mails and are still active.

A Microsoft spokesman said stolen online credentials was an unfortunate reality. “Microsoft has security measures in place to detect account compromise and requires additional information to verify the account owner and help them regain sole access.” Stolen online account credentials are to blame for 22 per cent of big data breaches, according to a recent survey of 325 computer professionals by the Cloud Security Alliance.

Sonia Nallan Killed, Husband Arrested for Murder

Sonia Nallan, 48, an Indian American woman was fatally shot dead in the neighborhood of San Jose, CA on April 30, and the police have arrested her husband on murder charges. Her husband, James ‘Jim’ Nallan, 63, is being held without bail at Santa Clara, Calif., County Jail.

According to San Jose Police Department reports, police responded at 12:46 a.m. April 30 to a call reporting that a person had been shot. Arriving at the scene, officers found Sonia Nallan suffering from at least one gunshot wound. She was taken to a local hospital and pronounced dead shortly after.

San Jose police confirmed that Jim Nallan is in custody and that there are no outstanding suspects. No motive has yet been established for the shooting. Nallan, a technical recruiter at Encore Semiconductors, is survived by two sons, Sahil, 21, who attends UC Berkeley; and Nitin, 20, who attends UC Irvine. Funeral services were held on May 6, at the Chapel of the Chimes in Hayward, Calif.

Rajan Jha Among Top 10 New Faces Of Civil Engineering

Rajan Jha, an Indian American engineer, has been named as one of the 10 Best Civil Engineers across the world by American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE)  – an engineering society that represents more than 150,000 members of the civil engineering profession in 177 countries.

Rajan Jha, 29, from Chhattisgarh, earned his master’s degree from the Via Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering in 2013 and currently works as a Water Resources Civil Engineer for ARCADIS. He currently serves as the first vice president of the Virginia Section and heads the website newsletter and the scholarship committee. In 2014 he founded the Richmond Branch of Environmental and Water Resources Group and started with an initiative called Water Allies. He’s also worked extensively with Engineers Without Borders, serving as the co-chair of the Central Virginia Chapter and also as a planning, monitoring and design lead for a water-supply project in Zambia.

Jha was recognized during Engineers Week and will be honored at ASCE’s annual Outstanding Projects and Leaders Gala in Arlington, Virginia. Every year ASCE selects 10 best civil engineers (under 30) and recognizes them for their profession, achievements and community works. These 10 engineers are titled “New faces of Civil Engineering”.  The ten new faces, represent professionals from Bangladesh, Cameroon, North America and India.

Google acquires start-up founded by Indian-origin entrepreneur

As part of its plans to scale training offerings, Google has acquired Synergyse Training, a business technology start-up founded by an Indian-origin entrepreneur, the California-based search engine giant announced here last week. Toronto-based Synergyse that puts a virtual guide into Google Apps, training you to be productive and stay up to date with changes was founded by Varun Malhotra and his business partners.

“We’re happy to announce Synergyse will be joining Google, and we intend to make the product available as an integral part of the Google Apps offering later this year,” Peter Scocimara, senior director, Google Apps Operations, said in a blog post.

“In 2013, we launched Synergyse Training, with a mission to teach the world how to use Google Apps. Synergyse Training for Google Apps puts a virtual guide into Google Apps, helping users get the most out of their Google Apps experience and training them to be more productive,” Synergyse founders said in an official statement released. “We’re proud to have served more than 4,000,000 people and 3,000 organisations globally,” the statement added.

“By joining the Google Apps team, we can accelerate our mission because we will be working even closer with the teams that build Google Apps,” the statement noted. With the new acquisition Synergyse Training for Google Apps will be free, enabling all Google Apps customers to take advantage of the solution, the company said. Malhotra specialises in training and strategy and has over 10 years of experience in the enterprise space.

Scocimara said Synergyse will be joining Google, and the company intends to make the product available as an integral part of the Google Apps offering later this year.

“By providing the right help at the right time, Synergyse will help our customers with the critical task of change management in the enterprise, and bolster the training and support programs we already offer today,” he said.

5 Indian Teens Win Google Contest On Web Safety

Mavika Boyini from NASR School, Hyderabad; Vaidehi Reddy, Army Public School, Pune; Kanish Chugh, DLF Public School, Ghaziabad; Raviteja Anumukonda, Chirec Public School, Hyderabad; and Neya Saravanarajan, the Hindu Senior Secondary School, Chennai, won a web contest conducted by Google India on browsing websites safely, the global search engine provider said here last week.

“The competition witnessed several entries from across schools in the form of sketches, videos and apps and were judged on creativity, reach and impact,” the Indian subsidiary of the Silicon Valley-based firm said in a statement here.

The young minds were challenged to create their own online safety campaigns aimed at curbing cyber bullying and leaving a safe digital footprint. Boyini sketched a set of cartoons and admonished peers to never post anything which their grandmother would not like, said the statement. “Don’t be rude, don’t post inappropriate stuff and follow the grandma rule” are some her dos and don’ts. Reddy cautioned internet users never to reveal home address, personal details and refrain from illegal downloads through a video, the statement said.

Chug developed an anti-phishing game to enlighten peers on how to spot fake logos, while Anumukonda talked about the need to avoid easy and predictable passwords to preferring complex unhackable ones. Saravanarajan composed a catchy tune, Mr. Two Faces, to remind everyone to turn on privacy settings. Google will gift all the winning students with chromebooks and tablets, the statement added.

Infosys and Levi Strauss & Co. Highlight American India Foundation Annual Bay Area Gala

San Francisco, CA: The American India Foundation (AIF) hosted its Annual Bay Area Gala, bringing together 600 guests, including some of the San Francisco Bay Area’s most influential corporations, venture capitalists, entrepreneurs, Fortune 500 CEOs, luminaries, and community leaders to raise more than $1.5 million on Saturday, April 30, in support of AIF’s poverty alleviation solutions across India. The evening showcased the organization’s groundbreaking work in vocational training and advocacy for India’s disabled population, the Ability-Based Livelihoods Empowerment (ABLE) initiative.
AIF Co-Founder and Co-Chair Lata Krishnan welcomed the audience, thanking sponsors and supporters, while introducing the organization’s new leadership, Co-Chair Ajay Banga, CEO of Mastercard, and AIF President and CEO Alex Counts, longtime CEO of Grameen Foundation. Dr. Vishal Sikka, Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director of Infosys, and Chip Bergh, President and Chief Executive Officer of Levi Strauss & Co., were each presented with the AIF Corporate Leadership Award at the Hilton Union Square in San Francisco. A longtime supporter of AIF, Dr. Sikka spoke of the growing importance of the India-US relationship, and how Infosys has embedded social stewardship in its business practices on both continents. “It is my deeply held belief that every individual should be encouraged and supported to reach their true potential. All around us are passionate and determined people who have achieved great things, often overcoming significant personal hardship to flourish. Only by sharing what we have with each other can we amplify our human potential,” said Dr. Sikka. “At Infosys we care deeply about purposeful work – since our founding and through our global Foundations, ours is a culture of creating local and lasting impact in the communities we are part of. In the same spirit, the work of the American Indian Foundation aims to not only solve immediate problems but to develop understanding and knowledge that helps bring meaningful change to communities and positively impact future generations. At Infosys, we are proud to share the same values and mission.”
Abra Annes led a stunning live auction and fundraising drive, which raised a remarkable $404,000 dedicated to the Ability-Based Livelihoods Empowerment (ABLE) initiative. The drive was preceded by a captivating personal testimony by Sophia Shetty, a hearing-impaired woman whose life was changed through the ABLE initiative. “For the first time I realized I had choices that I could make,” said Sophia. “I have an identity of my own, which I never thought I would. I love my job. My colleagues respect me. I am the most hardworking person in my department. I love sewing and I always get more work. But there are millions of deaf people in India who don’t have the same opportunities like I do. They will be dependent on others their entire lives. But all of us are capable of doing something; we are not helpless. If we have the training, we can contribute to the society, take care of our families. It is my dream that all the deaf people in India can get to where I am.”
Award-winning comedian Dhaya Lakshminarayanan emceed the event and delivered humor throughout. Guests enjoyed an exquisite menu designed by internationally acclaimed chef and James Beard Foundation winner Madhur Jaffrey, and a lively performance by Britain’s Got Talent top performer Signature.
AIF’s Ability-Based Livelihoods Empowerment (ABLE) initiative is revolutionizing the industry paradigm in India by providing equal opportunity and access to employment for persons with disabilities, based on a simple belief – it is one’s ability, not disability, that defines any individual. ABLE trains persons with disabilities in fundamental and specialized skill sets – and facilitates their entry into the job market through a robust advocacy platform for disability inclusion, promoting
The American India Foundation is committed to catalyzing social and economic change in India and building a lasting bridge between the United States and India through high-impact interventions in education, livelihoods, public health, and leadership development, with a particular emphasis on empowering girls and women to achieve gender equity. Working closely with local communities, AIF partners with NGOs to develop and test innovative solutions and with governments to create and scale sustainable impact. Founded in 2001 at the initiative of President Bill Clinton following a request from Prime Minister Vajpayee, AIF has impacted the lives of 2.3 million of India’s poor and aims to reach 5 million by 2018.

Debate Erupts in California Over Curriculum on History Of Indian Region

A committee that is entrusted with writing history books for schools in the state of California, finds itself at the center of a raging debate over how to tell the story of South Asia as it tries to update textbooks and revise curriculums. The textbook dispute has come up as the state’s Instructional Quality Commission debates a new framework for the kindergarten to 12th grade social science curriculum, an effort meant to include new research and reflect the state’s increasing diversity. The State Board of Education will vote on the final changes next month.

The dispute centers on whether the region that includes modern-day India, Pakistan and Nepal should be referred to as India or as South Asia, to represent the plurality of cultures there — particularly since India was not a nation-state until 1947. It also touches on how the culture of the region is portrayed, including women’s role in society and the vestiges of the caste system.

It might seem somewhat arcane. But it has prompted petition drives, a #DontEraseIndia social media campaign, and a battle of opinion pieces.

According to the Hindu American Foundation, nearly half of the 2.5 million Hindus in the United States live in California. The Hindu-American group has been particularly active in trying to shape California’s history curriculum. “The civilization that is being covered is Indian,” said Suhag Shukla, the executive director of the Hindu American Foundation, which started the social media campaign #DontEraseIndia. “When you talk about ancient India, that’s the birthplace of Indian students,” she said.

When the committee met earlier this spring, dozens of students turned out at the State Capitol, some in tears, earnestly telling the educators that anything other than India would amount to erasing their heritage. Among other issues that has prompted criticism are: the portrayal of so-called comfort women in World War II; the Armenian genocide; and the discrimination against Sikhs in the United States.

“We have a lot of people engaged in this because we have such a vibrant, diverse state,” said Tom Adams, the deputy superintendent of the California Department of Education, adding, “What we’re really trying to do here is make sure that the children of California have a curriculum that helps them understand all these groups.”

A New York Times report drew attention to “a fight that mirrors similar arguments being made in India, where Hindu nationalist governments have begun overhauls of textbooks in some states. On one side are advocates from the Hindu American Foundation, which seeks to shape the image of Hinduism in the United States. Backed by some scholars, they want the entire area under dispute to be referred to as India, reflecting what they say is the most important influence in the area. They also want the caste system to be explained as a phenomenon of the region, not as a Hindu practice — an idea that is not universally accepted in India. A group of other scholars challenge the historical accuracy of this view. They say the area should be referred to as South Asia. They also say the foundation is trying to sanitize history by wiping out any link between Hinduism and castes.

Quoting Vidhima Shetty, a high school freshman, who had stated, “The board is confusing our cultural terms with geographical terms. By removing India as a term from the textbooks this leaves Indian-American children with no ethnic or cultural identification to turn to. When we acknowledge ourselves as South Asians, us Hindus are forced to re-identify ourselves as something we are not.”

The ongoing strong fight for accuracy in history books has been described by The New York Times as “a reflection of the transformation in California’s population, where Asians, including South Asians, are the fastest-growing demographic.”

Modi invited to address joint session of U.S. Congress

Washington, DC: April 28, 2016: Narendra Modi has achieved yet another milestone during his tenure as the Prime Minister of India.  Modi has been invited to address a joint meeting of the US Congress on June 8 during his visit here, Speaker of the US House of Representative Paul Ryan said on Thursday, April 28, 2016.

“The friendship between the United States and India is a pillar of stability in an important region of the world,” Ryan told reporters during his weekly press conference.  “This address presents a special opportunity to hear from the elected leader of the world’s most populous democracy on how our two nations can work together to promote our shared values and to increase prosperity. We look forward to welcoming Prime Minister Modi to the US Capitol on June 8,” he said. Modi was invited by President Barack Obama for a bilateral visit when he was in Washington, DC for the nuclear summit.

India has not announced the PM’s visit yet, but Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar is in Washington to finalize the agenda of the visit that is reportedly at the behest of U.S. President Barack Obama. If Modi accepts the invitation and addresses the Congress, he will be the fifth leader of India to have the honor to address the joint session of the US Congress. Earlier, Prime Ministers Manmohan Singh (July 19, 2005), Atal Bihari Vajpayee (September 14, 2000), P V Narasimha Rao (May 18, 1994) and Rajiv Gandhi (July 13, 1985) addressed the joint meeting of the US Congress.

The tradition of foreign leaders and dignitaries addressing Congress began with the Marquis de Lafayette of France, who spoke in the House chamber on December 10, 1824. Ronak D Desai, a Fellow at New America and an Affiliate at the Belfer Center’s India and South Asia Program at Harvard University, has been quoted to have said, “an invitation to Prime Minister Modi to address a Joint Meeting of Congress is significant, given past US policy towards Modi during his time as Chief Minister of Gujarat.”

In a bipartisan initiative, House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce, the Ranking Democratic member Eliot Engel and Representatives George Holding, and Dr. Amerish ‘Ami’ Bera had written to the speaker on April 20, requesting him to invite Modi to address Congress.

Top U.S. House of Representatives from the Foreign Affairs Committee had called on Prime Minister Narendra Modi to address a joint meeting of Congress during a visit to Washington in June this year. Invitations to address the Senate and House are considered a great honor. There have been only two in the past year: Pope Francis, on September 24, and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, on April 29, 2015.

The invitation would be a sharp turnaround for a leader who was once barred from the United States over massacres of Muslims. In 2002, when Modi had just become Gujarat’s chief minister, more than 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, were killed in sectarian riots in the state. The administration of President George W. Bush denied Modi a visa in 2005 under a 1998 U.S. law barring entry to foreigners who have committed “particularly severe violations of religious freedom.”

“Given the depth of our relationship with India across a range of areas – defence, humanitarian and disaster relief, space cooperation, conservation and innovation – we believe this is an ideal opportunity for the Congress to hear directly from the prime minister,” Representatives Ed Royce, the Republican committee chairman, and Eliot Engel, the panel’s ranking Democrat, wrote to House Speaker Paul Ryan. The letter to Ryan was also signed by Republican Representative George Holding and Democrat Ami Bera, the co-chairmen of the Congress Caucus on India and Indian Americans. A spokeswoman for Ryan said she had no announcement at this time about whether Ryan would extend the invitation.

Modi’s visit is likely to be the last official meeting between the two leaders during President Obama’s final year in office.

Dr. Ajay Lodha Honored With Ellis Island Medals Of Honor

New York, NY: May 9th, 2016: Dr. Ajay Lodha, President-Elect of American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI), the largest ethnic medical society, representing the interest of over 100,000 Indian American physicians, was honored with the prestigious Ellis Island Medals of Honor on Saturday, May 7th, this year. Dr. Lodha, who was the past president of Rajasthan Association of North America (RANA) and AAPIQLI received the award during the 28th annual Ellis Island Medal of Honor ceremony, held on Ellis Island in New York.

“I am humbled for being chosen to receive this prestigious award,” Dr. Lodha said soon after receiving the award. “I feel there are lot more Indians here in the United States, who are doing outstanding job and make us feel very proud. This award is for all of them.”

1. Dr. Ajay Lodha with the Ellis Island Medal of Honor
Dr. Ajay Lodha with the Ellis Island Medal of Honor

Dr. Ajay Lodha hides a power house of entrepreneurial skills. Dr. Lodha has extensive background of overseeing quality assurance and quality improvement. The honor is yet another way of the Empire State recognizing the importance and influence of the Indian Americans, who are known to be highly successful, and are known for their achievements in education, medicine, community service and business, and high per capita income, Dr. Lodha added.

Dr. Lodha, a former Chief Medical Officer and Senior Vice President of Caritas Health Care System representing St. John’s Hospital and Mary Immaculate Hospital, is an Internist by profession. A graduate of RNT Medical College, Udaipur, Rajasthan, DR. Lodha completed his residency at Flushing Hospital, NY. He is the Founder and President of Queens Medical Services, a primary care practice with two locations serving Queens, NY since 1995 and is a partner in Hillaire and Nesconset Nursing homes and is a partner of ACO.

In 2008, Dr. Lodha was part of a coalition that built a state-of-the-art 11 bed Surgical Intensive Care Unit for Government Hospital located in Udaipur, Rajasthan, India – free care is given to all the patients. Dr. Lodha in his commitment to the health of the community has organized numerous Health Fairs, Blood Pressure Screenings, and Medical Awareness programs as well as the delivery of educational materials at churches, temples and senior centers.  Dr. Ajay Lodha was appointed a member of the Nassau County Comptroller George Maragos’s MWBE Advisory Council last year.

Dr. Ajay Lodha walking up the podium to receive the award on May 7th
Dr. Ajay Lodha walking up the podium to receive the award on May 7th

Dr. Lodha will assume office as the President of AAPI during the AAPI Convention on July 3rd, 2016. His vision for AAPI ‘is to increase the global awareness of APPI.  “I would like to see us lobby Congress for an increase in the number of available Residency Positions so as to help alleviate the shortage of Doctors.  That younger physicians and MSRF members feel fully integrated into AAPI and take a more active role.” His experiences in organizing conferences and meetings which help to bring members together and attract new members which is vital to the success of the organization. Dr. Lodha lives on Long Island, New York with his wife Dr. Smita and their two children Amit and Shweta.

