AIF Cultivating Global Citizens

New York, NY: America India Foundation has announced the third season of the Youth Ambassador Program (AYAP)! In its vision to build a lasting bridge between the United States and India, AIF has proudly launched the Youth Ambassador Program (AYAP), a service-learning experience in India for U.S. high school students.

“This immersive, service-learning experience for US high school students fosters an awareness of social development in India through visits with local communities, Indian peers and schools, leading NGOs, and the private sector. Students engage with an AIF-designed service-learning curriculum and gain firsthand experience of issues of poverty and other challenges facing vulnerable communities,” a press release issued by AIF said.

AYAP has partnered with the Frugal Innovation Lab in the School of Engineering at Santa Clara University to integrate curriculum and hands-on activities that cultivate empathy alongside fundamental technology skills. Applications for the 2016 program in Bangalore, June 18-July 3, are open now!

AIF is looking for passionate high school students with an interest in building cross-cultural and global citizenship skills, and learning how to apply their learnings to improve the lives of underprivileged communities in India and beyond.

Now in its third year, AYAP seeks to foster an awareness of social development in India for participants through visits with local communities, Indian peers and schools, leading NGOs, and the private sector. Students engage with an AIF-designed service-learning curriculum and gain firsthand experience of issues of poverty and other challenges facing vulnerable communities.

Participants engage with Indian peers throughout the program to build relationships and work together to develop solutions to local problems. Students learn how to make sense of development challenges and to help advance social justice.

Program Objectives include: Facilitate an understanding of social, economic and environmental challenges facing vulnerable communities in India; Foster two-way cultural awareness among students from the U.S. and India; Expose students to the NGO and private sector roles in advancing social justice; Explore frugal innovation in education, livelihoods and environmental issues; Spark continued collaboration with AIF; and, Cultivate Youth Ambassadors individual social responsibility to the local and global community at large.

AYAP has partnered with the Frugal Innovation Lab in the School of Engineering at Santa Clara University to integrate curriculum and hands-on activities that cultivate empathy alongside fundamental technology skills.

AYAP participants return to the U.S. as global citizens, inspired to advance social change in India and beyond. AYAP creates a long-term leadership opportunity for continued collaboration with AIF, its programs and communities it serves across the country.

$181 billion Indian black money in tax havens?

Washington, DC: Between six and seven trillion dollars worth of black wealth lies hidden in tax havens across the world, according to a fresh estimate by a trio of senior economists from the Bank of Italy. Indians’ share in this is estimated at $152-181 billion, by one calculation. This is only wealth invested in shares and debt securities or held in bank deposits. It is impossible to get a handle on other wealth invested in physical assets like real estate, gold or art.

Released this week, these estimates follow the train of several such estimates in recent years with Gabriel Zucman, of London School of Economics, estimating it at $7.6 trillion, Boston Consulting Group at $8.9 trillion and Tax Justice Network at $21 trillion.

All of this wealth is held in tax havens, which are jurisdictions with weak regulations and strong secrecy laws, using shell companies to conceal original identities. The Italian economists analysed data from IMF and the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) to arrive at the figure. When asked by TOI to estimate the Indian share in this gigantic treasure trove, the researchers were cautious.

There can be two ways of doing this, they told TOI via email. One is to assume that the Indian share in this global hidden wealth was simply the same as India’s share in global GDP, that is, about 2.5% in 2013, the year for which this data pertains. By this measure, the Indian share of hidden wealth is $152-181 billion. That’s about Rs 8.9 to 10.5 lakh crore. Another way of finding out the Indian share of undeclared assets is to look at the Indian share in actual declared portfolio assets—about 0.07% of the total—and assume that the same is valid for hidden assets. By this way, India’s share in black assets works out to $4-5 billion or about Rs 25,000-30,000 crore.

These figures for India are just indicative and the three economists — Pellegrini, Sanelli and Tosti — were insistent that they “have to be considered with great care and in no way can represent firm data”. But, having said that, there is no other way of getting even a glimpse of the secret stockpile of wealth stashed away abroad by Indians. So, as a ballpark figure, it does give a hint of what lies buried.

Why is there a big discrepancy between the two methods of calculating India’s hidden wealth in tax havens? As the Italian researchers explained, Indians seem to have a much lower propensity for investing in foreign financial assets — that’s why their share in global offshore financial assets, as calculated from IMF data, is a puny 0.07%. But will this reluctance extend to secret investments too? Nobody knows.

In all probability, Indian share in foreign black money is somewhere between the two estimates computed above. This is supported by estimates of offshore wealth growth by various agencies. In the Global Wealth 2015 Report, the Boston Consulting Group says that shares of offshore wealth from Middle East and Africa region, Latin America and Asia Pacific were higher than Western Europe and North America, although it also points out that Asia-Pacific contribution is not so high.

KAPOOR & SONS SETS 2016 RECORD

(NEW YORK – March 20, 2016)  “Kapoor & Sons – Since 1921” starring Sidharth Malhotra, Alia Bhatt, Fawad Khan, and Rishi Kapoor, has generated the biggest Bollywood opening weekend of the year in North America grossing an estimated $965,000 over the March 18 – 20 period. The acclaimed Karan Johar production from Fox Star Studios and Dharma Productions beat out the $878,000 debut weekend of Akshay Kumar’s Airlift which previously held the record for 2016.

The Times of India gave “Kapoor & Sons” four stars stating “Wicked, witty and wise, Kapoor & Sons does Karan Johar proud!”  Bollywood Hungama also gave a four-star review remarking “Kapoor & Sons makes for an excellent movie that you must watch with your entire family!”

Filmfare exclaimed “there’s no way on earth you should miss this movie,” while Firstpost said “this endearing flick gives ‘Neerja’ competition for Best Hindi film of 2016.”

Shakun Batra‘s first film was an unusual romance – one in which the boy and girl didn’t end up together. Four years later, Batra is back with “Kapoor and Sons“, a family drama with Sidharth Malhotra, Alia Bhatt and Fawad Khan in lead roles.

KAPOOR & SONS SETS 2016 RECORDHandout still from “Kapoor and Sons” Batra spoke to Reuters about the film, the influence of Woody Allen and Wes Anderson on his film-making and why he cast Rishi Kapoor, 63, as a 90-year-old. In a nutshell, some family films are better off as either tele-films or (finite) TV serials. Especially when the writing team and director cannot decide how much to keep real and life-like, and how much to keep overtly melodramatic.

This mix of old-world family drama told in a new-age way with contemporary and young nuances does hit the right chords off and on, but overall, the script changes graph jerkily in the second half just when we feel things are trekking back to course slowly for the harangued characters.

Of course, there is justification shown for things the way they happen, and we liked the way tragedy is graphically shown in a very ‘60s to ‘80s way yet through the cell phone, but overall, the sudden shift from the humor to the serious and even maudlin could have been better written and handled, or changed smoothly like a “Dil Chahta Hai.”

Briefly, the film’s story is about old man Kapoor, Dadaji (Rishi Kapoor), now 90, and in a hospital bed from a heart ailment, who is stubborn, naughty, endearingly child-like and emotionally strong all at the same time. He has two sons, and the second, Harsh (Rajat Kapoor) with whom he lives in Ooty, is the head of a dysfunctional family, complete with wife Sarita (Ratna Pathak Shah), who suspects his affair with ex-colleague Anu (Anuradha Chandan); his two sons Arjun (Sidharth Malhotra) and Rahul (Fawad Khan), both aspiring authors working abroad, with Rahul doing well, and Arjun always considered the un-focused loser; and of course Harsh himself.

The outsider coming into their life is Tia (Alia Bhatt), who has lost her parents in an accident, and is a seemingly happy-go-lucky lass. Both brothers encounter her separately, and Arjun suspects Rahul of also being in love with her like he is.

A welcome home-cum-90th birthday party is held by the family for Dadaji when he returns home from the hospital, but, thanks to the family’s basic temperament, the celebrations go bust. Later, all that the old man wants before he dies is a family photograph with everyone, including the other son and his normal family, who soon visit him. But with each person from Harsh’s family having either a skeleton in their closet or a grudge, will that ever happen?

Though not too long, the film could have still been sharper, more concise and not so retro whenever it decides to suddenly veer towards melodrama, flip-flopping between real and ‘filmi,’ and being unnecessarily dark in its cinematography — Ooty never looked so unappetizing! The music, shoddily used and content-wise not up to the mark, fails to boost the movie. The background score is just about serviceable.

The dialogues do work most of the time. But when financial problems are given so much prominence in the beginning (as one of the root causes of conflict) and then suddenly disappear, and the family seems to be having a luxurious lifestyle, we wonder what the scriptwriter was (not) thinking. Also, Arjun buying property was something vague too, again disposed of at convenience.

Shakun Batra scores far better vis-à-vis his debut film “Ek Main Aur Ekk Tu” and handles the emotions well in most sequences, but, as we said, the totality does not add up. He extracts wonderful performances, in particular from Rishi Kapoor with his spontaneous one-liners, Fawad Khan and Ratna Pathak-Shah. Bhatt is good but scores over everyone else in the cast in her breakdown sequence — the build-up and her expressions are incredibly heart-tugging. The rest of the cast does a good job, though Malhotra has only a sketchy role.

6 of 9 Intel Science Talent Search are of Indian Origin

Washington, DC: Amol Punjabi, 17, of Marlborough, Mass., and Maya Varma, 17, of Cupertino, Calif., were chosen as first-place winners, along with Paige Brown, 17, of Bangor, Maine, in the prestigious 75th anniversary of the Intel Science Talent Search competition. Second-place winners included Meena Jagadeesan, 17, of Naperville, Ill., and Milind Jagota, 18, of Bethlehem, Pa. Kunal Shroff and Kavya Ravichandran were third-place winners, winning in Basic Research and Innovation, respectively.  Michael Zhang, 18, of Berwyn, Pa., and Nathan Charles Marshall, 17, of Boise, Idaho, won second and third place, respectively, in the Global Good category.

Overall, six Indian American teenage students were among the nine winners announced by the Intel and the Society for Science and the Public in a joint statement on March 15. Described to be among the most promising high school students and were celebrated for their scientific achievements in Washington, D.C, the winners walked away with the three first-, second- and third-place prizes of $150,000, $75,000 and $35,000, respectively.

Punjabi won the First Place Medal of Distinction for Basic Research in the prestigious competition. He developed software that could help drug makers develop new therapies for cancer and heart disease. Punjabi is also the lead author of a paper on nanoparticles published in ACS Nano and co-author of a paper on a related topic in Nanoscale. He is also the lead pianist for his high school’s jazz workshop and captain of the Science Olympiad team.

Varma won the First Place Medal of Distinction for Innovation. She used $35 worth of hobbyist electronics and free computer-aided design tools to create a low-cost, smartphone-based lung function analyzer that diagnoses lung disease as accurately as expensive devices currently used in medical laboratories.

Varma is proficient in five programming languages, holds leadership roles in multiple honor societies and science and math clubs, and has won grand prizes in several prestigious science competitions. “The Society congratulates Amol, Paige and Maya,” said Society for Science and the Public president and chief executive Maya Ajmera, who is also a Science Talent Search alumna. “They and the rest of the top winners of Intel STS 2016 are using science and technology to help address the problems they see in the world and will be at the forefront of creating the solutions we need for the future.”

Jagadeesan won in Basic Research for investigating an object in algebraic combinatorics, or the mathematics of counting, to reveal a novel relationship between classes of graphs. Jagota won in Innovation as he studied the performance of random nanowire networks as a less costly alternative to the transparent conductors now used in touchscreen devices.

Shroff, 17, of Great Falls, Va., discovered new relationships between the key protein associated with Huntington’s disease and the biological processes of cellular death that cause Huntington’s symptoms. His work may lead to new treatments. Ravichandran, 17, of Westlake, Ohio, studied the use of nanomedicine to destroy potentially fatal blood clots that can cause heart attacks and strokes.

The winners were pared down from 1,750 entrants. The six Indian American winners came from a list of 40 finalists, which included 14 Indian Americans and South Asians. Indian Americans and South Asians accounted for 70 of the 300 semifinalists named in the competition.

STEM Students Can Remain in U.S. for 3 Years Post-Graduation

Washington, DC: Students from abroad pursuing degrees in science, technology, education or mathematics will have the option of remaining in the U.S. for three years for practical training, according to a new rule announced on March 11 by the Department of Homeland Security. The law will extend the post-graduation work authorization period for international students studying STEM fields in the U.S as of May 10th this year. The rule will come as relief to thousands of international students whose futures in the U.S. were thrown into question after a federal judge invalidated a 2008 rule governing the program on procedural grounds.

The new rule addresses a program known as optional practical training, or OPT, which permits international students to work in the U.S. for 12 months after graduation. Under the 2008 rule, students studying STEM fields were eligible to apply for a 17-month OPT extension, for a total of 29 months of work authorization.

The new rule published will lengthen the extension from 17 to 24 months and enable students to apply for an extension at two different points of their academic career (after two different degree levels, e.g., a bachelor’s and a master’s), rather than only once. The ability of international graduates to work for up to three years at two different points in their academic careers while remaining on their F-1 student visas could allow them more time and flexibility to seek ways to stay in the U.S. legally, if that’s their choice.

The new rule also includes new reporting requirements for employers, students and university officials and, for the first time, requires employers to put in place formal training plans. “We’re viewing STEM OPT as a continuation of their training,” said Rachel Canty, the deputy director of the Student and Exchange Visitor Program at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, which issued the rule. “It’s not just regular employment. You see this with the institution of this new training plan, which emphasizes that the student and employer have to sit down together to say how are we going to use this job, how are they going to take the skills they learned in school and apply it to a work environment.”

“The new rule for STEM OPT will allow international students with qualifying degrees to extend the time they participate in practical training, while at the same time strengthening oversight and adding new features to the program,” said Lou Farrell, director of the Student and Exchange Visitor Program, in a press statement.

Only students who have earned a degree from a school accredited by a U.S. Department of Education-recognized accrediting agency and certified by SEVP may apply for a STEM OPT extension. On Mar. 11, DHS launched a new Web site — studyinthestates.dhs.gov — that explains the OPT extension program for prospective foreign students. DHS estimates there are roughly 34,000 foreign graduates enrolled in OPT or OPT Extension programs. Critics of the program cite a private survey which reports there are more than 120,000 foreign graduates enrolled in these programs.

Employers participating in the program must enroll in the government’s E-Verify program. They must pay STEM OPT trainees wages similar to regular employees with similar backgrounds. Trainees must work a minimum of 20 hours a week and cannot replace a full-time, part-time, temporary or permanent U.S. worker. DHS said it has built in the latter safeguard to guard against adverse effects on U.S. workers.

The rule also includes new provisions intended to protect international students and American workers. It requires that hours, duties and compensation for STEM OPT participants be commensurate with terms and conditions for “similarly situated U.S. workers” and requires employers to attest that students hired through the program are not replacing Americans.

Herein lies the controversy surrounding the program. Proponents of OPT argue that the lure of post-graduation employment opportunities will help the U.S. attract international students and enable industry to identify top foreign talent, particularly in technical fields for which there are few qualified American job applicants. Opponents, however, argue that the program harms Americans by flooding tech fields with cheaper-to-hire foreign workers. (On the cheaper question, critics argue that policies that exempt some international students on F-1 visas, and their employers, from Social Security and Medicare taxes make them less expensive to hire than U.S. workers. International students generally begin paying Social Security and Medicare taxes after five years in the U.S.)

Raja Krishnamoorthi, After Winning Primary, On Way To Be Member Of 115th US Congress

Washington, DC: Raja Krishnamoorthi , who won the Democratic Party primary on March 15, 2016 is all set to join the 11th Congress in the Nation’s Capital from the 8th Congressional District in the state of Illinois, that includes the Chicago suburbs of Hoffman Estates, Schaumburg and Palatine.

Krishnamoorthi won the Democratic primary, defeating his two opponents, Michael Noland and Deborah Bullwinkel. Krishnamoorthi believes he has a very good chance to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives in Illinois’ 8th Congressional District, and is now focused on winning the general election in November. “So far, the dynamic has been favorable, but we can’t take anything for granted,” Krishnamoorthi said. “We have to make sure we get our message out.”

Krishnamoorthi is currently president of Sivananthan Labs, where he works on leading research teams developing semiconductor technologies, improved military technologies, solar cells and biosensors to detect weapons of mass destruction. He was formerly the Illinois Deputy Treasurer and served as the policy director for Barack Obama’s successful U.S. Senate campaign in 2004.

Raja Krishnamoorthi’s Run For US Congress Gains Momentum
Raja Krishnamoorth

Krishnamoorthi noted that he has received endorsements from many politicians, including Democratic Representatives Jared Polis ’96 of Colorado and Derek Kilmer ’96 of Washington, local community leaders and advocacy groups in Chicago and Washington, D.C.

Sunil Bhave, a member of the District 59 School Board, explained that Krishnamoorthi is a very genuine person who is able to get along with people who have different opinions, which is a very rare quality that is needed in Congress. “Within a minute of talking to him, you just want to shake his hand and give him a hug,” Bhave said. “He listens to what people have to say.”

Born in New Delhi, India, Krishnamoorthi moved to the United States when he was three-months-old so that his father could complete a graduate degree in industrial engineering. He grew up in Buffalo, N.Y., and moved to Peoria, Ill., where his father was a faculty member at Bradley University. There, he graduated from Richwoods High School.

He explained that he decided to apply to the University because of the strong engineering school, which was where he intended to major. He also said that the liberal arts component and the presence of the Wilson School was key, because it would enable him to take humanities and science classes at the same time. “Princeton’s structure accommodated all of those interests at the same time,” he said. “I could not find that anywhere else.”

Krishnamoorthi graduated summa cum laude from the University. Krishnamoorthi received a degree in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and a certificate from the Wilson School. His independent project dealt with natural gas powered engines and his senior thesis for the Wilson School dealt with foreign directed investment in India, due to his interest in economic development.

He explained that he transferred from Electrical Engineering to Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering because of his interest in the large number of practical applications, such as combustion engines and solar cells. “I was able to take courses where the professors and the teaching assistants were available to mentor and shepherd me through some very difficult coursework,” Krishnamoorthi added. “They allowed me to excel.”

After graduating, Krishnamoorthi spent two years as a strategy consultant and dealt with how a business should grow, whether through increasing revenue or cutting costs. He had always wanted to go to law school because of his interest in government and public policy. “There’s nothing like law school that prepares you for that,” Krishnamoorthi said. “You really learn about the bones of our legal system and the Constitution, and how the federal government operates.”

He then graduated from Harvard Law School in 2000, clerked for Judge Joan Gottschall at the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois for a year. He assisted Judge Gottschall in deciding cases, and dealt with procedural motions arising in the cases. “It’s a real workout in terms of researching and writing and learning to express yourself persuasively,” he said.

Krishnamoorthi then joined law firm Kirkland and Ellis in Chicago, Ill., as an attorney. He dealt with many different types of law, including contract law, securities law, white-collar criminal prosecutions and bankruptcy litigation. In addition, he did some pro-bono work and was particularly proud of helping a man who had been persecuted in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Krishnamoorthi was then appointed by Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan to be the Special Attorney General with the Public Integrity Unit. He took this position after a former colleague at Kirkland and Ellis became the head of the Public Integrity Unit and asked Krishnamoorthi to come and join him.

Krishnamoorthi’s first foray into politics occurred in 1999, when he worked on Barack Obama’s Democratic primary campaign for the 1st Congressional District of Illinois. Obama lost, but asked Krishnamoorthi to become policy director for his Senate campaign in 2004. As a policy director, he educated Obama on various issues and formulated policy that would set him apart from his competitors. He also helped Obama prepare for debates.

In 2007, Krishnamoorthi left Kirkland and Ellis to become the Deputy Treasurer of Illinois. He was appointed by the Treasurer, who was formerly the banker of Obama’s 2004 Senate campaign. Krishnamoorthi focused on writing the policies aimed at promoting economic development, and was impressed by the amount of money managed by the state.

His first foray into elected office came in 2010, when Krishnamoorthi sought the Democratic nomination for Illinois State Comptroller, who maintains the state’s accounts and authorizes checks and payments. He noted that he possessed a unique set of skills that would help him in this position.

“One the one hand, I was an attorney who had investigated ethics abuses,” he said. “On the other hand, I had some financial training as the Deputy Treasurer.” Krishnamoorthi lost to David Miller in the Democratic primary by just over a percentage point. He said that he was able to meet great people during his bid, which encouraged him to try again for elected office. From his first run, he learned that he needed to raise more money to get his message across.

In 2010, Krishnamoorthi joined Sivananthan Laboratories as the president after meeting Dr. Sivalingam Sivananthan, the founder of Sivananthan Labs, when Krishnamoorthi was running for Comptroller.

In 2011, Krishnamoorthi decided to run for the House of Representatives in the 8th District of Illinois. He noted that he jumped into the race because he wanted to defeat then Rep. Joe Walsh, a Tea Party Republican. “He was then the Donald Trump of the U.S. Congress,” Krishnamoorthi said. “He was a horrible guy who played on people’s fears and tried to demagogue on the issues.”

Krishnamoorthi said that his second attempt at elected office was a positive experience because the discussions he had with his opponents were civil and ideas-focused. However, he lost the Democratic nomination to Tammy Duckworth, who went on to become the Representative for the 8th District. Krishnamoorthi then became an advisor to Rep. Duckworth. Last year, Rep. Duckworth announced that she would step down from the House of Representatives to run for the U.S. Senate. Krishnamoorthi subsequently declared his candidacy for the 8th District in 2015, and won the Mar. 15 Democratic primary.

“South Asians turned out in higher numbers than normal this time,” Krishnamoorthi said, hoping that would be the “new normal” in the future. During an event organized by the South Asian community, Raja Krishnamoorthi in his stirring eloquence spelled out his vision –when elected – to usher a new day in the United States Congress with pressing legislative agenda that seeks to strengthen working families, making college affordable, bolstering small businesses, reforming immigration system, improving America’s infrastructure. More importantly Raja Krishnamoorthi assured that he would passionately pursue critical agenda for Americans in bringing about economic equality, protecting Social Security, Medicare and fiercely advocating policies to help working families and raising minimum wage.

Keerthi Kumar Ravoori, Event Convener in his welcome remarks said that we as Indian Americans stand on the precipice of a shining hope and brighter promise with Raja Krishnamoorthi nearing to enter the portals of the U.S. Congress with comprehensive legislative goals. Keerthi Ravoori characterized Raja Krishnamoorthi as a ‘legislative genius’ who would passionately pursue meaningful legislative agenda by hitting the ground running when elected.

Dr. Vijay Prabhakar, Event Co-Chair in his remarks vociferously emphasized that the candidacy of Raja Krishnamoorthi represents a chance of a life time for the current and the future generations. He stridently challenged every Asian American to rise up and stand shoulder to shoulder to help Raja cross the finish line victoriously so that all Americans can see this eminent political personality as a shining inspiration for the entire nation.

His campaign has mainly revolved around keeping people in the middle class and strengthening the middle class and he has advocated for a set of policies to achieve this. Krishnamoorthi wants to raise the minimum wage, pass paid maternity leave, reduce student debt burdens and focus on building a clean-energy economy.

Krishnamoorthi noted that many of his policies have bipartisan support, and he wants to work to find common ground. He explained that there are many Tea Party Congressmen who support expanding solar energy. “Some folks believe that solar energy has become a liberty and independence issue in the Southwest and Florida, because they can cut the cord with their utilities,” he said. “It has the promise of combatting climate change and creating jobs.”

Some other races that would affect Indian-Americans’ political standing nationally and at state levels include California state Attorney General Kamala Harris’ run for the U.S. Senate; incumbent California Democratic Rep. Ami Bera, running for his third term from District 7; Maryland state Assemblyman and former Majority Leader Kumar Barve, the first Indian-American to win a state assembly seat back in 1990, still seeking his party’s nomination in his bid for the U.S. Congress from District 8; civil rights advocate and Washington state Assemblywoman Pramila Jayapal’s run for the Senate from District 7; attorney Neil Makhija, chosen by the Democratic Party to run for the Pennsylvania state House from District 122; and three-term Vermont state Rep. Kesha Ram’s bid for Lt. Governor, among others.

Murali Krishnamurthy – “Eradicate curable blindness in India by the year 2020 – Vision 20/20 by 2020”

I have a B.E in Electronics & Communications engineering from NIT Trichy (1977) and a M.S in Computer Science from Southern Illinois University, Carbondale (1984).

I have learnt Carnatic Music for a few years and also co-founded the San Francisco Bay Area Light Music group ‘Pallavi’ in 1996.  We have performed in over 30 events in several languages all over California.

My Uncle Mr. P. Balasubramaniam was a Rotarian and he used to volunteer at the Sankara Eye Hospital, Coimbatore.  He was after me and my brother K. Sridharan since 1996 to start the Sankara Eye Foundation, USA (SEF) to support the Hospital in Coimbatore.   I was very reluctant as we did not have much time and I thought that our friends and others would run away from us if we start asking them for donations.  We stopped calling our uncle, as he will surely ask about starting Sankara Eye Foundation.  Uncle was persistent and will not let it go.  Sridharan visited the Hospital in 1997 and came back very inspired and we decided to start SEF.  Sridharan’s neighbor Ahmad Khushnood Qazi of Lahore is a CPA and he helped with the 501c-3 papers and the three of us founded SEF in May 1998.

Murali Krishnamurthy - “Eradicate curable blindness in India by the year 2020 – Vision 20/20 by 2020”In the first year we hand wrote personal appeals to around 100 of our friends and we raised around $8,000.  We organized our first fundraiser on April 3, 1999.  It was a multi-lingual light music show by Pallavi at the Foothill College Theater in Los Altos and we raised around $19,000.

The number of free eye surgeries at our Coimbatore Hospital started increasing from 8,000 in 1998 to 15,000 in 1999, 22,000 in 2000 and this is when our volunteer Rajiv Chamraj proposed a big vision – Eradicate curable blindness in India by the year 2020 – Vision 20/20 by 2020.   At that time I used to read Swami Vivekananda’s teaching every day to pull through every day at work.  I was not motivated by Electronics or Software and I was doing it just to make a living.  Coming back to the big vision for SEF, even though it was much beyond us, I thought about what Swami Vivekananda said, “Every human being is divine and can do anything and everything.  Think big, even if you are a thief, don’t be a petty thief, be a big thief” and that motivated me and I accepted the big goal.   “Ignorance is bliss” really worked for me as I had no idea what it takes to build a Sankara Eye Hospital and others, both in Sankara USA and Sankara India, knew much more than me.

