Inequality and Its Discontents

By Jomo Kwame Sundaram

Global income inequality among different regions began to increase about five centuries ago, before accelerating about two centuries ago, according to the great economic historian Angus Maddison. After the brief reversal during the ‘Golden Age’ quarter century after the Second World War, higher commodity prices in the decade until 2014, despite protracted slowdowns in most rich countries following the 2008 financial crisis, reduced international disparities between North and South.

Before the Industrial Revolution, inequalities among regions were relatively small, while within-‘country’ inequalities accounted for most of overall global income inequality. But inter-country income inequalities now account for about two-thirds of world inequality, with intra-country inequality accounting for a third.

National income distribution trends do not necessarily follow those for global income inequality. National level inequality in 22 developed economies grew up to the second decade of the 20th century, with inequality declining thereafter until the 1970s. The trend then reversed again with the market fundamentalist counter-revolution and changing role of the state in recent decades.

The general trend for these countries is quite clear, but does not hold for all other countries. For example, many developing countries fared badly in the 1920s and 1930s as primary commodity prices fell, especially during the Great Depression.

The late historian Eric Hobsbawm famously described the period from the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917 to the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, as the ‘short twentieth century’. Other pundits identify the end of the First World War, or the creation of the ILO in 1919, as an alternative starting point for Karl Polanyi’s ‘second movement’.

For many, the ascendance of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan led the ‘neo-liberal’ counter-revolution against the post-World War Two ‘Golden Age’ marked by decolonization, Keynesianism, the welfare state, agrarian reforms and rapid employment expansion.

The ‘Washington Consensus’ from the early 1980s – shared by different branches of the US government and the Bretton Woods institutions located in the American capital – brought an end to earlier policy interventions associated with Keynesian and development economics.

The breakdown of the international monetary system and other developments of the 1970s led to ‘stagflation’ – economic stagnation despite high inflation — in much of the West while growth accelerated in other regions, notably East Asia. The US Fed raised interest rates sharply from 1980, inducing an international recession, and eventually, fiscal and sovereign debt crises in some developing countries and ‘communist’ economies. High debt and the Volcker-induced interest rate spike forced many governments to pursue macro-financial stabilization policies to defeat inflation besides microeconomic structural adjustment policies.

But the so-called Washington Consensus was not really about market liberalization, as little was done to check, let alone undermine private oligopolistic and oligopsonistic trends. Instead, despite the market rhetoric, neo-liberalism is really about strengthening property rights and capturing rents.

This involved a shift away from public authority and coordination, redefining the role of the state and enhancing private power. Good governance in the new order means upholding the rule of law, especially strengthening property rights and related privileges and entitlements. To secure political support, it appeals to all as consumers, and to all asset-owners, including petty ones and rentiers seeking to maximize net income flows by minimizing rent-seeking costs. Not surprisingly then, recent trends in the functional distribution of income reflect a declining share for labour despite rising labour productivity.

This disconnect between labour productivity and income is not unfamiliar to developing economies with high unemployment and underemployment. In such labour markets, characterized by ‘unlimited supplies of labour’ associated with economics laureate Arthur Lewis, productivity gains did not translate into higher wages, or a ‘producer surplus’, but instead lowered prices, contributing to the ‘consumer surplus’. This contrasts sharply with strong labour market institutions where wages rise with productivity.

Growing wealth concentration in recent decades reflects enhanced rentier power in most economic sectors and activities as well as the ascendance and globalization of finance in recent decades. Rentier income flows from legally sanctioned monopolies associated with intellectual property rights have grown greatly in recent years, increasingly capturing productivity gains at the expense of labour.

Although class has not declined in significance, by shaping the institutional context, political geography has become a key determinant of income. This not only helps explain the continuing strong economic incentive for international migration, but also the growing barriers to such movement, often supported by those who feel threatened about losing their privileges.

Not surprisingly, international labour solidarity has become much more difficult, while foreign advocacy of labour rights or the environment is treated with suspicion as self-interested, or even as protection by another name.

Alleged Killers of Rutgers Student Shani Patel Indicted

An Essex County jury has indicted two men who are suspected of fatally shooting Shani Patel, a 21-year-old Indian American Rutgers University student, during a break-in at his shared Newark apartment in April.

According to the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office, on Oct. 27, a jury indicted Marcus Feliz, 25, of Newark, and Fraynned Ramirez, 25, of Hartford, Connecticut, for the April 10 murder of Patel of Toms River, a 21-year-old economics student at Rutgers University’s Newark campus.

The nine-count indictment also charges Feliz and Ramirez with conspiracy to commit robbery, robbery, conspiracy to commit murder, felony murder, attempted murder, aggravated assault, and weapons charges.

The indictment alleges that Ramirez and Feliz broke into their Central Avenue apartment and shot Patel and his 23-year-old roommate. Patel was killed during the encounter; his roommate was injured but survived. Prosecutors said Oct. 27 that Feliz is in custody, but Ramirez remains at large.

NRI Sentenced To Prison For Sandy Relief Fund Fraud

An Indian-American motel owner was sentenced to prison Nov. 4 for stealing money from federal disaster relief funds meant for victims of the Superstorm Sandy.

Attorney General Christopher S. Porrino announced that Sandipkumar Patel, 44, of Edison, N.J., the owner of a motel in Ocean County was sentenced to 3 years in state prison Nov. 4, for stealing more than $81,000 in federal disaster relief funds from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) by fraudulently claiming to provide temporary shelter to victims of Superstorm Sandy.

Superior Court Judge Wendel E. Daniels in Ocean County sentenced Patel after he pleaded guilty on Sept. 26 to a second-degree charge of theft by deception. He has paid full restitution.

Patel admitted that he committed fraud when claiming FEMA funds under the Transitional Shelter Assistance (TSA) program. Under the program, FEMA directly paid participating hotels and motels for rooms temporarily occupied by residents displaced by Superstorm Sandy. Patel owns the American Motel on Route 166 in Toms River, N.J., with his wife. FEMA paid the motel $133.28 per day for each room occupied by storm victims.

The joint federal and state investigation revealed that Patel fraudulently billed FEMA a total of $81,567 in the names of 11 individuals under the TSA program. Eight of the individuals never stayed at the motel at all, while the other three stayed for shorter periods than were billed, or, in one case, shared a room that Patel already had billed to FEMA in the name of the other occupant. In some cases, Patel falsely billed for stays of multiple weeks or even months. He billed FEMA more than $50,000 in the names of several of his personal relatives who live in New Jersey but were not displaced by the storm.

Indian wins 2016 International Creative Writing Contest

This is the third time that Geralyn Pinto has won a prize in the Save as Writers annually-held International Creative Writing Contest. Dr Geralyn Pinto, Associate Professor of English at St Agnes College, Mangaluru, has won the first prize for her short story, “Here they are, Saar….” in the 2016 International Creative Writing Contest organized by the Save as Writers Group, Canterbury, England.

The theme of this year’s contest was ‘Rebellion’ in commemoration of the Irish Rising of Easter, 1916. Geralyn’s powerfully-told story won the first place from an otherwise all-British shortlist of nine stories and was described by judge, Derek Sellen, as an amazing story with a sinuous narrative that impressed one right from the beginning.

Geralyn, who views creative writing as an agent of social rebellion and memory retrieval, chose to write on Nangeli, a woman of the Ezhava community of early 19th century Travancore.

The young Nangeli looked at society in the face and decided to show it who she really was. Her self-mutilation in 1803 as a form of rebellion against the levying of the hideous ‘mulakkaram’ or breast tax earned all women, but particularly those of the lower castes, the inalienable right to cover themselves in modesty and decency, if they so chose.

The humiliating tax was eventually repealed by the British Crown, upon pressure from the British Resident of Travancore, Col. John Munro.

Sellen said, upon presenting the prize to Geralyn at the Awards Evening held on October 29 in the hall of St Mary Bredin Church, Canterbury, that he had no doubt when he began reading it that her story would be the top prize winner.

This is the third time that Geralyn Pinto has won a prize in the Save as Writers annually-held International Creative Writing Contest.

The website of Save As Writers introduces it as Canterbury’s liveliest writing group. Founded in 2002 by Luigi Marchini, it started as a small group of creative people meeting to critique each other’s poetry and prose.

GOPIO Europe supports demonetazization

The Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO) meeting in Paris over the weekend paid tribute to Indian soldiers who laid their lives fighting freedom of Europe on Armistice Day in France which honored all those soldiers who were killed at World War I. Over 4,700 Indian soldiers laid their lives fighting with the British. The convention delegates led by GOPIO Chairman Dr. Thomas Abraham visited Indian soldiers memorial at Neuve Chapelle in Richebourg, France on November 11th on Armistice Day and laid flowers at the memorial. The convention passed a resolution requesting UNESCO to recognize this memorial as a World Heritage site.

The convention was inaugurated at the Intercontinental Hotel by Indian Ambassador Mohan Kumar and was addressed by Dr. Satyapal Singh MP and Shri Raj Purohit MLA, Chief Whip of the Maharashtra Assembly. The Chief Guest at the Conference inauguration was Ms. Ericka Bareights, Minister of Overseas Affairs of France. Eight conference sessions followed.

The convention passed a resolution in support of demonetization of the higher end Indian currencies so as to curtail the black money and terrorism funding. However, GOPIO has called upon India govt. to provide same opportunity for NRIs and PIOs as Indian nationals to deposit up to Rs. 2.5 lakhs of Indian currencies in Indian banks in India or outside. The convention ended with a finale banquet dinner cruise on Siene River in Paris.

GOPIO Europe supports demonetazization

The Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO) meeting in Paris over the weekend paid tribute to Indian soldiers who laid their lives fighting freedom of Europe on Armistice Day in France which honored all those soldiers who were killed at World War I. Over 4,700 Indian soldiers laid their lives fighting with the British. The convention delegates led by GOPIO Chairman Dr. Thomas Abraham visited Indian soldiers memorial at Neuve Chapelle in Richebourg, France on November 11th on Armistice Day and laid flowers at the memorial. The convention passed a resolution requesting UNESCO to recognize this memorial as a World Heritage site.

The convention was inaugurated at the Intercontinental Hotel by Indian Ambassador Mohan Kumar and was addressed by Dr. Satyapal Singh MP and Shri Raj Purohit MLA, Chief Whip of the Maharashtra Assembly. The Chief Guest at the Conference inauguration was Ms. Ericka Bareights, Minister of Overseas Affairs of France. Eight conference sessions followed.

The convention passed a resolution in support of demonetization of the higher end Indian currencies so as to curtail the black money and terrorism funding. However, GOPIO has called upon India govt. to provide same opportunity for NRIs and PIOs as Indian nationals to deposit up to Rs. 2.5 lakhs of Indian currencies in Indian banks in India or outside. The convention ended with a finale banquet dinner cruise on Siene River in Paris.

GOPIO Europe supports demonetazization

The Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO) meeting in Paris over the weekend paid tribute to Indian soldiers who laid their lives fighting freedom of Europe on Armistice Day in France which honored all those soldiers who were killed at World War I. Over 4,700 Indian soldiers laid their lives fighting with the British. The convention delegates led by GOPIO Chairman Dr. Thomas Abraham visited Indian soldiers memorial at Neuve Chapelle in Richebourg, France on November 11th on Armistice Day and laid flowers at the memorial. The convention passed a resolution requesting UNESCO to recognize this memorial as a World Heritage site.

The convention was inaugurated at the Intercontinental Hotel by Indian Ambassador Mohan Kumar and was addressed by Dr. Satyapal Singh MP and Shri Raj Purohit MLA, Chief Whip of the Maharashtra Assembly. The Chief Guest at the Conference inauguration was Ms. Ericka Bareights, Minister of Overseas Affairs of France. Eight conference sessions followed.

The convention passed a resolution in support of demonetization of the higher end Indian currencies so as to curtail the black money and terrorism funding. However, GOPIO has called upon India govt. to provide same opportunity for NRIs and PIOs as Indian nationals to deposit up to Rs. 2.5 lakhs of Indian currencies in Indian banks in India or outside. The convention ended with a finale banquet dinner cruise on Siene River in Paris.

India’s Hindu Army celebrates Trump ‘victory’ a few days early

An Indian fringe group on Friday celebrated the “victory” of U.S. presidential contender Donald Trump, hailing his friendship with diaspora Indians and backing his call to ban immigration by Muslims from countries hit by Islamic militancy.

With drums banging and speakers blaring, the Hindu Sena, or Hindu Army, gathered at Jantar Mantar – New Delhi’s answer to London’s Speakers’ Corner – to proclaim to a knot of TV crews that Trump had “already won” the Nov. 8 vote.

“Trump’s victory is confirmed early, due to his thoughts against Islamic terrorism and love for India and Hindus,” said Vishnu Gupta, the Hindu Sena’s self-styled national president.

Trump uttered the memorable phrase “I love Hindu” at a cultural event in New Jersey last month organized by supporters of his candidacy from the Indian diaspora.

That sentiment has not played so well with many diaspora Indians who are secular or belong to other faiths and, as a group, lean more toward supporting Democrat Hillary Clinton. But as far as the Hindu Sena is concerned, the feeling is mutual.

Its celebration at a roadside stall featured posters bearing the slogans, “India Loves Trump” and “Trump Our Only Hope”. One supporter held up a portrait of Trump with a tilak, or religious mark, on his forehead and held a sweet to his mouth.

Shalabh “Shalli” Kumar, founder of the RHC, said he had not seen the ad, but nevertheless gave India-West an earful on Abedin’s alleged ties to terrorism. Kumar – who with his wife has donated more than $1 million to Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump’s campaign and organized a rally for the candidate last month in Edison,

New Jersey – noted that Abedin’s mother was the editor-in-chief of a Muslim magazine which has opined that the U.S. was responsible for the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Moreover, Abedin’s family has extensive ties to the Muslim Brotherhood, which has ties to radical Islam, claimed the Chicago-area businessman.

Aniruddha Rajput elected to UN International Law Commission

UNITED NATIONS: Aniruddha Rajput has been elected by the UN General Assembly to the International Law Commission. Rajput received 160 votes on Nov. 3, outpolling the other nine Asian candidates vying for the seven ILC seats for the region. Among them, Japan’s candidate got 148 votes and China’s 146.

A total of 34 candidates were elected to five-year terms on the Geneva-based body that works on developing and codifying international law. In his early 30s, Rajput will be the youngest member of the Commission. He completed his Ph.D. in law from the National University of Singapore only last year.

Rajput, who practices before the Indian Supreme Court, was the lawyer for the Jammu and Kashmir Study Center’s controversial suit filed last year challenging Article 35A of the Constitution that allows state governments to give special rights and privileges to its permanent residents that are not available to other citizens.