Ninety distinguished individuals were bestowed with the honor this year, amonf them were five, who are of Indian origin. Padma Lakshmi, an author, actress, model, television host and executive producer, and Dr. Rekha Bhandari, an internist in Brooklyn, New York and is affiliated with Brooklyn Hospital Center and Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center, were among other Indian Americans who received the award last week.

Dr. Ajay Lodha,  with his wife, Dr. Smita and their two children Amit and Shweta
Dr. Ajay Lodha, with his wife, Dr. Smita and their two children Amit and Shweta

To date, nearly 2,000 U.S. citizens have received the medals. The National Ethnic Coalition of Organizations awards Ellis Island medals to Americans who “embody the spirit of America in their celebration of patriotism, tolerance, brotherhood and diversity.” NECO recognizes “individuals who have made it their mission to share with those less fortunate their wealth of knowledge, indomitable courage, boundless compassion, unique talents and selfless generosity; all while maintaining the traditions of their ethnic heritage as they uphold the ideals and spirit of America.”

Geeta Pasi Nominated As US Envoy To Chad By President Obama

Geeta Pasi, a career foreign service diplomat, has been nominated by President Barack Obama, as the next US ambassador to Chad. The Indian-American Pasi, who served as US Ambassador to Djibouti from 2011 to 2014, is a career member of the Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counsellor. She is at present the Director of the Office of Career Development and Assignments in the Bureau of Human Resources at the Department of State.

Pasi’s nomination as the next US envoy to the central African nation of Chad came along with several other appointments to a key administration post, from the State Department. “I am pleased to announce that these experienced and committed individuals have decided to serve our country. I look forward to working with them,” Obama said in a statement issued by the White House.

Pasi was also the Director of the Office of East African Affairs in the Bureau of African Affairs from 2009 to 2011, Deputy Chief of Mission at the US Embassy in Dhaka, from 2006 to 2009, and Deputy Principal Officer at the US Consulate in Frankfurt, Germany from 2003 to 2006.

Since joining the Foreign Service in 1988, Pasi has also served at posts in Cameroon, Ghana, India, and Romania. Pasi received her BA from Duke University and an MA in French Studies from New York University.

Chad, home to over 200 different ethnic and linguistic groups, with Arabic and French as the official languages, and having Islam and Christianity as the most widely practiced religions, is a landlocked country in northern Central Africa. Since 2003, the Darfur crisis in Sudan has spilt over the border and destabilized the nation, with hundreds of thousands of Sudanese refugees living in and around camps in eastern Chad.

Kumar Barve Loses Congressional Bid In Maryland

Washington, DC: Kumar Barve, the lonest serving Indian American in the state legislature of Maryland, lost his bid for the Democratic Party nomination for his Congressional race from District 8 in the state of Maryland in the April 26 primary election, accruing only two percent of the total votes.

Nine Democratic candidates vied for Maryland’s 8th Congressional District seat, which was left open by Rep. Chris Van Hollen, who is running for the U.S. Senate. Maryland state Senator Jamie Raskin won the Democratic primary with 33 percent of the vote, and will face off against Republican attorney Dan Cox in the Nov. 8 general election. “I ran the best race I could run under the circumstances,” Barve was reported to have told the media. He noted that the race was one of the most expensive in the country, with fellow Democrat David Trone – who came in second – pouring more than $12 million of his own money. Raskin raised almost $2 million, while news anchor Kathleen Matthews, who came in third, raised $2.5 million. Barve had raised more than $600,000.

Barve, who had received a significant endorsement from UNITE-HERE, an international labor union representing 275,000 hospitality workers around the country, among many others, shocking defeat in the primaries held in the state.

During his campaign, Barve, 58, who was born in Schenectady, N.Y., and lived for many decades in Maryland, had stressed his Indian heritage and the example set by his grandfather. “The government tried to strip my grandfather of his citizenship because he wasn’t white, but my grandfather stood strong and fought to defend his rights all the way to the Supreme Court,” Barve says on his website. “His story inspired my journey into public life and I follow in his footsteps and stand up for those who need a voice.”

Barve, 58, is the first Indian-American to be elected to a State Assembly in the history of this country back in 1990. He is credited with authoring several key bills that became law in the heavily Democratic state. He has led his Montgomery County delegation. He served as Majority Leader from 2002 to 2015, and is currently chairman of the House Environment and Transportation Committee.

Former chairman of the Montgomery County Democratic Central Committee George Leventhal, indicated that the seasoned Indian-American legislator’s defeat was a gain for the Assembly. “Montgomery County is fortunate to have both Ana Sol Gutierrez and Kumar Barve serving us so well in the Maryland General Assembly. Although both fell short in their congressional campaigns, they will return to Annapolis with their reputations enhanced and their understanding of our constituents’ needs deepened. I have great respect for both of them,” Leventhal posted on his Facebook page after the primary. Another constituent, Alan Banov commented, “Kumar Barve and Ana Sol Gutierrez were much better qualified than the “money” candidates! they had paid their dues and knew how to legislate.”

Barve said, he will support Raskin in the general election, as well as Van Hollen, and the Democratic presidential nominee. Raskin is virtually certain to win, said Barve, noting that two-thirds of voters in the 8th district are registered as Democrats.

Barve said he did the best he could under the circumstances. He lamented that he was able to secure only 2 percent of the votes despite having some 4,000 Indian-Americans in the state.  “Only 300 were registered to vote in a Democratic primary,” Kumar said about his Indian-American constituents.

Barve urged Indian Americans to register to vote in the primaries and state their party preference, noting that primary elections largely determine the fall general election. A large number of Indian Americans are registered as independents, which does not allow them to vote in certain states during the primary elections.

Jay Chaudhuri Appointed Member of North Carolina State Senate

Raleigh, NC: Gov. Pat McCrory of North Carolina has officially appointed Jay Chaudhuri to finish the term of Democratic Sen. Josh Stein of Raleigh, who resigned last month because he’s running for attorney general. Wake County Democrats last week picked Chaudhuri who won the primary but faces a Republican in November.

Sen. Chaudhuri, 46, who won the Democratic Party primary last month, will face the sole Republican candidate, Eric Weaver, in November, in a district that historically elects Democrats. “I’m honored that the voters have chosen me to be the Democratic nominee for the election in November,” Jay Chaudhuri said. “We’re going to fight hard to continue Josh Stein’s tradition of being a champion for progressive values, and I look forward to bringing everyone together to work toward providing a world-class education for all our students and building an economy that works for all North Carolinians.”

The Senate seat for the district, which encompasses much of western Raleigh and Cary, has been vacant since Sen. Josh Stein decided to run for attorney general. Chaudhuri resigned as general counsel to North Carolina Treasurer Janet Cowell May 1, 2015, and later announced his candidacy for the state Senate June 2, 2015.

The Democratic primary for Stein’s seat was one of the more expensive legislative races with both candidates raising six figures. The race heated up when Chaudhuri sent campaign mailers publicizing some of Hankins’ donations to Republicans in the 1990s. Hankins, 62, former executive director of the N.C. League of Municipalities, responded with a “voter alert” confirming that he made the donations at the request of a former employee to improve relationships with Republicans. He criticized his opponent, saying they had a gentleman’s agreement to run a clean campaign.

Chaudhuri said in a press release that, while serving as general counsel to Cowell, he helped recover more than $100 million for state pension and unclaimed property funds and led efforts to establish the first ever Innovation Fund, a $230 million fund to support and invest in businesses with significant operations in North Carolina.

The Indian American candidate said that education is the overriding issue in his campaign. The Republican-dominated General Assembly in North Carolina, he charged, has “not made its focus on investing in public education. Teachers are leaving (North Carolina) for other states,” he had told India-West, adding that he views public education funding as “investing dollars in economic development.”

In addition to serving as general counsel and a policy adviser to Cowell, he was also Cooper’s special counsel and legislative counsel when Cooper was state Senate Majority Leader. Before that, Chaudhuri clerked for now Chief Judge Linda McGee of the North Carolina Court of Appeals and was Jacob K. Javits Fellow for former U.S. Sen. Russell D. Feingold of Wisconsin.

Born in Chattanooga, Tenn., and a resident of Cameron Village in Raleigh, with his wife, Sejal Mehta, a former New York prosecutor, and their two children, Chaudhuri has an extensive background in state government. Chaudhuri’s parents, Debi and Mithu Chaudhuri, left India 50 years ago and settled in Fayetteville, N.C., where his father worked at the Veteran Administration Hospital.

Chaudhuri graduated from Davidson College in Charlotte, N.C., the Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs in New York and the North Carolina Central University School of Law.

ECHO Organizes Free Cancer Awareness Camp in New York

New York, NY: Enhance Community through Harmonious Outreach, (ECHO), in association with Indian Nurses association and HFCC are partnering with Oncology, Internal Medicine and Gastroenterology and Pulmonary Specialists in the area is organizing a Free Cancer Awareness Camp for our Community on Sunday, May 22nd 2016 from 11 am to 4 pm, Dr. Thomas P. Mathew, Executive Director of ECHO, announced here last week.

“The initiative is a unique campaign to draw attention to the importance of cancer awareness and screening. There are staggering facts with frightening numbers about this disease. The good news is that this fight we absolutely can do something about. ECHO is committed more than ever to help get the word out about this disease, raising awareness. We need your help and humbly requesting for your support.” According to Usha George, President of Indian Nurses Association of NY

“We believe that our organizations can work together in a number of ways to directly address the critical problem and help collectively collaborate in this new initiative by our community based physicians to increase Cancer Awareness and the importance of Screening, Coping with Cancer, and Pranik Healing and Yoga,” says Biju Chacko, Operations Director. “The camp will include Seminars by Oncology, Gastroenterology, Pulmonary and Internal Medicine Physicians.Workshops, one on one talk with experts, Brochures, flyers, preventive screenings,” Sabu Lukose, MBA, Program Director, adds.

Koppara B. Samuel, Communications Director, says, “We are planning to advertise in the local community to approximately reach around 50,000 homes and all Indian Community through leaders like you. We at ECHO look forward to the chance to work with you on this noble cause and awareness initiative.”

Solomon Mathew, Capital Resource Director, says, “At this time we are reaching out to all our media partners through television, newspaper, social media and community organizations to reach out and promote with public service announcements and spread the word to encourage screening.”

The Durga Project Panned At Battery Dance In New York

(Thursday, April 26, 2016) New York City’s dance ambassador to the world, Battery Dance, introduces an Indo-American, collaborative dance interpretation of Hindu Goddess Durga’s Shakti (strength) and Bhakti (devotion) through the world premiere of “The Durga Project,” featuring renowned classical Indian dancer Unnath H.R. and five of Battery’s Western-trained dancers.

The 30-minute choreographic fantasy, which weaves together the movement vocabularies, sonorities and aesthetics of the United States and India, will also be complemented by works commissioned by European and African choreographers:  “Inter/Ago,” created in 2015 by Tadej Brdnik, the recently retired Martha Graham principal dancer and choreographer, who has danced with Battery Dance since 1998; and “Observatory,” created in 2014 by Theo Ndindwa, founder of South Africa’s iKapa Dance Theatre, and since performed in tours of South America, Europe, Asia and at the first Cape Town International Dance Festival in 2015.

World premiere of “The Durga Project” is planned to be held on May 11th at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.; May 12th at 7 p.m., followed by a VIP gala at the Schimmel Center for the Arts (3 Spruce Street), Pace University, New York City. For Tickets, please visit: http://batterydance.org/ny-season/

Shani Patel Killing: Police offer $10,000 for information leading to capturing murderers

As the killers of Shani Patel is still at large, the police in Newark, New Jersey are offering a $10,000 for information leading to the capture of the murderers. Shani Patel, 21, an Indian American student majoring in economics who was in his junior year at Rutgers, was fatally shot around 10 p.m. on April 10, in his Toms River, New Jersey, apartment. His 23-year-old roommate, a Rutgers graduate, was also shot, and was transported to University Hospital where he underwent a surgery. He was previously listed in critical condition and no updates have been announced.

According to reports, a suspect, Marcus Feliz, was captured on April 13 and charged with homicide and robbery. Feliz – who is being held on $750,000 bail – has pleaded not guilty to both charges. Menawhile, the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office has said another suspect believed to be involved in the killing of Patel, Fraynned Ramirez, 26, of Hartford, Conn., is still at large. Ramirez has been charged with murder, felony murder and robbery, in connection with Patel’s death. Ramirez is presumed to be armed and dangerous, according to the prosecutor’s office. Neither Felix nor Ramirez are students at Rutgers, according to nj.com.

Police believe the shooting was related to drugs. A substantial amount of drugs and money were found in Patel’s apartment as police investigated the scene of the crime, and police believe the shooting occurred in the course of a robbery attempt.

A memorial page has been set up for Patel on Facebook. Friends also held a memorial service for him. “I write with the sad news that last night we lost one of our students,” Rutgers chancellor Nancy Cantor wrote in an email to students. “There is an active, ongoing investigation by the Newark Police Department of a crime that took place at a private residence located off campus.”

Cantor went on to write, “While law enforcement is still investigating and we understand that it was not a random act that led to Shani’s death, it is a shock to lose a member of our community under any circumstances. Our deepest condolences go out to Shani’s family and to all who knew him as a student, colleague or friend.”

“It’s really sad to see that this has happened to him, very sad,” said Patel’s lawyer Billhimer in an AP report. “He was an economics major and was interested in becoming an entrepreneur. He was always talking about having his own business. He was a very smart young man. He was a nice kid.”

Lahore Literary Festival Comes to New York at Asia Society, May 7-8

NEW YORK, April 26, 2016—The Lahore Literary Festival (LLF), one of South Asia’s premier cultural events, will travel to Asia Society New York on May 7-8. This is the first time that a Pakistani literary festival takes place abroad.

LLF in New York will explore contemporary Pakistan, and feature artists, writers, and cultural commentators. In keeping with Asia Society’s mission of promoting mutual understanding between Asia and the U.S., the Festival will present American audience with a more nuanced view of Pakistan, with discussions on fiction and nonfiction writing, music, arts, popular culture, and politics.

Saami Brothers Qawwal performing Qawwali devotional music from the Sufi traditions of Pakistan, will be held on Sunday, May 8. The eight–member ensemble, one of the most accomplished and traditional performers of the form today, will close the first New York edition of the Lahore Literary Festival.

Qawwali blends Iranian, Central Asian, and South Asian poetic, philosophical and musical elements, combining popular music with classical traditions. Strong voices and explosive hand-clapping seek to transport musicians and audience closer to the divine. An ensemble of usually twelve male performers conveys a religious message through music and song based on mystic poetry. The texts usually deal with divine love (‘ishq), the sorrow of separation (hijr, firaq), and union (visal) – these concepts symbolically reinforced and illustrated by the music.

The Saami Brothers were founded by four sons of the critically acclaimed Maestro Ustad Naseeruddin Saami. They grew up in a family with rich musical heritage, referred to as Qawal Bachcha Delhi Gharana. The lineage of this gharana, or “house,” leads back some 800 years, all the way back to Saamat Bin Ibrahim, a principal student of the Sufi saint Hazrat Ameer Khusro.

Keeping the flame of the gharana alive, the Saami Brothers are well versed in a number of languages, and weave various genres of Eastern classical music beautifully into their performances. For this performance, the Brothers will sing the music of Khusro, who is regarded as the “father of Qawwali.” This program is part of Asia Society’s ongoing initiative Creative Voices of Muslim Asia.

Festival participants include former WWF International president Syed Babar Ali; musical artist Zeb Bangash; New York Times columnist Roger Cohen; artist Salima Hashmi; former Ambassador to the U.N. Abdullah Hussain Haroon; physicist Tasneem Zehra Husain; actor, director and screenwriter Sarmad Khoosat; journalist and foreign policy author Ahmed Rashid; and author Sadia Shepard. It will also feature a musical performance by the eight-member qawwal ensemble the Saami Brothers.

LLF, founded by Razi Ahmed in 2012 aims to reclaim and employ Lahore’s cultural significance and influence. A global city under the 12th century Sultanate, capital of the Mughal Empire under Akbar, and cradle of the modern Punjabi civilization under Maharaja Ranjit Singh, Lahore has fired the imagination of artists for centuries, inspiring global literature and thought from Milton’s Paradise Lost to Kipling’s Kim to Massenet’s Opera Le Roi de Lahore to John Masters’ Bhowani Junction. This program is part of Asia Society’s ongoing initiative Creative Voices of Muslim Asia.

Indian American students protest kirtan singing by white woman not born Hindu

New York, April 28: When the whole world is moving towards pluralism, trying to embrace and appreciate the faith and culture around the world, Indian American students at an Ivy League College in the US, led by fundamentalists have protested against a White woman singing Hindu Kirtans. They assert that only those born Hindu should sing the religious hymns, according to media reports.

The performance by Carrie Grossman, who has adopted the Hindu name Dayashila, was disrupted Thursday last week by protesters claiming that by singing kirtans she as a white person was wrongly “appropriating” elements of Hinduism.

According to reports, although the protesters used radical leftist rhetoric, their agenda appears to be a form of selective opposition to conversions or religious interactions – in effect, banning those not born Hindu from singing Hindu religious hymns or participating in rituals. However, similar protests are not held by those claiming to be against “cultural-appropriation” when non-Christians sing Christian hymns or participate in Christian observances. Wearing bindi or pottu by non-Indian women have also been crticised as “cultural appropriation.”