I was like a young child who wanted the candy and would not accept anything else.  Others were not ready to accept the big vision as they thought that it was a very big step for the organizations and Murali had no idea.   I was very disappointed but would not let it go.  I threatened that SEF, USA will work with other service providers in India and build 20 eye hospitals by the year 2020.   They said that I was arrogant.  The way my uncle persisted in us starting the SEF, USA, I was adamant about “Vision 20/20 by 2020”.

It took some time for SEF and Sankara Eye Care Institutions (SECI India) to accept the big goal but all of us are on board now.

When the vision is big and if the work is genuine, support does come and it did.  We now run eight Eye Hospitals in India and 150,000 + free eye surgeries were performed by these Hospitals in 2013.  Our next Hospital (ninth) is coming up in Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh and will be inaugurated in October 2014.  We have also purchased land in Jodhpur, Rajasthan and Indore Madhya Pradesh for our next Hospitals and we are also looking at Chhattisgarh and Bihar.  Our goal is to build at least 20 hospitals in India by the year 2020 and play a big role in eradicating curable blindness.

Murali Krishnamurthy - “Eradicate curable blindness in India by the year 2020 – Vision 20/20 by 2020”SEF has now performed close to 1.18 million free eye surgeries and it has become the largest free eye care provider in the world.   A key part of our work is self-sufficiency – we expect our hospitals to become self-sufficient by also attracting paying patients.   We have a 80:20 model where 80% of the patients are provided services free of cost and we bring these patients from rural India to our hospitals and they are poor.    The other 20% of the patients are those who can afford to pay.   Out of the eight hospitals in Coimbatore, Krishnankoil, Guntur, Bangalore, Shimoga, Anand, Ludhiana and Rishikesh, two of them – Bangalore and Guntur have become self-sufficiency and they don’t our support from here for recurring services.

SEF is still mostly volunteer run and is supported by over 50,000 donors all over the USA and the collective efforts are paying off.  SEF received the top 4-star rating from Charity Navigator for sound fiscal management, commitment to accountability and transparency.   We also won the IMC Ramakrishna Bajaj National Quality Performance Excellence trophy in the health care category.

Even though our uncle literally forced us to start the Sankara Eye Foundation, now we realize that this is the best thing that has happened to us.   We have made so many friends and that has enriched our lives beyond imagination.     Initially I used to think that I was making a difference in the lives of our dear visually handicapped brothers and sisters but now it is dawning on me that I am the biggest beneficiary.  I am so fortunate and grateful for this golden opportunity.

Let us, together, eradicate curable blindness – Vision 20/20 by 2020

Jyot se jyot jalate chalo; Prem ki Ganga bahate chalo; Raha mein aye jo din dukhi; Sabko gale se lagate chalo; Prem ki Ganga bahate chalo.

In order to get more information on how to join us on this noble missión, please visit: http://www.giftofvision.org/

UN adopts first resolution tackling sexual abuse by UN troops

UNITED NATIONS: The UN Security Council on Friday approved its first-ever resolution tackling the escalating problem of sexual abuse by UN peacekeepers who act as predators when sent to protect vulnerable civilians in some of the world’s most volatile areas.

The United Nations has been in the spotlight for months over allegations of child rape and other sexual abuses by its peacekeepers, especially those based in Central African Republic and Congo. The UN says there were 69 allegations of sexual abuse and exploitation by peacekeepers in 2015, with an additional 25 allegations so far this year.

The resolution was approved by a vote of 14-0 with Egypt abstaining after a last-minute amendment it proposed that would have weakened the text was defeated.

The US-drafted resolution endorses Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s plan for reform, including his decision to repatriate military or police units “where there is credible evidence of widespread or systemic sexual exploitation and abuse.”

It also asks Ban to replace contingents where allegations are not properly investigated, perpetrators are not held accountable or the secretary-general is not informed on the progress of investigations. The Egyptian amendment would have required that all three conditions are met before a military or police unit is sent home, not just one of them as now required.

It’s up to the home country of the soldier or police officer to conduct the investigation and determine the punishment if allegations of sexual abuse or exploitation are proven.

The United States, the biggest financial contributor to UN peacekeeping operations, said it wanted the UN’s most powerful body to send a strong signal that it will not tolerate the escalating problem.

“To the victims of sexual exploitation and abuse by peacekeepers, we pledge that we will do better, US Ambassador Samantha Power said after the vote. “We will do better to ensure that the blue helmets that we send as your protectors will not become perpetrators.”

Secretary-General Ban called the resolution “a significant step in our collective efforts to combat the terrible damage caused to victims of sexual exploitation and abuse” and pledged to ensure protection and support for those who have been abused, his spokesman said.

More than 100,000 troops and police are deployed in the UN’s far-flung peacekeeping operations, the vast majority from developing countries. The United Nations reimburses troop contributing countries for salaries and provides allowances for peacekeepers.

As part of the secretary-general’s reforms, the United Nations has for the first time begun naming the countries of alleged perpetrators, a move meant to pressure states to pursue allegations that, UN records show, they often have let slide. Ban has also pledged to speed up investigations and to make information available about outstanding allegations on a new UN website.

Egypt, Russia and several other countries had argued that the council resolution would punish thousands of peacekeepers for the actions of a few. They say the issue should be addressed in the General Assembly instead. But General Assembly actions are not legally binding, while Security Council resolutions are.

Egypt’s UN Ambassador Amr Abdellatif Aboulatta said libeling and “branding entire states” is totally unacceptable and “drastically and inevitably affects the morale of the troops.” He said it would have been more appropriate if the Security Council focused on the root causes of sex crimes including training and supervision at camps for peacekeepers.

One of the 25 allegations this year is against an Egyptian peacekeeper in the Central African Republic. Egyptian authorities are investigating the case, according to the UN website. Russia and China supported the Egyptian amendment but then voted in favor of the resolution.

Russia’s deputy UN ambassador Petr Iliichev said it was “wrong” for the council to reject the Egyptian amendment which reflected the view of troop contributing countries. But he said Russia decided to support the resolution because the final text was expanded to call for all forces deployed by the Security Council – a reference to French troops accused of sexually abusing children in Central African Republic and African Union soldiers in Somalia, Darfur and elsewhere.

Donald Trump Wants End To H1-B Visas

WASHINGTON, D.C: There have been studies that have found that America gains much by attracting talented, educated and resourceful workforce from among the world through its popular H1-B Work Visa, Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump  stoked another controversy by vowing to abolish the visa program, popular among Indian techies. IT professionals from India and major Indian IT companies are major beneficiary of H-1B, a non-immigrant visa in the US which allows US employers to temporarily employ foreign workers in speciality occupations.

Donald Trump has said the H-1B visa programme he uses to employ highly-skilled foreign workers at his own businesses should end as it is “very unfair” for American workers and has been taking away their jobs. The last Republican presidential debate in Miami began with all the four White House aspirants slamming the H-1B visa system — popular among Indian techies, with Florida Senator Marco Rubio even naming Tata and India as part of his anti- H-1B rhetoric.

“I know the H-1B very well. And it’s something that I frankly use and I shouldn’t be allowed to use it. We shouldn’t have it. Very, very bad for workers. It’s very important to say, well, I’m a businessman and I have to do what I have to do,” Trump said while responding to a question on foreign workers, in particular H-1B visas. “When it’s sitting there waiting for you, but it’s very bad. It’s very bad for business, it’s very bad for our workers and it’s unfair for our workers. We should end it,” he said.

Trump’s website calls for eliminating the H-1B class of visas that allow companies to import high-skilled workers from countries like India. “We do need highly skilled, and one of the biggest problems we have is people go to the best colleges,” Trump said.

However, Trump had recently said in political rally, “They’ll go to Harvard, they’ll go to Stanford, they’ll go to Wharton, as soon as they’re finished they’ll get shoved out. They want to stay in this country,” he said. “They want to stay here desperately, they’re not able to stay here. For that purpose, we absolutely have to be able to keep the brain power in this country,” Trump said in response to a question.

“I’m changing. I’m changing. We need highly skilled people in this country, and if we can’t do it, we’ll get them in. But, and we do need in Silicon Valley, we absolutely have to have,” Trump, 69, said during the Republican presidential debate in Detroit. Responding to a question on his views on immigration in particular highly skilled people, Trump said America needs highly skilled professionals.

“So you abandoning the position on your website…?” he was asked. “I’m changing it, and I’m softening the position, because we have to have talented people in this country,” Trump said.

However, within an hour of his statement, which was interpreted differently by immigration experts, Trump clarified his position. “The H-1B program is neither high-skilled nor immigration: these are temporary foreign workers, imported from abroad, for the explicit purpose of substituting for American workers at lower pay,” Trump said.

“I remain totally committed to eliminating rampant, widespread H-1B abuse and ending outrageous practices such as those that occurred at Disney in Florida when Americans were forced to train their foreign replacements,” he said in his statement.

Florida Senator Marco Rubio immediately slammed Trump for his policy change. “Tonight, Donald Trump finally took an actual position,” Rubio said in a statement provided by his campaign. “But as soon as the debate was over, his handlers made him reverse himself. The Republican nominee cannot be somebody who is totally clueless on so many issues, including his signature issue,” he said.

Sonika Vaid Makes Her Way into ‘Top 6’ in ‘American Idol’

Indian American singer Sonika Vaid gave it her all for a shot at the last spot in the ‘Top 6’ of “American Idol,” when she took on Whitney Houston’s classic, “I Have Nothing,” on March 10. According to reports, the 20-year-old Vaid, however, failed to amass enough audience votes, which put her in the bottom 3 of the competition.

The episode saw the other two contestants from the ‘Top 8’ being eliminated from the competition, but Vaid, who received glowing reviews from the judges, also won their safety after her emotion-oozing performance.

The judges thought that Vaid did enough justice to the classic number, and decided that she belonged in the ‘Top 6.’ The judges, though impressed with her performance, however, felt that she still needed to loosen up.

The Massachusetts-based singer has been on top for much of this competition alongside being a judges’ favorite, who have often complimented her on her sterling vocals. In fact, during the auditions of the singing competition show, judge Harry Connick, Jr. had remarked that she had a “winning voice,” and that “this is one of the only times, this particular season, that I saw somebody that I can think can actually win this thing.”

The March 10 show kicked off with duet performances during which Vaid teamed up with Avalon Young to sing “Rise Up” by Andra Day. The duo brought out the best in each other. The ‘Top 5’ contestants will be revealed March 17 during a two-hour episode of “American Idol,” which airs Thursdays at 8 p.m. EST on Fox. The series finale will air in the first week of April.

Judge Sri Srinivasan Among 4 Vetted by Obama for US Supreme Court

WASHINGTON — President Obama is reportedly vetting Sri Srinivasan, 49, federal appellate judge who has enjoyed substantial support from Republicans in the past, as potential nominee for a Supreme Court vacancy that has set off a brutal election-year fight.

Jane L. Kelly and Merrick B. Garland, both federal appellate judges, and Ketanji Brown Jackson, a federal trial judge, are among others, reportedly being vetted by President Obama for the vacancy in the highest Court in the country. Reports state that they are undergoing background checks by the F.B.I. The White House has not given any indication in this regard.

“President Obama is vetting Merrick B. Garland and Sri Srinivasan, federal appellate judges who have enjoyed substantial support from Republicans in the past, as potential nominees for a Supreme Court vacancy that has set off a brutal election-year fight,” The New York Times reported March 5.

Taken together, the names help flesh out a list of potential nominees for an appointment that could reshape the court and the country. A replacement for Justice Antonin Scalia, a conservative icon who died on Feb. 13, could hold the deciding vote on matters of abortion rights, guns, the environment, campaign finance and a wide range of other issues.

Srinivasan is currently the U.S. circuit judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, which many call as a stepping stone to the Supreme Court. He is not only considered a favorite of Obama, who called him a trailblazer, but also his nomination was confirmed by a record 97-0 vote.

Srinivasan was sworn in as judge Sept. 26, 2013, making him the first Indian American to be on the bench of the U.S. Courts of Appeal for the District of Columbia Circuit. Retired Supreme Court justice Sandra Day O’Connor has called Srinivasan “fair, faultless and fabulous.” He received the Attorney General’s Award for Excellence in Furthering U.S. National Security in 2003, and the Office of the Secretary of Defense Award for Excellence in 2005.

Amidst protests from Republicans, President Obama has said he has an obligation under the Constitution, which says he “shall” nominate Supreme Court justices, to fill the vacancy. Public opinion polls indicate that large majorities of Americans believe that the Senate should hold confirmation hearings.

Sikh Captain Wins Case Against US Army

Simratpal Singh, a Sikh captain, has won an appeal against the US Army for its regulations for special testing to decide whether his hair, turban and beard interfere with the fit and functioning of his helmet and gas mask.

Federal Judge Beryl A. Howell for the District of Columbia ruled March three that the Army cannot impose extra testing on Singh. The ruling, however, dealt with the specialized testing and did not address the issue whether the Army should waive its grooming rules for Singh, according to a New York Times report.

Singh, 28, filed a suit Feb. 29, arguing that singling him out for such testing was religious discrimination. It said that special testing was not “even remotely comparable” to how soldiers in similar cases have been treated.

The Army granted Singh a temporary exemption in December of last year that was extended until March 31. But evidently, Singh did not want to wait until the exemption ended and violate the rules, and filed the suit against the army.

“Getting a court order against the Army is huge—it almost never happens,” Eric Baxter, senior counsel at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, which represents Singh, was quoted as saying by the Libertarian Republic. “It goes to show just how egregious the Army’s discrimination against Sikhs is. Thankfully the Court stepped in to protect Captain Singh’s constitutional rights. Now it’s time to let all Sikhs serve.”

The Becket Fund pointed out that Singh is a Bronze Star recipient and that more than 100,000 soldiers have received exemptions for their beards, often for medical reasons such as acne.

Singh, who grew up in Seattle, reluctantly complied with the Army grooming requirements for nine years, from the time he enrolled at West Point until last fall. He graduated from West Point in 2010 with honors, with a degree in electrical engineering. He graduated from Ranger School, served as a platoon leader in Afghanistan and was awarded a Bronze Star, among other decorations, according to The New York Times.

Judge Howell noted that thousands of other soldiers had been allowed to grow beards or long hair without similar testing. He said that in the past seven years, the military has made religious accommodations for two Muslims, a Jewish rabbi and three Sikhs who were backed by some of the same groups behind Captain Singh, including one called the Sikh Coalition.

“Requiring the plaintiff to undergo the specialized testing for further processing of his religious accommodation is a substantial burden when such testing is not required for soldiers to obtain exception from the Army uniform and grooming regulations on grounds other than adherence to the Sikh religious articles of faith,” Judge Howell wrote, according to The New York Times.

Harsimran Kaur, legal director of the Sikh Coalition, said in a statement that the coalition has been advocating for the simple, straightforward, equal right to serve for years and held onto the belief that the military would correct this injustice once they realized their mistake. “The military’s treatment of Captain Singh makes it clear that they deliberately want to squash diversity and religious freedom in their ranks and that’s not something that any court or American should ever tolerate.”

New York has America’s most bacteria-ridden subways

Grabbing a handrail on the New York subway transfers as much bacteria as shaking hands with 10,000 people. That’s according to a recent study that found the Big Apple has by far the most bacteria in its subway system compared with other US cities. Many of the bacteria founds have been known to cause respiratory problems and skin infections, although scientists stress most are harmless and could even be good for our immune system.

Travelmath, a logistics website, sent a team to gather bacteria samples from public transit systems in five major cities: New York, Washington, D.C., Chicago, Boston, and San Francisco.The study found that while ‘surprisingly few germs’ were on handrails on most cities, there was one major exception: New York. The Big Apple’s subway system has more than three times as many travelers as the city’s other four transit systems combined.

The team found to have an average of two million colony-forming units (CFU) per square inch. CNTraveler notes that this is 900 times dirtier than an airplane tray table.  On the other end of the spectrum was the subway in Boston, with a sample that turned up a scant average of about 10 CFU per square inch.

Bay Area Rapid Transit in San Francisco was the second grubbiest subway, with 483 CFU per square inch; the Chicago ‘L’ train was third with 180; and the Washington, D.C. Metro turned up only 30. The average for every city’s transit system was about 400,000 CFU per square inch, though excluding the bacteria-ridden New York subway dropped the average to 176 CFU. ‘We dug deeper to break down the bacteria we found by type: Bacillus, yeast, and various gram-positive and gram-negative strains,’

TravelMath writes on its blog. ‘The subway in New York contained an even split of gram-negative rods (which can cause respiratory and other infections) and yeast (types of which commonly live on skin and rarely cause infection).

‘The L train in Chicago was home to the most varied bacteria types, the brunt of which were yeast. ‘BART in San Francisco and the Metro in Washington, D.C. both predominantly hosted gram-positive cocci, which are a common cause of skin infections.’The Metro was the only location that yielded type II gram-positive cocci, and only BART and the L-train contained Bacillus, which can cause a range of infections, including respiratory illnesses.

‘Our samples from the Boston subway, home to the fewest bacteria, didn’t reveal any specific types,’ TravelMath writes.  The firm is quick to point out that not all of this bacteria is dangerous.  In fact, studies have shown that exposing people to different types of bacteria boosts their immune system.

The study follow similar research done last year by scientists from Weill Cornell Medical College. They spent 18 months swabbing turnstiles, ticket kiosks, railings and benches for DNA in New York.

They found 15,152 different types of microorganisms that share the train with its 5.5 million riders. At the time they linked these to bubonic plague, anthrax and meningitis – but the scientists have since retracted these claims.

Principal Investigator Dr Chris Mason and his team released findings from their ‘PathoMap’ study, a map of all the microorganisms and DNA present on surfaces in the New York City subway. The study, which used a super computer to study more than 10 billion biomedical fragments, was apparently inspired by Dr Mason seeing his daughter, then in preschool, sticking toys in her mouth in 2010.

Scientists and volunteers started the project in 2013 and found 637 known bacterial, viral, fungal and animal species when swabbing the spaces between commuters and street musicians and logging the data in real time with a mobile app. Most of the bacteria the group found were harmless, though nearly half (48 per cent) of the DNA found matched no known organisms, according to the published study at Cell.com. The mysterious finding ‘underscores the vast wealth of unknown species that are ubiquitous in urban areas,’ project leader Ebrahim Afshinnekoo said.

Researchers also saw 67 different bacteria species associated with diseases on the subway’s surfaces in about 12 per cent of their samples, though bacteria in general made up nearly 47 per cent. Some bacteria associated with ailments such as food poisoning are found at nearly half of the 466 open stations shared by germs, riders and rats.

Thankfully, more serious bacteria are less common. The New York City Department of Health disputed the finding of plague on the subway, according to the Wall Street Journal. The most diverse station was the G train’s Myrtle-Willoughby stop in Brooklyn, with 95 different bacteria groups. South Ferry station, which was submerged and temporarily closed after Superstorm Sandy in 2012, showed unique sets of bacteria normally found in marine environments.

Erasing Borders Exhibition of Contemporary Indian Art of the Diaspora Opens in New Jersey

Bedminster, NJ: Erasing Borders Exhibition of Contemporary Indian Art of the Diaspora is scheduled to open with a reception on Thursday March 17th, 5-7 pm at The Center for Contemporary Art, 2020 Burnt Mills Rd, Bedminister, NJ.

Erasing Borders is a richly provocative exhibition by artists of the Indian diaspora who confront issues of sexuality, terror, disease, the environment, racial and sectarian politics in painting, prints, installations, video, and sculpture. With great technical mastery and diversity of theme and style, these works combine traditional Indian aesthetics with Western elements, and speak to the powerful experience of personal and cultural dislocation in the global village. In its twelfth year, Erasing Borders is curated by Vijay Kumar and produced by the Indo-American Arts Council. Free and open to the public.

Participating Artists include: Anna Bradfield, Anujan Ezhikode, Arun Prem, Bivas Chaudhuri, Bolo, Delna Dastur, George Oomen, Indrani Nayar Gal, Mansoora HassanMD Tokon,Nipun Manda, Norbert Gonsalves, Padmini MongiaParul MehraQuinza Najm, Pooja Gupta, Radhika Mathews, Rahul MehraReeta Gidwani Karmarkar, Renuka KhannaRochana Dubey, Sejal KrishnanTara Sabharwal, and Uday K Dhar.

The Center for Contemporary Art in collaboration with the Indo-American Arts Council is hosting annual “Erasing Borders Exhibition of Contemporary Indian Art of the Diaspora.” The Indo-American Arts Council’s production “Erasing Borders,” curated by Vijay Kumar, is a stimulating exhibition that presents artists of the Indian diaspora who challenge issues of sexuality, terror, disease, the environment, racial and sectarian politics in painting, prints, installations, video, and sculpture. The diverse theme and style of the art juxtaposes traditional Indian aesthetics with Western elements. It also expresses the hardship of personal and cultural disturbance throughout the worldwide community.

Asia Society Celebrates 60 Years of Building Bridges Between the U.S. and Asia

NEW YORK, March 14, 2016 — Asia Society is celebrating its 60th anniversary in 2016 with special exhibitions and signature events across the Society’s global network that kick off this week in New York. The anniversary year celebrations opened on March 15 with a special dinner and gala reception in New York, celebrating the legacy of collecting and exhibiting Asian art that John D. Rockefeller 3rd (1906–1978) and Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller (1909–1992) set in motion for Asia Society. On March 21, at Asia Society Hong Kong Center, Sheeran and Judith Rodin, president of The Rockefeller Foundation, will lead a conversation with Asia Society Trustees about the Rockefeller legacy in terms of global philanthropy.

Asia Society was founded on June 28, 1956, by John D. Rockefeller 3rd in New York to build understanding between the peoples of Asia and the United States. The Society has since grown from a small New York institution to a global organization with 12 centers across Asia, the U.S. and Europe, and unparalleled networks in the field of Asian arts, policy and education.

“Six decades ago, John D. Rockefeller 3rd had the vision to create an institution that would build bridges between the U.S. and Asia, at a time when Asia was poorly understood,” said Asia Society President and CEO Josette Sheeran. “He saw the potential of Asia when few did — and today that vision has proved prescient. Today, Asia is rising in every way — in influence, in standards of living, and in the global imagination — and this year we will honor Rockefeller’s vision, and his great legacy.”

Asia Society Museum will honor the Rockefeller legacy in the arts with the New York exhibition “In and Out of Context,” which juxtaposes historical and contemporary works to trigger more informed and distinctive ways of thinking about the artworks, their creators, and how they are displayed. Works of traditional art from the Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller 3rd Collection of Asian Art, bequeathed to Asia Society in 1979 after Rockefeller’s death, are displayed next to contemporary works from the Asia Society Museum Collection. “In and Out of Context” runs through January 8, 2017.

Also on display at Asia Society New York is the installation “60 on 60: Asia Society Celebrates Six Decades in Photographs,” which presents some of the highlights of the organization’s history in snapshot form. From Rockefeller’s early stewardship of the institution to its global expansion, from its impactful policy and education work to its inspiring exhibitions and performances, these photographs capture the essence of what has transpired at Asia Society in New York and its other centers around the world.

Asia Society is also marking the anniversary with a short documentary film about the organization’s history, narrated by NBC News anchor and Asia Society Trustee Emeritus Tom Brokaw. A collection of articles from Asia Society leaders, past presidents, and global thinkers reflecting on Asia’s role in the world today and its future will be published as a magazine — in print and online. Commemorative exhibitions and events are also being planned across Asia Society’s global network.

“60 is an important number in many Asian cultures,” Sheeran said. “It signifies that one has completed a full cycle of life. So for this institution more than most, this is an occasion to celebrate.”

Asia Society is the leading educational organization dedicated to promoting mutual understanding and strengthening partnerships among peoples, leaders and institutions of Asia and the United States in a global context. Across the fields of arts, business, culture, education, and policy, the Society provides insight, generates ideas, and promotes collaboration to address present challenges and create a shared future. A nonprofit, nonpartisan organization, Asia Society is headquartered in New York with state-of-the-art cultural centers in Hong Kong and Houston, and offices in Los Angeles, Manila, Mumbai, San Francisco, Seoul, Shanghai, Sydney, and Zurich.

New York City’s Dance Ambassador to the World Unveils 40th Anniversary Season

(New York, NY – March 4, 2016) Founded in New York’s financial district in 1976, Battery Dance is an anchor in the cultural life of Manhattan and a global ambassador for dance, with signature performances in 65 countries across six continents. The Company celebrates its 40th anniversary season in 2016 with a world premiere and a diverse array of performances at home and abroad.

Two events will showcase the Company’s artistry and its commitment to its lower Manhattan home base, where Battery Dance was born some 40 years ago: New York Season performances at The Schimmel Center for the Arts (3 Spruce Street) on May 10th at 2 p.m., May 11th at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. and May 12th at 7 p.m., followed by a gala reception at the House of Morgan on Wall Street.

35th annual Battery Dance Festival in Battery Park City from August 14th to the 19th, with a grand finale at Schimmel Center on the 20th (performances at 6:30 pm – schedule to be released soon).

The centerpiece of the New York season will be the world premiere of The Durga Project, which weaves together the movement vocabularies, sonorities and aesthetics of the U.S. and India into a choreographic fantasy of 30 minutes in length. Watch a sneak peek of the performance HERE!

“Selecting an Indian theme for the Company’s 40th Anniversary was a natural and fitting choice,” saidJonathan Hollander, founder and artistic director of Battery Dance. “Battery Dance is the best-known American dance company in India, having engaged in 7 national tours (17 cities reached thus far) since 1992 and having hosted dozens of Indian dancers and musicians in New York and across the U.S.,” Hollander explained. “The concept of Durga, or Shakti, the power and energy and magnificence of womanhood, underlies and informs the piece. And it follows other works that have been inspired by Indian music and with Indian guest artists such as Songs of Tagore and Layapriya.”

Guest Artist Unnath H.R., one of the leading classical dancers of his generation in India, engages in a symbiotic process with Battery’s Western-trained team of five brilliant and diverse dancers, yielding swaths of distinctive, yet undefinable, choreography that are like none other in the Company’s repertoire. A commissioned score by award-winning composer Frank Carlberg adheres to the musical notes that define the Hindustani Classical Raga Durga, a late evening raga that pays tribute to the Goddess Durga, but spins his own melodic and rhythmic invention.  Costume designer Solé Salvo applies her vision and skill to adorn the dancers in garments suggestive of a primitive time and place, in hues inspired by the spices of India Calvin Anderson employs a variegated palette in his lighting design with sculptural chiaroscuro suggestive of the bas relief on Indian temples.