The controversial suit focuses on that article’s application in Kashmir where, according to Rajput, the state Assembly passed laws that were drafted narrowly to exclude certain communities.

The chairman of the ILC, Narinder Singh of India, will complete his term by the end of this year. He was first elected in 2006 and then re-elected in 2011. Singh, who is also the incumbent Secretary General of the Indian Society of International Law, is a former External Affairs Ministry legal adviser and head of its Legal and Treaties Division.

Rajput’s candidature is a departure from the tradition of India nominating the heads of the Legal and Treaties Division. His basic law degree is from the ILS Law College in Pune and he did his LLM at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

According to his biodata circulated by the UN, Rajput has advised on potential claims in U.S. courts under the Alien Tort Claims Act and British courts under universal jurisdiction for violations of rights of certain communities.

He drafted the Sports Bill, 2012, at the second revision stage and has advised the state governments of Haryana and Jammu and Kashmir on laws relating to industry and mining. He is also a member of the Governing Council of the Global Village Foundation.

Pakistan urges UN to send fact-finding mission to Kashmir

New York, Nov 6: Pakistans Ambassador to the United Nations Maleeha Lodhi has once again called on the UN to dispatch a fact-finding mission to Jammu and Kashmir, saying that Indias rejection to allow one was in fact acknowledgment of the “grave atrocities” being committed by its forces.

Ambassador Lodhi made the call when the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra ad Al Hussein called on her at the Pakistan Mission in New York, the Associated Press of Pakistan cited an official press release.

The Pakistani envoy commended the High Commissioner for his effective leadership as an advocate of human rights and fundamental freedoms across the world.

Pakistan, she said, appreciated his repeated calls for grant of unconditional access for the Office of High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) to both sides of the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir.

Ambassador Lodhi also noted that the calls by the High Commissioner for sending fact-finding mission to Jammu and Kashmir to independently assess the situation on the ground was a source of solace for the people of Kashmir.

Their rejection by India only reinforced the need for the office of the High Commissioner to monitor the situation on a sustained basis, she added.

The international community has an obligation to support the legitimate struggle of the Kashmiri people for their right to self-determination and act decisively to end human rights violations, she added.

Aakash Dalal Found Guilty Of Terrorism In Synagogue Bombing Case

A Bergen County jury found Aakash Dalal, a former Rutgers student guilty on Nov. 1 of terrorism and 16 other charges for his role in conspiring with his former school friend Anthony Graziano for vandalism and firebombing of Jewish facilities five years ago, NorthJersey.com reported.

Aakash Dalal, a former Lodi resident, was found guilty on 17 of 20 counts in attacks and vandalism against several synagogues and other Jewish institutions, which occurred between 2011 and 2012 in Rutherford, Paramus, Hackensack and Maywood. Dalal, now 24, will be sentenced on Dec. 21, NorthJersey.com reported.

Dalal was charged as the mastermind behind the attacks who instructed Graziano to carry them out. Graziano was found guilty in May. Reports said that according to Defense attorney Brian Neary “the family is very disappointed with the jury’s verdict” and they plan to appeal, based on whether the terrorism statute that was passed

after 9/11 was properly used in this case. “The statute itself might be unconstitutional,” Neary said. These crimes “don’t put an entire population at the same level of fear as the World Trade Center” attacks of 9/11.

Rep. Ami Bera’s dad sentenced to 1-year prison term

Babulal Bera, father of Rep. Ami Bera, was sentenced to one year and one day in federal prison for organizing a money-laundering scheme that helped fund two of his son’s campaigns, media reports here said.

It was a sentence that defense attorneys for Bera, 83, a retired chemical engineer who emigrated from India and watched his oldest son win election to the U.S. House of Representatives, argued was too severe, but one U.S. District Judge Troy L. Nunley said was appropriate.
“The defendant’s efforts were calculated,” Nunley said during the sentencing hearing in Sacramento. “This is more than just a naive person who doesn’t know how elections work.”

Babulal Bera allegedly funneled about $260,000 to his son’s bids for Congress in 2010 and 2012. Babulal Bera and his wife made the maximum allowable contribution of $2,400 each election cycle. He then asked family members and friends to also make the maximum contribution and said he would pay them back the full amount. In May, Babulal Bera pleaded guilty to two counts of violating federal campaign finance laws. His son is the sole Indian American in Congress.

Bera cannot appeal his conviction on campaign finance fraud or his one-year prison sentence, which begins on Nov. 18. The plea agreement notes that the maximum sentence would have been five years in federal prison.

In all, prosecutors said they were able to track at least $260,000 in illegal contributions funneled through donors but secretly paid by the elder Bera through multiple bank accounts used to further cover his tracks.

The 2010 incidents of money laundering did not end up helping Ami Bera win, as the Sacramento County physician lost a close race to former U.S. Rep. Dan Lungren (R-Gold River). But in the 2012 rematch, the second election cycle in which money was illegally funneled into Bera’s campaign, the Democrat defeated Lungren by about 9,000 votes.

Bera has remained a target of Republicans in one of California’s swing districts, having narrowly won reelection in 2014. His challenger in November, Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones, is seeking to link the congressman to his father’s money laundering conviction. On Tuesday, Jones proposed tightening federal campaign finance laws to make it harder for money to be funneled from one donor to another.

“This is one of the most difficult moments my family has ever experienced,” the congressman said in a written statement. “Of course I’m absolutely devastated and heartbroken for how today’s decision will impact our entire family. But my father’s accepted what he did was wrong, he’s taken responsibility and I love him more than words can express.”

Indian American youth arrested for swamping 911 System

Meetkumar Hiteshbhai Desai, 18, an Indian American youth has been charged with three counts of computer tampering after “accidentally” swamping the state of Arizona’s emergency services with thousands of bogus 911 telephone calls.

Desai is reported to have told police last week that he had tried to share on Twitter a link to JavaScript code that exposed iOS bugs making phones freeze or restart, hoping Apple would pay him a bug bounty for information about the flaws, but had mistakenly linked it to an earlier version of his app. When the link was clicked, it continually called 911 and would not let the caller hang up, the BBC reported.

More than 1,000 people clicked on the exploit and flooded emergency call centers around the country with more than 100 calls over a few minutes. Desai told the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Department that his friend discovered the vulnerability and that he tweaked the bug to trigger pop-ups, open emails, and to activate phone dialing. He said he was just trying to be “funny,” The Verge reported. Maricopa County sheriff’s office said the link had been clicked almost 2,000 times, threatening emergency services across Arizona.

NRI pleads guilty in baby’s death, faces 18 years in prison

Jagsheer Singh, 30, an Indian American father in Queens, New York, pleaded guilty on October 21 to manslaughter and assault charges in the death of his 4-month old son. Singh pleaded guilty to using a blunt object to fatally fracture his 4-month-old son’s skull, the Queens District Attorney announced.

Jagsheer Singh was charged with manslaughter and assault of his son, Nevin Janduher, who had died after suffering multiple skull fractures in December 2014. Nevin was left alone with his dad after his mother, Dr. Reena Malhotra, went to work at Long Island Jewish Medical Center.

“As a father, the defendant’s job was to protect and nurture his helpless, innocent son,” said District Attorney Richard Brown. “Instead, the defendant assaulted his son, causing skull fractures and widespread brain injury and ultimately resulting in the child’s death. As a result, the sentence to be imposed by the court is more than warranted.”

Singh first told his wife that Nevin fell off a changing table, but doctors found that his injuries were inconsistent with a short fall and that he had suffered “abusive head trauma.” Medical personnel at Cohen Children’s Medical Center in New Hyde Park, New York, examined the baby and found he had suffered injuries inconsistent with falling off a table. Doctors said that Nevin had suffered non-accidental inflicted trauma.

The infant died several days later on Christmas Eve after being taken to Cohen Children’s Medical Center. Singh is facing up to 18 years in prison when he is scheduled to be sentenced before Judge Richard Buchter at Queens Supreme Court on Nov. 4.

Singh was arrested Dec. 21 with first degree assault and endangering the welfare of a child. The charges were upgraded after Nevin’s death, to second degree murder and acting in a manner injurious to a child under the age of 17.

In March 2015, Queens radiologist Reena Malhotra, Nevin’s mother and Singh’s wife, wrote to Judge Richard Buchter, who was presiding over the case, to ask that her husband be released. She pointed out that Singh was a “loving and caring father. Our family is his world,” she wrote. “He has a big heart, is a God-loving man, and is a responsible person with a calm demeanor,” she said. In September, to honor their nephew’s second birthday, Nevin’s aunts started a gofundme drive to raise donations for the Make-A-Wish Foundation. “We think of Nevin every day,” wrote his aunts.

Dharun Ravi’s Plea Deal Ends Long Drawn Case

From News Dispatches.

A plea deal worked out by an Indian-American youth who was convicted on charges of bias intimidation and invasion of privacy of his gay roommate, may finally bring to an end a case that hit headlines and energized a national debate on homophobia and bullying, even evoking a response from President Obama
Former Rutgers student Dharun Ravi on Oct. 27, pleaded guilty in a Middlesex County Superior Court in New Jersey, to one count of 3rd degree attempted invasion of privacy. Four years ago, he was convicted on 15 counts of bias intimidation and invasion of privacy as well as evidence tampering, when he put out a secretly videotaped his roommate Tyler Clementi’s encounter with a gay man. Clementi went on to commit suicide shortly thereafter. However, Ravi has consistently denied his actions led to the suicide and has never been charged on that count.

In September, a court dismissed five of thos 15 counts and called for a new trial on the remaining counts. In making the plea agreement, Ravi effectively puts to rest the case that has dragged on for five years.

According to a report in Nj.com, Ravi completed his 300 hours of community service Oct. 27, and has already served 30 days in jail, finished his probation period, and paid the $10,000 fine.

“Dharun Ravi will be sentenced to time served for the third-degree charge and will spend no additional time in jail,” according to the news report, after he admitted to attempting to activate a webcam to record his roommate’s interaction intending to let others see it as well. The activation however, failed to materialized. Ravi was quoted in nj.com saying he “feels good” and is “relieved” and his lawyer Steven Altman said, “He just wants to disappear.” The young man works in IT in New York City, the news report said.

Indian-origin baby dies after van backing out of driveway hits stroller

An 8-month-old Indian-origin baby was killed when the stroller he was in was hit by a car as it backed out of a driveway in Queens, NY here. News reports quoting police said that the baby, Navraj Raju, was knocked out of the stroller as the van was backing out of a narrow driveway on Astoria Boulevard near 93rd Street in East Elmhurst in Queens, NY around 10 in the morning.

The baby’s mother, 35-year-old Daljit Kaur, who was pushing the stroller, had left a grocery next door with a dozen eggs. She had momentarily stopped and bent down to adjust the baby’s blanket when the stroller was suddenly hit by the van that was rolling back towards the stroller.

EMS rushed Raju to Elmhurst Hospital Center, where he died. His mother was not injured. Rodriguez remained on the scene and was taken into custody. Police say he does not have a valid driver’s license.

Witnesses told the media that the mother and baby had just left a nearby deli when the mother stopped to fix the blanket on the stroller, stopping behind the van. A witness, Ahmed Ali (26), described a chaotic scene, saying the child’s mother shouted “Stop! Stop!” as the van backed up. Some passersby ran to pull Raju from under the van, Ali said.

Navnoor Kang, ex-official of NY Pension Fund charged with bribery

Navnoor Kang, an Indian origin former official of one of the largest pension funds, who oversaw the investment of $53 billion in pension funds, has been charged by federal prosecutors with accepting bribes of more than $100,000 in cash, cocaine, prostitutes, strippers, trips and concert tickets to steer lucrative business to two brokerage firms.

A director and strategist at the New York State Common Retirement Fund (NYCRF), Navnoor Kang “allegedly steered billions of dollars of business to broker-dealers who bribed him with luxury vacations, high-priced watches, drugs, cash and more”, Preet Bharara, the New York Federal prosecutor, said on Wednesday, last week.

Kang, 38, is a former tennis pro who played in international tournaments in 2005 and 2006.

From 2014 to 2016, he was the Director of Fixed Income and Head of Portfolio Strategy at NYCRF, the third largest pension fund in the US with $184 billion in assets. He was responsible for investing $53 billion in fixed income securities.

Court documents say Navnoor Kang, 38, started taking bribes almost as soon as he became director of fixed income and head of portfolio strategy for the NYS Common Retirement Fund in Albany in 2014.

The two companies, which were not identified, did not do any business with NYCRF in 2013. But by 2016 their combined annual volume of business was $2.557 billion after Kang had started sending them business, according to court documents. This netted the companies millions of dollars in commissions, prosecutors said.

NYSCRF is the third largest pension fund in the United States, with approximately $184 billion in assets in trust for a total of more than one million retirees and other beneficiaries, and at least two different people from different companies paid off Kang to get a piece of the pie. “This was an age old, very classic tale of quid pro quo corruption,” said Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara.

Bharara said the prosecution began with an investigation by the enforcement unit of the Securities and Exchange Commission which was alerted by one of the brokerage houses involved. Investigators found one of the brokerage houses went from handling no fixed income investments for the state pension fund to handling over $2 billion in two years. If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

9-yr-old Parth Patel dies of cancer in NJ

A little boy battling cancer from Jersey City who received his own parade sadly died on Saturday, October 22, according to Jersey City Police.

On most days, Parth Patel was a 4th grader battling cancer who just wanted to go to his school PS 27 in Jersey City. He also loved superheroes and wanted to be a police officer. So guess what? He got his wish.

“Look at his smile! This is what it’s about!” said Adrienne Morrell, Jersey City Police Department. His day started riding shotgun with Batman.

Funeral services were held Oct. 25 morning for Parth Patel, an Indian American resident of Jersey City who had been suffering from Ewings sarcoma, a rare bone cancer, for two years. Parth leaves behind his father Sunil, mother Parul, and an elder sister Hileri.

“A beautiful life that came to an end, he died as he lived, everyone’s friend,” Hileri Patel said on her Facebook page. “In our hearts a memory will always be kept, of one we loved and will never forget. We all love this little superhero but we lost him when we weren’t ready,” said Hileri Patel.

“He’s a child. You could only wish he gets better,” Jersey City police officer Melissa Sarmiento told CBS New York. “We can only pray for him and hope things work out.” Parth Patel received the keys to the city. The parade route ended at his school, where he was celebrated with a pizza party.

Bhairavi Desai lauds decision of NYC Couriers for standing up for Rights

New York City – The New York Messengers Alliance, a grass-roots labor organization lead by veteran and new bike messengers and walkers announced its formation and the launch of a Worker Safety Campaign, calling on courier companies including Uber, Postmates, DoorDash, and Caviar to pay for safety equipment and provide Workers Compensation for injured workers.  The messengers have been regularly meeting, strategizing, organizing to be the voice for 10,000 workers who labor the streets in the country’s biggest courier market.