The protesters are reported to have used radical leftist terminology like white privilege, structural change and “radical love” to oppose what they called “cultural appropriation” by a white person. “Cultural appropriation,” according to those who protest it, happens when people use or performs elements from a culture not their own.

Many in the audience confronted the protesters, who eventually left the event and staged a sit-in outside. “Several audience members turned around and asked them to be quiet,” The Brown Daily Herald reported. “In addition, some of the audience members stood up and moved to where the protesters were sitting to ask them to leave.”

In the face of protests, the Contemplative Studies Departmental Undergraduate Group, which organised the kirtan, issued an apology saying that they “humbly acknowledge that those intentions (in arranging the event) do not preclude harm and hurt that we may have inflicted,” the Herald reported.

Freedom of expression in US universities is under threat not from the government, but from students and faculty. At elite universities like Yale, students have in the past year explicitly protested freedom of expression on campuses and tried to silence professors and students not conforming to their version of liberal or radical views.

Rajan Zed, the president of US-based Universal Society of Hinduism, called the protests at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island state, “sad and inappropriate”. “Color of the person should not matter in devotional singing and anybody should be able pay respectful homage to Hindu deities through kirtan or other forms,” Zed said. “Kirtan offered means to connect to the heart, to the divinity that lies within.”

He asked Brown University president Christina H. Paxson and chancellor Thomas J. Tisch to “make sure that such unreasonable interruptions did not happen at the Hindu events on the campus in the future” and to hold a formal inquiry into the disruption. The Herald reported that Grossman, a Brown University alumna, told her audience that she discovered kirtans during a visit to India and “found (chanting) very powerful and very healing”.

Describing her mission to spread the singing of kirtans, Grossman writes on her website about her experience in the third person: “At the altar of her instrument she called out to the divine and unburdened her heart. This process was profoundly healing and, the more she did it, the more she felt drawn to share her sound with the world.” She has produced a recording, “Soma Bandhu,” that features hymns like “Om Nama Shivaya,” “Jai Ma” and “Sarve Bhavantu.”

Anchal Saraf, one of the protesters in this incident, has been quoted in the media, as a signatory to a petition demanding freedom of expression at Jawaharlal Nehru University. The duplicity of these students is shocking. While they demand freedom of expression in some cases, they protest against the same when it comes to their own.

Shanti Bhavan Students Share Their Story in America

“I am different from every other girl in my village, because I believe I have a good future ahead of me,” Bhavani, a student at Shanti Bhavan told an audience of over one thousand people at a Northwestern University function.

Bhavani and Vijay, two 11th graders from Shanti Bhavan, came to the U.S. last month through its partnership with Tufaan Entertainment. The first in their families to travel overseas, they were full of wonder as they explored museums, tried new foods, and saw the world open up to them in a way they had never experienced before.

“I know now that I can make my dreams real. I’ve been given a special opportunity and I want to make the most of it.” – Vijay, reflecting on his dreams of becoming a software engineer after visits to Google, Facebook, and Twitter.

Bhavani and Vijay come from humble backgrounds and their families face discrimination, but through education and support at Shanti Bhavan, these children have a bright future.

Shanti Bhavan Students Share Their Story in AmericaShanti Bhavan Children’s Project opens the door for a world of possibilities through high-quality education at our residential boarding school, and subsequently at top-tier universities. More than an education, Shanti Bhavan is a home and a community. However, we know that none of these accomplishments would be possible without the generosity and support of our donors. “No matter how large or small, your contribution can make a difference to promising young people like Bhavani and Vijay,” said the founder Abraham George, who left his well-paying job in the US to start this not-for-profit, in the rural area near Bangalore, India. “We have three classes of children in top colleges such as Christ University, Mount Carmel, St. Josephs and Jyoti Nivas. Your support will ensure we are able to continue their high-quality education, housing, clothing, food, and medical care,” George added.

Shanti Bhavan’s mission is to adequately develop the most vulnerable and disadvantaged children of India’s “lowest caste” by providing them world class education and instilling globally shared values to enable them to aspire to careers and professions of their choice.

The organization provides a holistic, high quality focused education to children on a beautiful boarding school campus. For these communities, Shanti Bhavan is a beacon of hope that shines a path of opportunity for their children. It is an oasis built within the confines of crushing poverty supported by a devoted administration and global network of volunteers. Our children see that a better world isn’t just an idea but a real possibility.

Indian-Americans more tilted towards Democrats, says Sangay K Mishra in new book

Jersey City, New Jersey: “Indian-Americans are overwhelmingly supporters of Democratic party. But unlike African-Americans these groups are open to persuasion,” Sangay K Mishra, author of the book ‘Desis Divided: The Political Lives of South Asian Americans’ said in a recent interview.

The new book about voting patterns in the United States authored by Mishra seeks to explain how the Indian American community has switched its party support over the past decade and a half. Mishra’s book delves into how the Republican Party’s anti-immigrant stance following the Sept. 11 attacks on the U.S. has leaned the Indian American community towards Democrats.

Explaining the reason for Indian-Americans voting overwhelmingly towards Democratic party, Mishra said it has to do with developments after the recent terrorist attacks on American soil. “Post 9/11 the whole racial hostility has really pushed them towards the Democratic party, because the Republican party has the consistently taken anti-immigrant position. Post 2001, they have moved away from the Republican Party, which is seen more as a party which is opposed to immigrants, which is opposed to immigrant integration,” he said.

At a time, when candidates are fighting for each delegate in closely-contested primary elections in both the parties, Indian Americans in some of the key states like New York, New Jersey, Maryland and California, where they have a sizeable presence, can tilt the equation one way or the other, the author said. “Indian Americans are overwhelmingly supporters of the Democratic Party. But unlike African Americans these groups are open to persuasion,” Mishra said.

Mishra said despite two Indian-Americans – Bobby Jindal and Nikki Haley – gaining top positions in the Republican party, this has not made much difference. “The way in which election has developed in the last few months, Republicans have not shown any inclusive side of their party. Anti-immigration, anti-Muslim rhetoric has been very very high. Given this kind of rhetoric, I do not expect much shift in the way the Indian Americans are voting,” Mishra said.

Referring to a survey, Mishra, an assistant professor of political science at Drew University in New Jersey said, “So more than 80 percent of Indian Americans who voted, voted for Democrats. That goes against the idea that Indian Americans since they are affluent they tend to vote more Republican.” Mishra specializes in immigrant political incorporation, Indian diaspora, global immigration and racial and ethnic politics.

GOPIO Aims AT “Strengthening Connections between India and Indian Diaspora trough Business”

New York City, N.Y.  – Apr. 29, 2016 – GOPIO International, the Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (www.gopio.net), has announce the 27th Anniversary Celebrations and GOPIO Biennial Convention 2016 to be held in New York, USA at the Marriott Hotel near LaGuardia Airport on June 24-25, 2016. The theme of the conference is “Strengthening Connections between India and the Global Indian Diaspora through Business and Technology,” and will provide an opportunity to connect and network with people of Indian origin worldwide.

Delegates from over 25 countries are expected to attend the convention which starts on Friday, June 24 with an inauguration and welcome reception. Next day, June 25 will consist of a full day conference sessions to deliberate on the Global Indian Diaspora; evaluate GOPIO’s progress in 27 years; network, exchange ideas, and connect with PIO/NRI delegates from around the world. The event will end with a Grand Finale Banquet at the World’s Fair Marina Banquet Hall on Saturday June 25 evening.

The conference will evaluate, assess, debate, discuss and deliberate on the current, critical issues of interest and concern that confront over 25 million people of Indian origin, living in countries outside of India. GOPIO International President Niraj Baxi invites all PIOs (People of Indian Origin) and NRIs (Non Resident Indians) to avail of this opportunity to attend, emphasizing “This conference will examine several pertinent issues, providing a unique forum for education, information and interactive participation.”

Baxi continued, “On behalf of the newly elected Executive Council of GOPIO International, I invite all GOPIO members to join us at our 2016 Biennial Convention, and help unite forces as we reach across to Indian community worldwide. We want to be the voice of any and all NRIs and PIOs taking initiatives to grow and strengthen our organization. Given our new motto of “GOPIO means business”, the thrust of this convention will be to help connect the global Indian community, enable and promote intra-Diaspora business ventures, as well as bilateral sharing of business resources with India.”

Lal Motwani, Convener, GOPIO Convention 2016 and GOPIO Tri-State New York Area Coordinator extends his invitation to join in, saying “This convention will have a great emphasis on Diaspora’s involvement and contribution in Business, Technology and Investment. Therefore, it is beneficial for you to participate, network and to be known in the Diaspora. We have a great opportunity for you to provide exposure to your business and/or service as a sponsor of the convention, or to place an advertisement in the souvenir journal brought out at the convention.”

The major thrust of this year’s conference sessions will be on Entrepreneurship, Business, Technology and Investment within the Diaspora and India. A second track of conference will be organized by GOPIO Council chairs to develop their strategy for future actions.

Commenting on the upcoming Convention 2016, GOPIO founder president and Conference program chairperson Thomas Abraham said that GOPIO has come a long way since 1989 to sensitize governments across the world on issues of the Indian Diaspora in a timely manner and seek solutions to them. “In 27 years, the Indian Diaspora has moved from outside the political main stream in many countries to political leadership, and this trend will continue. The objective now is to mobilize the Diaspora resources, both professional and financial to help not only India but the Diaspora itself, and the countries they come from,” said Dr. Abraham.

GOPIO leadership hopes that this convention will help charter its course for the organization. “During the last many years, GOPIO has made rapid strides as there have been several new chapters and increased awareness of GOPIO’s advocacy role for issues of the Indian Diaspora,” said Inder Singh, Chairman of GOPIO International.

“In the past, GOPIO election has been conducted at the General Body meeting at our Biennial Convention. As the previously scheduled General Body meeting got postponed for reasons beyond the control of the convention organizing team, we moved forward with the election, which could not be postponed. So now, as per GOPIO Bylaws the new team has organized the General Body meeting at the 2016 Biennial convention in New York City. With leadership of experienced GOPIO people in New York area taking charge to manage and deliver the convention, and the fact that New York area has many delegates to fulfill Bylaws requirement for this meeting quorum, it was a smart decision to hold the General Body meeting, along with the convention in New York.” continued Singh.  More details of the convention will be available at http://www.gopio.net/  or contact:  GOPIO Convention General Convener Lal Motwani at 516-581-3332.

Hindus want health plans to cover yoga

With Yoga, the ancient Indian practice becoming more popular around the world, Hindus are asking health insurance plans to cover multi-faceted yoga, thus making it more accessible and affordable. Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada (USA) today, said that yoga reportedly promoted physical and mental health, cut down hospital/doctor visits and medical services, reduced stress, and was kind of a preventive medicine.

How long could health insurers and lawmakers/policymakers overlook highly beneficial and cost-effective yoga? Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, asked.  Moreover, prevention dollar saved hundreds/thousands of dollars in the long run. Yoga could be part of the solution to save health care costs, Rajan Zed pointed out. Zed indicated that yoga, referred as “a living fossil”, was a mental and physical discipline, for everybody to share and benefit from, whose traces went back to around 2,000 BCE to Indus Valley civilization.

Rajan Zed further said that yoga, although introduced and nourished by Hinduism, was a world heritage and liberation powerhouse to be utilized by all. According to Patanjali who codified it in Yoga Sutra, yoga was a methodical effort to attain perfection, through the control of the different elements of human nature, physical and psychical.

According to US National Institutes of Health, yoga may help one to feel more relaxed, be more flexible, improve posture, breathe deeply, and get rid of stress. According to a recently released “2016 Yoga in America Study”, about 37 million Americans (which included many celebrities) now practice yoga; and yoga is strongly correlated with having a positive self image.  Yoga was the repository of something basic in the human soul and psyche, Zed added

Ambedkar’s 125th birth anniversary held in California

The 125th birth anniversary of the father of the Indian Constitution, Dr. Ambedkar was held in California last week.  And it was noteworthy that for the first time in history, the Indian government participated in celebrations for Bhimrao Ambedkar, commemorating the contributions of the Indian patriot who tirelessly campaigned for the rights of Dalits and women, and declared that true democracy could only be accomplished when the caste system was abolished. The event was organized by the San Francisco Indian Consulate and the local Indian American community, and was held at the India Community Center.
The evening celebration was rounded out by Odissi dancing from students of the Jyoti Kala Mandir; kuchipudi by students of Mythri Natyalaya; a performance by the Aero Dance School; and bhangra by Dance Karishma. Alka Bhatnagar kicked off the celebration by singing the Indian national anthem; Margret Hurtado sang “The Star Spangled Banner.”
Though he was not allowed to sit alongside other schoolchildren due to his status as an “untouchable,” Ambedkar prospered educationally nevertheless, and was at one time one of India’s most educated citizens: he was the first untouchable to attend the University of Bombay, and went on from there to earn his Ph.D. from Columbia University in New York and a Master’s degree from the London School of Economics.
Returning to India in 1917 after finishing his studies, Ambedkar was appointed finance minister to the Maharaja of Baroda, but had to quit his job due to ill-treatment from his co-workers because of his caste. Caste discrimination also made it difficult for Ambedkar to find a home to live in.
Throughout his legal career with the Bombay High Court, Ambedkar fought for the rights of Dalits and equality of opportunity for women. Serving as the first law minister for a newly-independent India, Ambedkar drafted the country’s Constitution, abolishing untouchability and caste discrimination, among other provisions. Ambedkar resigned from his post in 1951 when he received no support from the Indian Parliament and Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru for his “Hindu Code Bill,” which aimed to set down equality in the laws governing marriage and inheritance. Ambedkar’s death in 1956 in Delhi drew one of the largest crowds the young nation had ever seen.
In his keynote address at the ICC event, Prof. Ronki Ram, dean and the head of the Political Science department at Punjab University in Chandigarh, noted that Ambedkar aimed to bring the concept of “social democracy” to India. “If we were to create a democratic nation, there must be changes in the social set-up,” said Ram, paraphrasing Ambedkar, and noting the Indian statesman’s view that a democracy is unsustainable if its people are divided by caste.
Ambedkar tried to make a distinction between religion and caste, arguing that religion should be based on rationalism, not fundamentalism, said the professor. “Society remains mum and justice remains silent,” stated Krishna passionately, noting this was the first time the Indian government had celebrated Ambedkar’s birthday, an occasion normally only marked by Dalits. Krishna advocated that all Indian government offices, consulates and embassies bear a portrait of Ambedkar alongside a portrait of Mahatma Gandhi.
Indian Consul General in San Francisco Venkatesan Ashok praised Ambedkar in a speech onstage at the ICC event. “He was the chief architect of a constitution that is the inspiration of democratic countries throughout the world,” said Ashok, noting that “Baba Saheb” was ahead of his time with many concepts such as birth control for women and equal rights for women, along with investments in agriculture to grow the economy of the agrarian nation.
“I am very impressed that the community has come together to celebrate this great son of India,” said Ashok, noting that the Bharat Ratna – one of India’s highest awards – was conferred on Ambedkar posthumously in 1990. Ashok also revealed that the Indian government has given its approval to refurbish the Gadar Memorial in San Francisco, a tribute to the Northern California-based Gadar Party founded in 1915 to support the movement for India’s independence.
“These sons laid down their lives at a time when India had no idea where it would go,” stated Ashok, adding that the modalities of rebuilding the Gadar memorial would now have to be worked out with the city of San Francisco.

India will be the world’s largest economy by 2050: Nicholas Burns Says at USIBC Summit

San Francisco, CA: India will be the world’s largest economy by 2050, Nicholas Burns, who served as US Envoy to India, said during the first ever West Coast Summit on April 21. Burns was joined by Venkatesan Ashok, India’s Consul General in San Francisco, for a panel discussion entitled, “The U.S.-India Partnership – Priorities for the Next Administration.”

“India is not difficult. Both parties want to forward the U.S.-India relationship. They agree on nothing, but they are united on this,” he said, noting that Modi has also been very clear on strengthening the partnership between the two nations. Ashok noted the two countries needed to change the strategic content of the relationship. Strategies to counter global terrorism must be an area of cooperation, he said. The two nations must also partner in creating educational opportunities, said Ashok. “India needs a huge amount of innovation. This can only happen by looking at models like Stanford, to make India an innovation power,” said the consul general.

The lives of 1.3 billion people in set to be transformed with the initiative of the Indian Government with the plan to digitalize India, said John Chambers, chairman of the U.S. India Business Council.  “The opportunity is enormous,” said Chambers, the former CEO of Cisco who continues to serve as the company’s executive chairman. “Business and government working together can dramatically change economic growth,” he said. “We will see more impact over the next five years than we have seen in the past 40.”

According to Chambers, India could become “the model nation for the rest of the world, not just the developing world,” with inclusion of all its citizens in the villages and cities. “The window to India will only be open for a couple of years. If you’re not here, you won’t just miss the bus, you’ll be left behind,” he emphasized.

This half-day summit in the Silicon Valley was held to explore how the US-India business corridor is uniquely poised to build the digital future of the global economy. Against this backdrop, Amitabh Kant, the newly appointed CEO of National Institution of Transforming India (NITI) Aayog presented his plans on how the Government of India and industry could coordinate efforts to ensure the success of programs such as Digital India, Start Up India, Skill India, Financial Inclusion and Make in India.

“India is an oasis in the midst of very barren economic growth worldwide,” Amitabh Kant, CEO of the National Institution for Transforming India Aayog (Commission), told the crowd of investors and business leaders in his keynote address. Kant said the challenge for the nation was to get to a 10 percent economic growth rate over the next three decades and create jobs for the 65 percent of its population under the age of 35.

Earlier, USIBC president Mukesh Aghi kicked off the summit, noting that India’s economy is expected to grow by eight percent this year and that inflation is expected to drop by 5 percent. Foreign direct investment in India has grown by 14 percent, while dropping globally by 16 percent. “India’s policies must be streamlined so that we have a better return on investment,” the Indian American executive said. Aghi lauded the new budget released in February as one of “the best budgets the government has ever put together.”