The international program will be complemented by works commissioned by European and African choreographers—“Inter/Ago,” created in 2015 by Tadej Brdnik, the recently retired Martha Graham principal dancer and choreographer, who has danced with Battery Dance since 1998; and“Observatory,” created in 2014 by Theo Ndindwa, founder of South Africa’s iKapa Dance Theatre, and since performed in tours of South America, Europe, Asia and at the first Cape Town International Dance Festival in December, 2015.

Tickets will be available beginning April 1 at the Schimmel Center Box Office. General Admission is $25. Gala tickets for the May 12th performance are available through the company. For more information, please visit www.batterydance.org.

Tulsi Gabbard Quits DNC, Endorses Bernie Sanders

Washington, DC: Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, vice chair of the Democratic National Committee, resigned on Sunday in order to endorse presidential candidate Bernie Sanders.

Gabbard — who was the first Hindu and first American Samoan to be elected to Congress, as well as the youngest person ever elected to the Hawaii legislature, at age 21 — commended the leftist Vermont senator for his foreign policy, and his opposition to the hawkish policies of fellow presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.

“After much thought and consideration, I’ve decided I cannot remain neutral and sit on the sidelines any longer,” she wrote in an email to fellow DNC officers obtained by Politico.

“There is a clear contrast between our two candidates with regard to my strong belief that we must end the interventionist, regime change policies that have cost us so much,” Gabbard said.

“This is not just another ‘issue.’ This is THE issue, and it’s deeply personal to me,” Gabbard continued. “This is why I’ve decided to resign as Vice Chair of the DNC so that I can support Bernie Sanders in his efforts to earn the Democratic nomination in the 2016 presidential race.”

Gabbard, who is a member of the House Armed Services Committee, has condemned U.S. policy in Syria. In late 2015, she introduced a bipartisan bill that called for “an immediate end to the illegal, counter-productive war to overthrow” Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad.

Zoroastrians Build New Religious, Cultural Center In N.Y.

Zoroastrians are opening a new religious and cultural center in Pomona, N.Y. this March, and are encouraged by a steady rise in their numbers. The new Dar-e-Mehr building is inspired by ancient Persian and Zoroastrian architecture of the fire temples of India.

The small community of 500 families of both South Asian and Iranian extraction, raised $5 million over a period of four years from local, national and international sources, to build a home for future generations, a press release from a group of organizations said. The current Zarathushti population in the Greater New York area is estimated at about one thousand and growing as the community becomes more culturally flexible and intermarriage is accepted.

On March 26th, Zarathushtis, from the Tristate area will inaugurate the new Arbab Rustam Guiv Dar-e-Mehr building, a religious and cultural community center, in Pomona, NY. The Zoroastrian Association of Greater New York (ZAGNY), the Iranian Zoroastrian Association (IZA), and the Dar-e-Mehr Zoroastrian Temple (DMZT) will host the event. The inauguration is scheduled to coincide with the week of Navroze, the start of the Persian new year, and March 26th coincides with the birthday of the Prophet Zarathustra.

“This will be the community’s third home in the last 40 years, but the first that will reflect traditional Zoroastrian architecture and character,” Mrinalini ‘Mindy’ Nair, spokesperson for the Dar-e-Mehr Zoroastrian Temple, who is married to a Zarathushti, Sheherzade Mehta, said. She also said that contrary to reports about a decline in population, there’s been an increase in membership of the Zoroastrian organizations. “There are multiple reasons for this growth, including more of them coming from India and other parts of the world to the U.S., more kids, and more marriages to non-Parsis,” Nair said.

The first Dar-e-Mehr in the country opened in 1977 in New Rochelle, N.Y. It soon proved too small to meet the community’s needs. It was relocated to an old Jewish synagogue in Pomona, N.Y. after the land and building were purchased. The desire to build a traditional Dar-e-Mehr and infrastructural problems with the old Jewish synagogue, drove leaders like Edul Daver, to rally others and fundraise successfully to achieve that goal. Sixteen individuals pledged $500,000 each initially. “In March 2014, they had enough money to pull the trigger and start with the groundbreaking,” Nair said and the construction began.

Considered one of the oldest religions, Zoroastrianism once widely followed in ancient Persia, found a home in India when followers had to flee religious persecution. The Tristate community prides itself o being able to maintain their cohesiveness, and follow the basic tenets of their religion attributed to Prophet Zarathushtra 3,000 years ago. Zoroastrians have made an outsize contribution to India’s growth in contrast to their numbers, as leaders in business, film, science, education, national security and other fields.

New York City To Enhance Outreach With Ethnic Media

Mayor Bill de Blasio and Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito has announced an expansion of New York City’s outreach and engagement with community and ethnic media outlets across the five boroughs. The announcement includes the launch of an online directory of ethnic and community media for City employees to use in outreach and informational and paid campaign efforts, and a system to ensure accountability with the aim of having equitable communications across diverse ethnic, racial and geographic communities. The Mayor and Speaker will convene community-based journalists in the coming weeks to discuss these efforts.

Many New Yorkers turn to neighborhood, youth and ethnic media to get their news, frequently in languages other than English, and the de Blasio Administration is committed to providing equal access to information. Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito has advocated for proactive and consistent engagement of community media, and has dedicated resources and expertise in working with the Administration to ensure inclusion of diverse outlets.

“In the city of immigrants, no person should be denied access to vital services or information due to their language. Half of all New Yorkers speak a language other than English at home. Almost one-sixth of all NYC households – 1.8 million people – are proficient in languages that are not English. Today we are ensuring that the City speaks the language of our people,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio.

“Government has a responsibility to engage diverse media equitably so that we can communicate with a wide range of constituents,” said Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito. “I am pleased that we are raising the bar for the way agencies plan and execute their outreach, public service announcements and paid campaigns. By doing so, we move towards being a more inclusive city at all levels.”

“The de Blasio Administration is committed to speaking the language of multilingual New Yorkers, and as part of this outreach we must also reach them in the media outlets that are an integral part of their day-to-day lives,” said Nisha Agarwal, Commissioner of the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs. “The Administration has also deepened its commitment to language access to ensure that information is made available to all New Yorkers by hiring an Executive Director at MOIA who works to implement citywide tools, training, and reporting mechanisms. 311 now also accepts complaints from New Yorkers who have experienced language barriers at City Agencies.”

“The Ethnic and Community Media Directory will strengthen the effectiveness of communications efforts throughout the city,” said Mindy Tarlow, Director of the Mayor’s Office of Operations. “Now communications teams have a guide that will further ensure their message is heard across the five boroughs.”

“The responsibility of ensuring that our communities have access to relevant news is shared by press and by government. This Council is interested in engaging community press sources in a real way and this commitment is memorialized in part by today’s announcement. Without a doubt, we need to remain engaged about how we strengthen our relationships with community press and by extension, with the communities that they serve. I am proud to be witness to this important first step,” said Council Member Carlos Menchaca, Chair of the Committee on Immigration.

“The ethnic and community press plays a crucial role in our city’s diverse neighborhoods –  especially to public school families who collectively speak more than 200 languages,” said Maite Junco, NYC Department of Education Senior Advisor for External Communications. “These media outlets spread out across our city are vital vehicles to reach our families and I thank the Administration for providing communication professionals in city government with an online tool to help us reach every New Yorker regardless of their zip code or language they speak.”

Historically, City Agencies’ media outreach has focused primarily on English-language outlets, in spite of the fact that New York City is the ethnic media capital of the country – with hundreds of community and ethnic media outlets speaking dozens of languages.

This trend has shifted under the de Blasio Administration, with the development of campaigns to inform all New Yorkers about IDNYC, Paid Sick Leave, and Pre-K For All, among other initiatives. Ethnic and community media were central to the outreach strategy, and the engagement and enrollment results clearly demonstrated the effectiveness of multilingual media outreach.

World’s Costliest Train Station Opens in NYC Near 9/11 Site

New York, NY: The world’s most expensive train station opened Thursday in New York, nearly $2 billion over budget and years behind schedule, but the European architect who designed it called it a gift of love to the city.

The World Trade Center Transportation Hub, which is expected eventually to serve more than 200,000 commuters daily, is built next to the site of the Twin Towers, which were destroyed in the terror attacks of September 11, 2001.

Twelve years in the making, there was no official ceremony to mark the opening to rail commuters of the World Trade Center Transportation Hub next to the site of the Twin Towers, which were destroyed in the Al-Qaeda hijackings.

The building, designed by Spanish-Swiss architect Santiago Calatrava and called Oculus, is a giant oval made up of steel ribs and glass laid out in elliptical shape, reaching for the sky like wings of a bird. Calatrava said he hoped America’s financial and entertainment capital would enjoy a building that he hoped would become a “big civic monument like Grand Central” — one of New York’s most beloved landmarks.

“This is a great moment. This is a gift for all New Yorkers,” Calatrava said of the opening to rail commuters. “I hope the New Yorkers embrace it like we do and that they see the message of love to them,” he added.

The building has an elliptical shape, reaching for the sky like the wings of a bird. The space measures 350 feet (107 meters) long by 115 feet (35 meters) at its widest point, according to Calatrava’s website.

The building has become a major source of controversy — for its daring aesthetic, for spiraling drastically off budget and for closing seven years behind schedule. The center connects the PATH commuter rail to New Jersey with New York subway lines, provides indoor pedestrian access to the Trade Center towers and will also house an enormous shopping and restaurant plaza.

It was only a partial opening and the shops are slated to open in August. In the 12 years since the project was unveiled, it has been heavily criticized not just for its appearance but also for spiraling so drastically off budget and closing seven years behind schedule.

Initially budgeted at $2 billion, it has spiraled to $3.85 billion according to a spokesperson in Calatrava’s office, which would make it the most expensive station in the world. In contrast, the temporary station which was built straight after the September 11, 2001 attacks cost just $323 million.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey admitted in a report published in 2008 that the original cost estimate was “too low to begin with” but stressed the advantages it would afford the city. It said that when completed, the transit hub will serve 250,000 people and more than 200,000 commuters each day, making it the third-largest transportation center in the city.

Email Pioneer Shiva Ayyadurai Seeks Recognition

Washington, DC: March 7, 2015: The death of Raymond Tomlinson over the weekend, has been described as huge loss across the world as he has been credited as the “inventor” of email. While Tomlinson is widely recognized for selecting the @ symbol to connect a username with the destination address email, making it a central part of the communications process. the truth as been believed by many is that the real inventor of the most popular medium of modern day communications, is Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Shiva Ayyadurai.

Ayyadurai, who emigrated to the US with his family when he was only seven, and has been fighting an epic battle to be recognized as the primary inventor of email as we know it when he was only 14. “I’m the low-caste, dark-skinned, Indian, who DID invent #email not Raytheon, who profits from war, death and lies,” he raged in one tweet a few hours after Tomlinson’s death, referring to the deceased man’s employer, best-known as an armaments company.

Shiva Ayyadurai has the first US copyright for Email, or “Computer Program for Electronic Mail System,” in 1982. Numerous awards and honors recognize his work, from a “Westinghouse Science Talent Search Honors Award for creating EMAIL” in 1981 to the Smithsonian National Museum of American History accepted his code, papers and artifacts demonstrating HIS WORK on EMAIL. And while he may not have written the first email program or code, he is recognized in some quarters as the first to devise the form closest to today’s email – on commission from the Brookhaven National Laboratory.

But missing from the scroll is the official recognition, from the government and the tech community at large, which says he only capitalized on the infrastructure provided by the military and other pioneers, including Tomlinson, to make some contributions in the advancement of electronic mail as we know it today.

In interviews, Ayyadurai has argued that as a 14-year old in New Jersey in 1978, he not only had no access to the early technologies that were strictly in the military domain, he didn’t need their parts, their protocol, or the Internet. His work centered on using local area networks and Ethernet cords.

What Tomlinson did, Ayyadurai clarifies, is send text messages between computers. “It is also an obvious and inescapable fact that sending a text message is not email – since email, as we all know, is a system that includes features such as Inbox, Outbox, Drafts, Folders, Attachments, Carbon Copies. Groups, Forwarding, Reply, Delete, Archive, Sort, Bulk Distribution, and more,” he writes on his website.

Ayyaduari, on the other hand, invented a software system that duplicates the features of the Interoffice Mail System. “I named my software “EMAIL,” (a term never used before in the English language), and I even received the first US. Copyright for that software, officially recognizing me as The Inventor of Email, at a time when Copyright was the only way to recognize software inventions, since the US Supreme was not recognizing software patents,” he writes. He has influential supporters, including the philosopher-activist Noam Chomsky, who has known Ayyadurai since he was a sophomore at MIT, and who noted in a testimonial that “the steps taken to belittle the achievement” of a 14-year old immigrant … “suggest an effort to dismiss the fact that innovation can take place by anyone, in any place, at any time.”

“Given the term email was not used prior to 1978, and there was no intention to emulate ‘…a full-scale, inter-organizational mail system,’ (which is what Ayyadurai did) as late as December 1977, there is no controversy here, except the one created by industry insiders, who have a vested interest to protect a false branding that BBN (a military contractor like Raytheon) is the “inventor of email”, which the facts obliterate,” Chomsky noted in his support for Ayyadurai.

However, others, including some media outlets, who credited Ayyadurai for the invention of the email, have been forced to retract or clarify their stories – by the powerful US military-industrial complex, according to Ayyadurai. The US defense establishment, he argues, wants the public to believe that their tax dollars are well spent to invent things like Velcro and GPS (both of which it did). But often, innovations came from humble, hum-drum low cost environments which do not suck up billions of dollars – which is the point he is trying to prove.

Indian Americans Coming Of Age In US Presidential/Congressional Elections

Washington, DC: March 7, 201: The coming of age of the Indian American community is evident all over with the tiny less than 1% of the US population leading in several areas of American life. With the record number of Indian Americans holding high jobs in the Obama administration, many more are even trying to take an active role in the politics of the country by trying to get elected to public offices across the nation. They are the most affluent and best educated of any immigrant group in the country, according to Pew. They include doctors, engineers, tech entrepreneurs and educators, and form a rich donor base. However, Indian-Americans are more spread out than other ethnic groups, and Indian-American candidates in expensive races often have to go out of state to raise funds.

With only one sitting US Congressman of Indian origin in the US Congress, many more are now vying to enter the US Congress. Kamala Harris in California is expected to win the US Senate race in November. With veteran House of Delegates member Kumar Barve running for Congress in Maryland, and Rep. Ami Bera currently ensconced representing a congressional district in Northern California, if the stars align themselves fortuitously, the Indian American community could have many more members elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 2016.

The Indian American presence on the political stage was delayed until the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which opened up the quotas preventing Indians from migrating to the United States and sharply increased the presence of Indians in America. Dalip Singh Saund was the first Indian American member of the House of Representatives, a Sikh who converted his PhD in math to a successful farming career in California, garnering support for a brief Congressional career. But the Indian American presence in Congress since then has been limited, the only blip being former Congressman—and the former governor of Louisiana—Bobby Jindal and the rising star in the Republican Party, Nikki Haley, the governor of North Carolina.

They lean strongly toward Democrats, yet two Republican governors, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana and Nikki Haley of South Carolina, are of Indian descent. Harris will have to seek contributions to run in a state with some of the costliest media markets in the country. Asian-Americans could form a crucial part of her campaign.

Indian Americans are also aligning with presidential candidates of their choices across the nation. “By mid-March, we will have a clear Democratic nominee,” Indian American political activist Saif Khan, a volunteer for Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton’s campaign, told the media. “After ‘Super Tuesday,’ we will see a significant lead in delegates and the delegate allocation will show who the clear front runner is,” he said. Khan, an Iraq war veteran, is joining “Operation Rolling Victory,” a campaign initiative in which former war veterans come out to support Clinton at various rallies throughout the country. “When it comes to political contributions, that aspect of her identity will become important,” said Karthick Ramakrishnan, associate dean of the School of Public Policy at the University of California, Riverside.

People from New York and New Jersey have got busy this election year to give some time from work to party candidates. While it was difficult to get an exact count of how many Indian-American volunteers are working from the Tri-state area for the Democratic campaign, some young political activists, put the figure of leading volunteers in leadership roles close to 100. There are many others giving some of their time and energy to campaigns.

Sampat Shivangi, founder of the Indian American Forum for Political Education, has expressed disappointment over former Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush’s decision to drop out of the race, following the Republican primary Feb. 20 in South Carolina. Bush had fared dismally throughout the battle, trailing far behind Republican contenders Donald Trump, Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz.

Dr. Zachariah P. Zachariah, a long-time supporter of the Bush family, also expressed dispaoointment: “I am very disappointed that Governor Bush has decided to get out of the race. I have great admiration for him. He is a fantastic human being.” Zachariah, also a long-time Republican Party leader, said he was “perplexed” as to how to move forward. “This is a new game. I have no idea what happens next.” “The extreme right wing of the Republican Party has hijacked the party. Trump is preying upon the angriest of people and dividing the electorate,” said Zachariah.

Calling Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump as the “best hope for America”, some Indian-Americans in the New York Tristate area have formed a Political Action Committee (PAC) to support and raise funds for him. Headed by Dr. AD Amar, a business professor with Seton Hall University in New Jersey, the ‘Indian-Americans for Trump 2016’ was registered as a PAC with the Federal Election Commission last month. Its sole goal is “to garner actively the support of all Americans, but particularly Indian-Americans, to have Donald J. Trump become the next President of the USA,” the PAC said in a press release.

Ash Kalra, a member of the San Jose City Council, is vying to become the first Indian-American elected to the California legislature. “The longer the Indian-American community has been in this country, the more it has matured,” Kalra said. “And part of that maturity is becoming more politically active.”

Last year, technology lawyer Ro Khanna, a Democrat, sought a seat in Congress, while former U.S. Treasury Department official Neel Kashkari, a Republican, ran for governor. Though both challenged popular incumbents and lost, their efforts are emblematic of the rise in Indian-American political engagement.

The election results could have major consequences for India and the Indian Americans. The average Indian American may be more interested in a US president who keeps the “golden door” open for immigrants, students and temporary hi-tech workers. They would also be reassured if the White House has a person who upholds traditional liberal democratic views on religious minorities and multiculturalism as a whole.

The populists in both parties, whether Trump or Sanders, have been the most vocal against migrants. Trump has targeted Muslims and Mexicans, Sanders H-1B visa workers. But their rhetoric would worry migratory birds the most. India, however, gets only a passing mention by even the most extreme candidates. Ultimately, says Twining, “the fact that India, unlike China, will not be an election issue should be reassuring to New Delhi.”

Says Sanjay Puri, head of the US-India Political Action Committee, “Indian-Americans tend to be more Democrats than Republicans and it has not changed much this election cycle, especially with Clinton running as she has long-standing relationships with the Indian-American community.” But, he notes, no candidate is allergic to Indians. “Each candidate has a support base in the Indian-American community.”

Raja Krishnamoorthi’s Run For US Congress Gains Momentum

Washington, DC: March 7, 2015: Of the many choices in endorsing candidates for the March 15 primary, the Chicago Tribune editorial board wrote that the decision for Congress in the 8th District of Illinois “isn’t close at all” and that the “Tribune endorses [Raja] Krishnamoorthi” for the seat to represent the voters of the northwest Chicago suburbs.

“Krishnamoorthi’s amalgam of business and government experience makes him the best candidate, hands down,” the Chicago Tribune editorial board stated. “A Harvard Law School grad who lives in Schaumburg, he’s been a deputy state treasurer and an assistant attorney general. He’s president of two high-tech firms focused on military security and renewable energy. Those overlapping experiences give him a valuable perspective on how government policy affects businesses and workers.”

The Chicago Tribune endorsement makes it a clean sweep of Chicago-area newspaper endorsements for the progressive Democrat Krishnamoorthi following the earlier endorsements from the Chicago Sun-Times and the Daily Herald, the largest suburban newspaper in the Chicago area.

Raja Krishnamoorthi’s Run For US Congress Gains Momentum
Raja Krishnamoorth

“We were impressed with Krishnamoorthi’s command of specifics about the tax code and the Affordable Care Act — and even more impressed when he emailed us after our meeting to correct himself on a minor point,” the Chicago Tribune editorial board wrote. “We like that he’s already scoped out opportunities to join in bipartisan initiatives on criminal justice reform and alternative energy. We agree with his maxim that government must do everything ‘faster, cheaper, smarter.’”

Raja Krishnamoorthi, the former deputy state treasurer of Illinois, an Indian American Democrat, who had lost to Rep. Tammy Duckworth in the Democratic primary for Congress in 2012, has announced his bid to join the fray to take the seat one more time. The 41-year-old Indian American has been campaigning to succeed Duckworth in Congress as the representative for the 8th District in the northwest suburbs of Chicago. Duckworth has declared her candidacy to the US Senate from the state of Lincoln.

The United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 881, has endorsed Raja Krishnamoorthi. In their endorsement, Ronald Powell, President, Local 881 and UFCW International Vice President said, “Local 881 United Food and Commercial Workers are proud to give Raja Krishnamoorthi our endorsement. Raja is the only candidate in the 8th District race with a working families agenda that offers a significant increase in the minimum wage, equal pay for equal work and guaranteed paid sick leave and maternity leave for workers.”

In the race to replace Tammy Duckworth in Congress, Raja Krishnamoorthi has opened up a double-digit lead. A live poll of 400 likely Democratic voters taken February 9-11 by GBA Strategies asked 8th District voters in the northwest Chicago suburbs which candidate they would vote for if the election were held today.

Krishnamoorthi had the support of 41 percent of voters with State Sen. Mike Noland at 27 percent and Villa Park President Deb Bullwinkel with 5 percent. Undecided voters accounted for 26 percent of the poll. The margin of error was +/- 4.9 percentage points.

Raja said, “I’m encouraged that voters are responding to our message of protecting Social Security and Medicare, fighting for sane gun laws and standing up for policies to help struggling working families.” A capable fundraiser who raised about $1.3 million for his 2012 run, he said in a press release that he wants to continue Duckworth’s advocacy for working families, with a focus on helping more people to succeed in the new economy. I will work hard to provide education and job opportunities so more families can achieve the economic security they need.

According to Krishnamoorthi, “The one issue that continues to resonate with voters is the economic insecurity of the middle class.” There is growing importance, he added, to gain access to jobs that pay a living wage and access to the right kind of jobs in the 21st Century. He said he knows he needs to raise at least as much money as he did in 2012 to win in the March 2016 Democratic primary in what could be a crowded field.

A resident of Schaumburg, Ill., where he lives with his wife, Priya, a doctor at a local hospital, and their sons Vijay, 9, and Vikram, 5, who attend public schools in school District 54, Krishnamoorthi is president of Sivananthan Labs and Episolar, small businesses selling products in the national security and renewable energy sectors.

In 2006, he was appointed by Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan as a Special Assistant Attorney General in her public integrity unit and he served as a member of the Illinois Housing Development Authority. When he ran in 2016 against Duckworth, who had the support of many in the Democratic leadership, Krishnamoorthi lost by a 66.6% to 33.4% margin.

Co-founder of InSPIRE, a nonprofit providing training to Illinois students and veterans in solar technology, he is a former vice chair of the Illinois Innovation Council, a group supporting economic growth and job creation in Illinois.

Krishnamoorthi pointed out that when he served as deputy treasurer of Illinois, where he helped revamp the state’s unclaimed property system by using technology to increase the amount of property returned to taxpayers while cutting the program’s costs. Raised in Peoria, Ill., he has a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Princeton University and a law degree from Harvard Law School. Krishnamoorthi clerked for a federal judge in Chicago, became a partner in an Illinois law firm and was an issues director for Barack Obamaâ’s successful United States Senate campaign in 2004.

“We need people in Congress who understand the opportunities provided by the new economy and how to make sure more Americans are prepared to seize them,” the Indian American candidate said in a press release. “That requires practical, pragmatic ideas and far less partisanship and politics. I want to help provide this leadership and ensure that the same opportunities that my family had to escape tough economic times exist for other working families today and into the future,” he said.

“I am excited to have the support of the hardworking men and women of the United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 881,” Raja said. “UFCW, Local 881 represents more than 34,000 members employed in retail food, drug stores and grocery stores. Winning another labor union endorsement shows that my campaign’s message of helping more Americans find good jobs and help grow and strengthen the middle class is resonating with voters throughout the northwest Chicago suburbs.”

Ro Khanna Energized Despite Democratic Endorsement Going To Rep. Mike Honda

California’s 17th Congressional district seat remains hotly-contested between Honda and Khanna. The two squared off in the 2014 election cycle in which Honda prevailed by less than 5,000 over the Indian American Stanford professor.

The endorsement for Honda at the state’s Democratic Convention, held Feb. 26 through Feb. 28 in San Jose, Calif., comes just a month after the delegates were unable to endorse a candidate at the Jan. 28 pre-endorsement conference.

The campaign of Honda’s Democratic challenger, Indian American Ro Khanna, however, was encouraged by the developments simply because Honda had to go to the convention to get the endorsement. “The entire (endorsement process) is rigged to protect the incumbent,” Khanna campaign spokesman Hari Sevugan told the media. The endorsement process has three rounds for the party to give its endorsement, with incumbents not getting endorsed if more than 20 percent, 30 percent or 50 percent oppose each round, respectively.

Honda did not receive 80 percent support in the first round, setting up the pre-endorsement conference in which he failed to secure the 70 percent needed. The fallout from that led to the February convention in which he needed 50 percent of the delegates’ support. “It’s embarrassing for Honda that it even got to this point,” Sevugan said, adding that the majority of the delegates voting are appointed by Honda or his allies.

Despite receiving the endorsement, Honda continues to lose support of many dignitaries, who are siding with Khanna in his campaign efforts. Among those shifting gears in 2016 are California Secretary of State Alex Padilla and the Laborers International Union of North American Pacific Southwest Region.

San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo, Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen and Santa Clara County Assessor Larry Stone have endorsed Democratic challenger Ro Khanna to represent the 17th Congressional District — a triple blow to Rep. Mike Honda.

None of the three prominent local Democrats endorsed either candidate last year during their first showdown that ended with Honda, D-San Jose, beating Khanna by 3.6 percentage points. And none, at least in their initial statements, hinted that the House Ethics Committee’s ongoing probe of blurred lines between Honda’s office and campaign influenced their endorsements.

The state’s 17th Congressional district includes much of California’s Silicon Valley cities such as Sunnyvale, Cupertino and Santa Clara, as well as north San Jose, Milpitas, Fremont and Newark. Many Indian American Silicon Valley luminaries have thrown their support behind Khanna. The primary election is scheduled for June 7 with the general election on Nov. 8.