Couriers, including bike messengers and walkers, work in all weather and in constant risk of injury. Couriers work for services such as UberRUSH and UberEATS, with no guaranteed minimum wage or paid sick leave, and few on-the-job protections.

“Uber messengers are treated the same as Uber drivers: misclassified as independent contractors, subject to poverty rates, constant wage cuts, firings, long hours, no paid time off, with the added fight of proving employee status when challenging the exploitation,” said Bhairavi Desai, President of the National Taxi Workers Alliance and Executive Director of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance. “Uber messengers and drivers and the overall messenger and driver workforces are in a historic struggle to protect their full-time pay and stop the race to the bottom, battling a Wall Street darling valuated at over $60 billion. Like drivers, messengers – also mostly people of color and immigrants – are at a historic juncture. And with the New York Messengers Alliance, they choose to organize and fight and challenge an exploitative business model, not concede to its makers.”

NYMA is the first non-driver affiliate of the National Taxi Workers Alliance.  NYTWA and NYMA will jointly organize Uber Workers Rising, a campaign of Uber Drivers and Messengers, in solidarity with all drivers and messengers, to challenge Uber’s business model of part-time-only, poverty wages work cemented by misclassification.

“Over the summer I fractured my ankle on the job but I had to keep working, pedaling with one foot because I didn’t have any way to buy food if I took time off,” said Sadio Ballo, New York Messengers Alliance Executive Committee Member and 16-year bike messenger who formerly worked for Uber. “We are forming the New York Messengers Alliance to build our collective strength to improve the appalling conditions that couriers work under. Every day, messengers struggle to get by in this great city without decent wages and without employer-paid medical coverage if we get injured on the job. Over the past few years, app-based companies like Uber have lowered the standards, making our jobs even harder and pushing us to the breaking point. Since Uber cut our rates, we find ourselves working 12 to 16 hour shifts on our bicycles or on our feet the entire time, often making less than minimum wage for our work. We will no longer accept being taken advantage of by these billion-dollar companies. Together, we are standing up and fighting back.”

Bhairavi Desai-led New York Taxi Workers Alliance, Uber Drivers win employee status

New York – For the first time in New York State, Uber drivers have been determined to be employees. Uber does not contribute to unemployment benefit funds or guarantee a minimum wage for drivers because the company insists that its drivers are independent contractors. Now, the New York State Department of Labor has for the first time determined that two drivers who filed for unemployment were in fact employed by Uber.

“This is a significant victory for Uber drivers, and a game changer for all drivers in a race to the bottom due to Uber’s economic policies,” said Bhairavi Desai, Executive Director of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance which was also a plaintiff in the lawsuit. “Uber is lowering the standards for all drivers across the industry and the outcome of this fight will, in many ways, determine the future of the industry. That’s why it’s so important to hold Uber accountable. We’re calling on the Department of Labor to conduct a full audit of Uber and make a determination consistant with labor law that all drivers are employees. We will keep fighting until we win employee status for all Uber drivers and all of the legal and economic protections for workers that correspond with employee status.”

The two unemployment determinations came after Brooklyn Legal Services (a program of Legal Services NYC) filed a federal lawsuit  on behalf of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance and two Uber drivers, Jakir Hossain and Levon Aleksanian, complaining that the New York State Department of Labor was refusing to investigate claims for unemployment benefits by Uber drivers. Both Uber driver plaintiffs have been determined to be employees of Uber and one of them was determined to be an employee of both Uber and Lyft.

One plaintiff, Jakir Hossain, began to receive unemployment benefits last week after struggling to get by for nearly a year while waiting for his determination. Mr. Hossain was found to be an employee of both Uber and Lyft.

“Now that I have received unemployment benefits I can finally start to make ends meet again,” said plaintiff and former Uber driver Jakir Hossain. “For nearly a year, as the Department of Labor dragged its feet, I was so broke that I had to borrow money to pay my rent and I racked up credit card debt for the first time. After Uber deactivated me for having a 4.3 rating, I was no longer able to send money home to my family in Bangladesh and I couldn’t afford basic living expenses. I came to this country with the hope that if I worked hard enough, I could create a better future for myself. But my experience with Uber left me broken hearted about the American dream. Now that I see the strength we have when drivers work together with the support of our union, the New York Taxi Workers Alliance, to fight for our rights, I have reason to hope again.”

This historic victory could have a profound impact on the business models of Uber and other app-based car service companies that “terminate” drivers at will and keep them at low pay without any protections to fall back on.

Founded in 1998, NYTWA is the 19,000-member strong union of NYC taxicab drivers, representing yellow cab drivers, green car, and black car drivers, including drivers for Uber and Lyft.  We fight for justice, rights, respect and dignity for the over 50,000 licensed men and women who often labor 12 hour shifts with little pay and few protections in the city’s mobile sweatshop.  Our members come from every community, garage, and neighborhood. To find out more visit NYTWA.org

CACF to honor Anurima Bhargava

The Coalition for Asian American Children and Families (CACF) is pleased to announce that it will recognize the significant achievements of Anurima Bhargava for her advocacy work around children and education, impacting the lives of thousands of children and families. Ms. Bhargava will be recognized at CACF’s 30th Anniversary Gala and Caring for Children Awards on Monday, October 17 at espace in New York City, where over 300 guests, including community leaders, advocates, and professionals from law, finance, healthcare and technology will come together and raise vital funding for CACF’s policy and advocacy campaigns.

Anurima Bhargava served as the Chief of the Educational Opportunities Section of the Civil Rights Division at the U.S. Department of Justice. She led the Division’s efforts to provide equal educational opportunities for all students by enforcing federal statutes that prohibit discrimination on the basis of race, national origin, sex, language status, religion and disability in schools and institutions of higher education. Through litigation, guidance and policy, the Division addresses a broad range of issues, including school segregation; school discipline and the school to prison pipeline; harassment and bullying; sexual assault; and protecting educational access and services for English Learners, LGBTQ and undocumented students. She has served on numerous task forces and working groups, including the White House Task Force to Prevent Campus Sexual Assault and the Supportive School Discipline Initiative.

Since leaving the DOJ in February 2016, Ms. Bhargava served as a Fellow at the Institute of Politics and is currently a Fellow at the Carr Center for Human Rights at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

Comments Bhargava, “CACF has given a voice to our future and each of our children, the tools to dismantle barriers. It is a privilege to join CACF in celebration of the impact it has had and will have on generations to come!”

Bhargava will be honored alongside Dr. Raymond Fong and Dr. Danny Fong, both past Presidents of the Chinese American Medical Society; the Lee Family – Chester, Diana and Michael, who represent two generations of community service; and world-leading surgeons on vascular anomaly Dr. Teresa O and Dr. Milton Waner.

“As we celebrate 30 years of empowering children and families, we are thrilled to honor Anurima Bhargava, who has dedicated her professional life to improving access to education for all children.  Her selfless achievements will inspire Gala attendees and the many families and children we serve,” stated Henrietta Ho-Asjoe, CACF’s Interim Executive Director.

7-year-old Pakistani beaten up by classmates for being a Muslim

A seven-year-old boy of Pakistani origin was allegedly beaten up by five classmates on a school bus in the US for being a Muslim, forcing the family to move back to Pakistan, media reports say.

Two-time Fulbright scholar, Zeeshan-ul-hassan Usman,  who uses data to prevent terror attacks, shared a post on Facebook with a picture of his son wearing a sling on his arm after he was attacked by fellow students in Cary, North Carolina.

“Welcome to the United States of America of Donald Trump.” he wrote as a caption  post on october 8, the International Business Times reported.

“Meet my son Abdul Aziz. He is in grade 1, bullied and beaten by his own classmates in school bus for being a Muslim.” he continued.

Usmani  told The Huffington Post  they twisted his son’s arm and called him “Muslim” over and over again.

“He was born and raised in the United States. He was born in Florida. As American as you can think of. He likes Captain America. He wants to be president of the United States of America,” Usmani told The Huffington Post, while speaking from Pakistan. This is not the first incident of bullying and discrimination. According to Usmani, the family has been on a receiving end of discrimination several times

Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said the group wants the school system to do an investigation and determine whether police should get involved.

Harendra Singh’s quid pro quo leads to Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano’s arrest

Indian American restaurateur Harendra Singh’s deals has led to the arrest of Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano and his wife, Linda on Thursday, October 20, 2016 . The couple were arrested early morning in a bribery and kickback scheme involving the restaurateur — who paid Linda Mangano $450,000 for a no-show job as a “food taster,” authorities said.

Oyster Bay’s town supervisor, John Venditto, also was implicated in the scheme, helping out restaurateur Harendra Singh with his business in exchange for being allowed to hold fundraisers at the businessman’s restaurants and given free limousine service, according to the feds and sources.

As per reports, Mangano and his family also were treated to free trips, including vacations in Niagara Falls, St. Thomas, and Turks and Caicos, officials said. On top of that, they allegedly received a $3,371.90 ergonomic office chair, a $3,623.73 massage chair from Brookstone, a $7,304 Panerai Luminor watch and hardwood flooring in the Manganos’ bedroom worth $3,701.81.

Ed Mangano walked out of his Bethpage home without handcuffs just before 7 a.m. and got into a waiting vehicle, WABC reported. “I will have a press statement for everybody later. I plan on giving my own press conference. Let’s see what they are saying and I will be happy to respond. That’s all I can say right now,” Mangano said.

ed-manganoThe Manganos and Venditto pleaded not guilty to the charges in federal court in Central Islip on Thursday and were set to be released on $500,000 bond. They posted their homes as collateral.

A 13-count federal indictment alleges that Mangano, the highest-ranking elected official in Nassau County, and Venditto used their positions to help the federally indicted Singh, who was identified by sources, to procure lucrative county contracts and loans guaranteed by the town of Oyster Bay.

In exchange, Mangano’s wife was paid for a “no-show” job at one of Singh’s restaurants, the feds allege. “We allege that she was paid ostensibly to do nothing, and so she received a salary for a period of years that totaled $450,000,” US Attorney Robert Capers said at a press conference announcing the indictment.

Mangano and Venditto have been charged with conspiracy to commit bribery, bribery, conspiracy to commit honest services fraud and honest services fraud. The Manganos and Venditto were also charged with obstructing justice for concocting fictitious stories with Singh in an effort to hide their dirty dealings.

Singh is assisting the feds in a probe into Mayor Bill de Blasio’s campaign fundraising,the New York Times reported earlier Wednesday. It is unclear whether Singh is cooperating in the Mangano case.

Mangano is charged with honest-services fraud in connection with two Nassau County contracts that were given to Singh. They involve the provision of bread and rolls to the Nassau County jail in June 2012, and the provision of $237,000 worth of food to workers in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy.

Mangano, a Republican, was first elected county executive in 2009. He is up for re-election in 2017. He also served seven terms in the Nassau County Legislature.

António Guterres appointed next UN Secretary-General by acclamation

The General Assembly appointed by acclamation the former Prime Minister of Portugal, António Guterres, as the next United Nations Secretary-General, to succeed Ban Ki-moon when he steps down on  December 31, 2016.

Guterres, aged 67, was Prime Minister of Portugal from 1995 to 2002, and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees from June 2005 to December 2015. He will become the world’s top diplomat on 1 January 2017, and hold that post for the next five years.

Adopting a consensus resolution put forward by its President, Peter Thomson, the Assembly acted on the recommendation on the UN Security Council, which on 6 October forwarded Mr. Guterres’ name to the 193-member body as its nominee for UN Secretary-General for a five-year period, ending 31 December 2021.

Thanking the General Assembly for appointing him as the next Secretary-General, Mr. Guterres said he was grateful to the Member States for their trust in him as well as for the transparent and open selection process they undertook.

“I believe this process means that the true winner today is the credibility of the UN. And it also made very clear to me that, as Secretary-General, having been chosen by all Member States, I must be at the service of them all equally and with no agenda but the one enshrined in the UN Charter,” said Mr. Guterres.

The new UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who takes office on January 1, arrives with strong credentials — both as a former Prime Minister of Portugal and an ex-UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

As a senior UN official, he spearheaded an ambitious but politically intricate action plan to battle one of the world’s major humanitarian crises that threatened to unravel European unity as millions of refugees from the Middle East, Africa and Asia landed on the shores of Europe last year.

Guterres was elected mostly on merit – with a rare unanimous decision by the five veto-wielding permanent members at a time when the Security Council is sharply divided over Syria, Yemen, Ukraine and North Korea. The consensus in the 15-member Council, and the approval of his nomination by the 193-member General Assembly, underlined a strong affirmation of his appointment.

When both the Security Council and the General Assembly gave their overwhelming support to Guterres, they side-stepped two alternative options: picking the first woman Secretary-General or the first Secretary-General from Eastern Europe.

The lobbying for a female UN chief was initiated by more than 750 civil society and human rights organizations, while the proposal for an East European as UN chief came mostly from member states.

A member of the Socialist Party in Portugal, Guterres spent over 20 years in government and public service before he was elected by the UN General Assembly to become the 10th High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), serving for a decade until the end of 2015.

His work with the UNHCR was nothing short of groundbreaking. As High Commissioner, he oversaw the most profound structural reform process in UNHCR’s history and built up the organization’s capacity to respond to some of the largest displacement crises since the end of World War Two.

Guterres has already pledged to serve the “victims of conflicts, of terrorism, human rights violations, poverty and injustices of this world”. Ban Ki Moon rightly complimented Guterres as a “superb choice” and said “his experience as Portuguese prime minister, his wide knowledge of world affairs, and his lively intellect will serve him well in leading the United Nations in a crucial period”.

Guterres takes over the UN at a time when the world body has remained paralyzed over several unresolved political problems, including the five-year-old devastating civil war in Syria, hundreds of civilian killings in Yemen, Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan, and the emergence of North Korea as the world’s newest nuclear power in defiance of Security Council resolutions.

Antonio Guterres: New UN Secretary General

The new UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who takes office on January 1, arrives with strong credentials — both as a former Prime Minister of Portugal and an ex-UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

As a senior UN official, he spearheaded an ambitious but politically intricate action plan to battle one of the world’s major humanitarian crises that threatened to unravel European unity as millions of refugees from the Middle East, Africa and Asia landed on the shores of Europe last year.

Guterres was elected mostly on merit – with a rare unanimous decision by the five veto-wielding permanent members at a time when the Security Council is sharply divided over Syria, Yemen, Ukraine and North Korea. The consensus in the 15-member Council, and the approval of his nomination by the 193-member General Assembly, underlined a strong affirmation of his appointment.