By 2024, every Indian will be equipped with a smart phone and access to the Internet, radically transforming India’s business climate, asserted Kant. Massive urbanization – with more than 700 million villagers moving to “smart cities” — will also dramatically alter India’s landscape, he said.

Shubhada Saxena Among Those Nominated For Asian American & Pacific Islander Community Hero Awards

WASHINGTON, D.C., May 2, 2016: Shubhada Saxena is among the ten nominated for Asian American & Pacific Islander Community Hero Awards by AARP. Shubhada Saxena is a leader at SAIVA (South Asians’ International Volunteer Association) in Austin, TX.

AARP’s inaugural Asian American and Pacific Islander Community Hero Awards has been established to acknowledge the hard-working staff and volunteers of non-profit organizations serving AAPIs age 50-plus. One can visit facebook.com/AARPAAPICommunity to cast the vote during Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month until May 31, 2016 at 11pm ET. Three heroes and their organizations will each receive a $1,000 cash prize when the winners are announced in June.

“We’re thrilled with the caliber of all the nominees who were submitted for consideration by their colleagues, friends and family,” said Daphne Kwok, AARP Vice President of Multicultural Leadership, Asian American and Pacific Islander Audience Strategy. “Each and every one of the nominees provides invaluable service to our community.  Many have been serving for decades. We’re proud to recognize this outstanding group of individuals for their commitment to making a difference in the lives of older adults and ask that you vote now! We hope that by highlighting these community members we will inspire people to either volunteer or to work for our older adults.”

The ten AARP Asian American and Pacific Islander Community Hero Award finalists are: Katty Chow, Kin On Community Health Care in Seattle, WA; Enoch Fung, Chinatown Community Development Center in San Francisco, CA; Julie Kimiyo Hubbard, Yu-Ai Kai Japanese American Community Senior Service in San Jose, CA; Shiao-Lin D. Hui, Chinese Community Center Free Clinic at the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association of Chicago (CCBA) in Chicago, IL; Rose Kim Ly, Vietnamese American Community Center of the East Bay in Oakland, CA; Fay Chew Matsuda, Hamilton-Madison House in New York, NY; Soon Do Paik, Penn Asian Senior Services (PASSi) in Philadelphia, PA; Dongwoo “Joe” Pak, Korean-American Seniors Association of Orange County in Garden Grove, CA; and, Lourdes Santos Tancinco of the Veterans Equity Center in San Francisco, CA.

The finalists were selected from the 77 submissions AARP received from around the country including California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Nevada, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas, Virginia, Washington, and Washington, DC. The stellar nominees included executive directors, staff, and volunteers who work in healthcare, social services, education, technology, and the arts.

AARP is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization, with a membership of nearly 38 million, that helps people turn their goals and dreams into real possibilities, strengthens communities and fights for the issues that matter most to families such as healthcare, employment and income security, retirement planning, affordable utilities and protection from financial abuse. .  The AARP Foundation is an affiliated charity that provides security, protection, and empowerment to older persons in need with support from thousands of volunteers, donors, and sponsors. AARP has staffed offices in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Learn more at www.aarp.org.

Fareed Zakaria To Lead Healthcare 2020 CEO Forum With Healthcare Leaders From Around The World At AAPI’s 34th Annual Convention

(New York, NY; April 26, 2016): For over three decades, the Association of American Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI) has been in the forefront, educating, informing, advocating and providing a forum for the over 100,000 members whom it represents to have a collective voice in the healthcare industry in the United States.

The fluid political climate in the nation makes the healthcare industry and those who provide and benefit from healthcare services ever more challenging. Now, as the healthcare industry is rapidly evolving with the changes constantly impacting the providers, the Government, and patients, AAPI is once again playing a lead role in bringing together leaders from across the spectrum to discuss and provide insights into what to look for in the year 2020 in the healthcare sector.

Fareed Zakaria, a world renowned journalist and author will lead this in-depth Healthcare 2020 CEO Forum by AAPI, which will look at the major global developments in the rapidly changing healthcare sector, with an emphasis on new ideas and innovative solutions to America’s complex healthcare related issues.

“We are proud to have the Fareed Zakaria leading this prestigious forum,” says Dr. Seema Jain, President of AAPI. “Representatives from the healthcare industry, including leading CEOs from hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, academicians, intellectuals and physicians, who will focus on the changing trends in the healthcare sector and how they impact the providers, hospitals and corporations as well as the patients. The Forum will also offer insights into managing efficiently the growing costs in the delivery of healthcare services,” she added.

Fareed Zakaria writes a foreign affairs column for The Post. He is also the host of CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS and a contributing editor for The Atlantic. Before being named to his position at time in October 2010, Zakaria spent 10 years overseeing Newsweek’s editions abroad and eight years as the managing editor of Foreign Affairs. He is the author of “The Post-American World” (2009) and “The Future of Freedom” (2007). Born in India, Zakaria received a B.A. from Yale College and a Ph.D. from Harvard University.

“The AAPI CEO Forum, planned to be held on June 30th from 4 to 6 pm will help the delegates at the Convention in New York City at the prestigious the Marriott Marquis, Time Square in New York from June 30th to July 4th, 2016 better understand the recent trends in the delivery of healthcare to millions across the nation,” said Dr. Rita Ahuja, Chair Person of the Convention Committee.

Anwar Feroz, AAPI’s Honorary Advisor, says, “The CEO Forum will focus on the changing trends in the healthcare sector and how they impact the providers, hospitals and corporations as well as the patients. The Forum will also offer insights into managing efficiently the growing costs in the delivery of healthcare services.”

“With the changing trends and statistics in healthcare, both in India and US, we are refocusing our mission and vision, AAPI would like to make a positive meaningful impact on the healthcare delivery system both in the US and in India,” Dr. Seema Jain says.

Representing the interests of the over 100,000 physicians of Indian origin, leaders of American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI), the largest ethnic organization of physicians, for 34 years, AAPI Convention has provided a venue for medical education programs and symposia with world renowned physicians on the cutting edge of medicine.

Dr. Seema Jain says, “Physicians and healthcare professionals from across the country and internationally will convene and participate in the exchange of medical advances, to develop health policy agendas, and to encourage legislative priorities in the years to come. We look forward to seeing you in New York!” For more details, and sponsorship opportunities, please visit:  www.aapiconvention.org   and www.aapiusa.org

The Economic Recovery: The Plight of the Middle Class & Obama Legacy

The economic downturn that shook the nation nearly eight years go has had its influence on everyone. Just as any other community in the US, Indian Americans, a mostly affluent Immigrant community in the US, has been affected by the recession that hit the economy as well as by the recovery that is underway today.

Eight years after one of the largest the financial crisis America has ever faced, today, unemployment is at 5 percent, the country’s deficits are down and G.D.P. is growing. However, a majority of Americans feel left behind, writes Andrew Ross Sorkin, a financial columnist for The New York Times, founder and editor at large of DealBook and co-anchor of CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”

When Obama took office in early 2009, the U.S. economy was losing 800,000 jobs a month and the Dow was under 7,000. Today, the unemployment is 5 percent, the deficit is under 3 percent, AIG, the world’s biggest insurance company, has turned profitable and the government made all the money back on the banks.

Andrew Ross Sorkin draws to the impact of Obama policy in the past seven years. Overall, the U.S. economy is in much better shape than the public appreciates, especially when measured against the depths of the financial crisis and the possibility — now rarely even considered — that things could have been much, much worse. The economy has certainly come further than most people recognize. The private sector has added jobs for 73 consecutive months — some 14.4 million new jobs in all — the longest period of sustained job growth on record. Unemployment, which peaked at 10 percent the year Obama took office, the highest it had been since 1983, under Ronald Reagan, is now 5 percent, lower than when Reagan left office. The budget deficit has fallen by roughly $1 trillion during his two terms. The U.S. economic growth has significantly outpaced that of every other advanced nation.

In spite of all the progress in the past few years under Obama, Andrew Ross Sorkin says, despite the gains of the past seven years, many Americans have been left behind. A large swath of the nation has dropped out of the labor force completely, and the reality for the average American family is that its household income is $4,000 less than it was when Bill Clinton left office.

Economic inequality, meanwhile, has only grown worse, with the top 1 percent of American households taking in more than half of the recent gains in income growth. “Millions and millions and millions and millions of people look at that pretty picture of America he painted and they cannot find themselves in it to save their lives,” Bill Clinton himself said of Obama’s economy in March. “People are upset, frankly; they’re anxiety-ridden, they’re disoriented, because they don’t see themselves in that picture.”

Kenneth Rogoff, a Harvard economics professor and co-author of “This Time Is Different,” a well-regarded history of financial crises, said, “We had a systemic financial crisis since World War II. I mean this was like nothing we’ve experienced since World War II. The 1982 Volcker recession was nothing compared to this, and so you have to look at the nature of the shock.”

Charles Homans, the politics editor for the New York Times magazine, says, on one end of the “middle class” spectrum is a dream inexorably receding from view; on the other is a pair of socioeconomic blinders obscuring the harsher economic realities of those further down the scale. Summarizing today’s economy, Hillary Clinton, the Democratic Party’s presumptive nominee, said, “Many are still barely getting by,” while Donald Trump said that “we’re a third-world nation.”

Richard V. Reeves, a scholar at the Brookings Institution, argues that the most significant dividing line in recent American experience isn’t between the 99 percent and the 1 percent, but between the 80 percent and the 20 percent — a group that includes not just the very rich but also people most Americans would identify as upper middle class. The top 20 percent saw its average real household income rise to $185,000 in 2013 from about $109,000 a year in 1967. The middle 40 percent saw their real incomes rise, too, but to only $68,000 from $52,000 — the equivalent of a $348-­a-­year raise. The top 20 percent is also more likely than the middle 40 percent to believe that hard work gets you ahead in life.

According to a Brookings study released last year, men and women with bachelor’s degrees earned a median of 7 percent and 16 percent more in 2013 than they did in 1990. Women who either didn’t attend college or attended but didn’t graduate made just 3 percent more — up to a meager $29,500 — and those men made 13 percent less: a median of $40,700 a year, down from $47,100 a year.

President Barack Obama, recalling his efforts to rebuild the U.S. economy from the 2008 financial crisis, in spite of the criticisms and non-cooperation from the left, right and center, laments that his efforts were vastly underappreciated. “If you ask the average person on the streets, ‘Have deficits gone down or up under Obama?’ probably 70 percent would say they’ve gone up,” Obama said, with some justifiable exasperation — the deficit has in fact declined (by roughly three-quarters) since he took office, and polls do show that a large majority of Americans believe the opposite.

“I actually compare our economic performance to how, historically, countries that have wrenching financial crises perform,” he said. “By that measure, we probably managed this better than any large economy on Earth in modern history.” Obama said, “Anybody who says we are not absolutely better off today than we were just seven years ago, they’re not leveling with you. They’re not telling the truth.”

Dr. Narendra Kumar: Past President Of AKMG/AAPI & Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Recipient

“I am humbled and honored by this great honor bestowed on me today,” Dr. Narendra Kumar, president of American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI) said, soon after receiving the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman, the Government of India’s highest civilian honor for non-resident Indians in Kochi, India from Shri Pranab Mukherjee, president of India,on January 9th, 2013 during the 11th annual Parvasi Bharatiya Diwas. “I consider this award as the recognition of the achievements and contributions of 100,000 physicians of Indian origin in the United States, whom I represent as its sitting president,” Dr. Kumar added. Dr. Kumar received the award for his achievements in the field of medicine, community service, global leadership and contributions to building bridges between India and the United States.

It’s been a steady growth to prominence for Dr. Narendra Kumar, who took charge of AAPI in June 2012, during its 30th annual Convention in Long Beach, CA. Soon after assuming office, Dr. Narendra Kumar told his fellow physicians: “We will put all our energy in a positive direction in order to restore AAPI’s image, improve financial health, and bring unity, integrity and stability to our organization.”

Sen. Harry Reid Addressing AAPI Legislatiave Day under the leadership of Dr. Kumar in Washington DC
Sen. Harry Reid Addressing AAPI Legislatiave Day under the leadership of Dr. Kumar in Washington DC

In less than six months, Dr. Kumar and his extraordinarily committed team have worked hard to fulfill those prophetic words. AAPI today is more united than ever, financially stable, expanding steadily and is on the right path strengthening the organization and its 100,00 members, seeking ways to contribute to their motherland.

His leadership qualities and organizational skills came to the forefront and have been hailed by one and all during the Nine-City Musical Tour in the United States as well as during the most recent Global Healthcare Summit 2013 in Kochi, India. With over 1,200 delegates from around the world, the Summit was historic for the number of delegates and the quality of discussions led by world renowned physicians, ceos, and scholars from around the globe, in addition to the many initiatives planned to benefit millions of people in our motherland.

For many, leading such an organization is an honor. However, Dr. Kumar sees this as a responsibility, and said, “I have tried my best to carry on this responsibility with ever greater commitment and dedication.” Serving in various capacities in his local Michigan chapter and subsequently the parent-body, AAPI, Dr. Kumar has an intimate knowledge of the “nuts and bolts” of this giant organization.

When others were hesitant to commit money towards Shreya Ghoshal Musical Tour, especially after he had inherited several hundred thousand Dollars of debt from his predecessors, Dr. Kumar showed courage and innovation, encouraging AAPI and its local Chapters around the nation to play an active role that resulted not only in generating over $1.2 Million but also, brought the Chapters and the national organizations together.

Narendra Kumar
Dr. Kumar being awarded with the prestigious Pravasi Bharatiya Samman

“It all began with the idea of strengthening the relationship between the AAPI Chapters and national office,” Dr. Narendra Kumar says with a sense of pride. “The concept of this program to bring together various local Chapters and its members and Fellows closer has been in my mind for several years. Drs. Jayesh Shah, Ravi Jahagirdar and Hemant Dhingra enthusiastically embraced this idea and the net result of our collaboration and dialogue is the Multi-City Tour.”

Being a leader of an umbrella organization representing over 130 member associations nationwide, and having a total membership of over nearly 100,000 physicians and fellows of Indian origin, Dr. Kumar has ascended to leadership with his decades of hard work and dedication to the organization and the people it is committed to serve. As a Regional Director of AAPI, Dr. Kumar had attended almost all the local AAPI chapter meetings in his region in an attempt to serve as a liaison between the local chapters and the national organization. He  has been instrumental in recruiting hundreds of new AAPI patron members to AAPI.

The Pravaasi Bharat Diwas (PBD) Meeting held in New Delhi in January 2007, “gave me a chance to prove my ability to act as political liaison in organizing special interviews with India’s top dignitaries,” Dr. Kumar recalls. Since then, it has been a steady ascendance for Dr. Kumar, culminating in his current position as the president of AAPI.

As the AAPI Treasurer, Dr. Kumar was able to fulfill his promise to keep AAPI finances in proper order by maintaining fiscal stability, accountability and enhance financial health. “It is important to keep financial matters transparent to the membership,” he says.

A man of integrity and giving his best to every effort that he has undertaken both in his professional, family and social life, Dr. Kumar has won the admiration of everyone. In the words of Dr. Jayesh Shah, past President of AAPI,  “Dr. Kumar is kind of person that you immediately feel like he is your friend. To describe Dr. Kumar in 3 words: He is personable, go getter  and passionate. He can translate any dream into reality by hard work, perseverance, and commitment.”

An accomplished  physician and surgeon in the United States, specializing in  Otolaryngology- Head & Neck Surgery, Dr. Kumar is a Board Certified Sleep Medicine specialist and founder/Medical Director of Sound and Sleep Diagnostic Labs which includes 4 Sleep Labs in the state of Michigan. Dr. Kumar, who had completed his medical degree from Trivandrum Medical College, Kerala and post-graduate residency from Banaras  Hindu University  (Varanasi , India ) and Case Western  Reserve University , Cleveland, Ohio , is committed to giving back to the community and to the enhancing of opportunities for the professional growth of physicians of Indian origin.

Dr. Kumar with former President of India, Dr. Abdul Kalam Azad
Dr. Kumar with former President of India, Dr. Abdul Kalam Azad

On his commitment to social causes in addition to his professional leadership, Dr. Kumar, who is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, candidly admits, “Over the past 10 years, I have become increasingly involved in social, professional and political arenas and have taken active leadership roles in various Medical Organizations.”

Dr. Kumar has been involved in social professional and political arenas and has taken active leadership roles in various medical organizations both in USA and abroad. Encouraging his fellow physicians to give generously towards noble causes, Dr. Kumar says, “As members of AAPI, we have not forgotten our roots and are engaged in several activities such as conducting Indo-US Healthcare Summit in Kochi this year that will blaze new trail in healthcare sector in India and will pave way for new frontiers in public private partnership.”

During his tenure in 2004 as the Silver Jubilee President of Association of Kerala Medical Graduates, AKMG Executive Committee was dedicated in taking this organization to the next level by promoting increased member participation, partnering with global AKMG chapters in India and the Middle East, which included the inauguration of AKMG Emirates in Dubai, and furthering its mission to charitable projects. “I was instrumental in establishing Electronic Learning Resource Centers in various government medical colleges in Kerala, raising over $500,000 in alumni donations.

Dr. Kumar leading a delegation to meet with Prime Minister Narendra Modi
Dr. Kumar leading a delegation to meet with Prime Minister Narendra Modi

Dr. Kumar was instrumental in organizing the Heart-Heart program in conjunction with the Lions Club of Kerala, India which provided free open heart surgery for 150 indigent patients in Kerala, India.  In 2004, he helped raise over $150,000 for the charitable wing of AKMG-Humanitarian Services, thru the AKMG Silver Jubilee convention held in Detroit. In 2010, as the Fund Raising Committee Chair- Tri-City Hindu Temple of Mid-Michigan, USA, he helped raise over $2 million to build a Hindu Temple in Michigan.