Memoir by Late Stanford Neurosurgeon Paul Kalanathi Released Posthumously

In May of 2013, the Stanford University neurosurgical resident Paul Kalanithi was diagnosed with Stage IV metastatic lung cancer. He was thirty-six years old. In his two remaining years—he died in March of 2015—he continued his medical training, became the father to a baby girl, and wrote beautifully about his experience facing mortality as a doctor and a patient. In this excerpt from his posthumously published memoir, “When Breath Becomes Air,” which is out on January 12th, from Random House, Kalanithi writes about his last day practicing medicine.

Dr. Paul Kalanithi was preparing to wrap up his medical residency in neurosurgery when, in 2013, a CT scan revealed tumors throughout his body. He had stage 4 lung cancer. In his last two years of life, he continued caring for patients. He and his wife became parents. And Kalanithi, a gifted writer, wrote a book, When Breath Becomes Air, a reflection on being a doctor with a terminal illness.

He died March 9, 2015. He was 37 years old.

His widow, Dr. Lucy Kalanithi, is on a book tour for When Breath Becomes Air, which has resonated with a wide audience.

“It’s really kind of a bittersweet process, as you can imagine, quite bitter and quite sweet,” she tells NPR’s David Greene. “Paul died nearly 11 months ago, but being able to talk about how I feel and remember Paul is actually very healing for me. So it’s actually kind of wonderful at the same time.”

In her interview on Morning Edition, she reads excerpts from When Breath Becomes Air and talks about her late husband’s life.

On the cancer spreading to his brain and having a neurological impact

Would you trade your ability to speak for another five months of life, or what type of neurologic devastation would make it more reasonable to stop living than to be alive? And these are not theoretical questions in the neurosurgical context. …

Yeah, that was very hard. This whole second half of the book is Paul thinking about how to grapple, in a very real way, with his own mortality. And then when he was diagnosed with a form of metastatic brain cancer called leptomeningeal disease — it’s essentially like tumors are coating your brain and your spinal cord, and it also holds the prospect of seizures or trouble speaking, trouble thinking. So, it was so intense to get this diagnosis on top of everything else that meant that his ability to participate in all of the things that were bringing him meaning — particularly writing this book and being together with our daughter and our family — was really devastating.

On their daughter, Elizabeth Acadia Kalanithi

He was just thrilled to be a dad, and just the fact of having this infant just breathed this unbelievable life into our house. He was the one who initially had the strong instinct to have a child despite his illness. … I said to Paul, “Don’t you think that saying goodbye to a child would make your death more painful?” And he said, “Wouldn’t it be great if it did?” And what he meant by that was the joy and meaning of having a new family member is so great that wouldn’t it be great if that made it even more painful?

On whether Paul’s illness and death gave him the opportunity to help others through similar journeys

Yeah, it’s sort of bringing tears to my eyes … because he makes this joke in the book where he says something like, “Wouldn’t a terminal illness be the perfect gift to this young man who hoped to grasp mortality in a kind of intellectual sense?” Those questions became not at all theoretical. Paul really had to draw on all these things that he had been developing his whole life — he really returned to literature to cope, he fell back on his training as a physician. … What a funny confluence of factors that would prepare a young person to face this in a particular way despite looking at the fiery light of illness in real time.

He died in March 2015 and 10 months later his book was published in the US, where it went straight to No 1 in the New York Times bestseller list. It is now out in the UK. Lucy Kalanithi, a doctor and academic, is his widow. LOK

When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi review – how to live, by a doctor who died aged 37

This fast-selling memoir by an idealist neurosurgeon facing an early death from cancer gains power and poignancy from its detailed descriptions and reflections on mortality

Has the book’s success surprised you?
It’s exceeded our wildest expectations. A month or so before it was published it was getting some critical acclaim but the big question was whether people would actually want to read a book about dying written by a man who had recently died. We weren’t sure. But it turns out they do. I think it is because the book is about living as well as dying. And although it is about what happened to Paul it is also about a universal experience – and it is so beautifully expressed. That’s what people are responding to and holding on to.

How does it feel for you to see him so celebrated after – and because of – his death?
Bittersweet is a vast understatement. But it is fantastic to watch him developing a legacy through the positive reaction. It is very meaningful to me. It’s just under a year since he died and it feels like no time at all: I still want to be thinking about Paul and talking about Paul, and having the opportunity to remember him in a communal way rather than in a lonely way is very helpful.

How would he have felt about the impact of the book?
I think he would have been totally thrilled. His eyes would have been sparkling. He would have been so excited to be part of the conversation around the book because he was so interested in death and mortality.

How did you feel about him writing about your marital problems in the book?
The bottom line is that I felt fine about it. I was surprised at first that he did it because Paul was a relatively private person and I thought of asking him to take it out but then I thought, no, it’s part of the story and it’s important to be authentic. People respond to authenticity and I felt like, OK, go ahead and share it. Now I feel glad it’s in there. It feels real.

There’s a heartbreaking irony in the way his cancer drew you back together and saved your marriage…
I agree. But I think now that it was good timing because our problems came to a head and got out on the table right before he was diagnosed. I often wonder what would have happened if we hadn’t confronted our troubles when we did. As it was, we regained hope in our relationship and started to draw back together literally a week before he found out he had cancer. I think this meant we were in a stronger position to deal with it.

How easy was it to decide to have a baby when you knew he might not live long enough to be a father?
Not at all easy. It was really very considered, as you can imagine. We certainly had our eyes wide open in that we knew it was likely that he wouldn’t live to see her grow up and I would go on to be a solo parent after he died. We first talked about it as soon as he was diagnosed but for a few weeks we were really unsure. We both had the instinct to do it but were both worried about the implications for the other one. I feared it might make his death so much more painful if he had to say goodbye to a child. But he said: “Well, wouldn’t it be great if it did?” His view was that life wasn’t about avoiding suffering, it’s about making meaning. It was obviously a big risk to have a child, to invite more uncertainty and possible pain in to our lives, but it was the best decision I ever made.

I knew that if Paul himself could have described the way he died then he would have done

Did you understand Paul’s decision to push himself back into work to finish his residency after his first bout of lung cancer?
I did understand – because of knowing him the way I did. Not everybody would go back to work in his situation, many people wouldn’t. Everyone has different priorities and Paul endured a certain amount of physical suffering in order to work as a neurosurgeon and to write the book. But he was a natural learner, very driven and a deeply curious, impassioned person. Going back to the operating theatre underscored how much his work was a part of who he was.

Paul’s faith in God has surprised some reviewers. It is rare in a scientist. Do you share it?
He was a top scientist but empirical research didn’t explain for him what it meant to be human. One time I asked him straight out, “Do you believe in God?” and he answered that he thought just as important a question was “Do you believe in love?”, to which his reply would be yes. I thought that was really striking. I would say the same thing.

Writing the epilogue for the book must have been hard for you. How did you approach it?
The hard part was that I have never thought of myself as a writer at all. I’m a doctor: I can write a medical chart and express information. But I’ve never felt compelled to write an essay or anything longer. So when Paul’s editor asked me if I would consider writing an epilogue I was shocked. But I recognised that the story was unfinished and I knew that if Paul himself could have described the way he died then he would have done. I wrote it two months after he died, which was a very raw time and it was actually really helpful and I was so glad to have that opportunity.

Paul’s last paragraph is a beautiful account of the joy your daughter Cady brought him in his final months. What will you tell her about him?
I’ll tell her lots of things but in a sense the book will tell her all she needs to know. Writing it was a way for him to communicate with her after his death. Through reading it and through things he left for her that I am keeping she will understand how much she was loved by him.

What does the future hold for you and Cady?
People keep asking me, “Hey, are you going to stay in your house?” Well, I’ve made a decision not to make any decisions for at least two years. Our house is where Paul and I lived, then where the three of us briefly lived and now it is where Cady and I live. For me it’s now about reforming the space so I can move forward as a doctor, a widow and a mom. I’ve kept a lot of Paul’s things, but a few months ago I painted all the walls white and remade the bookshelves so that he doesn’t have his own bookcase any more, so I am slowly changing things.

At the moment of diagnosis Paul said he hoped I would get remarried. He meant it really lovingly but it was so shocking to me at the time. Now I feel that even if I do ever get remarried I am positive I will love Paul for my entire life. He will stretch into my past and into my future.

Driverless Cars Could Increase Reliance on Roads

Driverless vehicles could intensify car use, reducing or even eliminating promised energy savings and environmental benefits, a new study shows. Development of autonomous driving systems has accelerated rapidly since the unveiling of Google’s driverless car in 2012, and energy efficiency due to improved traffic flow has been touted as one of the technology’s key advantages.

However, new research by scientists from the University of Leeds, University of Washington and Oak Ridge National Laboratory, published today in the journal Transportation Research Part A, says its actual impact may be complicated by how the technology changes our relationship with our cars.

Lead author Zia Wadud, associate professor in the University of Leeds’ Faculty of Engineering and a research group leader in the University’s Institute for Transport Studies, said: “There is no doubt that vehicle automation offers several efficiency benefits, but if you can work, relax and even hold a meeting in your car, that changes how you use it. That, in turn, may change the transport equation and the energy and environmental impact of road transport.”

The study uses analysis of self-driving technology combined with data on car and truck use, driver licenses and vehicle running costs to model the impact on energy demands of various levels of automation on U.S. roads by 2050.

It identifies several efficiency benefits of self-driving cars and predicts ranges of likely energy impacts, depending on the extent of adoption of the technology and other factors: More efficient computer-directed driving styles (0% to 20% reduction in energy use); Improved traffic flow and reduced jams because of coordination between vehicles (0% to 4% reduction); “Platooning” of automated vehicles driving very close together to create aerodynamic savings (4% to 25% reduction); Reduced crash risks mean that cars can be lighter (5% to 23% reduction); and, less emphasis from car buyers on high performance (5% to 23% reduction).

But the study also predicts that the very attractiveness of self-driving technology could reduce or even outweigh the efficiency gains. It estimates a 5% to 60% increase in car energy consumption due to people choosing to use highly automated cars in situations where they would have previously taken alternative transport (e.g. trains or planes).

Wadud said: “When you make a decision about transport, you don’t just think about the out-of-pocket costs of the train ticket or the car’s petrol; you also take into account non-financial costs.

“Car owners might choose to travel by train to relatively distant business meetings because the train allows them to work and relax. The need to drive is part of the cost of choosing the car, just as standing on a cold platform is part of the cost of the train. If you can relax in your car as it safely drives itself to a meeting in another city, that changes the whole equation.”

The study also predicts that people who currently find it difficult or impossible to drive, such as the elderly or some people with disabilities, will have increased access to road transport with the advent of the new systems, resulting in an estimated 2% to 10% increase in road energy use for personal travel.

Possible higher speed limits because of the improved safety of autonomous cars (7% to 22%) and demand for heavy extra equipment in driverless cars such as TV screens and computers (0% to 11%) might also tend to reduce efficiency savings.

A major uncertainty is the effect of autonomous driving technology on car sharing. The technology could allow vehicles to move independently between different users and therefore not only increase sharing but possibly also make it easier for users to match trip types to car types. Instead of using one car for all journeys, users might be able to use a shared, smaller car for a commute and a larger one for family leisure trips, for example. The authors say these factors could reduce energy consumption by 21% to 45%.

Co-author Don MacKenzie, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Washington, said: “There is lots of hype around self-driving cars, much of it somewhat utopian in nature. But there are likely to be positives and negatives. By taking a clear-eyed view, we can design and implement policies to maximise the benefits and minimise the downsides of automated vehicles.

“Vehicle automation presents a paradox: it may encourage people to travel much more, but at the same time it makes it practical to implement tools such as road pricing that can offset those effects. Ultimately, however, it’s up to the government to set appropriate policies to manage these impacts.”

Co-author Paul Leiby, distinguished research scientist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, said: “Because automation has the potential to provide convenient, lower-cost mobility, we see it could have large implications for transportation demand, energy use and resulting CO2 emissions, by both passengers and freight. For example, low-cost automated trucking could shift more freight away from efficient railways to trucks. To make continued progress in reducing carbon emissions from light-duty vehicles and large trucks in the face of expanded mobility, it will be essential to couple vehicle automation with the extensive use of advanced low-carbon vehicles, like electric or hydrogen vehicles.”

The study says many of the energy benefits of self-driving technology could be delivered by systems that still require the human driver to pay attention to the road and therefore do not radically alter transport decision-making.

The authors suggest that policymakers could focus less on accelerating the introduction of complete automation and more on promoting aspects of automation with positive environmental outcomes. For instance, regulators could encourage standardisation of car networking protocols to allow vehicles to communicate with each other on the road and therefore deliver benefits such as “platooning.”

The researchers warn that, if a high level of automation becomes the norm, it may be necessary to financially intervene in transport decisions. For example, self-driving cars’ navigation and communication systems could be used as a basis for road pricing schemes to control congestion and reduce overall travel demand.

Analyzing Genetic Tree Sheds New Light on Disease Outbreaks

LOS ALAMOS, N.M., Feb. 25, 2016—Scientists have a new tool for unraveling the mysteries of how diseases such as HIV move through a population, thanks to insights into phylogenetics, the creation of an organism’s genetic tree and evolutionary relationships.

“It turns out that three different types of transmission histories are possible between two persons who might have infected each other,” said Thomas Leitner of Los Alamos National Laboratory, the corresponding author of a new paper out this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. “Using phylogenetic inference in the epidemiological investigations of HIV transmission, we’ve determined that between two sampled, potentially epidemiologically linked persons, we can now evaluate the possibility that an unsampled intermediary or common source existed, even without a sample from that individual.”

Like a detective inferring the existence of an unseen actor in a sequence of events, the Los Alamos team used computational phylogenetic analysis to examine how strains of HIV, both in computer modeling and compared with real-life case studies, would be transmitted.

The team’s research has broad implications. “The inference of donor-recipient relationships we describe here is not restricted to HIV transmissions; it applies to all situations when an original population seeds a new population with a restricted random draw (a bottleneck) of individuals. We use HIV transmission to illustrate the effects because it helps trace contacts among people and untangle investigations into outbreaks. Also, statistical guidelines are needed for interpreting phylogenetic results in court.”

Analyzing Genetic Tree Sheds New Light on Disease Outbreaks
Using computational techniques, scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory are working to more clearly understand how diseases such as HIV are spread. In this image, arrows indicate actual transmission; red and blue persons are sampled, and the grey outline person is an unsampled link discovered in the computer analysis of the phylogenetic trees of the disease agents. Image courtesy Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Phylogenetic inference of who infected whom has great value in epidemiological investigations, the authors point out, because it should explain how transmission(s) occurred. Until now, however, there has not been a systematic evaluation of which phylogeny to expect from different transmission histories, and thus interpreting the meaning of an observed phylogeny has remained elusive.

“Previously it was thought that it would be impossible to say who infected whom and whether there were unsampled intermediary links in an alleged transmission, or if both persons were infected by an unsampled/unknown third party. We show that this is now possible in many cases,” Leitner said. “This will have large impact on future epidemiological investigations, including forensics and outbreak investigations.”

In the paper, the team showed that certain types of phylogenies associate with different transmission histories, which may make it possible to exclude possible intermediary links or identify cases where a common source was likely but not sampled. “Our systematic classification and evaluation of expected topologies should make future interpretation of phylogenetic results in epidemiological investigations more objective and informative,” Leitner said.

The paper is titled “Phylogenetically resolving epidemiologic linkage,” by Ethan O. Romero-Severson, Ingo Bulla, and Thomas Leitner. The work was supported by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases/National Institutes of Health.

Vinod Khosla Demands $30 Million To Allow Access To ‘His’ Beach

Vinod Khosla, founder of Sun Microsystems, sparked public resentment earlier this month in San Francisco when he asked for $30 million from the State of California for allowing public access to Martins Beach, he had bought eight years ago.

The prime 53-acre parcel of Martins Beach, a haven for the beach-going public that Khosla had bought for US $37.5 million eight years ago, has become contentious in recent days. Initially, the Silicon Valley venture capitalist had let people use the beach, but in 2010 locked the gates on Martins Beach Road and posted guards, according to a New York Times report. But now Khosla is demanding $30 million from the state for re-opening the gates of the beach for public and also give access to another 39.5-acre parcel that includes coastal cliffs.

For nearly a century, the beach was a “popular destination for fishing, picnicking, and surfing and other recreational uses”, according to the California state lands commission. The previous owners provided a general store and public restroom and allowed the public to visit the beach, charging a fee for parking.

After purchasing the property, Khosla, who does not live on the property, initially continued to allow public access. But in 2010, he closed the gate and put up signs warning against trespass, prompting multiple lawsuits as well as legislation that required the commission to negotiate with Khosla about restoring public access.

In a letter to the State Lands Commission Khosla’s lawyer said that an “easement leading over his property” in San Mateo County to the beach would cost California about $30 million, not including the enormous additional costs for road repairs, annual operations and maintenance.

According to reports,. Khosla’s lawyer Dori Yob offered the estimate in a February 3 letter to the state Court of Appeal, which is handling one of several lawsuits over the property. The report said quoting Jennifer Lucchesi, the executive officer of the State Lands Commission, as saying that she was equally taken aback when she received the letter, which she submitted as evidence in the case. The commission contends the tidelands Khosla claims are actually owned by the state. “We have not seen any documentation or analysis supporting that $30 million value,” Lucchesi said.

Gary Redenbacher, a lawyer for Friends of Martins Beach that sued Khosla in San Mateo Superior Court said that the $30 million figure is rather amusing and that the state Constitution makes all beaches public property.

The report said that Friends of Martins Beach sued in San Mateo Superior Court, and Judge Gerald Buchwald ruled in Khosla’s favor in 2013, saying the beach was subject to the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the Mexican-American War and required the United States to recognize Mexican land grants. In essence, Buchwald said, the beach had been in private hands long before laws were passed requiring public access to the coast, the SFGate report said.

But whatever be the outcome of the battle in the court that is expected to give its decision in summer this year, the issue has become the latest “class-charged standoff” involving a wealthy entrepreneur.

“People are saying, ‘Talk about entitlement: Rich people think they can get away with anything,’” the New York Times quoted Rob Caughlan, the former president of the non-profit Surfrider Foundation, as saying. “All we want is to get Khosla to follow the same law as everyone else does,” the report said. Beah goers had been staging protest outside the locked gates, demanding reopening of the beach.

The state commission’s executive officer, Jennifer Lucchesi, said on Tuesday that the state did not agree that the “value of the public access” was $30m. She wrote in an email: “We believe the fair market value is significantly less than that. As of today, we have not seen any documentation or analysis supporting the $30 million value.”

NYCEDC And CUNY Launch IN2NYC H1B sponsorship Program For International Entrepreneurs

IN2NYC H1B, an initiative of the New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC), in partnership with CUNY and is one of the first of its kind municipal program in the nation designed to help international entrepreneurs access visas so they can create jobs in the United States.

IN2NYC is expected to help up to 80 selected entrepreneurs gain access to the visas they need to grow their businesses in New York City, and is projected to create more than 700 jobs for New Yorkers in the first three years alone.

These 80 Entrepreneurs who would qualify for the H-1B visa will be outside the annual cap of 85,000 H-1B visas issued by the DHS, which now has a lottery system in place. Last year, 233,000 people applied for H-1B visa; with only around 1/3rd of applicants finally getting it. This year, more applications than ever before are expected when filing begins April 1.

IN2NYC will also serve as a model that can be scaled and expanded at both public and private schools throughout New York City, with the potential to ultimately contribute thousands of jobs to the city’s innovation economy. The program advances the de Blasio administration’s goals of encouraging entrepreneurship and supporting international partnerships to build a diverse and inclusive economy for New Yorkers in every borough.

IN2NYC will partner selected entrepreneurs with one of seven participating CUNY institutions: Baruch College, City College of New York, LaGuardia Community College, Lehman College, Medgar Evers College, Queens College, and the College of Staten Island. Entrepreneurs will be required to base their businesses in their partner school’s incubator, bringing new services, revenue streams, and employment opportunities to neighborhoods and strengthening their innovation ecosystems. Entrepreneurs must also commit to support the mission of the partner school by contributing to academic research, developing curricula, providing students with internship and employment opportunities, or serving as mentors.

The program is designed to foster innovation ecosystems and diversify the economy by retaining international talent that has been educated locally, and attract entrepreneurs from abroad who have skills and knowledge that would benefit CUNY students and educators. NYCEDC will begin accepting applications for IN2NYC this spring, with the first group of entrepreneurs expected to be in place by the fall. For more information, go to www.in2.nyc.

“This is a win for our universities, our working people and our city’s ability to compete on the global stage. We are making sure New York City remains a magnet for the world’s top talent, and putting New Yorkers to work at the technology and engineering firms of tomorrow,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio.

“The success of our innovation ecosystem is rooted in the diversity and the talent of our people,” said NYCEDC President Maria Torres-Springer. “For too long, we would graduate some of the world’s smartest entrepreneurs, only to send them packing as soon as they got their degree. This ends today. IN2NYC is the first city run program in the US to help international entrepreneurs access the visas they need to grow businesses, create jobs, and cultivate the next generation of talented New Yorkers. No matter our national origins, we’ve got to be One New York, innovating together.”

“New York City has created an innovative pathway for the next generation of international entrepreneurs to launch their businesses right here in NYC,” said Penny Abeywardena, Mayor’s Office for International Affairs Commissioner. “Not only does the IN2NYC program encourage entrepreneurship, and builds and strengthens New York City’s international partnerships, but the program also directly benefits CUNY students by training them on how to launch their own businesses. IN2NYC is good for the international entrepreneurs, good for the New York City neighborhoods in which they will grow their startups and create jobs, and good for the CUNY students who will be mentored by these innovators. Moreover, it reinforces New York City’s role as a global hub for innovation.”

“The program underscores how immigrants are integral to the economic, social, and cultural life of our City. New York City reaps countless benefits when immigrant entrepreneurs have opportunities to build their businesses. Through the IN2NYC program, the de Blasio administration demonstrates again how building a welcoming and inclusive city benefits all New Yorkers,” said Commissioner Nisha Agarwal of the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs.

“Simply put, IN2NYC is a game-changer for NYC in the global competition to attract world-class tech talent and the businesses of tomorrow,” said Chief Technology Officer for the City of New York Minerva Tantoco. “IN2NYC builds on the Big Apple’s proud tradition of inviting bold and entrepreneurial thinkers to come to NYC and invent the future. IN2NYC supercharges the de Blasio administration’s goal of making New York the most tech-friendly and innovative city in the world.”

Beijing overtakes New York as new ‘billionaire capital’

Beijing has overtaken New York as the city with the highest number of billionaires for the first time, a new report by China-based firm Hurun says. A total of 100 billionaires are now living in the Chinese capital, compared with 95 in New York, the report says. Shanghai, China’s centre of commerce, comes in fifth place.

Hurun, which tracks wealth in China, has released an annual Global Rich List for the past five years measuring billionaires’ wealth in US dollars. The private research firm, which also publishes luxury magazines, uses a mixture of information from publicly traded companies plus interviews to compile its data.

Other companies such as Forbes and Bloomberg use different methodology and arrive at different conclusions. Hurun found that Beijing had welcomed 32 new billionaires since last year, allowing it to vault past New York which it calculated only saw four new billionaires.

Moscow was in third place with 66 billionaires, according to Hurun. Overall, China has overtaken the US as the country with the highest number of billionaires. However, the top 10 billionaires in Hurun’s list is still dominated by Americans.

China has 568 billionaires after gaining 90 new ones, compared with the US which has 535. China’s billionaires boast a combined net worth of $1.4 trillion (£1.01 trillion), which is similar to the GDP of Australia.

Hurun’s chairman Rupert Hoogewerf noted that the growth in China’s wealthy took place despite an economic slowdown and stock market instability. He told the AP news agency that it could be due to Chinese market regulators allowing a flood of new share issues after holding back Initial Public Offerings for several years.

Hurun found that the richest man in China is still Wang Jianlin, with an estimated worth of $26bn (£18.8bn). But he has not cracked the top 10 billionaires in Hurun’s list, which is dominated by Americans. It is topped by Bill Gates with a net worth of $80bn, followed by investor Warren Buffett with $68bn. In third place is Spanish fashion tycoon Amancio Ortega with a net worth of $64bn. The report found that overall there are now 2,188 billionaires in the world, a new record.

And It’s a WRAP! 2nd annual DFW South Asian Film Festival Celebrates Another Weekend of Film & Festivities in North Texas

(Dallas, Texas – February 24, 2016) The 2016 Dallas/Fort Worth South Asian Film Festival (www.dfwsaff.com) presented 13 ground-breaking, sold-out screenings of shorts, documentaries and feature films during its three-day festival (Feb. 19th to the 21st) at the Perot Museum in downtown Dallas and the Angelika Film Center in Plano. More than 350 people attended the opening night film, red carpet and festivities at the Perot, followed by another 1200 cinephiles at the Angelika on Saturday and Sunday. Every film was either a Texas or U.S. premiere, and the festival’s closing night film, Hansal Mehta’s “Aligarh,” was the North American premiere. Ravi Kapoor’s “Miss India America” and Prashant Nair’s “Umrika” were the opening night and centerpiece films, respectively. The entire lineup of films, including trailers and synopses, is available on the festival’s web site: www.dfwsaff.com.

Categories included education programming, arts programming, youth programming, women’s programming, men’s programming, family programming and LGBT programming. The topics explored varied in scope from slave brides in Rajasthan to the effects of depression & mental illness on the South Asian community to the plight of the LGBTQ community in India.

“The responses we got from our audiences were overwhelmingly positive,” said founder and festival director Jitin Hingorani. “People thanked us for bringing this revolutionary programming to North Texas, and they said they are already excited for next year’s festival.”

The festival, produced by JINGO Media, a NYC & Dallas-based PR & events boutique firm, also presented networking events, after-parties and post-screening Q&A sessions with 14 filmmakers and actors in attendance from all over the world.

Celebrities who walked the red carpet included: Suraj Sharma (Umrika, Life of Pi, Homeland, Million Dollar Arm); Tiya Sircar (Miss India America, The Internship, Friends with Benefits, Vampire Diaries); Meera Simhan (Miss India America, Anger Management, Date Movie); Tanima Bhattacharya (Shackle); and Viveck Vaswani (Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman, Pathar Ke Phool, Rough Book).

According to reports, 27 mainstream and South Asian brands supported the 2016 festival as sponsors and partners, including Wells Fargo; Etihad Airways & Jet Airways; Mercedes Benz of Plano; Civitas; Cambria Hotels & Suites; The Container Store; Shraman South Asian Museum;  Parish Episcopal School; American India Foundation; and Milaap USA.