Mr. Antonio Guterres former United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees addressed the press at the stakeout after the casual meeting with member states
Mr. Antonio Guterres former United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees addressed the press at the stakeout after the casual meeting with member states

When both the Security Council and the General Assembly gave their overwhelming support to Guterres, they side-stepped two alternative options: picking the first woman Secretary-General or the first Secretary-General from Eastern Europe.

The lobbying for a female UN chief was initiated by more than 750 civil society and human rights organizations, while the proposal for an East European as UN chief came mostly from member states.

While there was a strong case for a woman Secretary-General in a 71-year-old male-dominated world body, Eastern Europe had less of a legitimate claim. As a geographical entity, it existed only within the confines of the UN, not outside of it. After the end of the Cold War, most Eastern European states became an integral partner of the European Union (EU) or the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and often both

So, in effect, Guterres overcame both campaigns, as he was anointed the fourth Western European to hold the position. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon of South Korea, who will step down on December 31 after a 10-year tenure, will leave behind two legacies: the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Paris Agreement on Climate Change. But it will be left to Guterres to ensure their implementation.

A member of the Socialist Party in Portugal, Guterres spent over 20 years in government and public service before he was elected by the UN General Assembly to become the 10th High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), serving for a decade until the end of 2015.

His work with the UNHCR was nothing short of groundbreaking. As High Commissioner, he oversaw the most profound structural reform process in UNHCR’s history and built up the organization’s capacity to respond to some of the largest displacement crises since the end of World War Two.

Guterres has already pledged to serve the “victims of conflicts, of terrorism, human rights violations, poverty and injustices of this world”. Ban Ki Moon rightly complimented Guterres as a “superb choice” and said “his experience as Portuguese prime minister, his wide knowledge of world affairs, and his lively intellect will serve him well in leading the United Nations in a crucial period”.united-nations

However, he acknowledged that the election was also a disappointment as his vision of a female successor did not become a reality. Ban Ki Moon, is not alone in his sentiments, as many consider the outcome of the election to be “bittersweet”. Christiana Figueres, a Costa Rican diplomat and one of Guterres’ female rivals for the job, tweeted on 5 October, “Bitter:not a woman. Sweet: by far the best man in the race. Congrats Antonio Guterres! We are all with you”.

Guterres takes over the UN at a time when the world body has remained paralyzed over several unresolved political problems, including the five-year-old devastating civil war in Syria, hundreds of civilian killings in Yemen, Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan, and the emergence of North Korea as the world’s newest nuclear power in defiance of Security Council resolutions.

The new Secretary-General will also be entrusted with the task of resolving several lingering problems, including ongoing reports of sexual abuse of women by some UN peacekeepers and compensation for Haitian victims of cholera inadvertently brought in by UN peacekeepers, and address new challenges, such as helping muster the trillions of dollars needed to implement the 17 SDGs and the Climate Change agreement as well as ensuring a 50:50 gender parity in senior and decision-making positions in the UN Secretariat.

One of his first appointments should be to name a woman as his Deputy, preferably from the developing world. We wish him well in his endeavors.

UN Resolution on Journalist Safety Passed, But Long Way to Go

The UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) advanced its commitment to the safety of journalists after adopting a groundbreaking resolution with measures for states to ensure journalist protection. But this is only the first step, many note.

Though the UNHRC has adopted resolutions on the safety of journalists in the past, some note that this year’s resolution is more comprehensive in protecting the rights of freedom of expression and the press.

For the first time, UNHRC called for states to release arbitrarily detained journalists and to reform laws that are misused to hinder their work.

“[The resolution] brings up these issues more explicitly than it has been brought up in other resolutions,” Committee to Protect Journalists’ (CPJ) Advocacy Director Courtney Radsch told IPS.

She stressed that the resolution acknowledges the role that states play in committing violence against journalists and in creating a permissive environment for the safety of journalists.

“It is not simply enough to talk about the safety of journalist without also addressing the need to create an environment in which freedom of expression and press freedom can flourish,” she stated.

Reporters Without Borders’ (RSF) Advocacy and Communications Officer Margaux Ewen echoed similar sentiments to IPS, noting that the resolution is a “wonderful reiteration” which calls on member states to implement their international obligations.

For the first time, UNHRC called for states to release arbitrarily detained journalists and to reform laws that are misused to hinder their work.

According to CPJ, approximately 200 journalists were imprisoned worldwide in 2015. The organisation recorded the highest number of such arrests in China, where 49 journalists were imprisoned. Most recently, Chinese journalists Lu Yuyu and Li Tingyu were detained in June 2016 on suspicion of “picking quarrels and provoking trouble.” They had been documenting and reporting on protests across the East Asian nation since 2012.

The newly adopted resolution also affirms the right of journalists to use encryption and anonymity tools. Journalists often rely on such mechanisms to safely impart information anonymously online. They are also used to encrypt their communications in order to protect their contacts and sources.

Radsch noted that these tools are essential for journalists “to do their job in the 21st century.”

The resolution also addresses the specific risks that women journalists face in their work, condemning all gender-based attacks.

Earlier in September, freelance journalist Gretchen Malalad and Al Jazeera Correspondent Jamela Alindogan-Caudron were subject to severe social media attacks, receiving threats of rape and death due to their coverage of the Philippine government’s controversial anti-drug war.

The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NJUP) Ryan Rosauro expressed his dismay of the state of journalism in the country, stating: “We will never take any threats, whether of physical harm or to silence us, lightly for we have lost far too many of our colleagues and hardly seen justice for them,” he said.

In a joint statement with NJUP, the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) stated that the government must take social media threats to journalists seriously and should penalise perpetrators to ensure the safety of journalists.

In their 2016 World Press Freedom Index, RSF ranked the Philippines 138th out of 180 countries in press freedom making it one of the most dangerous countries for practicing journalists.

As in previous years, the UNHRC also highlighted the need to end violence against journalists and to combat impunity for attacks. CPJ found that over 1,200 journalists have been killed since 1992, the majority of whom were murdered with complete impunity. Other organisations speculate that the numbers are higher, with IFJ reporting that at least 2,300 journalists and media staff have been killed since 1990.

In 2009, prominent Sri Lankan journalist and editor Lasantha Wickramatunga was beaten to death after his car was pulled over by eight helmeted men on motorcycles. Often critical of the government and its conduct in the country’s civil war, the editor had been attacked before and received death threats for months prior to his death. He even anticipated his own fate, writing an essay shortly before his death about free media in the South Asian nation.

“In the course of the past few years, the independent media have increasingly come under attack. Electronic and print-media institutions have been burnt, bombed, sealed and coerced. Countless journalists have been harassed, threatened and killed. It has been my honour to belong to all those categories and now especially the last,” Wickramatunga wrote.

Most recently, Jordanian journalist Nahed Hattar was shot dead while on his way to face charges for sharing a cartoon deemed offensive to Islam.

“The killing of Mr. Hattar is appalling, and it is unacceptable that no protection measures had been put in place to ensure his safety, particularly when the threats against him were well known to the authorities,” said UN special rapporteur on freedom of opinion and expression David Kaye.

Kaye urged authorities to bring the perpetrator to justice and to ensure legislation that allows a culture of diverse expression. However, both Radsch and Ewen noted that the resolution is only the first step as it must be translated to action on the ground.

“We continue to see the failure of states to adequate investigate the murders of journalists…so while resolutions are important, we need to see actual concrete actions to accompany these normative statements,” Radsch told IPS.

Ewen stated that UN resolutions are “strong and strongly worded” but it still remains to be seen for states to implement measures to protect journalists and the right of freedom of expression. She pointed to RSF’s campaign to create a Special Representative to the UN Secretary-General for the safety of journalists as a way to ensure states comply with their international obligations.

Led by RSF, the Protect Journalists campaign has brought together over a 100 media organisations and human rights organisations including CPJ, the Guardian and the United Nations Correspondents Association to push for the establishment of a special representative.

During a press conference, RSF Secretary General Christophe Deloire noted that a special representative could act as an early warning and rapid response mechanism to give journalists, when threatened, access to authorities and protective measures as laid out in the resolution. He also added that a special representative with political weight can make sure the safety of journalists is integrated in all UN programs and operations.

“Every week, there are new names on new graves in journalist cemeteries…we cannot let anymore journalists be killed because of this lack of political will,” Deloire told press.

The 47-member state council adopted the resolution on the safety of journalists by consensus, expressing a deep concern for the increased number of journalists and media workers who have been killed, tortured and detained. Nations beyond the UNHRC including Austria and the United States also joined the initiative as cosponsors.

Second October –A Day of Peace and Harmony

Ravi P. Bhatia – TRANSCEND Media Service

Most people know that Mahatma Gandhi was born on 2 October 1869 in Porbandar, Gujarat. The day is celebrated all over India as well as in several parts of the world as Gandhi Jayanti — a day to remember the concepts of truth and non violence that this great soul (Mahatma) practiced all his life. Unfortunately this man of peace and non violence died a violent death on 30 January 1948 when he was shot dead by a man who wrongly felt that Gandhi was partial to Muslims in India.

Few people outside India would know that this day is also the day when another simple and self effacing man Lal Bahadur Shastri was born in 1904. From his simple beginnings Shastri rose to become the second Prime Minister of India when Jawaharlal Nehru died in 1964. Unfortunately Shastri had a very short stint in this important office. He had gone to Tashkent in Uzbekistan to negotiate with his Pakistan counterpart. But on January 11, 1966, he suffered a stroke and died in Tashkent itself.

Although there is a generation gap between the two leaders, there are some unusual similarities. I will only illustrate one common element of simplicity and truthfulness. Gandhi was a prolific writer; he used to write with a pencil. One morning when he awoke he found his small pencil missing. On enquiring he was told by his son that since the pencil had been used often and was very small, he had taken it away and replaced it by a new one. Gandhi felt otherwise and felt unhappy; he felt he could write with it some more. Ultimately the small pencil was found and brought before him so that Gandhi could use it for some more time and not waste it.

Shashtri had never gone outside India. He had few clothes and no woolen jacket. When he had to go Europe during the time he was in Nehru’s cabinet he was told that he needed a jacket to ward off the cold weather in his proposed trip. But he did not have a jacket and due to his simple life style he did not wish to buy a new one. Ultimately Nehru came to his rescue and loaned him his jacket so that Shastri could travel abroad without purchasing a new one.

Like Gandhi, Shastri also preferred travelling by train not in a first class cabin but in a third class coach. Why? To remain in touch with ordinary men and women. Such are the attitudes and practices of great souls.

October 2: Nonviolence Day, Gandhi’s Birthday

TMS PEACE JOURNALISM

“The International Day of Non-Violence is marked on 2 October, the birthday of Mahatma Gandhi, leader of the Indian independence movement and pioneer of the philosophy and strategy of non-violence.” — un.org

Thus starts the UN Resolution that on 15 June 2007 formalized the legacy of one the most prominent figures of the 20th Century, born 1869 dead 1948 and still ahead of his time in 2016. Yet, in the short span of 9 years this celebration has already become merely symbolic, ceremonial, practically meaningless. Gandhi Jayanthi as it is called in India. Myths can be useless and also misleading. So let me stick to the man and his meaning to humans.

Let’s remind ourselves of the worldwide wars, proxy-wars, invasions, occupations, terrorisms (State and private); slaveries/tortures of various kinds, human trafficking, forced human mass displacements, persecutions of minorities, economic exploitation, and cruelty to animals. Governments, TNCs, the arms industry, and the top 1%—the elites– profit from all of the above across religious, political, cultural, national, ideological, geographical divides (the globalization).

Such elites will provide narratives for why they have to kill, mutilate, exploit, and cause pain & suffering. And the masses will swallow their vile interpretations and rewritings of reality with a religious apathy and disconnection from reality. And that despite Internet, cell phones, social media, instant communications, and all the gimmicks that supposedly bring info, knowledge, culture, literacy to them. Pessimism? Realpolitik? Realism? Take your pick. History at its best.

But it doesn’t matter the amount or prevalence of violence employed or practiced anywhere anytime. It was from within a violent environment, which oppressed him both in South Africa and in India, that the Mahatma, born Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, gave birth to his philosophy of nonviolence. Yin-Yang. The world is readier than ever for it. Nevertheless, besides a philosophy NV can be many things for many people depending on contexts.

Gandhi reminded us that conflicts are natural occurrences. “Honest differences are often a healthy sign of progress.” They may arise from incompatible goals (Galtung). Or from pathologies. Nonviolence is one way of responding to conflicts whether at a personal, familiar, social, or political level (Micro- Meso-Macro-Mega levels: Galtung). Another response is the use of violence. Nonviolence is therefore a means to conflict resolution or transformation. Peace by peaceful means.

Because conflicts are symptoms of damaged relations, it is in the relationships that they are to be addressed, not in the parties–as a starting point. For if you steal my bicycle, and we fight over it, before ‘making peace’ you must return the stolen bike: common justice as a prerequisite.

Nonviolence can also be a political strategy to achieve a public goal or set of goals. The difference between strategy and tactics is that strategy is done above the shoulders whereas tactics are done below the shoulders, someone said. NV can be used as both, in tandem, defensively or offensively, a tool, a skill, an art: Civil Disobedience. Besides being a way of life, ahimsa.

“Non-Violence,” a sculpture by Karl Fredrik Reutersward, sits permanently outside UN Headquarters in New York. A most popular quote of Gandhiji is: “Be the change you want in the world.” The change starts in the person; nonviolence starts here—a design for living.

In his only book, The Story of My Experiments with Truth: An Autobiography, a collection of articles he wrote for Young India around 1927, Gandhi repeats many times the maxim that guided his actions throughout his life: Truth is God. Not God is truth, which would be a mere attribute, like God is love, God is light, God is the father. In his consciousness, Truth comes before God. Not mere semantics or a slogan but a principle to live–and die–for. Aptly, he named his movementSatyagraha (satya “truth”; agraha “insistence” or “holding to”).

It was this depth of commitment to truth and principle that Gandhi brought to the table and to his nonviolent interventions, which resulted in the retreat of the biggest empire of the time from India. Independence was not granted; it was conquered, but without bloodshed of the oppressors.

Sir Winston Churchill gave this unflattering description of Gandhi: “It is alarming and also nauseating to see Mr Gandhi, a seditious middle temple lawyer, now posing as a fakir of a type well known in the east, striding half-naked up the steps of the viceregal palace, while he is still organising and conducting a defiant campaign of civil disobedience, to parley on equal terms with the representative of the kingemperor.” (India Today)

As the resistance and instances of civil disobedience swelled, Churchill announced: “I hate Indians. They are a beastly people with a beastly religion, breeding like rabbits.” Such was his hatred for the successful nonviolent uprising and Gandhi.