Dr. Kumar has been active in the political realm too.  Since 2002, he has been organizing  Indo-American Political Fund Raising events and made substantial contribution for State Governors, Senators, and Congressman Election Campaigns enhancing political image of Indian American Community.  In May 2005, as the co-President of the Indo-Pak Friendship Society Convention, organized in Saginaw, Michigan, attended by over 1,200 participants, he was instrumental in enabling the people of these two nations to work together for fostering peace and cooperation.

Dr. Kumar with A K Antony, former Defense Minister and Ramesh Chennithala,  Home Minister of the State of Kerala
Dr. Kumar with A K Antony, former Defense Minister and Ramesh Chennithala,
Home Minister of the State of Kerala

Recognizing his leadership and contributions, the AMA honored him with the Leadership Award in 2008. In the same year, he was bestowed with the Kerala Ratna Award and the MAPI Presidential Award. In 2004, Dr. Kumar received the Distinguished Leadership award from Michigan State Medical Society (MSMS), from the President of MSMS.  In 2009, he was given the Keraleeyam-Kerala Ratna Leadership Award in New Delhi, presented by Chief Justice of India, K.G. Balakrishnan, for enhancing the image of Kerala through dedicated service. In 2011, he received the Distinguished Leadership Award from AKMG (Association of Kerala Medical Graduates).  Dr. Kumar is also the recipient of Flag Award from Michigan State Medical Society; AKMG Purple Heart Award for Philanthropy; Leadership Award from Kerala Center in New York; and Certificate of Appreciation from R.K. Foundation, Inc. USA. Most recently, he was awarded with the Excellence Award by Price Holding and GOPIO during the Kerala Investment Consortium in Kochi on January 5th, 2013.

Dr. Narendra Kumar with his family
Dr. Narendra Kumar with his family

Dr. Kumar is married to Meenakshi for 35 years and the couple are blessed with two children, Sarada and Ramesh. Dr. Ramesh Kumar graduated with a Medical Degree from Amrita Institute of Medicine in Kochi, India, and is currently a Ramesh Kumar is a Urology Resident at Henry Ford, Michigan. Sarada completed her Masters in Healthcare Administration from the University of Michigan and is currently on sabbatical, taking care of the family and with her husband, Dr. Arjun Das’ medical practice in Toledo, Ohio. Their 6-year-old grandson and 6-month-old grand-daughter are the pride of the family.

Dr. Kumar is a proven leader entrusted with the task of leading this prestigious global organization that represents the influential and committed members of AAPI. Under his effective leadership, AAPI has become a force to reckon with. AAPI’s stellar role has come in for appreciation with the political leaders both in India and the United States. Ever smiling, affable and approachable, Dr. Kumar is a solid leader in the AAPI tradition.

Shri Dwarkamai Celebrates 10th Anniversary of Sai Rainbow and Shri Sai Palkhi Utsav with Fervor and Gaiety

Chicago IL: Shri Dwarkamai (www.dwarkamai.org), which is a recognized non-profit and tax-exempt organization under IRS code section 501(c) (3) of the USA, celebrated the 10th Anniversary of Shri Dwarkamai Sai Rainbow and Sai Palkhi Utsav on Saturday April 16th, 2016, between 9:00 AM to 3: 30 PM at Margaret Mead Jr. High School, 1765 Biesterfield Road, Elk Grove Village, IL. The event was attended by hundreds of devotees from different walks of life, with their families and friends.

Dwarkamai Chicago Sai Palkhi started 10 years ago in Chicago land by Hari Prasad Valada and Sai Roopa Valada under guidance of Anil Naik . After Hari Prasad and Sai Roopa attended the Sai Palki ceremony in a different city, they saw the beauty, enlightenment and nirvana of the experience. Hari Prasad and Sai Roopa had a vision to spread of teaching of Shirdi Sai Baba to the Chicago area under Anil Naik guidance , Through their hard work, commitment and sacrifice, they have grown the Sai Palki spiritual journey from a few houses over 1 week to hundreds of houses over several months covering Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin area. So many volunteers dedicate their time and effort to make Sai Palkhi successful every year

The program was kick started by singing the Indian National Anthem by Om Desai and the US National Anthem by all Dwarkamai kids led by Gauri Naik. Chief Guest of Sai Rainbow Utsav Shri & Smt. Lakshmana Agadi inaugurated the event. A spectacular Cultural Program was organized between 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM. An Invocation Dance, “Pushpanjali”, was presented by Devaki Janakiraman and performed by her students Sangavi Subramani, Ramiya Jayakumar, Sowmiya Jayakumar, and Sahithi Tummala, which was followed by a vocal performance in praise of Lord Ganesha by Hemangi Chinthapali, and Akshara Birthi.

A pure Kuchipudi dance on Lord Ganesha was presented by Sobha Tammana and performed by her students Santhosha Pochiraju, Shaila Pochiraju, and Veda Nallapati. A gripping dance performance on Lord Shiva song was presented by Sreelekha Sama and her students Anita Ravula, Anita Ravindra Kumar, Ashwini Gawde, Madhavi Kathiravan, Padma Madireddy, Rajini Sharad, Rupal Shah, Sangeeta Ravulapati, Sreelatha Parvathala, Gayatri Kamath, Sridevi Donthi followed by another song on Lord Shiva performed by Shinmayi Subramanian, Aditi Subramanian, Sama Skanthakumar, and Apurva Kashyap.

A semi classical Kuchipudi Dance on Goddess Lalitha Devi was presented by Alekhya & Ananya Siri Dharna, Sai Manushri, Sai Vanshika Pendekanti, Dhivija Sai Challa, and Sahasra Veerapalli. A classical fusion dance based on Hanuman chalisa was presented by Rina Thakur and performed by Aparna Bandari, Ramya Eswaran, Sreedevi Adaveni, Riddhi Parekh, Khushboo Prasad, Yashwini Ullal, Kalpana Dhulipalla, Sairoopa Valada, Lavanya Velineni, Sridevi Arigela, and Vijaya Nakka.

A devotional dance, “Kathak Teen Taal”, in praise of Lord Krishna, was presented by Gauri Jog and performed by Aashna Bhatt, Anishka Vora, Aishani Waghmare, Haley Shah, Stuti Pai, Sanaa Ahmed, Sonia Singh, Arya Labade, Ruchi Patel, Palak Khera, followed by another song dedicated to Lord Krishna presented by Sridevi Donthi and performed by Supraja Donthi and Saiprasad Valada. A classical Kathak dance, based on thumri on a poem from Mugual era, was presented by Palak Khera, Anushka Agrawal, Saachi Dalvi, Niva Patel, Shweta Govilkar, Ruchi Patel, Keyana Desai, and Sruthi Gurudev.

A fusion dance medley on Lord Shiva and Lord Shri Rama was presented by Anand Bhatt and performed by Anay Kondapelli, Rohit Vyata, Dhruv Velineni, Akhil Inampudi, Aryan Sai Ravulapati, Akhil Sai Ravulapati, Rithvik Akula, Rohan Parvathala, Rahul Parvathala, Atharva Gawde, Samar Sannareddy, and Srehith Sannareddy. Later few more dance medleys of Bhangra (based on Shri Sai Baba and Lord Shiva), Bumlahari (Lord Shiva Song), and Bollywood were presented by Chetan Velineni, Richita Donthi, Bhanu Adaveni, Bhavin Adaveni, Shrikar Dulam,  Snigdha Akula, Anish Basety, Keertana Dhulipalla, Sai Varun Nandela, Roshni, Baldeep, Rajprit Saluja, Aarushi Arora, Diksha Chitkara, Shilpa Rajput, Mahima Patel, and Rohith Patel.

The Grand Finale of the Cultural Program consisted of a dance medley presented by all the devotees of Shirdi Sai Baba, dedicated to Lord Shiva and Shirdi Sai Baba. The Sai Palkhi Darshan and Procession took place from 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM. It consisted of taking the

Shri Sai Baba Palki (palanquin) with the picture of our Guru– Shri Shirdi Sai around the school gym area accompanied by singing of hymns, chanting, dancing and spiritual merriment in the form of a religious procession. The event concluded with the Aarti and Bhandara (Maha Prasad) between 1:00 PM and 2:00 PM.

Pictures captions: Devotees celebrates the 10th Anniversary of Shri Dwarkamai Sai Rainbow and Sai Palkhi Utsav 02 AMU_3316 Devotees celebrates the 10th Anniversary of Shri Dwarkamai Sai Rainbow and Sai Palkhi Utsav

Investments By NRIs To Be Considered Domestic

In an attempt to attract overseas funds, the Govt. of India said non-repatriable investments by nonresident Indians (NRIs), overseas citizens of India (OCIs) and persons of Indian origin (PIOs) will be treated as domestic investments and will not be subject to FDI caps. The Cabinet approved some amendments, including changes in the definition of NRI, to be incorporated in the FDI policy, “Investment by NRIs under Schedule 4 of FEMA (Transfer or issue of security by persons residing outside India).

“Regulations will be deemed to be domestic investment at par with the investment made by residents.” an official statement said. The NDA government, which has liberalized the FDI policy for sectors such as Defense, Railways, infrastructure, medical devices and insurance, is keen to tap NRIs, OCIs and PIOs. The government wants to channelize the funds of NRIs, who now have set up large companies abroad, by treating their non-repatriable investments as domestic investments. NRIs have been demanding from the government that their investments be considered as domestic investments.

A committee set up to look into the possibility of treating non-repatriable NRI funds as domestic investments, had earlier said that NRIs might prefer investing through corporate entities. “It was intended to provide NRIs an incentive to bring funds into India without repatriation rights, at a time when foreign exchange reserves were limited and capital inflows were modest,” the statement said. The provision should continue to incentivize investments by NRIs, including OCIs and PIOs, resulting in increased investments in the country.

“This will enable investments by NRIs, OCI and PIO cardholders under Schedule 4 on non-repatriation basis, across sectors without being subjected to any of the conditions associated to foreign investment,” it said. During the April-February period of the previous fiscal year, FDI rose by 39 per cent to $28.81 billion, as against $20.76 billion in the same period last fiscal year.

Priyanka Chopra, Aziz Ansari, Sania Mirza Among TIME’s ‘Most Influential People’

New York, NY: Bollywood actress Priyanka Chopra, Aziz Ansari, founders of Flipkart Binny Bansal and Sachin Bansal, tennis ace Sania Mirza, Google’s Indian American chief executive Sundar Pichai, activist Sunita Narain, Raj Panjabi, CEO of Last Mile Health and Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan have been featured in TIME magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in the World list.

Time’s annual list, released last week, includes pioneers like American composer Lin Manuel-Miranda, leaders like IMF head Christine Lagarde and icons like Oscar-winning actor Leonardo DiCaprio who are “exploring the frontiers of art, science, society, technology and more.” These persons of Indian origin have been features alongside Oscar-winner Leonardo DiCaprio, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and singer Nicki Minaj.

This year’s list includes Pope Francis, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla, Russian President Vladimir Putin, US President Barack Obama, French President Fran ois Hollande, Myanmar’s pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, Democratic Presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton, her Republican rival Ted Cruz, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Chinese leader Xi Jinping. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who was among the probable contenders for the list, was not in the final list determined by Time s editors. Modi was among Time’s 100 most influential people in the world last year.

Other big names from the entertainment industry whose names have been featured on the list include British singer Adele, actor Gael García Bernal, actor Idris Elba, singer Ariana Grande, actress Taraji P. Henson, filmmaker Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, actor Oscar Isaac, reality TV star Caitlyn Jenner, actor Dwayne Johnson, model Karlie Kloss, rapper Kendrick Lamar, actor Julia Louis-Dreyfus, actress Melissa McCarthy, actress Gina Rodriguez, actor Mark Rylance, and actress Charlize Theron.

Terming Rajan as “India’s prescient banker,” Time said he is among a rare breed of “economic seers” who he “steered” India through the global crisis and fallout, “playing a large role in making it one of the emerging-market stars of the moment. While serving as the youngest chief economist of the IMF from 2003 to 2006, Time said Rajan predicted the subprime crisis that would lead to the Great Recession, standing up to critics like former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, who labeled him a “Luddite”.

“Since then, more and more of the economic establishment has come to share Rajan s view that debt-fueled growth is just a saccharine substitute for the real thing,” Time said.

In a profile for Mirza, cricket superstar Sachin Tendulkar writes that her “confidence, strength and resilience reach beyond tennis” and she has inspired a generation of Indians to pursue their dreams ” and to realize that they can also be the best.” Tendulkar described Mirza, who recently was awarded India’s third highest civilian honor the Padma Bhushan, as an “inspiration” on the court. He lauded her “dedication and willpower” to reinvent herself fully as a doubles player when her singles career was cut short by wrist injuries.

Chopra, who came into the limelight in the West playing the lead role in the popular American TV series “Quantico,” has also graced one of the six cover pages of the magazine. On Chopra, who was awarded the Padma Shri this year, actor Dwayne Johnson said she is a “star rising higher” and lauded her “drive, ambition, self-respect, and she knows there s no substitute for hard work.”

Time said Flipkart founders Binny Bansal and Sachin Bansal may have come across as arrogant when they told investors the company they started in 2007 as an online bookstore could be worth USD 100 million in a decade. “It turned out to be modesty: Flipkart now has 75 million users and a $13 billion valuation,” Time said.

On Pichai, author Bill Nye said the “internet’s chief engineer” has “helped change the world”. The Chennai-born was the “head guy” on Google Drive and worked on Google Chrome, Gmail and Android phones and the world is now watching what he comes up with next, Nye said in his profile.

On activist Sunita Narain, author Amitav Ghosh said her ideas have shaped some of the “key debates of our time” and “hers is a voice that urgently needs to be heard in this era of climate change.

“As an activist, Narain is a pioneer,” he said, adding that she and her organization New Delhi based Centre for Science and Environment, have been campaigning to reduce the Indian capital’s dangerous air-pollution levels for almost two decades.

Also on the list is Indian-origin actor and comedian Aziz Ansari and Indian-origin Raj Panjabi, CEO of organization Last Mile Health. “The way Aziz talks about his ethnicity and career is so interesting, and the entertainment-industry world he writes about is hysterical and on point,” his colleagues from the industry Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson said.

On Panjabi, who at 9 had escaped a civil war in his home country of Liberia former, US President Bill Clinton said, “to spend time with Raj Panjabi is to see up close what happens when someone with uncommon courage and compassion puts himself on the front lines of the world s most complex challenges.” Clinton said the “heroic work” Panjabi and and his organization did to train 1,300 community health workers in Liberia was critical in helping the government contain the Ebola epidemic.

On Suu Kyi, Obama wrote for the Time that “The Lady” remains a “beacon” of hope, “now more than ever,” for 50 million people reaching for justice, and for millions more around the world. Time Managing Editor Nancy Gibbs said the people on this year’s list “have lessons to teach. We can debate those lessons; we don t have to endorse them or agree with them. But the influence of this year’s TIME 100, to my mind, is that down to the last person, they have the power to make us think. And they are using it.”

India Among 175 Countries That Sign Landmark Climate Deal At United Nations

UNITED NATIONS: While there is so much uncertainty, misunderstanding, differences of opinions, ideologies, and tensions around the world between the nations, there was one solemn moment today that brought nearly all the nations and almost the entire humanity together for a common goal: to preserve the Earth for future generations.

The Climate Summit at the world headquarters of the United Nations was symbolic of the urgency felt by the entire world to address the rapidly changing climate, and to recognize the need to stop the degradation of the resources and the Earth itself we have been blessed to have.

Leaders from at least 175 countries signed the Paris Agreement on climate change on Friday, April 22, 2016 as the landmark deal took a key step forward, potentially entering into force years ahead of schedule. “We are in a race against time,” U.N. secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the gathering. “The era of consumption without consequences is over.”

As many as 175 countries, including India, China and the US, signed the Paris Agreement on climate change at the UN headquarters in New York on Friday, to coincide with ‘International Mother Earth Day’. This was the first day of the signing ceremony of the historic global deal. That such a large number of countries signed the agreement in a single day is significant. The previous record for the most countries to sign an international agreement on one day was set in 1982, when 119 countries signed the ‘Law of the Sea Convention’.

The Paris Agreement, the world’s response to hotter temperatures, rising seas and other impacts of climate change, was reached in December as a major breakthrough in U.N. climate negotiations, which for years were slowed by disputes between rich and poor countries over who should do what. Under the agreement, countries set their own targets for reducing emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. The targets are not legally binding, but countries must update them every five years. The agreement aims to take multiple measures to save the world from disastrous consequences of climate change and was adopted by 195 countries in Paris

The agreement will be open for signature for one year – till April 21, 2017. However, merely signing the agreement will not make it operational. The United Nations says 15 countries, several of them small island states under threat from rising seas, did that on April 22nd by depositing their instruments of ratification. The agreement will enter into force once 55 countries representing at least 55 percent of global emissions have formally joined it. Many now expect the climate agreement to enter into force long before the original deadline of 2020. Some say it could happen this year. After signing, countries must formally approve the Paris Agreement through their domestic procedures.

India’s Union Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar signed the agreement on behalf of India. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and some heads of state and government, including French President Francois Hollande addressed the gathering. Also on the list of speakers was Mahindra Group chairman and managing director Anand Mahindra, as a representative of the business and corporate world.

India has maintained that the burden of fighting climate change cannot be put on the shoulders of the poor after decades of industrial development by the rich nations. It has announced plans to quadruple its renewable power capacity to 175 gigawatts by 2022 as part of the government’s plan to supply electricity to every household. However, India has so far not indicated when it would ratify it.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, holding his young granddaughter, joined dozens of world leaders for a signing ceremony that set a record for international diplomacy: Never have so many countries signed an agreement on the first available day. States that don’t sign Friday have a year to do so.