Community Partners, who had joined the efforts included, Selig Polyscope Company; Patrick O’Hara Salon; U.S. India Chamber of Commerce DFW; Dallas Video Fest; Women in Film;  Indian Association of North Texas; Women Entrepreneurs DFW; Forever Rakhi; and World Affairs Council.

MIT Team Wins First Round of SpaceX Hyperloop Design Contest

Indian American Lakshya Jain was part of a Massachusetts Institute of Technology team that was victorious in the first round of the SpaceX Hyperloop Design contest.

The Jan. 30 contest at Texas A&M University required teams to create a Hyperloop, which is a high-speed transportation concept imagined by Tesla Motors and SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk.

Jain and his graduate student teammates beat out more than 100 other teams from around the world, claiming best overall design.

The roughly-24 member MIT team is captained by Philippe Kirschen. Collectively, they have been working since last fall to create the design.

The team is gathering support from all over MIT. Douglas P. Hart of the mechanical engineering department is facilitating the team members’ work on the project for credit as part of his Engineering Systems Development course. The Edgerton Center has provided work and machining space, administrative support and advising.

The final design of the Hyperloop is roughly 2.5 meters long and weighs 250 kgs. Kirschen added in an MIT report that it has the aerodynamic feel of a bobsled.

Now the design needs to be made on a larger scale. Kirschen, in the MIT report, said the Hyperloop would reach speeds “in excess of 100 meters per second.”

The larger scales will be tested, albeit with no passengers on board, in the next phase of the contest. Each large-scale submission is due by mid-May.

TCS, Infosys, Wipro Join Obama’s ‘Computer Science for All’ Plan

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Three major Indian IT companies — Infosys, Tata Consultancy Services and Wipro — have joined President Barack Obama’s ambitious Computer Science for All initiative as part of a public-private collaboration, pledging thousands of dollars in grants.

Obama announced his “Computer Sciences for All” plan in his weekly address Jan. 30 as he emphasized the need for teaching the subject as a “basic skill” to all children across schools in the country in a changing economy.

While Infosys has pledged a $1 million in donation, Tata Consultancy Services is providing support in the form of grants to teachers in 27 U.S. cities, the White House said in a fact sheet, also issued Jan. 30.

Wipro announced a $2.8 million grant for multi-year project in partnership with the Michigan University to involve over a hundred school teachers, with the aim of nurturing excellence in science and mathematics. This would start with the public school systems of Chicago, Obama’s hometown.

According to White House, the TCS and Infosys pledge is part of the National Science Foundation’s effort to collaborate with the private sector to support high-school computer science teachers.

“Infosys Foundation USA will be a founding member of this public-private collaboration with a $1 million philanthropic donation, and, as an initial participant, Tata Consultancy Services is providing additional support in the form of grants to teachers in 27 U.S. cities.

“This collaboration will ultimately provide opportunities for as many as 2,000 middle- and high-school teachers to deepen their understanding of CS,” said the White House.

A joint Wipro and Michigan University statement said the Wipro STEM Fellowship Program will focus on building leadership in these disciplines in urban schools by leveraging on research validated expertise of the college of education at the university in designing transformative and innovative instructional experiences.

Aarti Dhupelia, chief officer of College and Career Success at Chicago Public Schools, said this partnership with Wipro and Michigan State University will have a transformational impact in classrooms and communities.

Dr. Rohit N. Kulkarni Named Harvard Medical School Professor

Rohit N. Kulkarni, senior Investigator in the Section on Islet Cell and Regenerative Biology at Joslin Diabetes Center, world-renowned for its deep expertise in diabetes treatment and research, has been named Professor of Medicine by Harvard Medical School.

Dr. Kulkarni’s research focuses on investigating signaling pathways impacting growth and function of pancreatic islet cells with the long-term goal of improving therapeutic approaches for the treatment of type 1 and type 2 diabetes and obesity-associated conditions. Dr. Kulkarni’s lab also focuses on the role of growth factor signalling in the renewal and differentiation of embryonic stem (ES) cells and induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells with the aim of studying mechanisms that underlie differentiation into pancreatic endocrine cells.

“Dr. Kulkarni has made many seminal scientific discoveries throughout his career. He is internationally recognized for his work with beta cell growth and regeneration, a topic that is critical to the treatment and cure of diabetes,” said George King, M.D., Chief Scientific Officer at Joslin Diabetes Center and Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. “We are excited to have Dr. Kulkarni as a faculty member at Joslin and look forward to collaborating with him in the years to come.”

Dr. Kulkarni joined Joslin and the Harvard Medical School faculty in 1999. He has held several leadership roles at Joslin, including the Director of the Diabetes Endocrinology Research Center (DERC) Specialized Assay Core from 2002 to 2012. Currently, Dr. Kulkarni serves as the Associate Director of the induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPS) Core of the DRC at Joslin. In his own lab, he mentors post-doctoral fellows, graduate students and visiting scientists in addition to supervising research assistants.

Dr. Kulkarni contributes to the educational symposia organized by Joslin, the American Diabetes Association, and the JDRF in the areas of diabetes and obesity in addition to symposia organized by Harvard Stem Cell Institute in the area of stem cells and is a faculty member of the BBS Program at Harvard Medical School. He also serves on the editorial boards of Journal of Clinical Investigation, Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Journal of Biological Chemistry.

Kulkarni, an M.D. and Ph.D., received his medical degree and doctorate of philosophy from St. John’s Medical College and the Royal Postgraduate Medical School, University of London, England respectively. While pursuing his doctoral thesis on regulatory peptides modulating islet function in Sir Steve Bloom’s laboratory in England, Kulkarni trained in the Diabetes Unit at Hammersmith Hospital in London.

He moved to Boston where he obtained the F32 National Research Scholarship Award and completed a post-d fellowship in the laboratory of C. Ronald Kahn, chief academic officer and senior investigator at Joslin Diabetes Center and the Mary K. Iacocca Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.

Mathers Museum Of World Cultures Newest Exhibition “Beyond Bollywood: Indian Americans Shape The Nation”

Bloomington, IN : The Mathers Museum of World Cultures has put up a new exhibition as part of three distinct exhibitions on Indian American experiences and their cultural contributions to United States & the American life.

“Beyond Bollywood: Indian Americans Shape the Nation” is the first of these three exhibitions which is a traveling exhib on loan from the Smithsonian Institution and will be on display until April 10.

Judith Kirk, assistant director of the museum, said alumnus Robert Johnson, who is on the board of the Asian Pacific American Center committee at the Smithsonian, suggested the idea to Provost Lauren Robel after a visit to Mathers.

“When it was discovered that ‘Bollywood’ was going to travel, we started working to bring it here,” Kirk said. “We were so fortunate in that we have an incredible India studies program, Dhar India Studies. They were very enthusiastic about being our partners.”

In conjunction with this exhibit, Mathers planned visits by prominent speakers and a few other events, such as films playing at the IU Cinema.

The next speaker in the series, Vijay Prashad, author of a work called “The Karma of Brown Folk,” will speak on March 10. Prashad will be speaking about the complicated status of Indian-Americans as the “model minority” and the issues with that term, Kirk said.

Another speaker, Vivek Bald, will visit March 24 to discuss the “lost history” of Bengali Harlem, and the movement of Asian immigrants into existing neighborhoods during the era of Asian exclusion — the 50 years leading up to the 1940’s.

“There were individuals, mostly men, who were involved in merchant marines, were seamen and other merchants, who ended up settling here,” Kirk said. “These were groups of men who, despite the exclusion-era laws, primarily settled in places like Harlem and New Orleans, communities that were typically African-American or Puerto Rican.”

These neighborhoods provided a community of support, opportunity and home, and Bald will speak to this relationship and his research on this period during his lecture, Kirk said.

6 Researchers Of Indian Origin Named Presidential Early Career Award Recipients

President Obama has named six Indian American researchers among 106 individuals as recipients of the Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers, the highest U.S. government honor for young independent researchers.

Milind Kulkarni, Purdue University; Sachin Patel, Vanderbilt University; Vikram Shyam, NASA Glenn Research Center and Shwetak Patel, University of Washington,Kiran Musunuru, Harvard Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology and Rahul Mangharam, University of Pennsylvania, the winners will receive their awards in Washington, DC this spring.

“These early-career scientists are leading the way in our efforts to confront and understand challenges from climate change to our health and wellness,” Obama said. “We congratulate these accomplished individuals and encourage them to continue to serve as an example of the incredible promise and ingenuity of the American people.”

Kulkarni of Purdue University is an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering who graduated in 2002 with a B.S. in both computer science and computer engineering from North Carolina State University and received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from Cornell.

Sachin Patel is an associate professor of psychiatry and molecular physiology and biophysics. His overall research goal is to understand the role of ‘neuronal cannabinoid signaling’ in brain function relevant to psychiatric disorders.

While Vikram is a member of the Turbomachinery and Heat Transfer Branch at NASA Glenn and a member of the graduate faculty at Cleveland State University Shwetak N. Patel is the Washington Research Foundation Entrepreneurship Endowed Professor in Computer Science and Engineering and Electrical Engineering at the University of Washington.

“These early-career scientists are leading the way in our efforts to confront and understand challenges from climate change to our health and wellness,” President Obama said. “We congratulate these accomplished individuals and encourage them to continue to serve as an example of the incredible promise and ingenuity of the American people.”

This year’s recipients are employed or funded by various government departments and agencies. These departments and agencies join together annually to nominate the most meritorious scientists and engineers whose early accomplishments show the greatest promise for assuring America’s preeminence in science and engineering and contributing to the awarding agencies’ missions.

The Presidential Early Career Awards highlight the key role that the administration places in encouraging and accelerating American innovation to grow the economy and tackle America’s greatest challenges. The awards, established by President Clinton in 1996, are coordinated by the Office of Science and Technology Policy within the Executive Office of the President.

Awardees are selected for their pursuit of innovative research at the frontiers of science and technology and their commitment to community service as demonstrated through scientific leadership, public education, or community outreach.

Established by President Bill Clinton in 1996, the awards recognize pursuit of innovative research at the frontiers of science and technology and awardees’ commitment to community service as demonstrated through scientific leadership, public education, or community outreach.

Fight Between FBI & Apple Brings Privacy Vs. Safety Vs. Business Interests To The Forefront

The recent dispute between FBI and Apple pits three important principles against one another. On the one hand, it’s about the right of the U.S. government to investigate thoroughly the most deadly terrorist attack on American soil since 9/11, in order to prevent the nation and the world from future terrorists attacks. The dispute has raised questions about the need and importance of maintaining the privacy of every individual. It is also about the right of the most valuable (and iconic) American company to go about its business without the government undercutting the key promise it makes consumers — that their most private communications are kept safely under lock and key.

A federal judge’s order to help the FBI hack into the encrypted iPhone of Syed Rizwan Farook, who in December, together with his wife, killed 14 of his co-workers at a holiday party in San Bernardino, California, has been rejected by Apple.  The couple carried out the attack on behalf of ISIS, although there is no evidence they did so at the direction of the group. The US Justice Department has been on the offensive, criticizing Apple for refusing to help unlock a phone used by Syed Rizwan Farook, who died after the terror attack that killed 14 people in December.

Fight Between FBI & Apple Brings Privacy Vs. Safety Vs. Business Interests To The ForefrontThe dispute between FBI and Apple has set the stage for what promises to be one of the great commercial battles of the next years, between the U.S. government and the tech companies that are the most important engine of the booming American economy. Big tech companies argue that if it is known Apple has given the U.S. government such an access, then consumers around the world will be leery of using Apple and Google and other U.S. technology products. Thus, it could result in many tens of billions of dollars being lost and, therefore the business is at stake.

The FBI has argued for years that it faces a “going dark” problem, that its investigations of everything from child pornographers to terrorists are hampered, or even completely undercut, by the fact that so much Internet communication is now encrypted to a level that the U.S. government can’t break. As a result, the FBI wants a “backdoor” into the encrypted communications platforms engineered by American tech companies.

Federal prosecutors in a motion las week have asked a judge to compel Apple to cooperate, saying CEO Tim Cook had made it clear the company wouldn’t willingly comply with an earlier order to help unlock the phone used by Farook. “Rather than assist the effort to fully investigate a deadly terrorist attack … Apple has responded by publicly repudiating that order,” prosecutors wrote in the filing in federal court in Riverside, Calif. Apple’s resistance is “based on its concern for its business model and public brand marketing strategy,” prosecutors wrote. Apple “is not above the law.”

The motion offers a sharply worded response to Cook’s public message earlier this week, where he refused to “hack our own users and undermine decades of security advancements that protect our customers.” Cook said that providing prosecutors with software to unlock the terrorist’s iPhone would provide a “back door” to its devices. Prosecutors said Cook’s statements have been misleading and if the company complied, the government would still need a warrant to access a device and Apple would keep custody of the software.

Apple says, helping the FBI to decrypt Farook’s iPhone would give the government access to all other similar iPhones and would also lead to an unfortunate precedent in which the government could eventually access encrypted communications on any American tech platform. Google has publicly supported Apple’s position. The revelations by National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden in 2013 about just how much U.S. tech companies had been playing footsie with the U.S. government had an effect on the firms’ bottom lines around the globe. A 2014 paper by the New America think tank estimatedthat the Snowden revelations cost U.S. tech companies billions of dollars.

Since Snowden went public, companies such as Apple and Google — two of the world’s most valuable companies — have incorporated much greater encryption into their products and have also been at pains to show that they will not go along with U.S. government demands to access their encrypted products.

According to reports, no evidence has emerged that Farook and his wife had any formal connection to a terrorist organization, and the plot involved only the couple and the alleged connivance of Marquez. What might be found on Farook’s iPhone therefore is more than likely simply only some additional details to buttress the overall account of what we know already. It’s unclear what help, if any, the contents of Farook’s phone might provide investigators. Nearly seven weeks of potential messages, texts, photos and data are missing — from Oct. 19, when Farook last uploaded his phone to iCloud, to Dec. 2, when he carried out a shooting rampage at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino. No evidence has surfaced so far to indicate Farook and his wife, Tashfeen Malik, were in contact with terrorists, or had received outside support, before the attack.

On one side of the debate inside the US administration were White House advisors who favored using quiet pressure to persuade Cook and other tech executives to cooperate. That approach has borne fruit, they say. Over the last year, tech companies have shut down social media accounts used by Islamic State, handed over subpoenaed material that suspects had loaded on “cloud” servers, and given other crucial help. But members of President Obama’s national security team wanted more. Together with state and federal prosecutors around the country, they viewed tech companies as making money while protecting terrorists, kidnappers, pornographers and others who use encryption to hide illegal schemes.

“In the court of public opinion, a dead terrorist whose phone might have connections to more terrorists is pretty attractive from the standpoint of prosecution, but the legal question is not made easier because of that,” Ryan Calo, an assistant law professor at the University of Washington in Seattle and an expert on privacy law, has been quoted to have said. No court has ruled on whether a tech company could be forced to find a way around its own security features, Calo said.

Balanced against that is what the tech companies lose if they are seen to be doing the bidding of the FBI — tens of billions of dollars and also the strong possibility of losing market share to other non-American tech companies, particularly software and cloud computing firms, around the world.

Although the fight between American tech companies and the FBI hunting terrorists is undeniably important, to some degree it may also be increasingly moot. ISIS’ key social media-encrypted platform is Telegram, which is engineered by a Berlin-based tech company that can simply ignore the rulings of American federal judges as well as legislation passed by the U.S. Congress.

Apple and its supporters say the dispute isn’t over the unknown contents of one phone, but about the government trying to establish a precedent that it can force a company to hack its customers’ devices. That could open floodgates for requests from local, state and federal prosecutors, they warn, and cripple customers’ confidence in Apple products, especially in lucrative overseas markets where distrust of government surveillance is higher. Apple’s advocates fear that giving in to the FBI now ultimately would help criminal hackers and authoritarian governments, which might use the software to trace secret communications of political opponents and human rights activists.

Indian American Community Bids Farewell To Dnyaneshwar Mulay

During a touching farewell reception organized by the leading Indian American community, Ambassador Dyaneshwar Mulay, Consul General of India in New York, was given a hearty send-off at the Royal Albert’s Palace, Fords, in New Jersey on February 16, 2016. Mulay, in his brief address, called upon the audience to work together for India while being away from India. “Let’s work together to bring India on the global platform and be instrumental in bringing about a change,” he said. “A lot has been done under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and a lot still needs to be accomplished,” Mulay said.

Indian American Community Bids Farewell To Dnyaneshwar Mulay
Mulay farewell audience

Attended by more than 350 people, the farewell event was organized by the Federation of Indian Associations of Tri-state in collaboration with a number of prominent community organizations. Earlier, Mulay was welcomed with a thunderous applause by the audience and was escorted by the band of New Jersey State Police in the presence of prominent leaders. Mulay was presented a plaque by the community leaders, and also his portrait done by Manoj Vyas, an alumnus of J.J. School of Art, Mumbai.

FIA Tri-state president Anand Patel in his welcome address praised Mulay and “his assiduous efforts” in opening the doors of the consulate and talked about many of his initiatives, including “Bringing Consulate to your door step”, alluding to the outreach program that he launched.

“He has streamlined and optimized all other services at the consulate. But even more impressive is the fact that he transformed the consulate into an epicenter of intellectual, cultural and professional hub to enhance the profile of India in the United States,” Dr. Sudhir Parikh said. “All big credit must go to Ambassador Mulay for transforming the Consulate,” he said.

H.R. Shah spoke about the many accomplishments of Mulay and said he admired Ambassador Mulay “not only for his exceptional body of work but also his “literary work.” FIA chairman Ramesh Patel; Dr. Sudhir M. Parikh, publisher of News India Times and Padma Shri award winner; H.R. Shah, chairman of TV Asia; Anil Bansal, chairman of Indus American Bank and Dr. Seema Jain, President of American Association of Physicians of Indian origin; Manoj Mohapatra, Deputy Consul General at the Indian Consulate in New York were others who were present at the event and had addressed the event.

The Consulate in New York organized an official farewell for Mulay on February 14th at the Consulate in New York. Attended by nearly 100 prominent people, mostly close friends of Mulay and community leaders. Ambassador Dnyaneshwar M. Mulay, who served as the Consul General of Indian in New York for two years and ten months, received accolades from business owners and professionals alike at the farewell event which was attended by a large number of people from all walks of life.

Mulay has been appointed to head the newly formed ‘India Diaspora Division’ in the Ministry of External Affairs incorporating the Ministry hitherto known as Ministry of Overseas India Affairs. His many great contributions covering all aspect of services -personal and official were recalled and appreciated by the speakers who included India’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations Ambassador Syed Akbaruddin, H.R. Shah, Dr. Sudhir Parikh, Dr. Navin Mehta, Prof. Indrajit S Saluja, Attorney Ravi Batra, and Ashok Vyas. Deepak Dave conducted the program.

Ambassador Syed Akbaruddin, Permanent Representative of India at UN and a contemporary of Mulay in the Indian Foreign Services, recalled his early days when Mulay was known as a poet among his batch mates. “A literary person at heart Mulay emerged as a fine diplomat fulfilling his duties, which are like writing hard prose not poetries.”

“We are proud to say that we process all applications within a day or two”, said Mulay in his speech at the farewell function. His vision was to project the New India House, the consulate premises, into a center for cultural and intellectual activities. “We held more than 200 events in a year”, he said adding that his office aimed at encouraging all sections of the community within its resources.

Kamala Harris Not In Favor Of Being Considered For The Supreme Court Vacancy Caused By The Death Of Justice Scalia

(Washington, DC: February 19, 2016) Kamala Harris, the first ever person of Indian Origin to win a state wide election in the state of California, and now considered a favorite to win the US Senate race in the same state, has doused speculation that she may be on President Obama’s list of potential Supreme Court nominees, saying during a campaign event at a San Jose union hall that while she is flattered to have her name mentioned, she has no interest in the job at this time.

Harris’ name as a possible Supreme Court nominee arose shortly after the death of Justice Antonin Scalia on Saturday. Harris addressed the speculation almost immediately when she appeared before the union members, insisting she “was not putting my name out there.” It was her first public event since Scalia’s death.

While presenting the Attorney General’s annual California Data Breach Report at Stanford University, Harris said, “I’m not interested,” she politely told an inquiring television news reporter. As the daughter of immigrants from India and Jamaica, Harris is an appealing prospect for those pushing for more diversity on the Supreme Court. But it would have been extremely difficult for a liberal politician from California to survive what is expected to be a bruising confirmation process in the Republican-led Senate.

Harris, 51, said her focus is on her current job and her campaign to succeed retiring Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer. “I’m not putting my name in for consideration. I do not wish to be considered. I am running for the United States Senate,” Harris emphatically told reporters after the union rally.

According to reports, Harris didn’t say who she wants the president to nominate, but suggested it should be someone with “practical life experience.” She also would favor a nominee who would protect abortion rights, and marriage equality for same-sex couples, she said.

“Maybe I’m biased, but I’d like to see someone who’s actually seen the impact of the court and the rulings of the court. Someone who’s thinking of it not just in a way that is theoretical, but … how these laws and these rulings affect real people,” she said.

Karris, a progressive, has always been in the forefront of Civil Rights, Equality and Openness. Harris used herself as an example, saying that she never would have been elected were it not for the not for the educational opportunities she received because of the 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education Supreme Court ruling that found segregation in public schools to be unconstitutional. Harris said that ruling allowed her to be a member of the second class that integrated Berkeley public schools in the 1960s.

Kamala Harris Not In Favor Of Being Considered For The Supreme Court Vacancy Caused By The Death Of Justice Scalia
California Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris

She criticized the current Supreme Court’s 2013 ruling that struck down a key part of the historic Voting Rights Act of 1965, ending federal oversight of election laws in Southern states. Harris said the court “gutted it” and she vowed, if elected to the Senate, to work to reinstate those voter protections that civil rights advocates credit for with transforming the South by ensuring blacks could vote. The attorney general also criticized members of the Senate Republican leadership who vowed to block any Supreme Court nominee put forth by the Democratic president.

“I think the Republicans have been outrageous on this issue. Outrageous,” Harris said. “This president is going to be in office through January of next year. We, as Americans, deserve to have a fully-staffed United States Supreme Court. There are very important issues before the Supreme Court right now.”

California’s primary is set for June 7. The top two vote-getters, regardless of party, advance to the general election. Leading in the polls and with two victories in statewide elections under her belt, Harris is the front-runner in the Senate race. Her top Democratic rival is Rep. Loretta Sanchez of Orange. Their Republican challengers include Tom Del Beccaro and George “Duf” Sundheim, both Bay Area attorneys who were former chairmen of the California Republican Party.

Former Obama White House advisor David Axelrod mentioned the possibility of a Harris nomination on a weekend news show, and Harris’ name has popped up on hypothetical lists from the New York Times, Associated Press, USA Today, the National Law Journal and the wonky but well-regarded SCOTUSblog.

“Kamala Harris would be an unusual choice — most recent appointments have been federal court of appeals judges — but a plausible one,” said Erwin Chemerinksy, dean of the UC Irvine School of Law. “However, there are so many plausible names. I doubt anyone has inside information so it is just all speculation.”

She is a graduate of Howard University in Washington, D.C., and earned her law degree at UC Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco. Harris as a veteran prosecutor and astute, ambitious political leader. Harris also has been a strong Obama supporter since he was a U.S. Senate candidate from Illinois.

For more than a decade, she worked as a prosecutor in Alameda County and San Francisco, and tried cases involving charges of drunk driving, sex crimes, assault and homicide. Her transition to electoral politics began in 2003 during her successful campaign to unseat San Francisco Dist. Atty. Terence Hallinan. Harris was elected attorney general in 2010, narrowly beating L.A. County Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley, a Republican. She was reelected in 2014 by a wide margin.

Her parents divorced when Harris was a toddler and her late mother, who was a breast cancer researcher at UC Berkeley, raised Harris and her sister, Maya, to be proud African American women during a tumultuous time in the United States. Harris was a student in the second class to integrate Berkeley’s public schools in the late 1960s. Her sister has served as advisor to Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign and is a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress.

Harris’ national profile got a boost when Obama gave her a speaking role at the Democratic National Convention in 2012. The headlines continued in 2013 when Obama apologized publicly for having described her as “the best-looking” attorney general in the country.

For all her demographic and political strengths, Harris does not come from the judicial realm. She has staked out liberal positions on issues that would raise the ire of Republican Senate leaders who already have warned Obama to leave the nomination to the next president.

Throughout her political career, Harris has articulated clear positions on many controversial, divisive issues that could come before the nation’s high court. Harris favors the protection of abortion rights, an end to the federal ban on medical marijuana and a path to citizenship for immigrants in the country illegally. She backs major changes in the criminal justice system, in part to address racial disparities, including shorter sentences for low-level drug crimes and a shift in government funding from prisons to crime prevention.

As attorney general, Harris has taken actions conservatives would no doubt take issue with during a Senate confirmation hearing, should one ever occur: She refused to defend Proposition 8, the 2008 ballot measure that outlawed same-sex marriage in California until the U.S. Supreme Court found it unconstitutional. Harris defended a state law that required members of public employee unions to help pay for collective bargaining. A case challenging those requirements — Friedrichs vs. California Teachers Assn. — is pending in the Supreme Court and could yield a 4-4 decision in Scalia’s absence. Harris, who has been supported politically by the California Teachers Assn., appealed a Los Angeles County Superior Court judge’s ruling in the case of Vergara vs. California, which threw out the state’s tenure process for grade school teachers. Harris criticized a federal appeals court for rejecting Obama’s executive actions on immigration, a case that is also pending before the Supreme Court.

Harris has brushed aside the speculation, although questions about the issue will follow her during her ongoing campaign for U.S. Senate ahead of California’s June 7 primary. “While the attorney general is honored to be mentioned in these conversations, she’s committed to her current job and continuing her fight for California families in the U.S. Senate,” campaign spokesman Nathan Click said Monday. Harris declared: “I am running for Senate.”

Creating a 25,000 foot ‘Vertical University’ in Nepal

In the years between 1990 and 2005, Nepal lost 4,500 square miles of forest — 25 percent of the country’s overall forest cover — through a combination of haphazard urbanization, a lack of sustainable economic alternatives, inadequate support to organic farmers, and the adverse impacts of climate change. This change has worsened Nepal’s natural springs systems and, in turn, the livelihoods of the country’s farmers.