God was never separated from Gandhi’s actions. His understanding of nonviolence implied the need for virtue in the satyagrahi, the practitioner of NV. A few quotes of his:

“Nonviolence is the greatest virtue, cowardice the greatest vice—nonviolence springs from love, cowardice from hate. The weak will never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong.”

“My imperfections and failures are as much a blessing from God as my successes and my talents and I lay them both at His feet.”

“Fearlessness is the first requisite of spirituality. Cowards can never be moral.”

“Faith is not something to grasp, is a state to grow into.”

It was here that Gene Sharp and others diverted from Gandhi’s approach to NV. Sharp tried to transform nonviolent actions into mere instruments that could be carried out by any party seeking any objective however lowly either could be.  This is not the place to elaborate on this, but I encourage readers and students to research further.

Gandhi gave a new meaning to the concept of civilization. In the 19th Century, the British spuriously classified peoples and races as Civilized, Barbarians or Savages insofar as their ‘evolution’ vis-a-vis Darwin’s theory of the survival of the fittest. They placed themselves, the white Anglo-Saxons, at the top of this food chain as the civilized ones. Barbarians were all non-Europeans such as Arabs, Indians, Asians; and Savages were the sub-Saharan Africans, natives from the Americas and Islanders. All non-white.

Gandhi redefined, imparted a new meaning to the term ‘Civilization’ with his concept of ‘Nonviolence’ as the way of truly civilized persons and cultures, of relations, mediation of conflicts; a necessary first step for the abolition of war as institution.  For by eliminating the violence (smoke) mediators can look into the source of conflicts (fire)—and work on them. The soft side of all religions mandate nonkilling of humans, but Gandhiji expanded it to all forms of life: ahimsa.

Gandhi’s legacy was felt also inside of India with the abolition of the caste system by law. He renamed the Untouchables as Harijans or children of God. But, like racism in the USA, also outlawed, it had little impact in society. Laws cannot and do not erase traditions and customs ingrained in people’s minds and in deep culture.  His own wife, Kasturba, would not agree in sharing their table with harijans, as he wished.

He did everything in public, with the masses he loved. He ate, prayed, fasted, slept, worked in their presence. His stomach was the weakest part of his body as he suffered from a chronic diarrhea that forced him to use diapers at times.

The Mahatma did not win a Nobel Peace Prize despite being nominated. The excuse was that he was not a man of peace, he fought against the British Empire [and dared to win—I’d say].  He was rather of the naïve persuasion, as many of us are; not a hawk, a personality trait essential for success in business and politics today. Case in point, the rat race we witness to the White House.

Last act: Mahatma Gandhi was shot dead on Jan 30, 1948 by Nathuram Godse, a Hindu fanatic nationalist who asked forgiveness before pulling the trigger. He wouldn’t accept what in his view was Gandhi’s partiality toward Muslims in the partition of India into India/Pakistan. Upon falling, Gandhiji uttered his last word: “Rama.” One of God’s name in India.

Global competitiveness: Pakistan stands last in South Asia, India jumps 16 spots

Pakistan has been ranked at 122, last amongst its South Asian neighbours, in the Global Competitiveness Index (GCI) by the World Economic Forum (WEF). The forum has ranked India at 39th spot, followed by Sri Lanka 71, Bhutan 97, Nepal 98 and Bangladesh at 106 at the GCI, reports the Business Reporter, a financial daily of Pakistan.

The Global Competitiveness Report 2016-17 competitiveness ranking is based on the Global Competitiveness Index (GCI), which was introduced by the WEF in 2005. Defining competitiveness as the set of institutions, policies and factors which determine the level of productivity of a country, the calculations of the GCI scores are made by drawing together country-level data covering 12 categories — the pillars of competitiveness — that collectively make up a comprehensive picture of a country’s competitiveness.

The 12 categories, or the pillars of competitiveness are-institutions, infrastructure, macroeconomic environment, health and primary education, higher education and training, goods market efficiency, labour market efficiency, financial market development, technological readiness, market size, business sophistication, and innovation.

Among 114 global competitiveness indicators, Pakistan this year showed improvements on 54 key indices, whereas on 50 indices the country lost its previous position, while 10 indices remained same as last year.

According to the report, Pakistan has shown recovery on the economic front, where the country has been successful in improving its macroeconomic framework to improve its global competitiveness.

Pakistan improved from 119 in 2015-16 to 111 in 2016-17 on the institutions pillars, while infrastructure improved only one point and stands at 116 this year.

Corruption, followed by crime and theft, tax rates, access to finance and government instability and coups, has been identified has the most problematic factor for doing business in Pakistan.

The report also indicates that a ten-year decline in the openness of economies at all stages of development poses a risk to countries’ ability to grow and innovate.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon offers to mediate between India, Pakistan

With tensions mounting between the border of India and Pakistan, UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon has offered to act as mediator between India and Pakistan to defuse rising tensions over disputed Kashmir. The offer came after Pakistan’s ambassador met with the UN chief and urged him to personally intervene, while India said it did not want to aggravate the situation.

Ban called on “both sides to exercise maximum restraint and take immediate steps to de-escalate the situation,” a statement from his spokesperson said. The UN chief said India and Pakistan should address differences through diplomacy and dialogue, and offered to mediate. “His good offices are available, if accepted by both sides,” the UN spokesperson said.

Tensions between the two arch rivals have been boiling since the Indian government accused Pakistan-based militants of launching an assault on an army base in Kashmir earlier this month that killed 19 soldiers.

India had said it had carried out “surgical strikes” several kilometers (miles) inside Pakistan-controlled Kashmir on “terrorist” targets. “This is a dangerous moment for the region,” Pakistan’s ambassador Maleeha Lodhi told AFP after meeting with Ban at UN headquarters in New York. “The time has come for bold intervention by him if we are to avoid a crisis, because we can see a crisis building up.” Lodhi accused India of creating “conditions that pose a threat to regional and international peace and security”.

UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric earlier said the UN chief “would welcome all proposals” or initiatives aimed at de-escalation. Ban is following the situation “with great concern,” said Dujarric, citing the escalating rhetoric between the two countries and the increased tensions along the Line of Control that separates Kashmir between the nations.

A UN military observer mission (UNMOGIP) is looking into reports of ceasefire violations along the line of control and will report to Ban, he added. “UNMOGIP has not directly observed any firing across the line of control related to the latest incident,” he added.

In a statement to AFP, India’s mission to the United Nations said “India has no desire to aggravate the situation,” and that “our response was a measured counter terrorist strike. It was focused in terms of targets and geographical space,” the mission said. “It is reflective of our desire to respond proportionately to clear and imminent threat posed by terrorists in that instance. With our objectives having been met that effort has since ceased.”

The Pakistani ambassador said she had suggested to Ban that plans for a visit to India and Pakistan expected in November could be brought forward to avert a crisis. Lodhi also met this week with the current Security Council president, New Zealand ambassador Gerard van Bohemen, to ask that the top UN body keep a close eye on developments. India and Pakistan have fought three wars since they gained independence from Britain seven decades ago, two of them over the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir.

Global competitiveness: Pakistan stands last in South Asia, India jumps 16 spots

Pakistan has been ranked at 122, last amongst its South Asian neighbours, in the Global Competitiveness Index (GCI) by the World Economic Forum (WEF). The forum has ranked India at 39th spot, followed by Sri Lanka 71, Bhutan 97, Nepal 98 and Bangladesh at 106 at the GCI, reports the Business Reporter, a financial daily of Pakistan.

The Global Competitiveness Report 2016-17 competitiveness ranking is based on the Global Competitiveness Index (GCI), which was introduced by the WEF in 2005. Defining competitiveness as the set of institutions, policies and factors which determine the level of productivity of a country, the calculations of the GCI scores are made by drawing together country-level data covering 12 categories — the pillars of competitiveness — that collectively make up a comprehensive picture of a country’s competitiveness.

The 12 categories, or the pillars of competitiveness are-institutions, infrastructure, macroeconomic environment, health and primary education, higher education and training, goods market efficiency, labour market efficiency, financial market development, technological readiness, market size, business sophistication, and innovation.

Among 114 global competitiveness indicators, Pakistan this year showed improvements on 54 key indices, whereas on 50 indices the country lost its previous position, while 10 indices remained same as last year.

According to the report, Pakistan has shown recovery on the economic front, where the country has been successful in improving its macroeconomic framework to improve its global competitiveness.

Pakistan improved from 119 in 2015-16 to 111 in 2016-17 on the institutions pillars, while infrastructure improved only one point and stands at 116 this year.

Corruption, followed by crime and theft, tax rates, access to finance and government instability and coups, has been identified has the most problematic factor for doing business in Pakistan.

The report also indicates that a ten-year decline in the openness of economies at all stages of development poses a risk to countries’ ability to grow and innovate.

India to ratify Paris Agreement on climate change on October 2

During her address at the United Nations, Sushma Swaraj, India’s Minister for External Affairs,  declared that on Oct. 2 – Gandhi Jayathi – India will deposit the instrument of ratification of the Paris agreement on climate change.

India, one of the largest polluters on earth, will bring this global deal to fight the menace of global warming closer to enter into force later this year. India had, in fact, announced its ‘climate action plan’ (to fight the challenges of climate change) on October 2 last year. It had submitted its ‘Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDC) to the UN body on October 1, 2015 and later made it public the next day coinciding it with the birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi. So far,

60 countries including the world’s top two polluters – China and USA – have ratified the Agreement which was adopted by 195 countries in Paris last December. While China and USA had ratified it on September 3, as many as 31 countries had formally joined the Agreement through formal ratification or acceptance at a special event, hosted by the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in New York, on September 21.

The Agreement will enter into force 30 days after 55 countries, representing 55% of global emissions, deposit their instruments of ratification, acceptance or accession with the UN Secretary-General. Though the national ratification has already crossed the threshold of 55 countries, it has so far only accounted for nearly 47.62% of the global emission.

Decision of India, which accounts for 4.1% of the global emission, will now bring it closer to the emission threshold of 55%. The magic figure of 55% will certainly be reached this year as 14 more countries, accounting for 12.58% of the global emission, had on September 21 committed to join the Agreement this year most probably before the beginning of the next UN conference on climate change (COP22) in Morocco in November.

The Paris Agreement calls on countries to combat climate change and to accelerate and intensify the actions and investments needed for a sustainable low carbon future, and to adapt to the increasing impacts of climate change.

It mandates regular meetings every five years, starting in 2018, to review progress and to consider how to strengthen the level of ambition as countries recognised that the present level of climate actions, pledged by individual nations, were still not sufficient to save the world from the adverse impact of climate change.

Besides India, the other countries who have announced to join the Paris Agreement through formal ratification this year include Austria, Australia, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Canada, Costa Rica, France, Germany, Hungary, Kazakhstan, New Zealand, Poland, and the Republic of Korea.

India urges UN to adopt global treaty on terror, UNSC reforms

India urged world leaders gathered at the 71st General Assembly of the United Nations to urgently adopt a long-pending global treaty on terrorism as well as implement the UN Security Council reform, while stating that the world today needs a more contemporary approach to combating terrorism and a Council that is less outdated. The Permanent and non-Permanent membership of the UN Security Council must reflect contemporary realities is an urgent necessity, India told the world leaders on Monday, September 26th.

Sushma Swaraj, India’s External Affairs Minister, while addressing the World Body, said, “We will be judged by our action and equally by our inaction. What goals have we achieved and what objectives remain unfulfilled?,” she said. As a result, we are unable to develop a norm under which terrorists shall be prosecuted or extradited. Therefore it is my appeal that this General Assembly acts with fresh resolve and urgency to adopt this critical Convention,” she said.

Swaraj appealed to the Assembly to act on the Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism that India proposed in 1996 but is still languishing. Because of this failure, “We are unable to develop a norm under which terrorists shall be prosecuted or extradited.”

On Security Council reform, Swaraj said just as the world needs a more contemporary approach to combating terrorism, there is also need for a Security Council that is less outdated and that continues to reflect the world order of an earlier era.  “The vast majority of nations share the belief that the UN should not remain frozen in 1945, just to serve the interests of a few. Whether it is institutions or issues, we must come to terms with present day realities and the challenges that confront us,” she said.

Swaraj added that an expansion in  “We must move forward substantively towards text-based negotiations. If both these long pending issues are addressed during your Presidency, the success of this Session will be ensured,” she said.

“The 21st century has begun in the shadow of turmoil, but we can turn this into a golden age in the history of civilization through united and concerted efforts. But what happens tomorrow will depend on what we do today,” she said.

Dinesh Bharadia wins ‘Marconi Society Young Scholar’ Award

Dinesh Bharadia, an Indian American post-doctoral student at MIT is one of four 2016 Paul Baran Young Scholars named by The Marconi Society Sept. 14 for their outstanding research and innovations in networking. The Marconi Society is dedicated to furthering scientific achievements in communications and the Internet, according to a Business Wire report.

Bharadia was selected for his work on full duplex radios. The 28-year-old has developed a solution that effectively doubles available radio spectrum in a bandwidth-constrained world. Solving a problem that has stumped scientists for almost 150 years, Bharadia’s work provides effective self-interference cancellation technology that enables radios to transmit and receive on the same frequency.

Bharadia’s work, said Stanford Prof. Sachin Katti, has other important implications. “Dinesh’s work enables a whole host of new applications, from extremely low-power Internet of Things connectivity to motion tracking. It has the potential to be used for important future applications such as building novel wireless imaging that can enable driverless cars in severe weather scenarios, help blind people to navigate indoors, and much more.”

Dinesh Bharadia, who holds a Ph.D. from Stanford and is currently a graduate researcher at MIT, will receive his prestigious award at a gala Nov. 2 at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif., where Brad Parkinson, the “father of GPS,” will receive the $100,000 Marconi Prize. When Bharadia, an electrical engineering graduate of IIT Kanpur, came to Stanford to pursue his M.S. and Ph.D. a few years ago, he wanted to solve “an interesting, hard problem.”

“Let’s say you are shouting at someone and they are shouting at you,” Bharadia explains. “Neither of you can hear the other, because you are both shouting in the same frequency. The noise in your ears (“interference”) from your own shout prevents you from hearing the other person. That’s a good analogy for why radios have needed to use two different frequencies to transmit and receive simultaneously. It’s also why solving the challenge of developing ‘full duplex radios’ effectively doubles the amount of available spectrum.”

Karan Mahajan nominated for National Book Award

Karan Mahajan, 32, is among the ten writers nominated for the prestigious National Book Award in the United States, according to an announcement made on September 15. The young Indian American author, born in Connecticut and once worked for the New York City government, tackles terrorism in New Delhi, the city where he spent the better part of his childhood, in his latest book, “The Association of Small Bombs.”