The United States has said it intends to join the agreement this year. The world is watching anxiously: Analysts say that if the agreement enters into force before President Barack Obama leaves office in January, it would be more complicated for his successor to withdraw from the deal because it would take four years to do so under the agreement’s rules. The United States put the deal into economic terms. “The power of this agreement is what it is going to do to unleash the private sector,” Kerry told the gathering, noting that this year is again shaping up to be the hottest year on record.

“The world must work together to ensure that the goals of the Paris Agreement are realized. US commitment to leadership in this arena has helped start a process that must last beyond your presidency,” a group of 145 US lawmakers said in a letter to US President Barack Obama.

China, the world’s top carbon emitter, announced it will “finalize domestic procedures” to ratify the Paris Agreement before the G-20 summit in China in September. Ban immediately welcomed the pledge. Maros Sefcovic, the energy chief for another top emitter, the 28-nation European Union, has said the EU wants to be in the “first wave” of ratifying countries.

French President Francois Hollande, the first to sign the agreement, said Friday he will ask parliament to ratify it by this summer. France’s environment minister is in charge of global climate negotiations. “There is no turning back now,” Hollande told the gathering. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also announced that his country would ratify the agreement this year.

Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe brought applause when he declared, “Life itself is at stake in this combat. We have the power to win it.” Countries that had not yet indicated they would sign the agreement Friday include some of the world’s largest oil producers, including Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Nigeria and Kazakhstan, the World Resources Institute said.

Scientific analyses show the initial set of targets that countries pledged before Paris don’t match the agreement’s long-term goal to keep global warming below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), compared with pre-industrial times. Global average temperatures have already climbed by almost 1 degree Celsius. Last year was the hottest on record. The latest analysis by the Climate Interactive research group shows the Paris pledges put the world on track for 3.5 degrees Celsius of warming. A separate analysis by Climate Action Tracker, a European group, projected warming of 2.7 degrees Celsius. Either way, scientists say the consequences could be catastrophic in some places, wiping out crops, flooding coastal areas and melting Arctic sea ice.

According to reports, as the Paris Agreement moves forward, there is some good news. Global energy emissions, the biggest source of man-made greenhouse gases, were flat last year even though the global economy grew, according to the International Energy Agency. Still, fossil fuels are used much more widely than renewable sources like wind and solar power.

Under Article 21 of the Agreement, the Paris accord will enter into force on the 30th day after the date on which at least 55 parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) deposit their “instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession” with the depositary at UN headquarters.

The Paris deal is the most ambitious climate change agreement in history. It established a long term, durable global framework to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions where 195 countries will work together to put the world on a path to keeping global temperature rise well below 2 degrees Celsius. These countries had also agreed to pursue efforts to limit the increase in temperatures to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

MoneyGram Cricket Bee: Winners announced for Bay Area regional contest

METUCHEN, NJ: Over 200 people registered for the Bay Area regional of the MoneyGram Cricket Bee held at Chabot College on April 17. The three winners of the second regional, answered trivia questions on Cricket to solidify their position at the finals. Auroshish Mishra of Belmont, CA was declared second runner up, Bharat Jayakumar of Sunnyvale, CA was first runner up and the Regional champion was Ravishkumar Bhavsar of Union City, CA.

The competition allows cricket fans to compete for prizes while sharing their knowledge of the game in an effort to win a cash prize of $10,000.

Open to those 18 and older, the contest began with regional rounds in New Jersey, completed San Francisco and will conclude in Toronto, each testing participants’ general cricket knowledge. The regional contest will have two components, a written test and an oral test. In the written qualifier, contestants will be asked 35 questions. They must get at least 25 correct in order to advance to the oral round. In the oral round, the contest will be held on a miss and out basis; simply if a contestant misses the right answer, they are eliminated.

Unlike quiz shows, the Cricket Bee will be conducted so that contestants are actually competing with themselves and the question posed to them as opposed to their peers. Cricket enthusiasts can still participate at the remaining center in Toronto (Apr 24). Contestants can register to compete in the game of their choice at www.cricketbee.com. A sample set of questions and sources will be provided for the participants.

“We are proud to sponsor the 2016 Cricket Bee,” says Joann Chatfield, MoneyGram’s vice president of marketing. “We know that the passion for cricket unites friends and loved ones around the world and brings them closer together. It’s always exciting to be a part of initiatives that support out South Asian communities.

Kawan Foods serves as the powered by sponsor for the innovative event and has been deeply involved with the South Asian community through various initiatives and hopes to connect with the entire Cricketing community here in the US and Canada.

“We want to congratulate the winners of the regional contest and wish them continued success in their endeavor to win $10,000,” said Tim Tan, MD Kawan Foods. “There was a lot of excitement and immense talent at the regional which goes to show how passionate people are about the game. Participants had an opportunity to network and interact with other cricket players and enthusiasts from various cities and I am very happy to have our first set of finalists” said Rahul Walia, Founder of the Cricket Bee

TV Asia serves as the exclusive broadcaster for the event and has been a strong proponent of promoting Cricket in the country. “Our studio was abuzz with the contestants and I was excited to see how much trivia and knowledge they had to share. It’s definitely a great platform for cricket enthusiasts across the country and we are excited to see them at the finals” said HR Shah, chairman and CEO of TV Asia and an avid cricketer himself. The finals are slated for May 7th and are open for the public to watch. You can reserve seats by calling 732-710-4361.

‘Fair and equitable treatment under the law applies to everyone’: Preet Bharara

Queens, NY: The 10th Biennial Civic Luncheon held by Queens Civic Congress (QCC) was a huge success with capacity attendance, a well-organized program with keynote speaker Preet Bharara, prominent U.S. Attorney for the Southern District, New York as well as featured speaker, Queens Borough President Melida Katz and several other notable elected officials. The event was sponsored by Queens Civic Congress Foundation and held at Antun’s in Queens Village.

Paul Kerzner, President, Queens Civic Congress Foundation, welcomed the guests, followed by the Pledge of Allegiance then a beautiful rendition of the National Anthem by Hon. Melinda Katz. QCC president Harbachan Singh welcomed members and guests, acknowledging the important role of members and officers for the successes of QCC activities focusing on improving the quality of life issues. Mr. Singh also expressed due gratitude and outlined several future plans,

Presentation of various proclamations and resolutions to the 3 honorees was done by Hon. Melinda Katz and NYS Senator Tony Avella. In his remarks, State Sen. Tony Avella congratulated QCC and the honorees, citing the advocacy of QCC on community issues Kevin Forrestal, executive vice president of QCC, made presentations on behalf of several elected officials.

In her speech, Hon. Melinda Katz thanked QCC for its issues oriented community efforts and remarked on the appeal, diversity and progress in Queens which is fast becoming the destination of visitors to New York.

Keynote speaker Preet Bharara was introduced by Vice President Ashook Ramsaran with a warm welcome of admiration and appreciation. Mr. Bharara recounted his family’s journey from India to USA and the many opportunities in the USA which contributed to his success as a notable and quite visible official in New York State and indeed the entire USA. Bharara reiterated determination and relentless pursuits of his office to enforce and encourage accountability in all sectors, and provide protection from predators and those who do not abide by the rule of law. He said that “fair and equitable treatment under the law applies to everyone regardless of position or standing and is a cornerstone of United States of America”.

QCC Civic Achievement Awards 2016 for high achievements in community service were presented to: James Gallagher, Jr. (President, Fresh Meadows Homeowners Civic Association) presented by QCC vice president Kim Ohanian; Warren Schreiber (President, Bay Terrace Community Alliance) presented by QCC vice president Tyler Cassell; Christina Wilkinson (President, Newtown Historical Society) presented by QCC treasurer James A. Trent.

Other elected officials in attendance included several NYC council members and NYS senators and assembly members. NYS Assemblyman David Weprin congratulated QCC and the honorees for outstanding community work.

QCC vice president Richard Hellenbrecht made the concluding remarks, citing several QCC initiatives and support for many important community issues. Hellenbrecht also welcome the youth group of Civic Activism Network (CAN) and thanked Elmhurst United for supporting CAN’s participation.

Music was provided by John Walters. Queens Civic Congress, Inc. and Queens Civic Congress Foundation, Inc., a 501(c)(3) corporation, were formed in 1997, representing more than 100 civic and other community organizations throughout the Borough of Queens in New York City, and are committed to the protection and advancement of the “Quality of Life”, to provide a forum for the civic associations and neighborhood organizations, to develop and present common policies and positions, and to furnish effective leadership and advocacy for the advancement of the welfare and interests of Queens’ neighborhoods.

Documentary on Mary’s Meals filmed in India to be shown at Cannes – Mary’s Meals was started in 2002.

New York, NY: Generation Hope,a documentary movie about the life-changing work of Mary’s Meals, is set to be shown at the 69th annual Cannes Film Festival in May. Filmed on location at Mary’s Meals projects in Malawi, Haiti and India, the movie highlights the difference a nutritious daily meal in school can make for children living in the world’s most impoverished communities.

Mary’s Meals was born in 2002 when Magnus MacFarlane-Barrow, a Catholic from Scotland, visited Malawi and witnessed the plight of youngsters there who did not have enough to eat.

Supported by people from many walks of life and different backgrounds,the charitable program now feeds more than one million poor children in 12 countries across Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, every day they attend school.

In India, the charity works in Bihar, Orissa, Kolkata, Chattisgarh, Jharkhand and Delhi. They work in both formal and non-formal education centres – such as railway platforms – providing a daily meal to children who are disadvantaged by caste, disability, gender, or HIV status. In collaboration with a partner, BREAD, they feed 19,148 Indian children, according to the charity’s website.

The uplifting half-hour documentary will be exhibited at the Cannes Film Festival’s ‘Short Film Corner’, a prestigious platform for the work of up-and-coming short film directors and producers from around the world.

Hollywood star Gerard Butler, who has supported Mary’s Meals for several years and has visited one of its sites in Liberia, features in the movie directed by Charles Kinnane.

“It’s an incredible gift to bring our work to new eyes, new ears and new hearts in this way,” said Mary’s Meals founder and CEOMacFarlane-Barrow on the movie beingselected to be shown at Cannes.

He added, “At this point in our growth, we see that a beautiful revolution is taking place as a new generation, once fed by Mary’s Meals, begins to find its voice. We call them ‘Generation Hope’.

This is what this film is about – the university students, singers, farmers, teachers, DJs, footballers, and a myriad of other happy young people who, well-nourished and well-educated, are now finding their own way in life.” Ahead of the Cannes Film Festival, Generation Hope received its official launch on April15, with premiere events taking place across six continents.

Jaydeep Patel of New Jersey Charged With Stabbing Grandmother

Jaydeep Patel, a 26-year-old Indian American man in New Jersey has been arrested and charged with killing his 73-year-old grandmother, Ramila Patel on April 20th. As per reports, police found the 73-year-old Patel after authorities had responded to a home on 9th Street in North Bergen, N.J.

According to  Hudson County prosecutor Esther Suarez,Patel, who had been stabbed multiple times in her torso, was transported to a hospital but was pronounced dead around 8 a.m. Jaydeep Patel, Ramila Patel’s grandson, who lived together at the North Bergen home, was arrested and charged with the murder, as well as two separate weapons charges, the nj.com report said.

Neighbors of the alleged killer said he is an engineer who spoke often of how much he loved his father who passed away of a heart attack about two years ago, according to the report. “The kid, he used to come here all the time since I got Parkinson’s dystonia. He used to tell me how to eat better,” one neighbor, Hector Millet, told nj.com, who has lived in the neighborhood for nearly three decades.

“He used to talk to me about his future… He was a happy-going kid. He was always happy. Never in my mind did I think that something like that was going to happen.” The overall feel of many of the neighbors, many of whom declined comment in the nj.com report, said the Patels were nice. “He loved computers. We would talk about computers. We would talk about religion,” Millet added.

Another neighbor, who chose to remain anonymous, said that Jaydeep Patel and his mother had been having verbal fights of late which led to the grandmother – Patel’s paternal grandmother – wanting them to move out. Prosecutor’s office officials declined to comment on the motive of the crime, and could not confirm when Jaydeep Patel would appear in court. The homicide is the first of the year in the New Jersey city.

Indian Superhero created by Lee’s POW! Entertainment and Graphic India

New York, NY: April 25, 2016 –As the global film industry continues to be dominated by superhero films based on Stan Lee’s co-creations, including the upcomingX-Men: Age of Apocalypse,the legendary creator is now planning his first Bollywood film for India.

Graphic India, India’s leading character entertainment company, andLee’sPOW! Entertainment,announced today a partnership with Phantom Films, to begin pre-production on alive-action theatrical film for “Chakra The Invincible,” the first Indian superhero created by Lee along with Graphic Co-Founder & CEO, Sharad Devarajan.

The film will be directed by acclaimed filmmaker, VikramadityaMotwane(Lootera, Udaan) who is currently working on the screenplay with Lee and Devarajan. Phantom’s MadhuMantena will produce the film with Devarajan and POW! Entertainment’s Gill Champion.  Datta Dave at Tulsea (Motwane’s agent) brought the parties together and structured the arrangement. Unlike the animated kids property, the film version of Chakra will feature an older version of the character in his twenties, set against the spectacular backdrop of Mumbai.

“I’m a fan of Bollywood films and am really excited about launching Chakra the Invincible as my first Bollywood superhero movie,”commented Stan Lee, Chief Creative Officer at POW! Entertainment. “Vikramaditya is an amazingly talented filmmaker who I have no doubt can make the Chakra film a massive hit in India and around the world. I only hope he remembers to include my cameo!”

Says Vikramaditya, “It’s an honor and an absolute delight to be making a film based on a Stan Lee character. We’re very excited and we hope to take comic book filmmaking to the next level with Chakra. And no, we won’t forget Stan’s cameo…”

“Stan Lee’s characters have generated $15 billion at the global box office, creating some of the most beloved icons in entertainment. More people likely know the face of Spider-Man than they do the Mona Lisa,” commented Graphic’s Co-Founder & CEO, Sharad Devarajan. “With VikramMotwane, we have been fortunate to find both a groundbreaking director and a passionate comic book fan, who will be able to create something uniquely Indian, but also authentic to Stan’s pantheon of superhero storytelling.”

Chakra The Invincible was originally launched as a kids animated film on Cartoon Network India two years ago, with three new animated TV movies currently in production to be released on Cartoon Network and Toonami later this year.  The hero also built a worldwide following through a digital mobile series launched on Rovio’s ToonsTV available through the Angry Birds game – resulting in more than 40 million views for the Indian superhero. Chakra has also had hundreds of thousands of comic books released worldwide in India and North America.

GRAPHIC INDIA is a character entertainment company focused on creating leading characters, comics and stories through mobile and digital platforms.  Graphic’s stories include, Ramayan 3392A.D., The LeavesandThe Sadhu, allcurrently in development as Hollywood feature films; 18 Days, a reimagining of the great eastern epic, the Mahabharata, by acclaimed graphic novel creator, Grant Morrison which was launched as an animated digital series in partnership with YouTube India; Devi, a female superhero from acclaimed filmmaker, ShekharKapur; Chakra The Invincible, the first superhero for India from legendary creator Stan Lee; and numerous other heroes and stories. www.GraphicIndia.com

POW! Entertainment, Inc. (OTCQB: POWN), a multi-media entertainment company, was founded by noted comic book writer Stan Lee, together with award-winning producer Gill Champion and the late intellectual property specialist Arthur Lieberman. Phantom Films is India’s first ‘Directors’ Company’. It was formed by four young creative minds of the country, viz. VikasBahl, Anurag Kashyap, VikramadityaMotwane and MadhuMantena in 2011.

Dr. Rupam Saran ‘s Book On Asian Indian Youth in South Asian Diaspora

Though Asian Indians are typically thought of as a “model minority”, not much is known about the school experiences of their children. Positive stereotyping of these immigrants and their children often masks educational needs and issues, creates class divides within the Indian-American community, and triggers stress for many Asian Indian students. This volume examines second generation (America-born) and 1.5 generation (foreign-born) Asian Indians as they try to balance peer culture, home life and academics. It explores how, through the acculturation process, these children either take advantage of this positive stereotype or refute their stereotyped ethnic image and move to downward mobility.

Focusing on migrant experiences of the Indian Diasporas in the United States, this volume brings attention to highly motivated Asian Indian students who are overlooked because of their cultural dispositions and outlooks on schooling, and those students who are more likely to underachieve. It highlights the assimilation of Asian Indian students in mainstream society and their understandings of Americanization, social inequality, diversity and multiculturalism.

Published by Routledge, August 2015, Hardback 258 pages. More info is available at https://www.routledge.com/products/9781138023468.

Guru Nanak Interfaith Prize For Serve2Unite, Harvard Pluralism Project


The Pluralism Project at Harvard University and Serve2Unite, created by Pardeep Kaleka, whose father was killed along with five others at a Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, in 2012 in a hate crime massacre, were last week awarded Hofstra University’s 2016 Guru Nanak Interfaith Prize.

The $50,000 Guru Nanak Interfaith Prize is bestowed every two years to recognize significant work to increase interfaith understanding. A formal award presentation is planned for spring 2016. The first Guru Nanak Interfaith Prize was awarded in 2008 to His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso.

Milwaukee-based Serve2Unite that focuses on youth and community outreach shared the honor with The Pluralism Project at Harvard University that was created in 1991 by Diana Eck, a professor of religious studies at Harvard who was inspired by the increasing religious diversity of the United States, Both the organizations seek to promote tolerance and religious understanding through education, research and leadership training. The awards ceremony was held at the Garden City Hotel in Garden City, Long Island, April 18.

“These two organizations use education and dialogue to promote tolerance, compassion and religious understanding. Now more than ever, I can think of no work that is more important,” said university President Stuart Rabinowitz. “Their unwavering commitment is a testament to the principles Guru Nanak represents,” Rabinowitz said.