Asia 21 Young Leader Rajeev Goyal first started working in Nepal more than a decade ago as a Peace Corps volunteer in 2001. An activist, lawyer, and rural-development worker, Goyal started monitoring Nepal’s environmental issues early on and, over the next decade, frequently found himself in the country working on a variety of projects.

In 2013, Goyal teamed up with the Canadian architect and planner Priyanka Bista and a local teacher and conservationist named Kumar Bishwakarma to create the Koshi Tappu Kanchenjunga Biodiversity Education Livelihood Terra-Studio (KTK-BELT), an organization seeking to educate people about conservation and Himalayan biodiversity while creating ecologically-sensitive livelihood opportunities.

Goyal and KTK-BELT have now undertaken a massive project to build a “vertical university” from Koshi Tappu, Nepal’s largest aquatic bird reserve, to Mount Kanchenjunga, the ​third tallest peak in the world. We reached out to Goyal via email to find out what a ​vertical university is and​ ​how it will conserve Nepal’s environment and biodiversity.

Can you describe what a “vertical university” is?

The idea of the vertical university is actually quite simple. It is to create a sort of “living classroom” in the form of an 25,000 foot continuous vertical forest corridor stretching from Koshi Tappu (220 feet), Nepal’s largest aquatic bird sanctuary, to Mt. Kanchenjunga (28,169 feet), the world’s third tallest peak, as a vessel to teach and conserve the 6,600 flowering plant species, 800 bird species and 180 mammals that are found in eastern Nepal. In a mountainous country like Nepal, where there is exceptional biological, climatic, and cultural diversity from the tropical plains to the alpine Himalayas, conventional education paradigms where students sit in a stationary classroom, divorced from their surroundings, make little sense.

The “professors” of the vertical university may not have a Ph.D. and in fact may never have set foot in school, but as indigenous farmers, they possess intricate, intergenerational knowledge about local fauna and flora which is critical for Nepal’s youth to attain. The vertical university will deepen place-based skills in sustainable technology, craft, and medicinal plants, and seeks to conserve and activate local knowledge while also creating sustainable livelihood opportunities. It does this through establishing “learning grounds,” which are micro-conservation hubs — the “classrooms” of the university throughout different locations across the landscape.

The objective is that one day, a Nepali student could walk from Koshi Tappu to Kanchenjunga, across 118 different forest types, and learn from local farmers about the deep physical and biological diversity of the landscape through place-based education. The objective is not to radically alter the existing government curriculum, which is actually quite comprehensive, but to enrich it with pragmatic, sensory learning opportunities that integrate hundreds of villages across a vertical gradient.

In the last few decades, deforestation, loss of natural habitats and the impacts of urbanization have affected many nations around the world. Why did you choose to focus your attention on Nepal?

Deforestation, degradation of biological diversity, and loss of the “wild” are challenges not unique to Nepal, but rather imperil all of Asia. The predominant trend is that forests are being converted into monocultures to grow palm oil or other bio-fuels and cash crops. Old growth forest, wetlands, and other fragile ecosystems which took millennia to evolve and mature are being hacked down and converted into monocultures or urbanized settlements without a second thought. Those that stand the most to lose, in terms of ecosystem services, livelihood opportunities, and educational possibilities, are rural youth, and yet no one is really asking what the role of government schools should be in conserving these resources.

Land use conversion and habitat degradation in Indonesia and Malaysia may actually be occurring at an even quicker and more destructive pace than in Nepal. China has less than one percent of its original forest cover under protected status. Many of these “forests” are simply wood lots for commercial purposes. Cambodia has experienced huge amounts of deforestation in the Cardamom Mountains. The challenges are everywhere. I have chosen to work in Nepal because, having been a Peace Corps volunteer here and worked on various types of projects for a number of years, this is the context that I know and have monitored and where I feel I can help. I have met extraordinary people in Nepal such as Kumar Bishwakarma, a local teacher and conservationist, who helped safeguard 100 acres of biodiversity-rich land to build the first prototype of the vertical university in Yangshila, Morang, within the Siwalik foothills of eastern Nepal. As a post-disaster and post-conflict country facing increasing threats from climate change disasters, it’s also the ideal place to pilot the university.

Another reason our team is so focused here is that Nepal is experiencing an environmental emergency. Between 1990 and 2005, Nepal lost over 4,500 square miles of forest, or 25 percent of its total forest cover in just 15 years. The annual rate of deforestation continues to be 1.7 percent, which means that if nothing is done the forests will continue to decline by one-quarter every 15 years or so until it is gone. Eastern Nepal is one of the world’s 34 biodiversity “hotspots” which has more endemic and rare species that most places on earth, including many that are listed on the IUCN Red List as under critical threat. New species continue to be discovered in the Himalayas each year. With much of the attention focused on the April 2015 earthquake, it is easy to overlook that there is a silent crisis occurring with the nation’s habitats and biological diversity.

Nepal is a paradoxical country. Everywhere there are shortages of energy, water, fuel, and supplies. Yet few places in the world are endowed with more natural resources, physical diversity, and diversity of culture and languages. It’s also a country where schools and education are deeply valued. Putting all of this together, we feel it is the perfect melting pot to realize an idea like this.

Your organization, KTK-BELT, has launched a very ambitious project in Nepal to conserve and teach people about biodiversity. Can you describe the project and the steps you are taking to to achieve this? What have been some of your greatest challenges so far?

KTK-BELT, which I helped co-found with Priyanka Bista, an architect from Canada, works very closely with local communities to help establish learning grounds at the village level, as conservation associations to safeguard threatened habitats. We establish these land plots at different elevations, in different micro-habitats, which in the aggregate help restore habitat connectivity. The learning grounds are plots organized around principles of agro-forestry and permaculture design, where trees cannot be cut down and only organic inputs are permissible.

Currently, we are working in a Village Development Council (VDC) called Yangshila, where we have established 28 learning grounds. Each plot responds to a different conservation need. For example, a plot in a tropical village called Rangcha is focused on the conservation of tropical fruit diversity. In Dahar, a bird-rich area with more than 100 species including the Great Indian Hornbill and Himalayan Vulture, the plot will be designed to deepen this bird diversity. In another plot in Chiuri Bhanjhyang, the aim is to conserve wild ornamental plants.

Bista, who oversees the design and planning arm of the project, is training rural youth in biodiversity mapping, sustainable design, construction methods, and other skills, so that each learning ground is designed by local youth and indigenous farmers and bridges traditional knowledge and modern attributes. This work is challenging because it requires training and capacity building and takes a great deal of time and exposure to change mindsets.

One challenge has been acquiring funding and capital, but we’re starting to get broader support. Recently we turned to crowd funding to share our idea with a global audience and launched a Kickstarter campaign to raise $100,000 before February 24. The idea of the vertical university is also starting to acquire endorsements from the global conservation community, and we recently were awarded the UIAA Mountain Protection Prize in Seoul. If we had major new resources, we could expand the BELT all over eastern Nepal, as we now feel we understand the process and how to go about it.

What are the goals of this vertical university in Nepal?

The goal is ultimately to change perceptions and shift attitudes. We want to make people see that environmental conservation, livelihood, and education are not mutually exclusive, but that each can fortify the other to achieve a much deeper level of sustainability through harnessing diversity. The word “diversity” is overused in our world and often utilized in the context of race, socioeconomic standing, or nationality, but there is a deeper level of diversity, which is the basis of our culture, imagination, and art. We hope that the vertical university will speak for itself and that when people walk in this landscape and see the transitions as they move further up along the BELT, they will realize that any development strategy should emanate from and actually further this mega-diversity.

What can other nations with growing environmental concerns learn from KTK-Belt? Can the methods you’re implementing in Nepal be replicated or adapted elsewhere?

In some ways, a vertical university in a place like Myanmar, for example, where there are snow-capped mountains and a 1,200-mile tropical coastline, could be even more dramatic and more fitting. Bhutan has expressed interest in the idea of creating a “golden walk” themed around birds and bird habitat and modeled on the vertical university concept. We can easily see this being adapted to any country in Asia, including archipelago nations like the Philippines, where the BELT could be oceanic and underwater. The threats, opportunities, issues and challenges are similar across different contexts. The core idea behind the vertical university — the notion of embracing diversity and place-based education — would be relevant throughout Asia.

Our dream is that one day there would be a continuous forest corridor cutting across many countries, going up and down mountains, linking wetlands and rivers. An inspiration for this project was actually the “Re-Wilding Europe” project in the Netherlands, which sought to create a land trust to revive lost species, and which will cut through different countries in Europe. An Asia vertical university could be comprised of thousands of learning grounds, each doing its bit at a local level to conserve species, as well as sub-species agro-biodiversity.

At the same time, having worked on our prototype in Nepal for several years now, it is very hard work and there is no substitute for spending vast amounts of time to map and understand indigenous knowledge. Local people, including women, elders and youth, must be involved at each step so that it has depth and local people feel ownership of it.

Of all the environmental issues that the world is facing, which one, in your opinion, most requires our attention?

That’s an easy question! The disruption of large, intact, undisturbed, wild habitat, whether it be terrestrial or marine.

With the sudden death of Justice Antonin Scalia, attention turns to Justice Sri Srinivasan

Washington, DC: February 14, 2016: With the sudden death of conservative U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, all eyes are on Sri Srinivasan, 48, who has served on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit since May 2013. If chosen by President Obama, Srinivasan would be the first Indian-American on the court and has impeccable bipartisan credentials. The Senate confirmed him on a 97-0 vote three years ago. He was a law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, now retired, a 1981 appointee of Republican President Ronald Reagan. At Srinivasan’s confirmation hearing, Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz, now a presidential candidate, described himself as a long-standing friend dating back to their time together as law clerks in the U.S. appeals court based in Richmond, Virginia. So far on the appeals court, his rulings have not sparked controversy.

“He was an extraordinary individual and jurist, admired and treasured by his colleagues,” Chief Justice John Roberts said in a statement. “His passing is a great loss to the court and the country he so loyally served.” Born in 1936 in Trenton, New Jersey, Justice Scalia was the first Italian American to serve on the high court.

He was one of the most prominent proponents of “originalism” – a conservative legal philosophy that believes the US Constitution has a fixed meaning and does not change with the times. In 2008, Justice Scalia delivered the opinion in District of Columbia v Heller, a landmark case that affirmed an individual’s right to possess a handgun.

Throughout his career, the outspoken justice has been a vocal opponent of abortion and gay rights, often writing scathing dissenting opinions. He supported business interests and was a strong advocate for the death penalty, but he often parted with his conservative colleagues on issues of free speech.

Justice Scalia’s death could shift the balance of power on the US high court, allowing President Barack Obama to add a fifth liberal justice to the bench. The court’s conservative 5-4 majority has recently stalled major efforts by the Obama administration on climate change and immigration.

Justice Scalia, 79, was appointed by President Ronald Reagan in 1986. He died in his sleep early on Saturday while in West Texas for hunting trip, the US Marshals Service said. “For almost 30 years, Justice Scalia was a larger-than-life presence on the bench,” President Obama said, calling him “an extraordinary judicial thinker” with “an incisive wit”.

The president said he intends to name a replacement in due time, despite calls from Republicans to wait until the next president is elected. “There will be plenty of time for me to do so and for the Senate to fulfil its responsibility to give that person a fair hearing and a timely vote,” Obama said.

The sudden departure of Justice Scalia has set up a major political showdown between President Barack Obama and the Republican-controlled Senate over who will replace him just months before a presidential election. It has been nearly 50 years since political wrangling between a president and Senate pushed a Supreme Court nomination into the next administration.

Republicans in the US Senate are expected to do everything they can to prevent Barack Obama, who has fewer than 11 months left in his presidency, from naming a successor to a court that had been sharply divided between liberals and conservatives. If they succeed, a Democratic victory in November would mean a court with a decidedly more liberal bent. If Republicans prevail they preserve their slender conservative majority on a court that regularly issues landmark decisions on issues like gay rights, immigration law, healthcare reform, campaign finance reform and civil liberties.

It is difficult to overestimate the impact that the death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia will have on US politics in the coming months. A vacancy on the court that serves as the final arbiter on legal and political controversies of all stripes, is always a significant, and significantly contentious, event.

The appointment of Justice Scalia’s successor is certain to become a major issue in the presidential race, with stark divisions emerging over whether he or she should be nominated by this president or the next. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, said on Saturday that the new justice should be selected after the presidential election.  “The American people should have a voice in the selection of their next Supreme Court Justice,” he said. His stance was echoed by Republican presidential candidates including senators Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio.

Senator Harry Reid, the top Democrat in the chamber, called the move to delay the confirmation “unprecedented”. “The Republicans in the Senate and on the campaign trail who are calling for Justice Scalia’s seat to remain vacant dishonor our constitution,” Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton said. “The Senate has a constitutional responsibility here that it cannot abdicate for partisan political reasons.”

Appointed by Democratic presidents, associate justices Mrs Ginsburg, 82, Sonia Sotomayor, 61, Stephen Breyer, 77, and Elena Kagan, 55, make up the court’s liberal wing. Appointed by Republican presidents, Chief Justice John Roberts, 61, along with justices Clarence Thomas, 67, Anthony Kennedy, 79, and Samuel Alito, 65, are the court’s conservative bloc. With a Supreme Court closely divided between five conservative justices and four liberal ones, every person on the bench is critical. Many of the most groundbreaking Supreme Court decisions of recent times have been decided by the slimmest of majorities.

Other Justices, who are said to be in consideration for the Supreme Court Bench are: Jane Kelly of Eighth Circuit and Paul Watford of the Ninth Circuit. California Attorney General Kamala Harris is another name that has been floated as a possible Supreme Court nominee, although she’s currently campaigning to replace Barbara Boxer in the US Senate. All are young – which is key when seeking Supreme Court longevity – and popular among liberals, while not having a controversial judicial track record that could be picked apart by conservatives.

Supreme Court justices don’t need to have an extensive background in the judicial branch, however. Normally, if a vacancy opens up on the court, the president will name a successor after a few weeks of consideration. At that point, the US Senate Judiciary Committee will hold hearings in which the nominee is extensively questioned. Then the entire Senate votes on whether to approve the nominee. Although a simple majority of the 100-member Senate is necessary for confirmation, senators could “filibuster” the pick – a procedural manoeuvre that effectively raises the bar for approval to a three-fifths majority.

Republicans in the Senate are going to be under intense pressure from some conservatives to do everything they can to delay confirmation of a replacement until a new chief executive is sworn in on 20 January 2017. That could involve slowing down confirmation hearings in the Senate committee and filibustering any nominee before they receive a vote in the full Senate.

Justice Srinivasan has been considered as a Supreme Court Judge in Waiting. During his prior hearing before the Senate for his current job, it was reported that Justice Sri Srinivasan’s  “credentials would surely appeal to Obama, who has a fondness for technocrats, and his thin paper trail would make him difficult to attack. Which is why it looks very much like this hearing isn’t just a test for Srinivasan—it’s a dress rehearsal.” Now that he had won the nomination with unanimity in the US Senate, all eye are once again on this young judge with impeccable record.

Coldplay Puts on Colorful Indian-themed Show at Super Bowl

Santa Clara, CA: The Super Bowl held this weekend in California had an Indian flavor. Even as millions around the world watched the most popular sport in the US, Coldplay, the rock band decided to use the Pepsi Super Bowl 50 platform to show just how fascinated they are with India and its myriad colors during their Super Bowl halftime act at Levi’s Stadium on February 7 in Santa Clara, Calif.

Coldplay’s latest video featuring Beyoncé, “Hymn for the Weekend,” which was shot in India, stirred much controversy, with many calling it a perfect case of cultural appropriation.  And with more than 100 million people estimated to be tuned into the game night, they sure had a huge audience.

Though the British rockers did not render “Hymn for the Weekend,” they performed on a brightly-colored Super Bowl stage that was adorned with marigold flowers and multi-hued garlands. Even their drum-sets and amplifiers had the band’s name written in Hindi. The four-minute video of the song, “Hymn for the Weekend,” shows Coldplay being chased and pelted with color as residents celebrate Holi, the Indian festival of color.
Many Indians say it stereotypes India as the land of holy men and pagan festival rituals. They say the video ignores changes in India following the economic boom that has changed the face of Indian cities and towns. The music video, shot almost entirely in India’s entertainment capital, Mumbai, also has a two-second appearance by Sonam Kapoor, an up-and-coming Bollywood actress.
The video has triggered a debate among India’s English-speaking elite about cultural appropriation as Beyoncé appears dressed in typical Indian wedding finery, on billboards and in a bioscope painted in many hues.

Baahubali To Launch Comics, Novels, Animations

February 8, 2016 –Arka Mediaworks and acclaimed filmmaker S. S. Rajamouli, announced a partnership with leading character entertainment company, Graphic India to take to epic blockbuster film Baahubali: The Beginning, beloved by millions of fans across the country, and extend it s story world beyond movies into original comic books, novels, animation and video games.

Graphic, currently in production on a number of digital comics and mobile shorts which will be released later this year, is working on various trans-media opportunities and partnerships for the film property across gaming, digital content, novels and merchandise.

“Extending the World of Baahubali beyond movies allows us to reach a larger audiences and that is really exciting for me,” said director SS Rajamouli. “We are happy to be collaborating with Graphic India who I believe have the best knowledge and experience in this space”.

CEO of Arka Mediaworks, Shobu Yarlagadda said “Having created so many iconic stories and characters, there is no one more equipped than Graphic India, to take the story of Baahubali forward. We are very excited for what’s to come.”

Graphic and Arka are also working on a larger animated project, tentatively entitled, “Baahubali: the Lost Legends,” which is being developed and produced by Rajamouli, Shobu Yarlagadda, and Graphic India Co-Founder Sharad Devarajan. More details on that project will be released in the coming months.

“The epic storytelling and groundbreaking visuals that S. S. Rajamouli created have captivated millions of fans including myself, and the future of Indian cinema shall now always be defined as ‘before Baahubali’ and ‘after Baahubali’. I am so deeply honored and humbled to work with, and learn from Rajamouli, Shobu and the Arka team as we bring their epic world into comics, animation and gaming,”added Graphic India Co-Founder & CEO, Sharad Devarajan. “

Through comics and animation, millions of fans will finally be able to experience secret stories and hidden legends about the world and characters from Baahubali. Two brothers competing to rule the greatest kingdom of its age and the epic adventures they must endure to prove they are worthy to one day wear the crown. One shall rise to be King of the throne, while the other shall become King of the people.

Political intrigue, betrayal, war, action and adventure – through dense forests, epic mountain tops, raging seas and hidden underground caves, Prince Baahubali’s adventures will take him beyond what was seen in the film, exploring different kingdoms, fighting strange and deadly warriors, saving villages from tyrannical warlords, and rescuing the innocent from certain death. Experience an age of legends and heroes; learn back stories and secrets about your favorite characters from the film and clues about the upcoming sequel.

GRAPHIC INDIA is a character entertainment company focused on creating leading characters, comics and stories through mobile and digital platforms.  Led by media entrepreneur Sharad Devarajan, Graphic India is owned by U.S. comic book Company, Liquid Comics LLC, CA Media LP, the Asian investment arm of The Chernin Group, LLC (TCG) and NYC Media Group, Start Media. The company’s partners and investors bring together decades of experience in building businesses in character entertainment, media and India.

Graphic’s stories include Chakra The Invincible, the first superhero for India from legendary creator Stan Lee, which launched on Cartoon Network and has over 40 million views from worldwide audiences on Angry Bird’s ToonsTV platform;Astra Force, created with legendary icon, Amitabh Bachchan and in production as an animated TV series for Disney; 18 Days, a reimagining of the great eastern epic, the Mahabharata, by acclaimed Batman writer, Grant Morrison; Devi, from acclaimed filmmaker, ShekharKapur; Ramayan 3392A.D., The Sadhu, Titans and The Leaves, all currently in development as Hollywood feature films; and numerous other heroes and stories.

Graphic believes that India is home to some of the most creative talent in the world, with more than 500 million people under the age of 25 and more than 850 million mobile phone users in the country. The Company’s mission is to create enduring stories and heroes that foster the imaginations and fuel the inspirations of a new globalized generation of youth in both India and around the world. www.GraphicIndia.com

Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders Intensify Efforts in New Hampshire After Iowa Standoff

NASHUA, N.H. — The absence of a clear political triumph in Iowa put both Democratic candidates in unexpected positions coming into New Hampshire. Hillary Clinton is digging in for a tough fight against Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont in next week’s primary in New Hampshire, according to her advisers. Clinton is trying to spark political momentum and fund-raising energy after only a razor-thin victory in the Iowa caucuses. Things have come a long for the former First Lady, who once was considered a sure winner, goes to New Hampshire trailing behind her rival by at least 20 points, and especially after a razor thin victory in Iowa.

The Clinton campaign had considered shifting its focus to Nevada and South Carolina, which hold nominating contests later in February. But Clinton, with the strong support of former President Bill Clinton, decided she would help herself more by closing the gap in New Hampshire, where polls show Sanders with a double-digit lead. The Clintons even hope she might pull off an upset win here, as she did in 2008, given their long history of campaigning in the state. “This is going to be a great week of campaigning,” Clinton said.

Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders Intensify Efforts in New Hampshire After Iowa Standoff
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton

For the Clintons, the New Hampshire primary holds an emotional attachment. It is the state that made Bill Clinton the “Comeback Kid” after he overcame scandal to place second here in 1992. Hillary Clinton said she “found my own voice” in New Hampshire in 2008 with a surprise victory here after finishing third in Iowa.

Some analysts say, the uncertain outcome in Iowa dealt a jolting psychological blow to the Clinton campaign, leaving volunteers, donors and aides confused throughout the night, and then crestfallen. Hillary Clinton urged the voters who gave her a surprise win in 2008 to get behind her again. “New Hampshire, come with me this week,” she told the crowd in Nashua just before The Associated Press called the Iowa race. A woman shouted, “We are!”

According to reports, Sanders and his team are said to be making plans to spend more than $1 million on television commercials in an attempt to solidify his advantage. He also drew about $3 million in donations in the 24 hours after his caucus speech Monday night, his campaign said; with $28 million on hand, compared with Mrs. Clinton’s $38 million, Sanders advisers expressed confidence that he would not stumble like other insurgent presidential candidates of the past.

Sanders had hoped to unnerve Clinton by eking out a win in Iowa, and instead found himself trying to spin gold out of his “virtual tie” with her in the caucuses. Yet he and his advisers welcomed the sudden prospect of increased competition from Clinton here because it played into the expectations game as the Sanders campaign would like to play it.

Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders Intensify Efforts in New Hampshire After Iowa Standoff
Bernie Sanders

The Clinton campaign has already sought to dismiss any potential victory by Sanders here as irrelevant, given the state’s history of rewarding candidates from New England. “I know I am in a contest with your neighbor,” Mrs. Clinton saidTuesday night in Hampton, N.H. “We are in his backyard.”

Sanders has vowed to campaign hard across New Hampshire and said that as in Iowa, his campaign would focus on getting supporters to the polls on election night. “Secretary Clinton won here in 2008,” he told a group of reporters in Keene after a rally. “Secretary Clinton has a very formidable political organization and, as you know, has virtually the entire political establishment on her side. So, you know, we are taking nothing for granted.”

Sania Mirza, Martina Hingis Win Australian Open Doubles Title

New York, NY: January 30, 2016: World number one doubles pairing Martina Hingis and Sania Mirza clinched their first Australian Open doubles title together with a 7-6(1) 6-3 victory over Czech pair Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka on Friday.

It was the 12th grand slam women’s doubles title for Hingis while the third for India’s Mirza, all of which have come with the Swiss in the last year. The pair, who have now won 36 successive doubles matches, are also the reigning Wimbledon and U.S. Open champions.

“Thanks to my partner, we have had an incredible year,” Mirza said in a courtside interview. “We keep going and it’s great to have all these records with you.” Both pairs were broken four times each in the first set before Mirza sealed it in the tiebreak after 62 minutes when Hradecka sent a forehand service return long over the baseline.

Hingis, who was knocked out by Mirza and Croatia’s Ivan Dodig in the mixed doubles quarter-finals, took a medical time out at the end of the first set to have treatment to her right shoulder, but did not appear troubled.

Hradecka dropped serve in the first and fifth games of the second set, to give the top seeds a 4-1 lead, and while Mirza lost her next service game they never looked like relinquishing control with Hingis dominant at the net.

The Swiss was then broken while serving for the title, though they sealed it on their fourth championship point when Hradecka’s running forehand sailed over the baseline, the third time she was broken in the set. “You have won two grand slam doubles so you were very tough,” Hingis said of the Czech pair. “I know everyone will say break, break, break but you guys have the best returns in doubles.”

2015 Was Hottest Year in Historical Record, Scientists Say

New York, NY; January 24, 2016: Scientists reported last week that 2015 was the hottest year in the historical record by far, breaking a mark set only the year before — a burst of heat that has continued into the new year and is roiling weather patterns all over the world. In the contiguous United States, the year was the second-warmest on record, punctuated by a December that was both the hottest and the wettest since record-keeping began. One result has been a wave of unusual winter floods coursing down the Mississippi River watershed.

On Jan. 7, NOAA reported that 2015 was the second-warmest year on record, after 2012, for the lower 48 United States. That land mass covers less than 2 percent of the surface of the Earth, so it is not unusual to have a slight divergence between United States temperatures and those of the planet as a whole. The end of the year was especially remarkable in the United States, with virtually every state east of the Mississippi River having a record warm December, often accompanied by heavy rains.

Scientists started predicting a global temperature record months ago, in part because an El Niño weather pattern, one of the largest in a century, is releasing an immense amount of heat from the Pacific Ocean into the atmosphere. But the bulk of the record-setting heat, they say, is a consequence of the long-term planetary warming caused by human emissions of greenhouse gases.

“The whole system is warming up, relentlessly,” said Gerald A. Meehl, a scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo. It will take a few more years to know for certain, but the back-to-back records of 2014 and 2015 may have put the world back onto a trajectory of rapid global warming, after a period of relatively slow warming dating to the last powerful El Niño, in 1998.

Politicians attempting to claim that greenhouse gases are not a problem seized on that slow period to argue that “global warming stopped in 1998,” with these claims and similar statements reappearing recently on the Republican presidential campaign trail.

Statistical analysis suggested all along that the claims were false, and that the slowdown was, at most, a minor blip in an inexorable trend, perhaps caused by a temporary increase in the absorption of heat by the Pacific Ocean.

“Is there any evidence for a pause in the long-term global warming rate?” said Gavin A. Schmidt, head of NASA’s climate-science unit, the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, in Manhattan. “The answer is no. That was true before last year, but it’s much more obvious now.”