The book is about the members of a community that includes Hindus and Muslims, that juxtaposes the protagonists that include the Khurana family who lose their two sons to the bombing, and the terrorist, in the aftermath of a 1996 explosion.

When brothers Tushar and Nakul Khurana, two Delhi schoolboys, pick up their family’s television set at a repair shop with their friend Mansoor Ahmed one day in 1996, disaster strikes without warning. A bomb—one of the many “small” bombs that go off seemingly unheralded across the world—detonates in the Delhi marketplace, instantly claiming the lives of the Khurana boys, to the devastation of their parents. Mansoor survives, bearing the physical and psychological effects of the bomb. After a brief stint at university in America, Mansoor returns to Delhi, where his life becomes entangled with the mysterious and charismatic Ayub, a fearless young activist whose own allegiances and beliefs are more malleable than Mansoor could imagine. Woven among the story of the Khuranas and the Ahmeds is the gripping tale of Shockie, a Kashmiri bomb maker who has forsaken his own life for the independence of his homeland.

Exploring the minds of the characters and their lives after and before the fatal bomb, the book also examines the cynical reaction of the terrorist from Kashmir, Shockie, who sees his work as a job not well done.

This is Mahajan’s second book after “Family Planning,” which was more a social satire about a minister and his family made up of his wife and brood of 12 children. This second one is way beyond his first in terms of content, the approach, and the prose, according to the New Yorker which reviewed it Sept. 4.

“In the first few pages of his new novel, he renders the spectacle of the bombing with a languid, balletic beauty, pitting the unhurried composure of his prose against the violence of the events it describes,” notes reviewer Alexandria Schwartz of the New Yorker.

Karan Mahajan was born in 1984 and grew up in New Delhi, India. His first novel, Family Planning won the Joseph Henry Jackson Award and was a finalist for the International Dylan Thomas Prize. It was published in nine countries. Mahajan’s writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The New Yorker Online, The Believer, NPR’s All Things Considered, The San Francisco Chronicle, Granta.com, Bookforum, Tehelka, and the anthology Stumbling and Raging: More Politically Inspired Fiction. He currently lives in Austin, Texas.The Association of Small Bombs is his second novel.

Pran Kurup dies of Cardiac Arrest

Entrepreneur and social activist Pran Kurup, who was best known for spearheading nascent Aam Aadmi party movement in Northern California, passed away last week in Thiruvananthapuram of cardiac arrest.

He released his third book just months ago in July, “Arvind Kejriwal and The Aam Aadmi Party: An Inside Look.” Kurup roomed with Delhi Chief Minister Kejriwal at IIT Kharagpur, the book highlights how deep the bond was between the two, as well as Kejriwal’s influence on Kurup’s philosophy.

“Pran, IIT batchmate and a very dear friend, passed away due to cardiac arrest. May his soul rest in peace. Heartfelt condolences to his family,” Kejriwal tweeted on the day of Kurup’s death.

When the Aam Aadmi Party began to gain steam in the U.S. in 2012, Kurup was credited for having increased the movement’s visibility through social media and his popular column in The Economic Times. During a 2013 discussion forum at UC Berkeley that explored India’s changing political landscape, Kurup said: “Although the last thing India needs is a new party, it is unfortunately the only alternative for a young, aspiring secular India in the 21st century.”

In a blog post, Namit Arora, another close friend of Kurup’s, wrote: “Through his ups and downs, my most abiding memory of him is his optimism, his decency, his caring for a better India, and his infectious humor and laughter. I loved him dearly.”

University of California San Francisco cancer researcher Maya Vishwakarma, the former 2014 candidate for a Lok Sabha seat from Hoshangabad district in Madhya Pradesh on the Aam Aadmi ticket, credited Kurup with being a mentor, teacher and beloved friend.

Kurup, who was born in Chennai, founded the e-learning company Vitalect in 1997. He additionally served as the president of the Silicon Valley Indian Professionals Association. Kurup, 49, leaves behind his wife and two children, all of whom reside in Silicon Valley.

Human Rights Watch honors Indian rights activist

Ratnaboli Ray from Kolkata is among the four 2016 recipients of the prestigious Alison Des Forges Award for Extraordinary Activism by the Human Rights Watch.  Ray is honoured for leading the fight – often at great personal risk – to move India toward a rights-based system of mental health care.

Ray has been a leading advocate for the rights of people with psychosocial disabilities in India, for more than two decades. In India, thousands are confined to government institutions where they often endure abuse behind closed doors. Ray, who has faced stigma, discrimination, and threats due to her own mental health condition, is working to change that.

Born into a family of committed social activists, Ray has worked with marginalized communities in Kolkata and West Bengal. After she had a breakdown in 1997, her employer forced her to resign. She has used her personal experience, including wrongfully being locked up in a mental hospital by union organizers trying to intimidate her, to push for a paradigm shift in government mental health institutions.

In 2000, Ray founded Anjali, a small nongovernmental organization that provides skills training to people with psychosocial disabilities living in government institutions. Additionally, Ray co-founded a national alliance for access to justice for people with mental health conditions. Ray and her organization are key partners for HRW in its work on the rights of women and girls with disabilities in India.

The other three recipients of 2016 awards are Kalpona Akter, a former child worker in Bangladesh garment factories who organized fellow garment workers to demand fair labor rights; Pierre Claver Mbonimpa, who has dedicated his life to denouncing rights violations against prisoners, activists, and people from all social, ethnic, and economic backgrounds in Burundi; and Yonous Muhammadi, who fled the Taliban in Afghanistan, was granted asylum in Greece, and has become a leading defender of refugee rights there.

“The Alison Des Forges Award honors people who have spent their lives defending some of the world’s most oppressed and vulnerable people,” said Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch. “The honorees work courageously and selflessly every day, often under the most difficult and dangerous conditions.”

The award is named after Dr. Alison Des Forges, senior adviser at Human Rights Watch for almost two decades, who died in a plane crash in New York State on February 12, 2009. Des Forges was the world’s leading expert on the 1994 Rwanda genocide and its aftermath.

71st United Nations General Assembly opens with reform issue still hanging Celebrating every woman every child

World leaders gathered for the 71st United Nations General Assembly on September 13th to address Earth’s most agonizing problems. If they leave without a single answer, fingers will point again to the entrenched dysfunction in the 193-member world body. The same handicap lies ahead for members during the General Debate, starting September 20, most of all when they discuss UN reform.

India’s push to achieve urgent reforms of the U.N. Security Council last year and secure a permanent seat has suffered a setback when the General Assembly decided to roll over discussions on reforming the world body’s top organ to its next session. India along with the G4 nations said it is “unfortunate” that momentum could not build up over the issue in the current session.

For 2016-2017, the array of problems includes refugees, all of the conflicts that trigger massive population flight, climate change, the Zika virus scare and the renewed Palestinian push for more than de facto sovereignty. The 71st session is the last for Ban Ki-moon as Secretary-General. The exiting UN chief plans to use his last term to push for a global agreement on resettling 10 per cent of refugees annually.

A 2014 BBC look at the reform issue asks why the United Nations hasn’t done more to end the violence in Gaza, Syria, Iraq, the Central African Republic, South Sudan, Libya, Afghanistan or Ukraine. The broadcaster observes that the UN has so far failed to secure anything more than a few hours of quiet in Gaza. A common thread in possibly hundreds of analyses of UN structural problems over the decades is that the competing interests of members impede solutions, with accusations directed mainly at the 5-member UN Permanent Security Council. Each of the five – the United Kingdom, Russia, the United States, France and China – has veto power that it uses to protect its own and its allies’ interests. The veto power also protects the veto.

Many draft resolutions do not even make it to a vote, because of the threat of veto. Any consensus on Ban’s global refugee resettlement proposal faces the same obstacle. Most sources agree that the rivalry between Russia and the United States prevents effective movement to stop the fighting in Syria. They also agree that the long-standing U.S.-Israel bond stands between the Palestinians and the sovereignty they seek almost 50 years since Israel took over the West Bank and Gaza Strip as a prize of the Six-Day War.

The late Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasser Arafat proclaimed a Palestinian independent state in 1988, and the United Nations approved the de facto recognition in 2014 – with 138 votes out of 188 in favour. France, the United Kingdom and the United States were among the nine countries voting against. As the three have veto power, they were able to quash further moves toward independence.

This year at the UN General Assembly, Every Woman Every Child will celebrate results achieved, acknowledge champions for the movement and highlight the importance of keeping women’s, children’s and adolescents’ health and wellbeing at the core of sustainable development efforts.

EWEC partners will emphasize the main messages deriving from the Global Strategy for Women’s, Children’s and Adolescents’ Health, launched in 2015 along the Sustainable Development Goals as a front-runner platform to help implement Agenda 2030.

From 18-22 September, a social media relay will cover topics of relevance for the movement, to ensure that key issues highlighted in the Global Strategy are not only visible, but also help set the agenda and drive the conversation forward about its centrality for a more sustainable, peaceful and prosperous future for all.

India’s Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, who had addressed the past two General Assembly sessions, has decided against attending it this year. Sushma Swaraj, India’s Minister for External Affairs will address the United Nations this week. India will continue to pushing for completing reforms of the U.N. Security Council in the 71st session of the General Assembly, which opened on September 13, 2016.

Prof. Sujit Choudhry protests 2nd investigation into sexual missconduct

Sujit Choudhry, an Indian-American professor at University of California, Berkeley, who was disciplined for violating the university’s sexual harassment policies has lashed out at a new review of his behavior, calling it an unjust attack on his legal and academic rights.

Sujit Choudhry, who resigned as dean last month but remains on the faculty, has asked the disciplinary committee of Berkeley’s Academic Senate to drop the second review, according to documents released by his attorneys Monday. Depending on the findings, Choudhry’s tenure and continued employment at Berkeley could be in jeopardy.

This Sept. 5, Sujit Choudhry, former dean of the law school at Berkeley, sent another grievance letter to the university faculty committee, which decided to launch a second investigation into his conduct earlier this year after his former executive assistant Tyann Sorrell filed the lawsuit in March this year.

In his Sept. 5 letter, Choudhry decried the second investigation saying it violeted his right to free and equitable treatment, the Dailycal.org news outlet reported quoting from the letter. “The disciplinary proceedings against him (Choudhry) concluded in 2015 with agreed upon punishment which he accepted,” Choudhry’s attorney William Taylor, told News India Times. At that time Choudhry apologized profusely and accepted sanctions the university proposed, Taylor said. The second investigation “is a grotesque violation of his rights” and a violation of the agreement reached, Taylor added.

In a university investigation last year, Choudhry admitted he repeatedly hugged, touched and gave kisses on the cheek to his former executive assistant from September 2014 to March 2015. Then-Provost Claude Steele, in consultation with Chancellor Nicholas Dirks and others, privately ordered the law school dean to take a 10% pay cut, undergo behavioral training and apologize to the assistant, Tyann Sorrell.

But University of California President Janet Napolitano intervened in the case after it came to light in a civil lawsuitfiled by Sorrell last month. In a March 11 letter to Dirks, Napolitano ordered that disciplinary proceedings be launched in the Academic Senate.

1000 RUPEE NOTE, directed by Shrihari Sathe opens September 23rd at New York’s Village East Cine

By Rohi Pandya

Winner of over 30 awards from film festivals around the world, the critically acclaimed motion picture 1000 RUPEE NOTE opens theatrically on September 23 in New York. Directed by Shrihari Sathe, the Maharashtra-set film about a widow who comes across a small fortune won both the Special Jury Award (Silver Peacock) and Centenary Award for Best Film at the International Film Festival of India. It also swept the Maharashtra State Film Awards winning Best Film, Best Director, Best Actress (Special Mention), and Best Supporting Actor. International critics have raved about 1000 RUPEE NOTE with the Times of India remarking “the director has struck gold with his first film!”

Budhi, a widow, lives in a small village in Maharashtra, India. Her only son, a young farmer, has committed suicide. Though poor and left alone in the world, she leads a cheerful life. She is particularly fond of her neighbor, young Sudama with whom she shares the small pleasures of life. A local politician gives her a few 1000 rupee notes at an election rally. She and Sudama go shopping to the nearby market with her newfound wealth, but fate has other plans for them.

Shrihari Sathe is a New York and Mumbai-based independent filmmaker and producer.  Sathe produced Eliza Hittman’s It Felt Like Love which world premiered at 2013 Sundance Film Festival and 2013 International Film Festival Rotterdam to great reviews. He is a 2015 Independent Spirit Award nominee and is a 2013 Sundance Institute Creative Producing Fellow.  Sathe’s latest production Elisabeth Subrin’s A Woman, A Part world premiered at 2016 IFF Rotterdam. He recently finished post-production on Ed Blythe’s Man With Van (2011 Film Independent Producers Lab). Sathe teaches at Columbia University’s School of the Arts. He is a member of the Producers Guild of America, Indian Motion Picture Producers Association and Film Writers Association – India. Directed by Shrihari Sathe, casts include: Usha Naik, Sandeep Pathak, Shrikant Yadav, Ganesh Yadav, and Pooja Najak. 1000 Rupee Note – Official Trailer is available at: https://youtu.be/3VBedDCBkC8

Couple Pleads Guilty to $20 Million Visa Fraud Involving Indian Workers

Raju Kosuri, 44, and Smriti Jharia, 45, a married couple from Ashburn, Virginia, pleaded guilty Aug. 25, to charges of conspiracy to defraud the United States and visa fraud, among other charges.

Kosuri and Jharia were indicted on April 27. According to the plea agreement, Kosuri, Jharia, and their co-conspirators fraudulently applied for more than 900 illegal immigration benefits under the H-1B visa program.

Since 2008, and at much greater scale since 2011, Kosuri built a staffing business that amounts to a visa-for-sale system, in violation of federal law, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia noted in a press release.

Kosuri and Jharia also admitted to defrauding the Small Business Administration in connection with a scheme to obtain HUBZone certification for a business named EcomNets Federal Solutions. Kosuri agreed to forfeit proceeds of his fraud schemes in the amount of $20.9 million.

Siddharth Chatterjee to lead 25 UN agencies in East Africa

Siddharth Chatterjee, the Representative of the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) in Kenya, has been appointed UN Resident Coordinator, where he will lead and coordinate 25 UN agencies in East Africa. At the same time, he will also serve as the Resident Representative of the UN Development Programme (UNDP).

At UNFPA, he and his team spearheaded efforts to reduce the unacceptably high maternal deaths in Kenya putting the spotlight on the challenges faced by adolescent girls, including child marriage, Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) and sexual and gender based violence.