Dean Bernard Firestone of Hofstra College of Liberal Arts & Sciences said this year’s recipients were chosen to reflect that there is no single approach to promoting interfaith understanding.“The Pluralism Project and Serve2Unite show that there are many ways to meet the challenge and embrace the opportunity presented by religious diversity,” Firestone said. “The most important thing is that people of different backgrounds communicate – whether it is through scholarly research, grassroots community outreach, leadership training or creative expression,” Firestone said.

“I am humbled and honored to be able to accept this on behalf of The Pluralism Project,” Eck said. “A prize offered in the name of Guru Nanak is a very special honor indeed. I am also very pleased that we will be sharing the prize with Serve2Unite.”

The Pluralism Project has engaged religious practitioners, students, scholars, interfaith and civic leaders for nearly 25 years around national and international research and education about religious diversity. Its projects include online resources, symposia and trainings, seminars and consultations, producing documentary films, case studies and profiles of interfaith organizations nationwide. Among the groups it has profiled, is co-recipient, Serve2Unite.

Pardeep Kaleka, is an inner-city school teacher and former police officer who launched Serve2Unite after his father, Satwant Singh Kaleka, president of the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin, was killed in 2012. In just three years, Serve2Unite has expanded its program from two Milwaukee schools to 20, with more than 600 active participants in its student leadership chapters.

Under the direction of Arts @ Large, an umbrella arts-education organization that annually engages more than 7,000 students, teachers, and their families in the Milwaukee area, Serve2Unite helps young people create communities built on interfaith and intercultural understanding through community service, artistic projects, and guided dialogue, both in person and online.

“We at Serve2Unite are extremely honored and humbled by the award,” Kaleka said. “Serve2Unite was founded upon the same ideology that Guru Nanak established the Sikh Religion upon — equality for all, regardless of caste, class, color, creed, or culture. Our mission is to carry this torch of justice forward in utter defiance of fear, ignorance, and hatred, to cultivate courage, wisdom, love, and human kinship on our earth,” he said.

The Guru Nanak Interfaith Prize was established in 2006 by Ishar Bindra and family and named for the founder of the Sikh religion. It is meant to encourage understanding of various religions and encourage cooperation between faith communities. In September 2000, the Bindra family endowed the Sardarni Kuljit Kaur Bindra Chair in Sikh Studies at Hofstra University in honor of the family’s matriarch.

Tejinder Bindra, who is also a member of the University’s Board of Trustees, noted If one can experience that universality then there is absolutely no room left for differences in race, color, caste, creed, religion or gender. “The awardees may or may not be Sikh and may represent any of the multitudes of faiths or, for that matter, even no particular faith at all,” he said. “It is their dedication that brings humankind to their shared destiny, common purpose and roots that they honor.”

Bernie Sanders Criticizes Hillary for Supporting Outsourcing to India

While Hillary Clinton has promised to get tough on companies that offshore U.S. jobs, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders has ratcheted up his criticism of her jobs record. Campaigning to clinch the Democratic Party nomination battered by offshoring, he has keyed on Clinton’s support for trade deals that he says helped companies move jobs overseas, and he has pointed to a 2012 video showing Clinton telling an Indian audience when it comes to outsourcing American jobs, there have been aspects that “benefited” America.

In 2004, though, it was Clinton who was slamming outsourcing as she led Democrats’ criticism of the Bush administration. Back then, Greg Mankiw, President George W. Bush’s top economic adviser, touched off a firestorm when he declared “outsourcing is a growing phenomenon, but it’s something that we should realize is probably a plus for the economy in the long run.”

“Outsourcing is just a new way of doing international trade,” Mankiw said. “More things are tradable than were tradable in the past — and that’s a good thing. A few days later, Clinton took to the Senate floor to reject those comments.

“I do not think outsourcing American jobs is a new kind of trade,” she said. “I do not think we should be thinking of our people as commodities, and I certainly do not believe it is a good thing. If the other end of Pennsylvania [Avenue] believes it is a good thing to have companies shift jobs from America to the rest of the world, then maybe they do not have a clue about what it is going to take to bring jobs back to this country and create the kind of economic prosperity that will put our people back to work again.”

Clinton said the comments from Bush’s adviser represented “a strategy for decline. This is a strategy for the destruction of the American job market.” She pledged to present a Senate resolution “to stand against this philosophy in the White House that turns a blind eye to the damage that is being done to the American economy: The loss of jobs, the loss of income, the loss of self-confidence and prestige that is now sweeping our land.”

The following day, Clinton introduced that resolution, which called on the Senate to “(1) oppose any efforts to encourage the outsourcing of American jobs overseas; and (2) adopt legislation providing for a manufacturing tax incentive to encourage job creation in the United States and oppose efforts to make it cheaper to send jobs overseas.” The measure was not successful.

Five years later, however, Clinton’s rhetoric shifted. In a 2009 interview with an Indian television outlet, she lauded President Obama for opposing efforts to protect domestic U.S. jobs, saying he was trying to “speak against protectionism and to make sure that our administration does not in any way give credence to it.” She also said while Americans were concerned with job losses, Obama administration officials were determined to avoid taking actions that might fundamentally alter international commerce.

“Outsourcing is a concern for many communities and businesses in my country,” she said. “So how we handle that is something that, you know, we are very focused on doing in a way that doesn’t disrupt the great flow of trade and services that go between our countries.”

Then came the 2012 comments that Sanders is now criticizing. During her trip that year to India, Clinton was asked about job outsourcing, and replied: “Well, it’s been going on for many years now, and it’s part of our economic relationship with India. And I think that there are advantages with it that have certainly benefited many parts of our country, and there are disadvantages that go to the need to improve the job skills of our own people and create a better economic environment. So it — like anything, it’s about pluses and minuses.”

The Kerala Center In New York Celebrates 26th Anniversary

Elmont, NY: Living in a land that is far away from our “home,” in the midst of another culture, busy with the day-to-day mundane work and home tasks, the Non Resident Indian (NRI) community in this “land of opportunities” has been yearning for a place of their own: just to come together, to discuss, share their thoughts and ideas and learn from one another, to have a platform which will pass on their culture and traditions to their children and grand children, and to nourish the feeling of belonging to a group.

These longings, shared by people, who have been endowed with a clear vision and commitment to generously share their ideas, skills, resources, and time, for the larger good of the community, gave birth to The Kerala Center. After a quarter century it was founded, The Kerala Center, now, come to be known as The Indian American Civic and Cultural Center, located in Elmont, Long Island, New York has come a long way, in living out these dreams and aspirations of a community that has made the United States their adopted homeland.

Non Resident Indians from across the nation came to celebrate and honor the Center on its 26th anniversary during a solemn celebration on Saturday, April 23rd, 2016. Dr. C. V. Ananda Bose,  an Indian civil servant who served in the Indian Administrative Service, was the Chief Guest at the event. Padma Shri Prof. P. Somasundaran, LaVon Duddleson Krumb Professor, Columbia University, was the honored guest at the event.

Parpidam, a book by the eminent administrator, writer, orator and innovator, Dr. Ananda Bose, who had pioneered path breaking administrative innovations in rural development, affordable housing, eco-tourism development, redressal of public grievances, women’s empowerment, development of weaker sections of society and promotion of art and culture, was released during the celebrations. After retirement, Government of India asked Dr Bose to continue with this mission and currently serves as the Chairman and Nominee Director of Central Warehousing Corporation. Dr. Bose is currently on an UN assignment in New York.

Dr. Thomas Abraham, a veteran of the global Indian community who had founded several Indian organization such as the FIA-New York, NFIA and GOPIO said that in the 1970s and 1980s, he made some attempts to start an Indian community Center in the New York area. However, there was not enough support among the newly arrived community to contribute large sums of money for a broad based community center while the community was contributing generously for religious institutions such as temples, churches, mosques and gurudwaras. In 1989, the Gujarati Samaj bought a building in Queens,NY and started their Center in 1990 and they were struggling to maintain it.

“When Stephen came to me with the idea of Kerala Center, I tried to discourage him, since I felt it would be difficult to maintain it with its monthly mortgages and other expenses,” said Dr. Abraham. It turned out to be true in the later part of 1990s.However, Dr. Abraham was fully committed to it and stayed on with the Center during the difficult times. The Kerala Center managed to tide over its financial problem when former banker and philanthropist Sreedhar Menon gave a challenge at one of Kerala Center’s annual banquet to raise $50,000 and he would match the same amount. The Kerala Center fulfilled it. In the following year. Dilip Varghese gave s similar challenge to raise funds for the Center. These, along with contributions from its founder patrons brought financial stability for the Center.

The Center has now paid off the entire mortgage on the building, which has an auditorium and two classrooms, as well as several office and meeting rooms of its own. With debt burden off their minds, E M Stephen, a founding member and the Executive Director of the Center, credited several individuals who have contributed their time, energy, talents and resources to the establishment and growth of the Kerala Center. He said, “From a modest beginning 18 years ago, the Center has come a long way to play a vital role in the life of the NRI community in the United States.” Over the past two decades, it has become a focal point for Indian Americans, coordinating programs, activities, and services to the members and groups of the community in the New York region. The Center has outgrown its initial objectives for which it was founded, and has become a facility that serves the various needs of the larger Indian American community.

When asked, what led him to think of founding the Center, Stephen, 62, who had immigrated to U.S.A: in 1977, and devoted his entire life, especially since 1990, to voluntary work and the running of the Center, said, “As all of us are aware, the strength of our community living in the United States of America is highly remarkable. We have come from a poor country, which is also one of the world’s most densely populated regions. Today, our community here is well established in every field except in the mainstream political life of our adopted land. It is necessary for us to think about our future. In order to tackle the problems and needs of the community in a well-organized and planned manner, enabling us to participate in the political education of our community, we need Community Centers.

With this long out look in mind, the Indian American Kerala Cultural & Civic Center was established on April 28th 1990. It is proud to mention here that this is the first and the largest asset establishment for and by the community as a whole.”

Stephen, who has a long history of community service and voluntarism, said, “I became actively involved in Kerala Associations” He was instrumental in organizing Indian American Forum for political Education in USA of which he was the Chairman for New York State 1981 – 1985. He was the Chairman for the I ndia Day Parade for 1988 and 1989. “The underlying current in my involvement in all these community activities was basically with the motive of enlightening the community to fully participate in the mainstream American social, political and economic affairs. In 1990, I started, with the cooperation of leading Community members, a Center called Indian American Kerala Cultural and Civic Center,” the founder President and currently functioning as the Executive Director at the Center, said.

According to Stephen, there are about 60,000 Keralites in the New York metropolitan area. A main objective of the Center has been to address the emotional and cultural, and political education of all the community members. “This Center, the way we have planned the growth of this institution, has a vision and tremendous responsibility to take care of emotional and cultural needs of our community and meanwhile prepare them to face the responsibilities of becoming a full fledged American Citizen.” Stephen, who is fully engaged in this responsibility, said, “We are perhaps a minority group now. But I feel, as a community member, we have to feel and act as a part of the mainstream by fully participating in all the activities. That is our ultimate goal.”

Jose Chummar, former president of the Center, praised the efforts of Stephen in establishing the Center: “Stephen was instrumental to start Kerala Center and took the lead and dealt with many of the headaches of starting The Kerala Center. Dr. Thomas Abraham played a very pivotal role too in the establishment of Kerala Center.”

There were several non profit Malayalee organizations when Kerala Center was formed but none of them had its own place. “Kerala Center has been unique, because from the very beginning, we wanted to have our own building, a place of our own so that our people can come together. The old YMCA building on Long Island was bought as our central office. I took a membership for Kerala Center in 1991 and became the general secretary in 1992,” Jose recalled.

“The Kerala Center is playing a pivotal role in the daily lives of the Malayalee community in many ways. The Center is a place for everyone, from the children of our community to the senior citizens,” Jose, who has been serving as the president of Kerala Center for the past four years, said.

“We can now concentrate more on community activities and programs. We can utilize the center for the betterment of our community here, as well as in India,” Jose added. “The Center has also been providing platform for various leaders to have political awareness and campaign meetings with the Indian community. Not leaving out the important religious factor, the Center has become a forum for various religious activities and celebrations for the members of the center who represent Hindu, Muslim and different denominations of Christianity,” Jose said.

E M Stephen added, “After overcoming several initial challenges, the Kerala Center has attained a stable status and has carved out a name for itself among the NRI community in USA. There are Indian languages, Music and Dance classes for children, SAT coaching for youngsters held regularly, benefiting hundreds of children of Indian origin. Various seminars are being conducted regularly on topics ranging from politics to investments, in addition to many Civic and Cultural activities taking place on a regular basis at the Kerala Center.”Stephen went on to say, “The Center is providing information to the community about business groups in all fields. The Center is giving full support and assistance to the writers forum in the community. The benefits of such actions include mitigation of crimes, drug abuse, employment discrimination, bigotry, lack of discipline among the youth, destruction of the environment, child abuse and all other areas of social decay. With the help of State and Federal agencies, the Center will expand services to Senior Citizens of our Community. In this way, not only we are able to produce a disciplined society, but also projecting our=2 0ideals to the mainstream of this country politically culturally and economically, Thus we are being appreciated, accepted and recognized by the entire society.”

Every year, The Center honors nearly half a dozen Non Resident Keralites for their outstanding achievements and service to the society with the prestigious Kerala Center Annual Gala Award during a solemn ceremony. Dr. Thomas Abraham, an architect of the Kerala Center and currently a member, Boar d of Directors of the Kerala Center, said, “The Kerala Center annual gala awards are rated as the most prestigious award given from among the Malayalee community in North America. Recipients are chosen after a rigorous search and scrutiny. It has been our endeavor to honor the best, and those who are and can be role models to the rest of the community.”

Seminars are organized regularly on literary, social, and political them es at The Center. The seminars are not just a brain-storming and idea-sharing sessions, but, they challenge and invite participants to give back to the larger community. Dr. Abraham said, “While Kerala Center caters to the cultural needs of the Kerala community, its objective is broad to serve the civic and community interests of the larger Indian community. So we tailor many programs to involve the Indian American community.” Kerala Center was the venue to launch National Indian American Association for Senior Citizens in 1998 and South Asian Council for Social Services (SACSS) in the 2000. The Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO) also uses Kerala Center for its committee meetings as well as organizing several public forums with the center. The Kerala Center in turns serves the whole Indian community”

Rajeshwar Prasad, who had served on the Board of Directors of the Kerala Center for nearly a decade, by virtue of the National Indo-American Association for Senior Citizens (NIAASC) being a member of the Kerala Center, said, “Though the Center’s membership, by its Constitution is limited to people from the state of Kerala, from a practical perspective, its activities cater to everyone. Many Indian community organizations of different languages and traditions utilize the Center as a focal point for their varied activities. The Center has welcomed such opportunities and in many instances, encourages them.”

Rajeshwar credits the prestige and success of the Center to the “enthusiastic and selfless contributions of its members.” He said, The Center’s collaborative efforts with a number of groups in Kerala State work for the benefit of most needy people in India. “Ongoing recognition by the Center of the social and political leadership at the Kerala State level as well as at the Federal level in USA is far more broader; it involves scores of organizations and institutions in the USA to be a part of such recognition,” he said.

The Center is exploring new ways to respond to the emerging needs of the community, Stephen said, and urged the members to contribute to, “continue with the ongoing projects of the Kerala Center; Support the Regional Cancer Research Center in Thiruvanathapuram; and change the mindset of the people back in Kerala.” Monetary support to young brides, whose families have no means to marry them off, was yet another noble project The Center runs every year, benefiting dozens of women back home in Kerala.

On the future of the Center, Thampi Thalappillil, president of the Kerala Center, said, “We have to do a lot of things for our second generation as well as for the first generation who are now getting old. We have already started some charity work aiming to help those back in India but we have plenty more to do.”

Vivek Maru, CEO of Namati Named Recipient of Skoll Foundation Awards

Vivek Maru chief executive officer of Washington, D.C.-based Namati, which works to protect community lands, enforce environmental law, and secure basic rights to health care and citizenship around the world; Mallika Dutt, president and CEO, and Sonali Khan, vice president, of Breakthrough, which mobilizes communities to disavow discrimination and violence against women through the use of popular media, leadership training, and advocacy are among the six who have been named recipients of the 2016 Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship.

The three Indian Americans received the coveted award at a special ceremony April 14. The award allots $1.25 million to an organization to scale up its work and increase its impact. The Skoll Foundation has announced the annual awards provide unrestricted funding to social entrepreneurs and organizations that are driving large-scale social change and are poised to have an even greater impact on some of the world’s most pressing problems. This year, the awardees will receive $1.25 million each over three years to scale their work.

Chuck Slaughter, founder of Living Goods, which works to support networks of village health entrepreneurs who go door-to-door teaching families better health practices while selling basic health products; Oren Yakobovich CEO of Videre, which gives local activists equipment, training, and the support needed to safely capture footage of human rights violations and distributes the results strategically with the aim of influencing media, political leaders, and courts; and Bryan Stevenson of the Equal Justice Initiative, which seeks to reform the criminal justice system and secure freedom for those unjustly imprisoned in the United States, were the others who have been honored with the awards.

“Each 2016 Skoll Award recipient is guided by a profound commitment to justice and a deep sense of compassion,” said Sally Osberg, president and CEO of the Skoll Foundation. “These social entrepreneurs know that injustice robs the disadvantaged of opportunities and hope, and that justice represents a human need as fundamental as food or shelter. It is their hunger for justice that has fueled their work to transform the lives of those who have been denied justice by building new systems and institutions to strengthen societies.”

“These social entrepreneurs know that injustice robs the disadvantaged of opportunities and hope, and that justice represents a human need as fundamental as food or shelter. It is their hunger for justice that has fueled their work to transform the lives of those who have been denied justice by building new systems and institutions to strengthen societies,” said Osberg.