Michael E. Mann, a climate scientist at Pennsylvania State University, calculated that if the global climate were not warming, the odds of setting two back-to-back record years would be remote, about one chance in every 1,500 pairs of years. Given the reality that the planet is warming, the odds become far higher, about one chance in 10, according to Dr. Mann’s calculations.

Two American government agencies — NASA, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration — compile separate analyses of the global temperature, based upon thousands of measurements from weather stations, ships and ocean buoys scattered around the world. Meteorological agencies in Britain and Japan do so, as well. The agencies follow slightly different methods to cope with problems in the data, but obtain similar results.

The American agencies released figures on Wednesday showing that 2015 was the warmest year in a global record that began, in their data, in 1880. British scientists released figures showing 2015 as the warmest in a record dating to 1850. The Japan Meteorological Agency had already released preliminary results showing 2015 as the warmest year in a record beginning in 1891.

A warmer atmosphere can hold more water vapor, and an intensification of rainstorms was one of the fundamental predictions made by climate scientists decades ago as a consequence of human emissions. That prediction has come to pass, with the rains growing more intense across every region of the United States, but especially so in the East.

Some additional measurements, of shorter duration, are available for the ocean depths and the atmosphere above the surface, both generally showing an inexorable long-term warming trend.

Most satellite measurements of the lower and middle layers of the atmosphere show 2015 to have been the third- or fourth-warmest year in a 37-year record, and scientists said it was slightly surprising that the huge El Niño had not produced a greater warming there. They added that this could yet happen in 2016.

When temperatures are averaged at a global scale, the differences between years are usually measured in fractions of a degree. In the NOAA data set, 2015 was 0.29 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than 2014, the largest jump ever over a previous record. NASA calculated a slightly smaller figure, but still described it as an unusual one-year increase.

The intense warmth of 2015 contributed to a heat wave in India last spring that turns out to have been the second-worst in that country’s history, killing an estimated 2,500 people. The long-term global warming trend has exacted a severe toll from extreme heat, with eight of the world’s 10 deadliest heat waves occurring since 1997.

Only rough estimates of heat deaths are available, but according to figures from the Center for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters, in Brussels, the toll over the past two decades is approaching 140,000 people, with most of those deaths occurring during a European heat wave in 2003 and a Russian heat wave in 2010.

The strong El Niño has continued into 2016, raising the possibility that this year will, yet again, set a global temperature record. The El Niño pattern is also disturbing the circulation of the atmosphere, contributing to worldwide weather extremes that include a drought in southern Africa, threatening the food supply of millions.

9th Planet Discovered

Washington, DC; January 24, 2016: American astronomers say they have strong evidence that there is a ninth planet in our Solar System orbiting far beyond even the dwarf world Pluto. The team, from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), has no direct observations to confirm its presence just yet.

Rather, the scientists make the claim based on the way other far-flung objects are seen to move. But if proven, the putative planet would have 10 times the mass of Earth.

The Caltech astronomers have a vague idea where it ought to be on the sky, and their work is sure to fire a campaign to try to track it down. “There are many telescopes on the Earth that actually have a chance of being able to find it,” said Dr. Mike Brown. “And I’m really hoping that as we announce this, people start a worldwide search to go find this ninth planet.”

The group’s calculations suggest the object orbits 20 times farther from the Sun on average than does the eighth – and currently outermost – planet, Neptune, which moves about 4.5 billion km from our star.

But unlike the near-circular paths traced by the main planets, this novel object would be in a highly elliptical trajectory, taking between 10,000 and 20,000 years to complete one full lap around the Sun.

The Caltech group has analysed the movements of objects in a band of far-off icy material known as the Kuiper Belt. It is in this band that Pluto resides.  The scientists say they see distinct alignments among some members of the Kuiper Belt – and in particular two of its larger members known as Sedna and 2012 VP113. These alignments, they argue, are best explained by the existence of a hitherto unidentified large planet.

“The most distant objects all swing out in one direction in a very strange way that shouldn’t happen, and we realised the only way we could get them to swing in one direction is if there is a massive planet, also very distant in the Solar System, keeping them in place while they all go around the Sun,” explained Dr Brown. “I went from trying very hard to be sceptical that what we were talking about was true, to suddenly thinking, ‘this might actually be true’.”

The idea that there might be a so-called Planet X moving in the distant reaches of the Solar System has been debated for more than a hundred years. It has fallen in and out of vogue.

What makes this claim a little more interesting is Dr Brown himself.  He specialises in finding far-flung objects, and it was his discovery of 2,236km-wide Eris in the Kuiper Belt in 2005 that led famously to the demotion of Pluto from full planet status a year later (Dr Brown’s Twitter handle is @PlutoKiller). At that stage, Pluto was thought to be slightly smaller than Eris, but is now known to be just a little bit bigger.

Others who model the outer Solar System have been saying for some years that the distribution of sizes seen in the objects so far identified in the Kuiper Belt suggests another planet perhaps the size of Earth or Mars could be a possibility. But there is sure to be strong scepticism until a confirmed observation is made.

Nasa’s chief scientist, Ellen Stofan, said she certainly needed telescopic evidence.  “The intriguing point is: we’ve identified lots of planets (beyond our Solar System) in this category of ‘super-Earth’ with our Kepler telescope; over 5,000 planet candidates. The fact that we don’t have a planet in that size class between Earth and Neptune makes us think, ‘well, maybe we are missing one’, and maybe they’ve predicted it,” she told BBC News.

Supreme Court to Review Case Opposing Obama’s Immigration Plan

The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review President Barack Obama’s 2014 executive order which would allow the undocumented parents of U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents to remain in the country without fear of deportation.

The justices will hear the case in April and are expected to issue a ruling in June. Opponents of Obama’s initiative have argued that the president has overstepped his role by issuing the order, known as the Deferred Action for Parents of Americans.

More than five million undocumented U.S. residents would be affected by the plan, which allows for work permits, drivers’ licenses and relief from deportation. Obama’s executive order also expands the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which has been in effect since 2011.

“We’ve got a lot of confidence in the legal arguments that we’ll be making before the court,” White House press secretary Josh Earnest told reporters Jan. 19 at the daily briefing.

“The kinds of executive actions that the president took a little over a year ago now to try to bring some much-needed reforms and greater accountability to our broken immigration system were clearly consistent with the precedent that was established by other presidents, and clearly within the confines of his authority as president of the United States. That’s the nature of the argument that will be presented to the court,” he said.

“These executive actions will have on the security of communities all across the country, a positive impact on our economy, and obviously a positive impact on thousands of families inside the United States,” said Earnest.

An estimated 11 million undocumented people currently reside in the U.S. India is the fourth largest source of unauthorized immigrants in America, behind Mexico, El Salvador, and Guatemala. The Pew Research Center estimates there are 450,000 undocumented Indians living in the U.S.

The initiative was immediately challenged by 26 states after the president announced the plan in November 2014. A lawsuit brought about by the states – Texas v. USA – has kept the order from being implemented.

The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled last November to block implementation of DAPA, upholding a lower court’s decision in February. Texas contends it would have to incur “millions” in cost for providing drivers’ licenses and unemployment benefits to at least half a million undocumented people who reside in the state.

The South Asian Bar Association applauded the Supreme Court’s decision to hear Texas v. USA, “thereby preserving the hopes of nearly four million undocumented individuals in the United States for quasi-legal status, temporary work authorization, and at least temporary relief from deportation.”

The organization noted it had filed an amicus – friend of the court – brief as the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals heard the case, stating that DAPA and expansion of DACA are well within the realm of the president’s executive authority.

“While the court is sure to examine the scope of the president’s authority to enact these programs, we urge the court to consider the very real interests of the families and individuals who would benefit from this program,” said SABA president Anne Gwal in a statement.

“Separation by deportation is cruel and unnecessary, and the inability to legally work in the United States relegates millions of people to the shadow economy,” she said.

If the Supreme Court reverses the lower court’s decision and upholds the executive order, the Department of Homeland Security would have about seven months to implement these programs before a new president assumes office, noted SABA. Asian Americans Advancing Justice noted that the new DAPA initiative and expanded DACA would benefit at least 400,000 Asian and Pacific Islander immigrants nationwide.

“We applaud the Supreme Court for agreeing to hear this case. We hope they correct the lower court’s ruling, and recognize correctly the legal authority of the president to exercise discretion in immigration enforcement,” stated Stewart Kwoh, president and executive director of Asian Americans Advancing Justice – Los Angeles.

India among Top 5 Most Promising Markets Globally

Washington, DC; January 24, 2016: India has emerged as one of the five most promising markets for businesses globally as it offers one of the best opportunities for both domestic as well as global companies, says a survey.

According to the annual global CEO survey of consultancy giant PwC released here at the WEF Annual Meeting, the top five markets considered as most important for overall growth prospects by the respondents are USA, China, Germany, the UK and India.

“India, which has continued to do well under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s pro-business government, is now among CEOs’ five most promising overseas markets,” said the survey which covered 1,409 CEOs spread across 83 countries.

It further noted that the confidence level among Indian CEOs remains higher than the global average although they have also become less confident since last year about the growth prospects of their own companies.

As per the findings, CEOs are less optimistic about prospects this year and those who think global growth would improve over the next 12 months have declined to 27 per cent from 37 per cent seen in 2015. Further, those who think the situation would worsen have increased to 23 per cent from 17 per cent. “Against this tide of pessimism, CEOs in India (64 per cent), Spain (54 per cent) and Romania (50 per cent) stand out as more optimistic,” it said.

PwC India Chairman Deepak Kapoor said CEOs in India have given strong indication of general uplift in sentiments by showing much more confidence than their global counterparts when it comes to revenue growth for their companies. “Recent policy reforms and a consequent pick up in investment and the government’s aim to boost infrastructure are also playing a role in boosting CEO confidence,” he noted. However, Kapoor said the CEO community continues to be concerned by lack of infrastructure and over-regulation.

As many as 90 per cent of the Indian CEOs cited inadequate basic infrastructure as a major threat and 80 per cent mentioned exchange rate volatility and 77 per cent cited over-regulation.

“Of business threats, 81 per cent stated availability of key skills, 79 per cent stated speed of technological change, 78 per cent stated bribery and corruption,” the survey said.

“With India as the fastest growing large economy in the world, it offers one of the best opportunities for both Indian and global companies in a world that is still coming to terms with a slower growth paradigm and increasing geopolitical uncertainty,” he added.

With respect to the global economy, 39 per cent of Indian executives expect an improvement whereas the global average is 27 per cent. Around 75 per cent of Indian CEOs believe there are more growth opportunities for their companies today than three years ago.

About countries most important for their companies’ growth in the next one year, 54 per cent said it was the US while 29 per cent respondents mentioned China and 23 per cent went for the UK.

As many as 56 per cent of the Indian executives plan to implement a cost-reduction initiative over the next 12 months. While 70 per cent anticipate increase in head count during the same period.

When it comes to disruptive trends in their industry most likely to transform wider stakeholder expectations over the next five years, 80 per cent of the respondents cited technological advances followed by demographic shifts (64 per cent) and shift in global economic power (55 per cent).

Around 64 per cent of Indian CEOs felt the government had been ineffective in achieving greater income equality. About 51 per cent thought that the government had been ineffective in reducing environmental impacts as well as in achieving a clearly understood, stable and effective tax system.

“93 per cent of Indian CEOs agree that tax is a business cost that needs to be efficiently managed like any other business cost… 87 per cent agree that a stable tax system is more important than low rates of tax,” it said.

Around 81 per cent agreed that reducing administrative burden of tax is as beneficial as reducing tax rates. With 79 per cent of CEOs concerned about over-regulation, it remains the biggest concern and is followed by geopolitical uncertainty.

The latter comes at a time when terror attacks are increasing and touching every part of the world, many linked to the heightened conflict in Iraq and Syria. “Global conflicts are also connected to anxieties about social instability and readiness to respond to crises, named by 65 per cent and 61 per cent of CEOs, respectively.

“Cyber security is also a worry for 61 per cent of CEOs, representing as it does (pose) threats to both national and commercial interests,” the survey said. As many as 66 per cent of the CEOs see more threats for their companies than it was three years ago, the report said.

Blizzard strikes East Coast, shuts down travel

Washington, DC; January 24, 2016: A massive winter storm clobbered the East Coast on Saturday, January 23, 2016, dumping more than three feet of snow in parts of West Virginia and Maryland, tying up traffic on highways, grounding thousands of flights and shutting down travel in the nation’s largest city.

From the Carolinas to New York, tens of thousands were without power Saturday night as a result of the storm, which was finally heading out to the Atlantic. Except for some isolated flurries, snowfall in most of the major cities will likely finish early Sunday morning, CNN Meteorologist Sean Morris said.

Blizzard strikes East Coast, shuts down travel40 inches of snow was recorded in Glengary, West Virginia; 39 inches fell in Philomont, Virginia; and Redhouse, Maryland, received 38 inches. In Central Park in New York City 25.1 inches of snow fell making it the third-largest snowfall on record. More than 28 inches of snow at Dulles International Airport, the second-largest snowfall recorded there. Baltimore’s BWI notched 29.2 inches.

At least 14 people dead (six in North Carolina, three in Virginia, one in Kentucky, three in New York City and one in Maryland).11 states declared states of emergency: Georgia, Tennessee, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Kentucky, North Carolina, New Jersey, New York, Delaware, Virginia and West Virginia. Washington, D.C., has declared a “snow emergency.” 8,569 flights canceled for Saturday and Sunday, according to FlightAware.com. More than 74,000 people without power.

Clinton Woos Indian Americans, Other Asians With Launch of ‘AAPI for Hillary’

Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton Jan. 7 courted Indian Americans and the larger group of Asian-American voters, telling members of the nation’s fastest growing racial minority that she disagrees with the “hateful rhetoric” of her Republican challengers.

“They forget a fundamental lesson about our great country,” she told several hundred people gathered in a hotel ballroom in suburban Los Angeles. “Being an open and tolerant society does not make us vulnerable. It’s at the core of our strength.”

Clinton’s campaign stop in the San Gabriel Valley, an enclave home to more than a half million Asian-Americans, marked the launch of her grassroots outreach to the growing pool of Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders, called “AAPI for Hillary.” Those voters have trended Democratic in recent presidential elections, though they are still considered up for political grabs. Their influence is considered critical in some swing states. California is not one of those, having voted for a Democrat for president every election since 1992.

Republicans suggested Clinton’s visit is more about raising campaign cash. “The reality is Democrats have long taken the AAPI community for granted, and Hillary Clinton will be no different,” said Ninio Fetalvo, a spokesman for the Republican National Committee.

Clinton made her appeal to Asian-American and Pacific Islander voters in a Southern California region where a number of cities are now majority Asian-American and store signs in Mandarin and Cantonese line the streets.

“Their party identity is not cast in stone,” said Karthick Ramakrishnan, an Indian American professor of public policy and political science at the University of California, Riverside. “There’s still potential for persuasion there.”

In a half-hour speech, Clinton told constituents she would be the one to fix the nation’s broken immigration system, improve access to higher education, and increase wages — all issues considered top priorities for the Asian American electorate. She vowed to reduce the visa backlog and help unauthorized immigrants with deep community ties that “deserve the chance to stay.”

“Ultimately this is more than an economic or political issue,” she said. “It’s a family issue.”

Nearly 4 million Asians voted in the 2012 presidential election, a 547,000 increase over 2008. According to exit polls, nearly three-quarters of Asian-American voters favored President Barack Obama in the 2012 election. They comprised about 3 percent of the total electorate.

The Asian-American community has been the subject of relatively little discussion in the Democratic and Republican primaries.

PTI adds: The group, called “AAPI Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) for Hillary,” was launched in Southern California in the presence of a large number of Asian American leaders, including Indian Americans.

At the launch, Clinton pledged to address the concerns of the community, including those related to immigration and visas.

In her speech, Clinton pledged to work to reduce the backlog for family visas to reunite immigrant families.

“Applicants from the Asia-Pacific region make up about 40 percent of the family visa backlog. Some from the Philippines have been waiting for a visa for 23 years. If you’re a U.S. citizen and your brother lives in India, it will take at least 12 years just to get him a visa,” the former secretary of state said.

“We have got to do more to help the millions of people who are eligible for citizenship take that last step. I will work to expand fee waivers so more people can get a break on the costs. I will increase access to language programs to help people boost their English proficiency.

“I don’t want anyone who could be a citizen now to miss out on that opportunity,” she said.She also explained the reasons for her early outreach to the community.

“That is essential because right now, it’s one of the fastest-growing communities in this country, but it’s a community that votes at a lower rate than others,” Clinton said.

America’s ties to the Asia-Pacific region have always been important, but in the 21st century they will be absolutely vital, she said.

“I was very proud when my husband’s administration launched the first-ever White House initiative on Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders,” she added.

The United States, she said, is a country built by the hard work of generations of immigrants and America is stronger because of its diversity and openness.

She also identified Donald Trump – the Republican presidential front runner – in her speech.

“I disagree with the Republican front-runner, Mr. Trump. See, I think America is great because generations of hardworking Americans have made us great. Our values and our ideals have made us great,” Clinton said.

Foreign Affairs and the World Economic Forum Collaborate on The Fourth Industrial Revolution for Davos 2016

January 20, 2016 — Foreign Affairs magazine, in collaboration with the World Economic Forum (WEF) has published a special anthology, The Fourth Industrial Revolution: A Davos Reader, to coincide with the theme of this year’s annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland. The 180-page special issue—which covers everything from social media to the Internet of Things, digital fabrication to robotics, and virtual reality to synthetic biology—will be available to all meeting attendees in both electronic and print formats.
The compilation begins with an essay by Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic ForumKlaus Schwab, who explains that the fourth industrial revolution “is characterized by a fusion of technologies that is blurring the lines between the physical, digital, and biological spheres.”
“The speed of current breakthroughs has no historical precedent. When compared with previous industrial revolutions, the Fourth is evolving at an exponential rather than a linear pace. Moreover, it is disrupting almost every industry in every country. And the breadth and depth of these changes herald the transformation of entire systems of production, management, and governance,” writes Schwab. “We must develop a comprehensive and globally shared view of how technology is affecting our lives and reshaping our economic, social, cultural, and human environments. There has never been a time of greater promise, or one of greater potential peril,” he urges.
Other highlights from the anthology include:
The Robots Are Coming: How Technological Breakthroughs Will Transform Everyday Life
It is no question that robots could “greatly improve the quality of our lives at home, at work, and at play,” writes Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s (MIT) Daniela Rus, who directs MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. The goal of integrating robots into daily life is “to find ways for machines to assist and collaborate with humans more effectively.” That future is not quite here yet: although robots have evolved in “perception, reasoning, control, and coordination,” they still lag behind humans in “abstraction, generalization, and creative thinking.”
Will Humans Go the Way of Horses? Labor in the Second Machine Age
“The debate over what technology does to work, jobs, and wages is as old as the industrial era itself,” note MIT’s Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee as they consider the potential for robotics and automation to render human labor obsolete, just as the steam engine did for horses. “The answer is almost certainly no,” they contend, for humans are “more dexterous and nimble than any single piece of machinery.” And although computers might outpace humans at arithmetic and pattern recognition, our mental advantages cannot be matched.
Same as It Ever Was: Why the Techno-Optimists Are Wrong
In recent years, an influential strain of techno-optimism has promoted the idea that “humanity stands on the verge of breakthroughs in information technology, robotics, and artificial intelligence that will dwarf what has been achieved in the past two centuries,” writes Martin Wolf, chief economics commentator for the Financial Times. Others, he notes, warn of “great dangers, including those of soaring unemployment and inequality.” But is all the hype justified? “The answer is no,” Wolf argues.
The Innovative State: Governments Should Make Markets, Not Just Fix Them
The conventional view of a state’s role in fostering innovation is simple: get out of the way. At best, governments merely facilitate private-sector economic dynamism; at worst, they actively inhibit growth. In fact, argues University of Sussex Professor Marianna Mazzucato, in countries that owe their growth to innovation, the reverse has been true: the state has taken the lead in investing in new technology, assuming the risks that businesses will not.
The Power of Market Creation: How Innovation Can Spur Development
Most explanations of economic growth focus on conditions or incentives at the global or national level. But at the end of the day, societies, governments, or industries do not create jobs—companies do. Entrepreneurs and businesses choose whether or not to spend, invest, or hire. Harvard Business School’sBryan C. Mezue, Clayton M. Christensen, and Derek van Bever examine three categories of innovation—sustaining innovation, efficiency innovation, and market-creating innovation.
Also in the compilation:
New York University Professor Clay Shirky and best-selling author and journalist Malcolm Gladwell on the political power of social media
Cisco’s John Chambers and Wim Elfrink on the Internet of Things
The Council on Foreign Relations’ Laurie Garrett on the promises and perils of synthetic biology
The Economist’s Kenneth Cukier and the Oxford Internet Institute’s Viktor Mayer-Schoenberger on the rise and effects of big data

Toshiba Slashes 7,000 Jobs after $4.53 Billion Loss

Toshiba, the Japanese multinational conglomerate corporation has informed the media that it will cut down approximately 7,000 jobs in the near future as a result of $1.3 billion accounting scandal. The company is all set to sell their television manufacturing plant in Indonesia. This sudden move might cause a huge cut down in the consumer electronic jobs in the company, reports Economic Times

According to reports, the deal of the Indonesian plant is going to be done on a net loss of $4.53 billion at the end of this financial year. The company stated that “By implementing this plan, we would like to regain the trust of all stakeholders including shareholders and transform ourselves into a robust business,”

The company has addressed a 37.8 billion yen loss in August which reflected costs and conservative estimates on operations, including the South Texas Project, a US power plant project. In July it has been reported that the company also had employees questioning their superiors. The company which launched world’s first market laptop in 1985 has said to have long overdue. The 140 years old organization is going through a change in fortune. The company has been a prominent power in the Japanese business market over a century and its former executives has also served as policy advisors for the government.

Zuckerberg Fuels Free Basics vs Net Neutrality Debate in India

First splashy full page ads in major Indian newspapers and now a personal piece by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg in a leading English daily defending Free Basics, the war over “free” or “selective” internet services for the poor and net neutrality has entered a new phase.

“Free Basics should stay to help achieve digital equality for India. Free Basics is a bridge to the full internet and digital equality,” Zuckerberg wrote in his opinion piece on Monday in the Times of India, defending his ambitious initiative to provide a pre-selected suite of internet services to those who can’t afford it.

“There’s no valid basis for denying people the choice to use Free Basics, and that’s what thousands of people across India have chosen to tell the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) over the last few weeks,” he added.

Last week, Nikhil Pahwa, a volunteer with savetheinternet.in, wrote a counterpoint in the same daily against Zuckerberg’s appeal to save Free Basics. “Why has Facebook chosen the current model for Free Basics, which gives users a selection of around a hundred sites (including a personal blog and a real estate company homepage, while rejecting the option of giving the poor free access to the open, plural and diverse web,” he asked the Facebook founder.

Users who log on to their Facebook accounts are greeted with a message: “Act Now to Save Free Basics in India. Send a message to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) and tell them you support Free Basics in India.” Some users are even receiving “notifications” from friends: “sending messages to TRAI about Free Basics.”

TRAI has announced a deadline for public’s response on Free Basics while people can go to the online portal savetheinternet.in to register support for net neutrality. For those who are yet to be part of the ongoing debate, Free Basics is an app that gives users selective access to services like communication, healthcare, education, job listings and farming information — all without data charges.

On the other hand, “net neutrality” means that governments and internet service providers treat all data on the internet equally and, therefore, not deferentially charge users, content, platforms, sites, applications or mode of communication.

Facebook rechristened its free internet platform internet.org which it developed in conjunction with Reliance Communications Network as Free Basics in September. According to Facebook, it has been able to offer Free Basics services to a billion people across Asia, Africa and Latin America.

According to Pahwa, India is expected to have 500 million internet users by the end of 2017. “What kind of an internet they get access to is important for our country. This is why the battle for Net Neutrality, with the last and current TRAI consultations included, is the battle for our Internet Freedom,” he wrote.

Meanwhile, a post on “Save Free Basics in India” Facebook page read: “Free Basics is in danger in India. A small, vocal group of critics are lobbying to have Free Basics banned on the basis of net neutrality.”

It says that “instead of giving people access to some basic internet services for free, they demand that people pay equally to access all internet services — even if that means one billion people can’t afford to access any services.”

Asked about net neutrality and Internet.org, Zuckerberg said during his recent visit to India in November that the Free Basics platform aims to solve three problems of connecting to the internet — availability, affordability and awareness.

He said “Free Basics programme under the Internet.org initiative aims to connect the next billion people. It does not intend to harm anyone — neither the consumers nor the operators”. He reiterated India’s importance as a market for Facebook and said nearly 250 million of the targeted next billion will come from India.

‘Invest Karnataka 2016’ to Focus On Women Entrepreneurs

The Karnataka government’s ensuing Global Investors Meet (GIM) here on February 3-5 would focus on promoting women entrepreneurs in the state, an official said last week. “For the first time in a GIM, a session on promoting women entrepreneurship in the state will be held on February 4. They will also be given a centre-stage platform to connect and network with other stakeholders,” Additional Chief Secretary, Commerce and Industries, K. Ratna Prabha said in a statement here.

The three-day ‘Invest Karnataka 2016’ will be held at Bangalore Palace grounds in the city centre to promote the southern state as a premier destination for investments from across the country and overseas. “A delegation of women entrepreneurs from San Francisco on the U.S. west coast will participate in the GIM as an outcome of an agreement between the two cities (Bengaluru and San Francisco),” Prabha said in the statement after chairing a meeting with women associations on the event here.

Asserting that women entrepreneurs were talented, hard working and forward looking, Prabha said they performed much better in diverse sectors such as aerospace, biotech, IT, textiles and tourism. “We are encouraging women entrepreneurs also to move away from Bengaluru and set up units in tier-two and tier-three cities for giving impetus to other regions in the state,” Prabha added.

The state government has decided to provide two exclusive industrial areas for women entrepreneurs at Hubballi-Dharwad and Harohalli in Ramanagara district, about 45km from Bengaluru, five percent of plots and sheds in industrial areas and estates and exclusive textiles and gems & jeweler clusters.

Gov. Nikki Haley Advances Chances For Vice Presidential Candidate

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (R) has been chosen by Republican leaders in Congress to give her party’s response to President Obama’s final State of the Union address, which he’s delivering to Congress on Tuesday, January 12th, 2016.