Before he joined UNFPA, Chatterjee served as the Chief Diplomat and Head of Strategic Partnerships and was also responsible for resource mobilization at the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) since 2011.

In 1997 he joined the UN in Bosnia and over the next two decades served in Iraq, South Sudan, Indonesia, Sudan (Darfur), Somalia, Denmark, and Kenya. He has worked in UN Peace Keeping, UNICEF, UNOPS, the Red Cross and UNFPA.

Welcoming the appointment, Ruth Kagia, Senior Advisor, International Relations and Social Sectors in the Office of the President of Kenya said, “Sid’s insightful understanding of clients’ needs as the UNFPA Representative in Kenya has translated into tangible gains in maternal, child and adolescent health. His relentless energy and focus on results has helped build relationships and networks of trust and confidence with the highest levels of Government, civil society, the private sector and development partners.”

Chatterjee is expected to continue his advocacy for women’s empowerment in Kenya where he has led notable initiatives to advance reproductive, maternal, neo-natal, child and adolescent health.

Chatterjee is expected to continue his advocacy for women’s empowerment in Kenya where he has led notable initiatives to advance reproductive, maternal, neo-natal, child and adolescent health.

Dr Julitta Onabanjo, UNFPA’s Regional Director for East and Southern Africa said, “Sid resolutely pushed UNFPA’s mandate in the hardest to reach counties and service of the most vulnerable. He mobilized resources and partners in the private sector to join this drive to leapfrog maternal and new-born health. This bold initiative was highlighted by the World Economic Forum in Davos and Kigali”.

Among Chatterjee’s other career achievements include mobilizing the Red Cross/Red Crescent movement to join the eradication of polio initiative; negotiating access with rebel groups to undertake a successful polio immunization campaign in the rebel controlled areas of Darfur; leading UNICEF’s emergency response when conflict broke out in Indonesia’s Aceh and the Malukus provinces; and overseeing UNICEF’s largest demobilization of child soldiers in South Sudan in 2001.

A prolific writer, Chatterjee’s articles have featured on CNN, Al Jazeera, Forbes, Huffington Post, Reuters, the Guardian, Inter Press Service, as well as the major Kenyan newspapers. He was recently profiled by Forbes magazine in an article titled, “Passionate Leader of UNFPA Kenya Battles Violence against Women, FGM and Child Marriage.”
His early career was in a Special Forces unit of the Indian Army, where he was decorated in 1995 for bravery by the President of India. Chatterjee holds a Master’s degree in Public Policy from Princeton University, USA and a Bachelor’s degree from the National Defence Academy in India.

Janmastami and the Hare Krishna Movement’s 50th anniversary celebrated

By Asian Media USA ©

Chicago, IL: Janmastami, the Appearance Day or birth anniversary of Lord Krishna, is being celebrated in the Chicago area on August 25 at the Hare Krishna Temple in the Rogers Park neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois.

Krishna is respected as the author of the famed Bhagavad-gita by scholars, and revered as the Supreme Personality of Godhead by hundreds of millions of worshippers across the world. He has been the center of South Asian temples, art, and music for centuries. Often portrayed as the all-knowing, yet ever-youthful God who plays tricks on his friends, he also lovingly invites all forgetful souls to join his divine pastimes in the spiritual realm.

“The Sanskrit wisdom texts, the Vedas, explain that God is the all-attractive person and most intimate friend of everyone,” says Amrita Hari, ISKCON spokesperson. “That’s why Janmastami, the Appearance Day of Lord Krishna, is one of the most celebrated and joyful events in all of India.”

A big reason for his expanding popularity is the Hare Krishna movement, which celebrates its own 50th Anniversary this year. The International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) began in New York City’s lower east side in 1966, when a 70 year-old swami from India set up a storefront temple there.

ISKCON’s founder, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, taught that the path to happiness was not found in material pursuits but in simple living, high thinking, and in awakening love of God—Lord Krishna.

The swami found an audience for his message among the 1960’s youth and his society took root. Over the last 50 years ISKCON has grown into an international community with more than 600 temples, 100 vegetarian restaurants, and 516 million of its books in print in 87 languages. The society’s international food relief programs feed 1.2 million children each day in India alone.

“Swami Prabhupada did not teach anything new,” says Professor Graham M. Schweig, author of Dance of Divine Love, a translation of the millennium old Bhagavat Purana, which tells the story of Lord Krishna. “His expertise was in making the wisdom of the bhakti or devotional yoga tradition relevant to the modern world. His achievements are remarkable.”

ISKCON is rooted in the Gaudiya Vaishnava sampradaya, a monotheistic tradition, within Hindu culture. Its tenets include that the soul is eternal and different from the body; that chanting God’s names, or mantra meditation, can awaken knowledge of the self; and that healthy life comes through the practice of cleanliness, self-discipline, mercy, and truthfulness, and avoiding intoxication, illicit sex, meat-eating and gambling.
Janmastami will be celebrated at ISKCON temples around the world—and in Chicago at the ISKCON Temple in Chicago, IL —with a variety of drama performances, live music, sacred chants, adoration or darshan of sacred images in the temples, reading sacred texts, and a vegetarian feast. All are welcome. The event, including vegetarian feast, is free.

Janmastami and the Hare Krishna Movement’s 50th anniversary celebratedThe festival of Krishna Janmastami—the birth anniversary of Lord Krishna—has been celebrated since ancient times. Vaishnavism, the worship of Lord Krishna, is one of the principle branches within the broad Hindu tradition. Vaishnavas are monotheists, and believe Lord Krishna to be the same God worshiped by Christians, Jews and Muslims.

The scriptures of India teach that Lord Krishna personally descends to Earth to reestablish religious principles and to save human society from forgetfulness of God. Janmastami celebrates the day that Krishna appeared on Earth, over 5,000 years ago. For devotees of Krishna, it is a joyous occasion, replete with the singing of devotional songs, dance, worship services, and partaking in a sanctified vegetarian feast.

The Hare Krishna movement, formally known as the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), was founded in 1966 by A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, who brought the ancient Vaishnava tradition to the West.

Since then, it has grown into a worldwide confederation of more than 600 temples, farms and eco-villages, and 100 vegetarian restaurants across six continents. Its practitioners come from a variety of backgrounds. While some members live in temples and ashrams (monasteries) as monks and nuns, most Hare Krishna devotees live and work in the general community, practicing Krishna consciousness in their homes and attending their temple on a regular basis.

India-based parental child abduction second largest in US

The number of cases of inter-country parental child abduction related to Indians in the US is the second highest next only to Mexico, a senior US government official said here last week. “We are handling more than 1,000 cases of inter-country parental child abduction,” Michele Bond, US Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs, said during a media interaction here. “At this time, our case-load with India is the second largest that we have after Mexico,” she said.

Inter-country parental child abduction is the situation that arises when one parent takes a child to a foreign country and keeps him or her there with the hope that the parent will be able to establish custody of that child and prevent the other parent from having access or being able to share custody.

Bond said that Mexico was the US’s immediate neighbour and hence it was easy to take a child across the border while it was not so easy to travel to India. “There are approximately 80 (Indian) family cases involved and more than 90 children,” she said.

Stating that children were vulnerable and were unable to protect themselves, she said: “We recognise that India shares those concerns and this has been highlighted in the joint statement that was released during Prime Minister (Narendra) Modi’s visit to the United States in June.”

In the joint statement issued after Modi’s meeting with US President Barack Obama, one of the points stated that “the leaders intend to renew efforts to intensify dialogue to address issues affecting the citizens of both countries that arise due to differences in the approaches of legal systems, including issues relating to cross-country marriage, divorce and child custody”.

Bond stated that the US was among the 94 countries that were members of the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction or Hague Abduction Convention for short.

The Convention facilitates the prompt return of abducted children to their country of habitual residence and helps deter international parental child abduction. “We hope that India will make the decision to accede also to that Convention,” Bond said.

She said that under the Convention, the court in the child’s country of habitual residence would take the decisions about custody and visitation rights among other issues. “We applaud the Indian government for recently publishing for comment implementing legislation for the Hague Abduction Convention,” the US official said.

“We encourage India to continue progress to its accession because we genuinely believe that this is a significant issue for this country.”

She said that this problem was likely to grow as there was an increasing number of Indians living outside the country. “We also have a handful of cases of children who have been abducted from India to the United States,” Bond said. “We are working to help those parents to go to court and request the return of their children to India.”

Bond came to India to attend the annual bilateral consular dialogue that was held here on Monday during which issues like facilitating tourism and business and other travel between the two countries, visa assessing, protection of US citizens in India, transparent international adoption, and preventing international parental child abduction cases were discussed.

Diwali Stamp to be issued by US Postal Services

Over a decade-long efforts by numerous individuals, groups, political organizations, and officials, have finally resulted in the United States Postal Service (USPS) issuing a Diwali stamp. “The U.S. Postal Service will commemorate the joyous Hindu festival of Diwali with a Forever stamp,” a press release issued by the USPS stated. “The Wednesday, Oct 5, first-day-of-issue dedication ceremony will take place at the Consulate General of India, New York. The stamp design is a photograph featuring a traditional diya oil lamp beautifully lit, sitting on a sparkling gold background. Diya lamps are usually made from clay with cotton wicks dipped in a clarified butter known as “ghee” or in vegetable oils.

The statement also explained the festival of Diwali, also known as Deepavali, celebrates the triumph of good over evil. Spanning five days each autumn, it is considered by some to be the start of the new year. On the Hindu calendar, Diwali falls on the eve of, or on, the new moon that occurs between mid-October and mid-November. In 2016, the main day of the festival will be celebrated Oct. 29 for South Indians and Oct 30 for North Indians. Diwali is a shortened version of the Sanskrit word Deepavali, which roughly translates as “a necklace of lights.” During Diwali, the flickering oil-wick diyas sprinkle the homes of observers around the world.

According to USPS, Sally Andersen-Bruce of New Milford, CT, photographed the diya. Greg Breeding of Charlottesville, VA, designed the stamp and William J. Gicker of Washington, DC, service as the project’s art director. The Diwali stamp is being issued as a Forever stamp. This Forever stamp will also be equal in value to the current First Class Mail 1-ounce price.

The Postal Service receives approximately 40,000 suggestions for stamp ideas annually from the public.  Stamp subjects are reviewed by the Citizens’ Stamp Advisory Committee. Of that, approximately 25 topic suggestions for commemorative stamps are selected by the Committee for the Postmater General’s approval.

Indiaspora’s community engagement resulted in over 10,000 letters and postcards being mailed to the USPS urging them to create and release a Diwali Stamp. The organization also launched an online campaign encouraging Indian Americans to call and write their elected officials on this subject. Indiaspora’s blog, social media and newsletters kept up the drumbeat, it said.

“This is the successful culmination of a long-sought goal of the Indian American community, behind which Indiaspora and many other people and organizations put in unyielding and resolute effort,” Indiaspora said, adding its thanks to the volunteer group who helped make the stamp creation possible.

The stamp design is a photograph featuring a traditional Diya oil lamp lit, sitting on a sparkling gold background. Diya lamps are usually made from clay with cotton wicks dipped in a clarified butter known as “ghee” or in vegetable oils, the USPS said in a statement.

“Indiaspora lauds Rep. Maloney for introducing House Resolutions in Congresses to urge USPS to release the Diwali Stamp. Her efforts played an important role in the eventual achievement of this cherished objective of the Indian American community,” Indiaspora founder M.R. Rangaswami said in a statement.

Rangaswami went on to say that the culmination of their efforts showed a maturation of the Indian American community. “We have come of age and are getting more engaged in community issues and also becoming more politically active,” the founder said. Rep. Ami Bera, D-Calif., was ecstatic with the issuance of the stamp in advance of the festival.

“I am thrilled that the United States Postal Service has issued a stamp to celebrate Diwali,” Bera, a co-chair of the India Caucus in the House of Representatives and the only Indian American currently serving in Congress, said in a statement. “Nearly a billion people around the world celebrate this Festival of Lights, including 2 million right here in the U.S., and this stamp represents the hard work and achievements of all Indian Americans.”

Indiaspora added thanks to Maryland-based physician Dr. Shailendra Kumar for initiating the cause in 2001. Congress in 2007 recognized the significance of Diwali with President Barack Obama lighting a diya in 2009 at the White House.

Also in 2015, in conjunction with the Hindu American Foundation, Indiaspora volunteers walked the halls of Congress, meeting with elected officials and staff members at several hundred congressional offices, and convinced dozens of them to sign on to the congressional resolutions supporting the Diwali Stamp. By the end of 2015, Indiaspora and HAF sent a community letter signed by more than 100 organizations to the Citizens’ Stamp Advisory Committee urging them to approve a Diwali Stamp.

Ravi and Ranju Batra of New York helped compile more than 400,000 online signatures calling for the stamp in 2013. And Indiaspora, when approached by community leaders in 2014, committed to making the stamp a reality, the organization said. In 2015, Senate India Caucus co-chairs Sens. Mark Warner, D-Va., and John Cornyn, R-Texas, introduced Senate Resolution 113, calling for a Diwali Stamp in the U.S.

In a conversation with this writer, Ranju Batra said, “Having  served as Cultural Chair for 10 years of AIA-NY, I decided to focus and get the Diwali Stamp issued. During 2011-12, as president of AIA-NY, I uplifted the Diwali Celebrations at South Street Seaport to their highest level ever – such that the New York Times recognized that effort and reported that “more than 200,000 people attended the event…”.

Many events were held in New York and in the Congress, with many members of Congress participating, including, Congressmen Grace Meng, Ami Bera, Mike Honda, and Tulsi Gabbard. Carolyn Maloney introduced House Resolution 47 on January 25, 2013 in the 113th Congress calling upon Citizen’s Stamp Advisory Committee of the United States Postal Service to issue a Diwali Stamp.

Ravi Batra added, “I am so proud of Ranju and Carolyn – the Diwali Girls – who never gave up, and today, the United States Postal Service relented and agreed to issue a Diwali Stamp because these two leaders – Carolyn in Congress and Ranju at the grassroots’ level never gave up!”

“Today, history changes – as Diwali finally join Christmas, Kwanzaa, Hanukkah and Eid to have its own Stamp. India’s 1.2 billion people, represented here by the dynamic Amb. Riva Ganguly Das, India’s Consul General, along with almost 4 million Indian-Americans yearn for such inclusive recognition, and issuing the Diwali Stamp  will help USPS’ bottom line. Diwali’s  “Light over Darkness” – is intellectual, emotional and financial,” Ranju Batra said.