Vivek Maru, CEO of Namati Named Recipient of Skoll Foundation AwardsAs we work to challenge gender norms and envision a world in which gender-based violence is unacceptable, we are grateful to partners like the Skoll Foundation who recognize innovation and invest in it,” said Mallika Dutt, president and CEO of Breakthrough, in a press statement. “When we come together and pool resources we can dismantle rigid gender norms and create the culture change that will allow us all to reach our full potential.”

Breakthrough works to combat gender-based violence by shifting the focus to prevention and transforming the societal and cultural norms that lead to inequality and violence, noted the organization. Breakthrough uses innovative media and cultural strategies to engage youth and young adults.

The organization has reached 15 million people in rural communities in India and 350 million through its media campaigns, and has contributed to raising the average age of marriage by nearly a year in Bihar and Jharkhand, India.

Breakthrough will use its Skoll grant of $1.25 million to expand its work on 500 college campuses in the U.S. In India, Breakthrough will use Skoll Award funding to engage an audience of 150 million through multiple media channels and increase partnerships with states and advocates at the state and national level.

Vivek Maru founded Namati in 2011 to lend structure to billions of people globally who live outside the protection of the law. They can be driven from their land, extorted by officials, and intimidated by violence. Maru founded Namati to place the power of the law in the hands of the people.

Namati trains and deploys grassroots legal advocates who work with communities to advance justice. The organization trains “community paralegals” who serve low-income people in rural areas to gain access to their legal rights. Together with its partners, Namati has supported more than 40,000 clients in eight countries to protect community lands, enforce environmental law, and secure basic rights to healthcare and citizenship.

“(The award) is a generous recognition of the legal empowerment movement. We hope to use this opportunity to raise the profile of legal empowerment with a wider community of allies and supporters,” said Maru in a press statement. According to Sally Osberg, “These six remarkable people give voice and agency to the voiceless and marginalized, and give us good reason to believe in a radically better future.”

Raj Shah Leads Research On Hillary For Use In Possible General Election Campaign Against Her

Raj Shah, an Indian American entrusted with the Republican National Committee’s opposition research arm, a beehive of two dozen tech-savvy idealists who have already spent two years searching through decades of government documents, tax filings, TV footage and news archives, has been leading research on Hillary Clinton, the possible Democratic Party candidate in the US General Elections this year.

Searching in the Clinton presidential library to probe the Clintons’ accumulated past, and requesting more than 330 Freedom of Information Act, the teamhas netted 11,000 pages of records, and counting. Clinton “may not like those of us willing to hold her accountable, but she only has herself to blame,” Shah says. “We’re simply citing her own past words, positions and actions.”

“In this political cycle Republican investigators have been given a rare gift: a clear front-runner with a long and public history,” The New York Times wrote of Hillary Clinton. The Republicans boast that their research shop is bigger and better than the Democratic National Committee’s, but in fact the Republicans’ biggest advantage is Mrs. Clinton herself. Over 40 years of public life, she has changed roles, funding mechanisms, policy positions, even regional accents.

“We’ve got all sorts of fun and interesting things that reinforce” Clinton’s image as “untrustworthy, dishonest … whether its policy flip-flops, secret emails, and things about her life story,” Raj Shah, the deputy communications director at RNC, who wrote an operational handbook on GOP strategy against Clinton, said on the nationally syndicated “The Alan Colmes Show” on Fox News Radio April 19.

Clinton, Shah said, was the “architect” of seemingly unpopular policies relating to Libya and the nuclear deal with Iran and other Obama administration policies she staunchly supports even after leaving office. Add to that, her administration of the State Department which he said, showed “failure after failure” revealed in reports such as those routinely issued by the Government Accountability Office, on various government operations. “Donor and special interests rather than those in need … get in the front of the line,” those reports show, Shah contended.

Denying that his work digging the dirt on Clinton supported her contention of a “right wing conspiracy” Shah countered all parties have “professionalized opposition research.”
While admitting that Republican candidates such as billionaire Donald Trump and Senator Ted Cruz had negatives, he said, “But Hillary Clinton is extremely well defined, and defined in a negative way.

Shah also said the GOP has a big file on Sen. Bernie Sanders, and explained why the GOP plans to focus on the negative aspects of the Iran nuclear deal. “We are prepared for several scenarios including the potential ‘White Night’ scenario with (Vice President) Joe Biden stepping in,” Shah said, “But we are most prepared for Hillary Clinton.”

These revelations can be very damaging to any candidate who is running for public office. For instance, when Mrs. Clinton said recently that she is opposed to the Trans-Pacific Partnership — a trade pact she called a “gold standard” when she was secretary of state — they were able to send out her contradictory quotes on social media almost instantly. They did the same thing when she introduced a broad plan for gun control after largely opposing it in her last presidential run.

In New Hampshire this month, when Mrs. Clinton repeated a questionable story about wanting to join the Marines in her youth, the Republicans could catalog the times she made that claim in the past and the shifting reasons she gave. Recently they compiled a list of all the groups with ties to the financial sector and other industries with business before the federal government that paid Bill and Hillary Clinton millions in speaking fees well before the Clintons released lists on their own.

Americans may hate what this dredging enterprise says about modern campaigning, but it’s a legitimate part of the process, and any seasoned politician is likely to have inconsistencies, failures and embarrassments. What really keeps the opposition research machine humming are efforts by the candidates themselves to be all things to all voters, sacrificing their credibility.

Fareed Zakaria To Lead Healthcare 2020 CEO Forum With Healthcare Leaders From Around The World At AAPI’s 34th Annual Convention

(New York, NY; April 26, 2016): For over three decades, the Association of American Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI) has been in the forefront, educating, informing, advocating and providing a forum for the over 100,000 members whom it represents to have a collective voice in the healthcare industry in the United States.

The fluid political climate in the nation makes the healthcare industry and those who provide and benefit from healthcare services ever more challenging. Now, as the healthcare industry is rapidly evolving with the changes constantly impacting the providers, the Government, and patients, AAPI is once again playing a lead role in bringing together leaders from across the spectrum to discuss and provide insights into what to look for in the year 2020 in the healthcare sector.

Fareed Zakaria, a world renowned journalist and author will lead this in-depth Healthcare 2020 CEO Forum by AAPI, which will look at the major global developments in the rapidly changing healthcare sector, with an emphasis on new ideas and innovative solutions to America’s complex healthcare related issues.

“We are proud to have the Fareed Zakaria leading this prestigious forum,” says Dr. Seema Jain, President of AAPI. “Representatives from the healthcare industry, including leading CEOs from hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, academicians, intellectuals and physicians, who will focus on the changing trends in the healthcare sector and how they impact the providers, hospitals and corporations as well as the patients. The Forum will also offer insights into managing efficiently the growing costs in the delivery of healthcare services,” she added.

Fareed Zakaria writes a foreign affairs column for The Post. He is also the host of CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS and a contributing editor for The Atlantic. Before being named to his position at time in October 2010, Zakaria spent 10 years overseeing Newsweek’s editions abroad and eight years as the managing editor of Foreign Affairs. He is the author of “The Post-American World” (2009) and “The Future of Freedom” (2007). Born in India, Zakaria received a B.A. from Yale College and a Ph.D. from Harvard University.

“The AAPI CEO Forum, planned to be held on June 30th from 4 to 6 pm will help the delegates at the Convention in New York City at the prestigious the Marriott Marquis, Time Square in New York from June 30th to July 4th, 2016 better understand the recent trends in the delivery of healthcare to millions across the nation,” said Dr. Rita Ahuja, Chair Person of the Convention Committee.

The CEO Forum will focus on the changing trends in the healthcare sector and how they impact the providers, hospitals and corporations as well as the patients. The Forum will also offer insights into managing efficiently the growing costs in the delivery of healthcare services. “With the changing trends and statistics in healthcare, both in India and US, we are refocusing our mission and vision, AAPI would like to make a positive meaningful impact on the healthcare delivery system both in the US and in India,” Dr. Jain says.

Representing the interests of the over 100,000 physicians of Indian origin, leaders of American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI), the largest ethnic organization of physicians, for 34 years, AAPI Convention has provided a venue for medical education programs and symposia with world renowned physicians on the cutting edge of medicine.

“Physicians and healthcare professionals from across the country and internationally will convene and participate in the exchange of medical advances, to develop health policy agendas, and to encourage legislative priorities in the years to come. We look forward to seeing you in New York!” For more details, and sponsorship opportunities, please visit:  www.aapiconvention.org   and www.aapiusa.org

Indian Americans express shock, disgust over horrific church attack in Chhattisgarh; demand justice for victims

Washington, DC: April 23, 2016: The Indian American Muslim Council (IAMC – iamc.com), an advocacy group dedicated to safeguarding India’s pluralist and tolerant ethos has joined millions of Indians and people of conscience around the world, in strongly condemning the barbaric attack on a Christian pastor and his wife, in the state of Chhattisgarh in India. The incident took place last Sunday, April 17th, and reported in the media a few days thereafter.

Two attackers stormed into the church in Bastar district, set ablaze a Bible and other articles, before viciously assaulting the pastor and his pregnant wife. The couple managed to escape alive, after the men doused them in petrol in an attempt to burn them alive. News reports indicate the assailants were armed with a gun, rods and knives. Their brutal assault on Pastor Dinbandhu Sameli, his 7-month pregnant wife and daughter Roushni Vidya, represents an escalation of attacks on minorities in India since the government of Mr. Narendra Modi came to power.

Instead of filing charges of attempted murder, causing grievous injury, etc, the police have filed lesser charges  such as house trespass, dacoity, committing mischief by fire and injuring or defiling a place of worship.  Arun Pannalal, the President of Chhattisgarh’s Christian Forum stated in a quote appearing in the media, “Around 15-20 men with saffron bands on their forehead entered the church while Sunday prayer was under way at around 12 pm, and started vandalising the premises and started breaking everything,” Pannalal said and claimed that the “Bajrang Dal youth indulged in sloganeering and were raising Jai Shree Ram slogans. They started damaging chairs and fans. They did not spare women and even tore up their clothes. They also thrashed an infant,” he said

Pannalal further referred to the perpetrators of the murderous assault as members of the Bajrang Dal, a radical Hindu supremacist organization affiliated to the RSS.The RSS is the fountainhead of Hindutva and the ideological reference point for the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government headed by Mr. Narendra Modi. The increasing attacks on minorities and lower castes in recent years are consistent with the extremism and intolerance Mr. Modi and his party have espoused. Mr. Modi himself has been a lifelong worker of the RSS.

“The hate and venom spewed by the RSS and its affiliates and echoed by prominent members of Mr. Modi’s administration are directly responsible for this barbaric attack on Pastor Sameli and his family, ” said Mr. Umar Malick, President of Indian American Muslim Council. “Those who felicitate Mr. Modi during his foreign jaunts, should seriously consider the implications of what they are tacitly endorsing,” added Mr. Malick.

The attack in Chhattisgarh is part of a pattern of violence and hateful rhetoric against minorities in India. There have been scores of attacks on Christians and Muslims since India gained independence. However, the violence has gained in intensity, and the discourse become more vitriolic since the political ascendancy of the Hindu nationalist movement in the late-1980s. The situation has become even more dire with Mr. Modi’s victory in the 2014 general elections on promises of economic development that have been largely unfulfilled.

Leading global human rights groups such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, have expressed grave concern over the worsening situation of religious minorities in India. Prime Minister Modi’s government, “failed to address increasing attacks on free expression and against religious minorities,” Human Rights Watch stated in its recent 659-page World Report.

“We demand not only that the perpetrators be held accountable, but also those who are engaging in a cover-up of the gruesome episode, and those that are enabling the sectarian hate that leads to such crimes,” Mr. Khalid Ansari, Vice-President of IAMC. Indian-American Muslim Council is the largest advocacy organization of Indian Muslims in the United States with chapters across the nation. For more information, please visit our website at: http://www.iamc.com

Salman Khan Will Be India’s Goodwill Ambassador at Rio Olympics

Bollywood actor Salman Khan has been named goodwill ambassador of the Indian contingent for the upcoming Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro — an unprecedented appointment in the run-up to the quadrennial extravaganza. The announcement was made in the presence of Olympic medallists and Rio star athletes such as boxer MC Mary Kom, hockey captain Sardar Singh, and shooter Apurvi Chandela, among others. The next Olympics will be held at the Brazilian capital of Rio de Janeiro from August 5-21, 2016.

The association between Salman Khan and the Indian Olympic Association was facilitated by IOA’s official marketing agency IOS Sports & Entertainment. Speaking on this new association with IOA Salman said, “I am honoured that Indian Olympic Association has chosen me as the goodwill ambassador for the Indian contingent for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games.”

Commenting on the announcement IOA President N. Ramachandran said, “His association will not only attract sports lovers but also help motivate the players to do well in the Olympics. We are sure our association with Salman Khan will go a long way.”

The athletes too welcomed the move with Mary Kom saying, “This is a big moment for all of us that Mr. Salman Khan has joined us as our family member during Rio Olympics. My preparations for Rio Olympic qualification are going on and I will be competing in the World Championship soon.”

The Indian Olympic Association (IOA), which made the announcement at its headquarters here, chose Salman from a list of two to three candidates which also included Shah Rukh Khan and veteran actor Amitabh Bachchan.

However, the IOA reportedly chose Khan as he is considered to be more connected with the youth and is known to be a sports enthusiast. The 50-year-old is a youth icon and an inspiration for bodybuilding fans across the country. His latest film ‘Sultan’ is a sports-drama which sees Salman in the role of a wrestler who rises from small town origins to achieve international success.

“We welcome Salman Khan as the goodwill ambassador of the Indian contingent for Rio Olympics and his association is in line with our focus to create the required excitement in the country. His association will not only attract sports lovers but also help motivate the players to do well in the Olympics. We are sure our association with Salman Khan will go a long way,” IOA president N. Ramachandran said in a statement. This is the first time that a Bollywood superstar will be a goodwill ambassador for the Indian contingent at the Olympics. A host of sports stars including M.C. Mary Kom, Sardar Singh, Ritu Rani, Deepika Kumari, Apurvi Chandela and Manika Batra were also present on the occasion.

Praising the sportspersons for their hard work and dedication, Khan hoped that they will be able to win medals at the Olympics. ” It is a matter of great national pride that our athletes are performing better and better at the Olympic Games and I think we should all join hands in giving them every support and cheer for them so that Rio 2016 becomes our best Olympic tally. They are extremely talented and hard working. They are not here due to anybody’s recommendation. They are here because they are the best in the country. That is the reason why they are going to the Olympics.”

Parents Of Abducted Children Lobby Washington

Indian-American parents of abducted children joined by other South Asians, and parents from around the country, walked down Embassy Row in Washington, stopping before the Indian Embassy among others, to make a point about bringing their kids home. The “Embassy Walk” was part of a three-day lobbying effort in Washington, D.C. to further pressure lawmakers, the Obama administration, and the Indian government to make moves favoring the American parents.

Ravi Parmar of New Jersey, whose son did not return after his former wife went for a five-week trip ostensibly to attend a wedding in India four years ago, is a case in point. He founded and leads Bring Home Our Kids, which is seeking a long-term mechanism between the U.S. and India to combat what these parents see as a growing crisis.

Along with the umbrella organization, Coalition to Stop International Parental Child Abduction, Parmar’s group came to Washington D.C. April 20-22, pressing not just the U.S. but also foreign governments, including the Government of India to get their children back.

Bindu Philips of Plainsboro, New Jersey, whose child was abducted to India, testified at the hearing along with several other parents, a number of them Indian-Americans, who have suffered a similar plight, such as Ravi Parmar, founder of Bring Our Kids Home, joined the day-long lobbying effort  in Washington, D.C. They met the State Department’s Director of the Office of Children’s Rights Issues Henry Hand as well as senior staffers of the Judiciary Committee and the Chief of Staff of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Capitol Hill to make their case. About 25 parents of abducted children representing 5 organizations also held a candlelight vigil before the White House.

“My world and that of my innocent children, was violently disrupted by my ex-husband, Sunil Jacob in December of 2008, when he orchestrated the kidnapping of the children during a vacation to India,” Philips said. “I would note that the children, my ex-husband and I are American citizens and that the children were born in America, which is the only nation they identified with as home.” Philips was accompanied by a Plainsboro law enforcement officer to the Capitol Hill hearing.

Despite the New Jersey Superior Court awarding her sole legal and residential custody of the children in December 2009, she has not been able to see or communicate with her children. “My children have lost six years of their mother’s love and care and I have lost 6 years of my children’s childhood that neither of us can ever get back. I have put everything I have into my mission to be reunited with my children.”

“We want to impress upon our Governments that parental child abduction is not a “child custody” issue, and just because a parent wrongfully removes their children from the United States, it does not make it right,” Parmar said.

U.S. Wants To Invest More In India: Nisha Biswal

Appreciating the Narendra Modi government’s initiatives to make India investor-friendly, US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Nisha Desai Biswal on Tuesday said US investment in India would be doubled if policies were liberalised further.

Delivering a talk on “US-India Economic Relations” here, Biswal said the Barack Obama administration supports the Modi government’s programmes such as ‘Make in India’ and ‘Start Up India’.

“The Indian government is working hard to make it (India) more investor-friendly,” she remarked, saying that the country would need “huge foreign investment” as urbanisation was taking place very fast. “When we talk about India’s economic growth, we essentially talk about its urbanisation,” she said.

Biswal, an Indian-American who was born in Gujarat and later shifted to the US, also expressed satisfaction on the overall relations between the two nations, and said both were “large vocal democracies”.

“US’ direct investment in India has already surpassed what we invested in China,” she said, adding that the two countries were capable enough to work out differences to ensure better economic growth for their people.

Biswal said India’s economy has the potential to drive the economy of the entire world. She praised the heads of both the governments, saying meetings between Modi and Obama have helped both the nations come closer.

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