Cops arrest ex-husband of stepmom charged with murder of 9-year-old girl

The killing of a nine-year-old Indian girl from Punjab by her stepmother took a sordid turn on Sunday, August 21 when authorities arrested her ex-husband and accused him of helping her hide. Raymond Narayan was accused of helping his ex-wife Shamdai Arjun Pardas leave her home after allegedly strangling her stepdaughter on Friday and trying to hide her in his house, Ron Brown, the top public prosecutor for the New York city district of Queens, said in a statement on Sunday.

As per reports, the ex-husband, Raymond Narayan, 65, refused to allow police to enter his home and Arjun refused exit the house, police said. About an hour later, Narayan opened the door and he and Arjun emerged. Earlier in the day, at about 5:30 p.m., the couple were seen leaving the Richmond Hill home where Arjun lived with her stepdaughter, Ashdeep Kaur, and her father, investigators said.

Meanwhile, Pardas was produced in Queens Criminal Court on Sunday and formally charged before Judge Gerald Beibovitz with murdering Ashdeep Kaur, who had come from India to the US about three months ago to join her father.

“This is a horrifying case of a child, a defenceless nine-year-old, who was left in the care of her stepmother who allegedly strangled her to death,” Brown said. “Her actions, if true, are beyond comprehension and must be severely punished.”

Judah Maltz, Pardas’ lawyer, asked the judge to place her in protective custody in jail, the New York Daily News reported. This will keep her away from other prisoners as New York jails are notorious for brutal attacks by fellow inmates on those accused of heinous crimes, especially those involving children.

When authorities produced her in the court, she wore a white jump suit made of a tough plastic material, Tyvek. Maltz said the 55-year-old Pardas denied killing the child and claimed there was no proof that she did it. Arjun was arraigned on the murder charge Sunday and ordered held without bail.

Michael Curtis, the assistant prosecutor, made chilling new revelations in the court. He said that on Tuesday Pardas had told Kaur’s father, Sukhjinder Singh, 35, that she would kill the child, the News reported. She had “repeatedly and on numerous occasions threatened to kill the victim”, Curtis said. “On Friday, she made good on this threat.”

Curtis told the court that circumstantial evidence that Pardas killed the child is “overwhelming”, according to the News. Brown gave the following account: Narayan, who is 65 years old, was seen by a witness leaving Singh’s house in Richmond Hill around 5.30 p.m. on Friday with Pardas and two of her two grandchildren.

When detectives went to Narayan’s house in South Ozone Park he kept them at bay for over an hour refusing to come out or letting them in, before relenting and coming out. Narayan and Pardas were then arrested. He is charged with “obstructing governmental administration” and faces a year prison if convicted. Pardas faces 25 years to life in prison.

Pardas told a witness as they were leaving that Kaur was in the bathroom and waiting for her father to pick her up. The witness called the child’s father and said that the light had been on in the bathroom since 11.30 a.m. Singh asked the witness to break open the door and the child was found dead in the bath tub.

This is the second recent incident involving step-mothers of Indian origin in New York city. Last month 35-year-old Sheetal Ranot was convicted of slashing her 12-year-old step-daughter with a broken metal broom handle and cutting her left wrist to the bone, Brown said.

Sheetal Ranot and her husband, Rajesh, of Ozone Park were also accused of torturing Maya Ranot for two years, Brown said. They locked her up in a room without food or water long periods of time and when she was found by authorities she weighed only about 26 kg.

Sheetal Ranot faces up to 25 years in prison. Rajesh is waiting for his trial. They were both arrested in 2014, but the first case came up for trial only last month. Richmond Hill has a sizable population of people of Indian descent, while South Asians have a significant presence in the Ozone Park neighborhoods.

Indo-American Film ‘Love Sonia’ Features Richa Chadda With Freida Pinto

“Love Sonia,” a film based on child trafficking, by “Slumdog Millionaire” producer Tabrez Noorani, will feature Richa Chadda with Freida Pinto. David “Life of Pi” Womark will be producing this Indo-American venture. The film is scheduled to go on floors Apr. 24 and is slated to release in 2017. According to reports, the film also stars Rajkummar Rao, Anupam Kher and Manoj Bajpayee.

Chadda, in a press release, said: “I am delighted that I can be a part of this project. I really believe in the content, and I can say that this film is being made for the right reasons. I am honored to be a part of such a talented international team.”

The film is based on real-life incidents, and the story revolves around Sonia, a young girl from a village, who gets sold by her father for money. After her disappearance, her sister Preeti goes on a mission to find her and falls into the vicious world of sex trafficking.

The film will be shot mostly in Mumbai with parts being shot in Los Angeles. Two of the world’s largest anti-trafficking NGO’s — Coalition to Abolish Slavery & Trafficking and Apne Aap Woman Worldwide — have lent their support to the film.

Muslims welcome a man who drunkenly shot at their mosque in Connecticut

Ted Hakey, a former Marine, knelt in prayer, his forehead on the floor, beside his Muslim neighbours inside their Connecticut mosque on Saturday, April 2. The enormity of that gesture was lost on no one. It was only several months earlier, on the night of the terror attacks in Paris, when Hakey, 48, went to a local bar and downed 10 drinks. In the early morning, he went home, drank some more and loaded his 9mm handgun and an M14 rifle. He went into his yard and fired rounds at the side of the mosque next door.

His Facebook page was laden with vile anti-Muslim hate speech. Text messages with friends, obtained by law enforcement, showed the same. In one post, he noted living next to a mosque and keeping watch on them with “binos” (presumably, binoculars). In another, he wrote, “Is Muslim season open yet? I’m in a target rich environment.”

But rather than hate him back, Dr. Mohammed Qureshi, president of the Baitul Aman “House of Peace” Mosque, wished he had been a better neighbor by making an effort to get to know Hakey and his wife. Perhaps then, he reasoned, Hakey would not have harbored so much anger.

Qureshi’s mosque practices a type of Islam called Ahmadiyya, a reform sect that believes the Messiah has already come. That man, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, taught that “jihad by the sword” is not Islam and advocated for the end of religious wars and bloodshed. Ahmadiyya believers have launched a “True Islam” campaign to distinguish the religion from extremism. It highlights 11 principles that if all Muslims endorsed there would be no terrorism, Qureshi said. They include belief in nonviolent Jihad, human rights, and the understanding that “no religion can monopolize salvation.”

Hakey had asked his lawyer for the chance to apologise, so Dr. Qureshi and a few others had met with Hakey privately a week earlier on Good Friday. Dr Qureshi, before even hearing the apology, brought Hakey chocolate Easter eggs as a gift. “I’ve never had anything like this,” Dr Qureshi said of that first meeting.

“It was very emotional. He came in in tears, he was quivering. I could feel it in his heart and his eyes that he meant what he said. I felt like he was saying it from his heart. It’s a rare moment when you see someone with so much hate for you come and apologise.” But some members of the congregation remained wary knowing a man lived next door who had wished them harm. Dr Qureshi invited Hakey to come visit the mosque so he could show them he was sorry.

“As a neighbour, I did have fears, but fear is always when you don’t know something. The unknown is what you are always afraid of,” Hakey told them, according to the Hartford Courant, which covered the April 2 event. “Going forward I want to help you bridge that gap and help someone else not make the same mistake I did.”

Mr Hakey, in an interview, said he was “so overwhelmed” by how graciously he was treated after what he had done. He said he’s now hearing from Muslims all over the world thanking him for coming forward to apologise. “The forgiveness was so genuine,” he said. “I realised they were really good people and the whole way they handled it was above and beyond.”

Neem Tree Extract Shows Activity Against Pancreatic Cancer

Nimbolide, a compound found in neem leaves, was recently tested against pancreatic cancer in cell lines and mice. These tests, conducted by biomedical scientists at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso, found that nimbolide stopped the growth and metastasis of pancreatic cancer, yet did not harm normal, healthy cells.

“The promise nimbolide has shown is amazing, and the specificity of the treatment toward cancer cells over normal cells is very intriguing,”Dr. Rajkumar Lakshmanaswamy, an Indian American associate professor in the TTUHSC El Paso Center of Emphasis in Cancer, said in a press release.

Currently, pancreatic cancer is fatal for 94 percent of patients who develop the disease within five years of diagnosis. No effective treatments are available, and so it has the highest mortality rate of all cancers.

The compound reduced the capacity of pancreatic cancer cells to migrate and invade by 70 percent, so the cancerous cells did not become aggressive and spread. Metastasis is the chief cause of mortality from the disease.

Furthermore, cancer cell death was induced by nimbolide treatments, as the size and number of pancreatic cancer cell colonies decreased by 80 percent.

“Nimbolide seems to attack pancreatic cancer from all angles,” Lakshmanaswamy said. The study found that nimbolide increases the generation of reactive oxygen species, which induces apoptotic cell death mediated by the mitochondria of the cells.

“Many people in India actually eat neem and it doesn’t have harmful side effects, which suggests that using nimbolide for pancreatic cancer will not cause adverse effects like chemotherapy and radiation typically do,” said Dr. Ramadevi Subramani, postdoctoral researcher and lead author of the study.

The researchers emphasized that healthy cells were unharmed by nimbolide in both the in vitro and in vivo experiments. Next, the research team plans to pursue both preclinical and clinical investigations.

Arun Agarwal Appointed as CEO to Small Business Development Board By Texas Governor

Houston, TX: Arun Agarwal, Nextt chief executive officer, has been named to the Product Development and Small Business Incubator board by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on March 30th. With his appointment, which has a term that expires Feb. 1, 2019, Agarwal became the first Indian American given the position in the state’s history.

Nextt is a Dallas-based home textiles company that supplies to retailers such as Walmart, Target and Kohl’s. It also has a portfolio of celebrity brands, including Beautyrest, Ellen Tracy, Jessica McClintock and Royal Sateen. The company was recently awarded a patent for “alpha cotton,” a fabric that will make sheets 30 to 40 percent cheaper than 100 percent cotton.

Agarwal, who also serves as the director of the company, which also has an art design studio and showroom in Manhattan, New York, was honored for his contributions to HIV/AIDS organizations last year (I-W Sept. 2, 2015http://bit.ly/1NObWiX).

“It is such a huge honor for me to serve on one of the governor’s boards,” said Agarwal in a statement. “As global business owners, it is our responsibility and civic duty to help other local small businesses survive and thrive in this global economy, and I am excited to do my part.”

PDSBI is a revolving loan program, administered by the office of the governor, and overseen by a nine-member board appointed by the governor. The incubator’s fund provides financial aid for the development, production and commercialization of new or improved products, and to foster the growth of small businesses in Texas.

Agarwal, a graduate of IMT in Ghaziabad, the University of New Hampshire and Harvard University, was named 2013 Entrepreneur of the Year by the Greater Dallas Indo-American Chamber of Commerce. He also received the minority business leader award by the Dallas Business Journal in 2013; the 2014 Outstanding Entrepreneur award by the Indian American Friendship Council; “NRI of the Year” by TIMES NOW and ICICI Bank in 2015; and was named the king of home textiles by D Magazine.

Aakash Shah Honored as White House ‘Champion of Change’

Aakash Shah, a 28-year-old Indian American, has been honored as a Champion of Change by the White House for founding Be Jersey Strong, helping people sign up for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act.

The Champions of Change program was created as an opportunity for the White House to feature individuals doing extraordinary things to empower and inspire members of their communities, according to a statement from the White House. Ten ACA “Champions of Change” — selected from community nominations — were honored last week.

Health care coverage in the state is inexpensive, said Shah, noting that almost 75 percent of residents will qualify for some form of subsidized health insurance, with premiums as low as $75 per month, prompting the young Shah, a third-year medical student at Harvard Medical School and doing his rotations at Massachusetts General Hospital when he conceived of the idea for Be Jersey Strong, a volunteer-driven organization that helps people sign up for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act.

“It is very frustrating for a provider to see this,” Shah, who was honored Mar. 26 by the White House as a “Champion of Change,” told India-West. He noted that there are a large number of people who qualify for subsidized, low-cost healthcare coverage under the ACA, but have not enrolled for various reasons, including language barriers, the complexity of the enrollment process, and lack of knowledge about the various options for coverage.

“My patients were saying ‘it’s not as easy as it sounds,’ to enroll,” said the New Jersey native. “So many of us are having trouble enrolling; it’s no surprise that my patients were also having trouble. We don’t need slick Web sites. We need one-on-one conversations to guide us through the process,” explained Shah.

Shah, who did an away rotation in the emergency room at Rutgers-Robert Wood Johnson Hospital — saw many patients come through the doors in need of medical care but lacking health insurance coverage.

In 2015, Shah founded Be Jersey Strong, a non-profit organization which recruits student volunteers to sign up people for health care coverage. Since last summer, Be Jersey Strong has recruited more than 500 volunteers from 20 local universities and provided services to more than 12,000 people. The organization has set an ambitious target of recruiting 1,000 college students to have over 100,000 one-on-one conversations with uninsured people about their health care options.

Students are natural cheerleaders for the ACA, said Shah, noting that many of them come from the same backgrounds as the community they are attempting to serve. Moreover, they understand the pathos of being uninsured or having to insure themselves for the first time, he said.

Students enrolling other students benefit from the peer-to-peer contact, said Shah. Newer immigrants — most states require immigrants to legally reside in the U.S. before receiving federal benefits — often face language barriers when attempting to enroll. Be Jersey Strong’s student volunteers speak 15 different languages, including several South Asian languages. Many volunteers first sign up their own families.

New Jersey has more than 525,000 undocumented residents, who are ineligible for coverage under the mandates of the ACA. Shah said many legal residents are afraid to enroll for health care coverage for fear of exposing their undocumented family members. Student volunteers — many who are in mixed immigration families — are able to allay such fears, he said, and also to provide undocumented residents with information about health care resources they can avail of, such as Federally Qualified Health Centers, which are mandated to provide health care to all, regardless of immigration status.

Shah related the story of a volunteer who had been with the organization for three weeks and enrolling people at his church after Sunday services. The volunteer came across a 48-year-old woman whose family had a strong history of breast cancer. “She told our volunteer, ‘it is a virtual certainty that I’m going to develop breast cancer.’ She was absolutely right.”

The woman had gone to a local ER, but could not be tested, because she lacked insurance. “She was sent away with a brochure for healthcare.gov. She went away worse than when she went in, because now there was a bill in the mail for the consultation,” Shah told India-West.

The volunteer worked with her over three Sundays and got her enrolled. “The student realized he had saved this woman’s life. He loved that feeling,” said Shah, noting that the volunteer subsequently decided to go to medical school.

The health care activist hopes to build a network in which volunteers can interact with their enrollees to ensure they are getting adequate care. Be Jersey Strong is supported by grants from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the United Way, along with private donations.

Shah said he was “excited and quite humbled” to be named a “Champion of Change” by the White House. “I was filled with a sense of gratitude that they acknowledged all the hard work of our volunteers,” he said.

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