The prestigious invitation was the natural next step for a governor who earned national attention and applause for her handling of the aftermath of a mass shooting in her state this summer. For that, Haley topped the list for one of the most notable governors in 2015:

After an avowed white supremacist shot and killed nine black parishioners in a Charleston church this June, Haley handled her role as the state’s griever-in-chief with grace, choking up in an emotional speech soon after, and a few months later delivering a speech in Washington calling on the GOP to be more tolerant toward minorities.

But it was the way Haley forcefully put herself at the front of the charge to end displays of the Confederate flag on public property that won her the most praise. As presidential candidates appeared to hem and haw, Haley called for the state legislature to remove the flag from statehouse grounds — something it did shortly after. “I knew that it was giving a lot of people a pass to do what was right,” she told The Washington Post’s Abby Phillip.

Tuesday’s address is also a natural platform for Haley to try out for a job some in her party have considered her for: The GOP vice presidential nominee. For a few minutes Tuesday, she’ll be a voice for her party in a speech that is likely to have major electoral overtones. She’ll be drawing contrasts between Obama’s — and by extension, likely Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton’s — vision for America and the Republican vision, while attempting to make the case to the nation that Republicans should lead it instead.

This moment was a long time coming. Whispers of Haley’s national potential began the moment in 2010 that she came from relative obscurity to win a crowded primary — as an Indian American female state legislator who defeated three more-established white male politicians — and eventually become South Carolina’s first female and first minority governor.

Haley’s background already looked like a no-brainer to be a vice presidential short-lister for a party that badly wants to make inroads with women, minorities and younger voters: She is the daughter of Indian immigrants, and at age 43, she is the youngest current governor in the U.S., despite being in her second term.

Haley has got to tap into whatever poise and courage she summoned during the post-Charleston Confederate flag debate to help make Tuesday’s speech go smoothly. The eyes of the nation will once again be on her. And if she does well, they may be for the rest of the year.

Climate Change Seen as Top Global Threat

As the world leaders were gathering in for the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris this December, many publics around the world name global climate change as a top threat, according to a new Pew Research Center survey measuring perceptions of international challenges. This is particularly true in Latin America and Africa, where majorities in most countries say they are very concerned about this issue. But as the Islamic militant group ISIS maintains its hold in Iraq and Syria and intensifies its grisly public executions, Europeans and Middle Easterners most frequently cite ISIS as their main concern among international issues.

Global economic instability also figures prominently as the top concern in a number of countries, and it is the second biggest concern in half of the countries surveyed. In contrast, concerns about Iran’s nuclear program as well as cyberattacks on governments, banks or corporations are limited to a few nations. Israelis and Americans are among the most concerned about Iran’s nuclear program, while South Koreans and Americans have the greatest concern about cyberattacks relative to other publics. And apprehension about tensions between Russia and its neighbors, or territorial disputes between China and surrounding countries, largely remain regional concerns.

These are among the findings of a new Pew Research Center survey, conducted in 40 countries among 45,435 respondents from March 25 to May 27, 2015. The report focuses on those who say they are “very concerned” about each issue.

Across the nations surveyed, the level of concern about different international issues varies considerably by region and country, and in some places multiple issues vie for the top spot.

Publics in 19 of 40 nations surveyed cite climate change as their biggest worry, making it the most widespread concern of any issue included in the survey. A median of 61% of Latin Americans say they are very concerned about climate change, the highest share of any region. And more than half in every Latin American nation surveyed report substantial concerns about climate change. In Peru and Brazil, where years of declining deforestation rates have slowly started to climb, fully three-quarters express anxiety about climate change.

Sub-Saharan Africans also voice substantial concerns about climate change. A median of 59% say they are very concerned, including about half or more in all countries surveyed. Climate change is particularly worrying in Burkina Faso (79%), Uganda (74%) and Ghana (71%), while South Africans (47%) and Tanzanians (49%) are the least concerned.

Top Threats by Region
Top Threats by Region

Both regions are especially vulnerable to the effects of climate change, as is Asia, where a median of 41% voice great concern about the issue. Indians (73%) and Filipinos (72%) are particularly worried, but climate change captures the top spot in half of the Asian countries surveyed.

Concern about climate change is relatively low in Europe. While a median of 42% report being very concerned, global climate change is not one of the top two threats in any European country surveyed. Anxiety about this issue is highest in Spain (59%), but just 14% in Poland say the same. In a number of European nations, concern about climate change is more pronounced for those on the left of the political spectrum. Ideological differences are particularly large in the United Kingdom, where about half of those on the left (49%) express serious concerns, compared with 30% of those on the right. Those to the left of the political center are also considerably more concerned about global climate change in Italy, France and Spain.

Global climate change ranks substantially lower as a comparative global threat for Americans, with 42% saying they are very concerned about the issue. The only global issue that is even less worrying to Americans: territorial disputes between China and its neighbors (30%). Much like in Europe, perceptions in the U.S. about the threat of climate change depend on ideology. About six-in-ten Democrats (62%) are very concerned about climate change, while just 20% of

Publics in 14 countries express the greatest concern about ISIS, the militant group seeking to create an Islamic state in Iraq and Syria. In Europe, a median of 70% express serious concerns about the threat posed by the growing organization. Apprehension is greatest in Spain (77%), but anxiety about ISIS is high throughout the continent. Even in Poland, where just 29% voice serious worries, fear of ISIS is second only to worries about tensions between Russia and its neighbors.

As ISIS continues to control territory in Iraq and Syria, concern in neighboring countries is high. More than eight-in-ten in Lebanese (84%) are very concerned about ISIS. Fear is especially high among Muslims in Lebanon, Syria’s western neighbor: 90% of Sunnis and 87% of Shia say they are very concerned, compared with 76% of Christians. More than half in Jordan (62%) and the Palestinian territories (54%) also express substantial worries about ISIS. Compared with other international issues, concern about ISIS also ranks highly in Israel and Turkey, which has seen a flood of refugees across its southern border as violence escalates.

A majority of Americans (68%) and Canadians (58%) are also very concerned about the looming threat of the Islamic State. In both countries, anxiety about ISIS is the top concern of the issues included in the survey. Concern is similarly high in a number of Asian nations, including South Korea (75%), Japan (72%), Australia (69%) and Indonesia (65%). Publics in all four countries cite ISIS as their top concern. Relatively few in Africa and Latin America voice serious concern about the threat of ISIS. Only in Tanzania do roughly half (51%) report substantial concerns, the highest of any country in either region.

Climate Change Seen as Top Global ThreatWhile concerns about climate change and ISIS take the top spots in an overwhelming majority of the countries surveyed, the most frequent secondary concern around the world is the instability of the global economy. A top concern in five countries, including Russia, the economy is the second highest concern in 20 countries.

Economic instability is among the top threats in Latin America, where a median of 54% express serious concerns. Six-in-ten in Brazil and Venezuela say they are very concerned about economic issues, the highest in Latin America. Both nations have seen little to no growth in the past year, and their economic woes are expected to deepen in 2015. Economic worries are similarly troubling for countries in Africa. Ghanaians (67%), Ugandans (62%) and Senegalese (59%) are most concerned about the economy, but economic instability is considered one of the top two concerns in every country surveyed in Africa.

Russia and Ukraine, which are facing contracting economies in 2015, consider economic instability a major threat. In Russia, 43% say they are very concerned about the economy, the highest-ranking concern of any issue tested there. About a third of Ukrainians (35%) agree; economic worries are second only to their concerns about tensions with Russia.

The economy is somewhat less concerning in Europe, Asia and the Middle East. Still, a third or more in each region say they are very concerned about global economic instability, and the issue still ranks as the second-highest threat in seven countries, including some of the world’s largest economies – China, France, India and Italy all rate economic issues as one of their top two concerns.

Israelis are the only public surveyed to rate Iran as their top concern among the international issues tested. More than half of Israelis (53%) have substantial concerns about the threat posed by Iran’s nuclear program. Israeli Jews (59%) are far more likely than Israeli Arabs (23%) to express anxiety.

Americans also see Iran’s nuclear program as a major issue. Roughly six-in-ten (62%) say they are very concerned, making Iran the second-highest-ranked threat of those included in the poll. While a median of 42% of Europeans express strong concern about Iran, only in the UK is it considered one of the top two dangers. Relatively few in Latin America, Africa, Asia and the Middle East say they are very concerned about Iran’s nuclear program.

Worldwide, the threat of cyberattacks on governments, banking or corporations does not resonate as a top tier worry, though there are pockets of anxiety. In particular, worries about the systematic hacking of computer networks are highest in the U.S. (59%) and South Korea (55%), both of which experienced high profile cyberattacks in recent years. Fewer than half in every other country surveyed express serious concerns about the threat of cyberattacks.

Pope Francis calls for unity against militant atrocities In his Christmas Message

Pope Francis has urged the world in his Christmas message on Friday to unite to end atrocities by Islamist militants that he said were causing immense suffering in many countries. “Where God is born, peace is born,” the Pope said. “And where peace is born, there is no longer room for hatred and for war. Yet precisely where the incarnate Son of God came into the world, tensions and violence persist, and peace remains a gift to be implored and built.”

The plea came on Christmas day in the pope’s annual “Urbi et Orbi” message, meaning “to the City [Rome] and to the World.”  In addition to calling generally for peace, Francis endorsed rather specific solutions in some cases. He called, for example, for the Israelis and the Palestinians to resume direct dialogue, and appeared to come close to endorsing a two-state solution to the long-running conflict, saying they should “reach an agreement which will enable the two peoples to live together in harmony.”

Pope Francis also prayed that the U.N. agreement on Syria would succeed in halting that country’s devastating civil war and in remedying the “extremely grave humanitarian situation of its suffering people.” He prayed as well for peace in Libya, Iraq, Libya, Yemen and sub-Saharan Africa, mentioning in particular Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo and South Sudan. In those African countries, some of them wracked by ethnic and political division, Francis said he hoped that “dialogue may lead to a strengthened common commitment to the building of civil societies animated by a sincere spirit of reconciliation and of mutual understanding.”

He deplored recent terrorist attacks in various locations around the world, “particularly the recent massacres which took place in Egyptian airspace, in Beirut, Paris, Bamako and Tunis.” He prayed for children who have been conscripted as soldiers, for the victims of human trafficking, and for the acceptance of migrants and refugees. “Nor may our encouragement be lacking to all those fleeing extreme poverty or war, traveling all too often in inhumane conditions and not infrequently at the risk of their lives,” Francis said. “May God repay all those, both individuals and states, who generously work to provide assistance and welcome to the numerous migrants and refugees, helping them to build a dignified future for themselves and for their dear ones, and to be integrated in the societies which receive them.”

“May the attention of the international community be unanimously directed to ending the atrocities which in those countries, as well as in Iraq, Libya, Yemen and sub-Saharan Africa, even now reap numerous victims, cause immense suffering and do not even spare the historical and cultural patrimony of entire peoples.” He was clearly referring to Islamic State militants who have carried out numerous attacks in those countries and destroyed many cultural heritage sites. In October, Islamic State militants blew up the Arch of Triumph, a jewel in the exquisite collection of ruins in the Syrian oasis city of Palmyra. “Only God’s mercy can free humanity from the many forms of evil, at times monstrous evil, which selfishness spawns in our midst,” he said. “The grace of God can convert hearts and offer mankind a way out of humanly insoluble situations.”.

“Even today great numbers of men and women are deprived of their human dignity and, like the child Jesus, suffer cold, poverty, and rejection,” he said. “May our closeness today be felt by those who are most vulnerable, especially child soldiers, women who suffer violence, and the victims of human trafficking and the drug trade.”

The Pope’s words were echoed by the Archbishop of Canterbury in his Christmas Day address, in which the leader of the world’s 80 million Anglicans said Christians in the Middle East faced extinction at the hands of Islamic State. Archbishop Justin Welby said IS was “igniting a trail of fear, violence, hatred and determined oppression.” He branded the group “a Herod of today”, in a reference to the ruthless king of Judea at the time of the birth of Jesus Christ.

“They hate difference, whether it is Muslims who think differently, Yazidis or Christians, and because of them the Christians face elimination in the very region in which Christian faith began,” he said.

Tri-State Indian Americans Celebrate Christmas With Carol Singing

Members of Our Lady of Assumption Syro-Malabar Catholic Mission in Norwalk CT went around houses across the southern Connecticut, singing Christmas carols and bringing in the joy of Christmas and sharing blessings with members and families and friends of the newly formed Catholic Church in Fairfield County during the weekend of December 18-20, 2015.

The Asian Indian Ministries organized a community Christmas celebration in Edison, NJ last week.  Attended, among others was Dr. Sudhir Parikh, publisher of Desi Talk and Padma Shri award winner, who was also the chief guest. The program began with welcoming of guests and visitors by Sunil Roberts, an emcee, followed by opening prayer done both in Hindi and English, and the carol, ‘O Come All Ye Faithful.’

One of the highlights of the event was a violin duet recital by sisters, Ava and Mia Decore, a Christmas medley of carols: ‘Joy to the World and Sing We Now of Christmas.’ Faith Guan, a child piano prodigy was a big hit with his recital.

Tri-State Indian Americans Celebrate Christmas With Carol SingingThe Christmas pageant was done by the children of Asian Indian Christian Church under the direction of Joy Victor and Selina Moses and the props by Sunil Mamidi. The story of Christmas was well-received by the audience.

Later a message was brought by Ashish Singh as to how one can seek ‘The Way’. There were Hindi bhajans as well as Telugu and Malayalam carols as well, according to David Chigurupati, one of the key organizers of the event.

In his brief remarks Dr. Parikh talked about the current worldwide tension and violence and urged everybody to seek joy and peace on earth, especially during Christmas. Dr. Parikh, who was accompanied by his wife Dr. Sudha Parikh, greeted everybody in attendance. Dr. Parikh was honored by the organizers for his “philanthropy, entrepreneurial service, and community leadership” both in India and the United States. While he was presented with a Bible and a plaque of honor, a shawl and a flower bouquet were presented to Dr. Sudha Parikh. A closing benediction was rendered by Rev. B.B.C. Kumar, reciting from St. Francis of Assisi – to serve and not to be served.

Meanwhile, Trumbull Party Timers, a group of families in the Trumbull region shared the joyous Christmas blessings with children leading the Carol singing in each house in the region. “It was fun and while we had a good time we are glad we are able to share with one another the spirit of Christmas; Love, Joy, Peace, and Sharing,” said, Archana Ajay, a 15-yr-old who was among the lead carolers of the group.

Earth’s Recent History May Predict Global Temperatures

Climate change over the last 150 years may estimate future global temperatures, a NASA study has found. According to a new NASA study published in the journal Nature Climate Change, to quantify climate change, researchers need to know the Transient Climate Response (TCR) and Equilibrium Climate Sensitivity (ECS) of Earth.

TCR is characteristic of short-term predictions, up to a century out, while ECS looks centuries further into the future, when the entire climate system has reached equilibrium and temperatures have stabilised. As part of that calculation that depended on the measurements of important climate drivers, such as carbon dioxide, the researchers have relied on simplifying assumptions when accounting for the temperature impacts of climate drivers other than carbon dioxide, such as tiny particles in the atmosphere known as aerosols.

But the assumptions made to account for these drivers are too simplistic and result in incorrect estimates of TCR and ECS, said Gavin Schmidt, a climate scientist and director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York, who is also a co-author of the study.

“The problem with that approach is that it falls way short of capturing the individual regional impacts of each of those variables,” he said. Earlier NASA calculated the temperature impact of each of variables like greenhouse gases, natural and manmade aerosols, ozone concentrations, and land use changes based on historical observations from 1850 to 2005 using a massive ensemble of computer simulations.

However, earlier studies did not account for what amounts to a net cooling effect for parts of the northern hemisphere and the predictions for TCR and ECS were lower than they should have been. “If you’ve got a systematic underestimate of what the greenhouse gas-driven change would be, then you’re systematically underestimating what’s going to happen in the future when greenhouse gases are by far the dominant climate driver,” Schmidt said.

Students Treated Like Criminals Despite Valid Visa By AIR INDIA

Air India, the official carrier of India, stopped 19 Indian students from boarding its flight in Hyderabad to San Francisco last week after being informed by US authorities that the two universities to which they had been admitted were under “scrutiny”.  Air India said the move was aimed at preventing the students from being “inconvenienced”.

A statement issued by the national carrier cited the plight of 14 students who had earlier travelled on Air India flights to San Francisco to the same universities but were deported. Deepak, one of the 14 deported students, said they had all been issued valid visas following a clearance by the US Department of Homeland Security. “If the universities were blacklisted, why did they issue us the visa,” he wondered. “We were treated like criminals and sent back,” said another student who had been deported by US authorities.

Air India said it received word on December 19, 2015 from the US Customs and Border Protection agency that two universities, Silicon Valley in San Jose, California and North Western Polytechnic College in Fremont, California are under scrutiny. The communication from the agency further stated that students who arrived into San Francisco were not allowed to enter the US and were deported back to India, Air India said.

“In the past, we have witnessed that students who secured admission in those institutions have been deported to India as soon as they land there. To avoid embarrassment to them and save their money, we prevented them from boarding the flight,” an Air India official in Hyderabad said.

“Students travel on a one-way ticket to the US and, in the event of deportation, incur huge expenditure to buy a ticket back to India on first available service. Further, seats are often not available on any airlines to travel back,” the Air India statement said.

“Considering the situation, as a precautionary measure and to avoid inconvenience, students booked for travel to take admission to these universities are not being accepted on Air India flights,” the statement said.

The national carrier, which did not allow the 19 students to board the flight at Hyderabad’s Rajiv Gandhi International Airport, has decided not to accept students headed to these universities till the time it got clearance from Air India’s US office for their travel.

Air India has offered a full refund and waived all charges such as cancellation and rescheduling fee. The airline said it will start accepting students travelling to join these universities, at no additional cost, as soon as clearance is received from Air India’s US office.

US Consulate officials in Hyderabad said they are trying to get more information on the situation. “We are indeed aware of the reports that some students were denied entry on the flights to the US. At this time, we don’t have any further information to share with you on this particular issue, but we are seeking clarity on the situation.

When contacted, an immigration official at the Rajiv Gandhi International Airport said his department had nothing to do with the students not being allowed to board the flight. “The students were not issued boarding passes. It is the airline’s responsibility to clear passengers. We have nothing to do with the issue,” he said. In the meanwhile, one of the universities in question said on its website that “absolutely false” reports are being disseminated by certain media outlets and other groups that the institute has been blacklisted by the US government.

Mother Teresa All Set To Become A Saint

With Pope Francis recognizing a second miracle attributed to, Mother Teresa, who had served the poor, the destitutes and those unwanted and unloved, is soon going to be a Saint.  The Roman Catholic nun who was awarded a Nobel Peace Prize for her work helping the poor of Kolkata, India, is one her way for her canonization next year, the Vatican announced last week. “It is a real Christmas gift that the Holy Father has given,” the archbishop of Kolkata, Thomas D’Souza, said after the Vatican’s announcement.

Mother Teresa died in 1997 at age 87. Though there is normally a five-year waiting period before the process toward sainthood can begin, Pope John Paul II waived it through a special dispensation in 1999 and he beatified her — the first step to sainthood — in 2003. Francis made the decision on Thursday, his 79th birthday, after meeting with Cardinal Angelo Amato, the prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints.

Mother Teresa All Set To Become A SaintHer eventual canonization has long been expected, but the timing had not been clear. In May, the Italian news media widely speculated that she would be canonized on Sept. 4, 2016, which has been scheduled as a day to honor the work of volunteers, as part of the , a yearlong celebration of the virtues of compassion and charity.

But a Vatican spokesman, Rev. Federico Lombardi, said at the time that the speculation was “premature” and only “a working hypothesis.” The Vatican did not announce a date for her canonization, saying only that “the Holy Father has authorized the Congregation for the Causes of Saints to proclaim the decree concerning the miracle attributed to the intercession of blessed Mother Teresa.”

Two miracles are generally required for canonization. Mother Teresa was beatified in 2003 after the Vatican concluded that an Indian woman’s prayers to the nun caused her incurable tumor to disappear. The second miracle involves a Brazilian man who suffered a viral brain infection that caused multiple abscesses, and eventually left him in a coma and dying. His wife had been praying for months to Mother Teresa, and on Dec. 9, 2008, as he was about to be taken to emergency surgery, she and her husband’s priest and relatives intensified their prayers.

The next morning, the man fully awoke, with normal cognition, according to the Rev. Brian Kolodiejchuk, a Canadian priest who was the postulator, or chief proponent, of Mother Teresa’s canonization. The man did not need surgery, and resumed his work as a mechanical engineer. Moreover, although doctors had previously told him that he was sterile because of his weakened immune system and antibiotics, he and his wife had two healthy children, in 2009 and 2012, Father Kolodiejchuk said.

Mother Teresa All Set To Become A SaintAccording to reports, on Sept. 10 of this year, a medical commission “voted unanimously that the cure is inexplicable in the light of present-day medical knowledge,” and on Oct. 8 a theological inquiry “voted unanimously that there was a perfect connection of cause and effect between the invocation of Mother Teresa and the scientifically inexplicable healing,” Father Kolodiejchuk said.

Since the start of his papacy in 2013, Francis has canonized, among others, 813 Italians who were killed in 1480 for refusing to convert to Islam; two of his predecessors, John XXIII and John Paul II;Junípero Serra, a Spanish Franciscan friar who evangelized in California in the 18th century; and the parents of St. Thérèse of Lisieux, a 19th-century French Carmelite nun. In May, he beatified Óscar Romero, the archbishop of San Salvador who was assassinated in 1980 after advocating fervently against poverty, social injustice and torture.

Mother Teresa, an ethnic Albanian, was born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu in 1910 in Skopje, which is now the capital of Macedonia but at the time was part of the Ottoman Empire. She joined the Loreto order of nuns in 1928, moved to India a year later and founded her order, the Missionaries of Charity, in 1950. They wore simple white saris with blue trim that were once associated with street-sweepers in Kolkata, the former capital of British India that is also known as Calcutta.

The order eventually expanded into a network of thousands of nuns who run hundreds of orphanages, soup kitchens, mobile clinics, homeless shelters and hospices in more than 130 countries around the world. Mother Teresa was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1979, reportedly over candidates like President Jimmy Carter and the anti-apartheid activist Steve Biko.

She said she did not deserve the prize but accepted it “in the name of the hungry, the naked, the homeless, of the crippled, of the blind, of the lepers, of all those people who feel unwanted, unloved, uncared for throughout society, people that have become a burden to the society and are shunned by everyone.”

She began her Nobel Prize lecture on Dec. 11, 1979, with a prayer from St. Francis of Assisi — after whom the current pope, the former Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, chose the name Francis upon his election. “There is so much suffering, so much hatred, so much misery, and we with our prayer, with our sacrifice are beginning at home,” Mother Teresa said in her lecture. “Love begins at home, and it is not how much we do, but how much love we put in the action that we do.”

Immigrants ‘Critical’ for Both America and India: Indian-American filmmakers

Two Indian-American makers of a new film about immigrants in America believe immigration, which has emerged as a key issue in U.S. presidential elections, is “incredibly critical” for both America and India. “We think immigration is incredibly critical not just for America but also for India,” says Rishi Bhilawadikar, writer/producer of “For Here or To Go?” a comedy drama set against the backdrop of the 2008 recession about many personal battles faced by immigrants.

“Indian Americans are key contributors to growth and competitiveness,” he said in an interview with IANS pointing to Sundar Pichai and Satya Nadella, CEOs of Google and Microsoft respectively as examples. “As artists we hope a story like ‘For Here or To Go?’ humanises the situation and can contribute towards action in bringing about sensible immigration reform,” Bhilawadikar said.

Rucha Humnabadkar, San Francisco-based director of the film, agrees, saying one of their goals “is to show that the immigration debate is about people and people’s lives and not just numbers or policy. We hope to put a human face to this largely political issue. Immigration is a complex demographic phenomenon and there needs to be a broader discussion that goes beyond the theme of illegal immigration to the U.S.,” she said.

“Presidential candidates must take a more comprehensive approach, which involves attracting and retaining the brightest and smartest minds from around the world, which is what will continue to help this nation to truly remain innovative and drive sustained economic growth.”

The film tells the contemporary story of ambition and ambivalence of Desi immigrants, “Americans in mind and Indians at heart,” through the struggles of Vivek Pandit, a young Silicon Valley software professional awaiting the renewal of his work visa.

Bhilawadikar, who came from Mumbai to study interactive storytelling and video game design, said the idea of the film started with his own “experience of trying to be an entrepreneur as an immigrant in 2007, many of which still exist.”

“At the time reverse brain-drain phenomenon was picking up and a lot of American educated immigrants had started returning to their home countries largely due to the immigration process. The story examines this fascinating dilemma of millions of people trying to make a home away from home and the choices they face today,” he said. This experience “exemplified by the Indian ethno-bubble of the Silicon Valley,” Bhilawadikar said, “started getting captured in a blog – ‘Stuff Desis Like” and later into the script of ‘For Here or To Go?'”

“Rishi and I have the advantage of being exposed to both worlds this story straddles,” said Humnabadkar, who hails from Pune. She decided to direct the film when she realised “it wasn’t just my story but also that of many friends and family members. At the heart of it, it’s a story about cultural assimilation in a foreign land, and asks the question where is home and where do you belong?” she said.

Interviewing several San Francisco Bay area Indian immigrant families, they came across stories of “the visa struggles of immigrant entrepreneurs, students victimised in the Tri-Valley university scam, the ‘reverse brain drain’ phenomenon during the recession, and the tragic wave of Sikh shootings that followed 9/11.”

“We understood that the film we needed to make would be the first of its kind, a narrative that unifies the experiences of a very strong and growing South Asian minority across all strata of American society,” Humnabadkar said.

When asked about the ongoing debate in India about growing intolerance, both Bhilawadikar and Humnabadkar felt they didn’t “qualify to make comments” as it was “something that’s not part of our everyday reality.”

“That said, some of the reactions that I’ve read to the comments made by such accomplished names like Shah Rukh Khan or Aamir khan do little more than proving their points,” said Bhilawadikar. Humnabadkar agreed, suggesting a “healthy public debate” about the subject. “It is important for a democratic nation to protect its secular fabric, be it discussion of immigration in the US or intolerance in India. We must find unity in diversity.”

“As immigrants from all walks of life know so well, every journey brings forth new stories to tell,” said Humnabadkar, when asked what next. Her first feature film won the Jury Award at the 10th Seattle South Asian Film Festival, 2015. “Many Cups of Chai Films will continue to look to tell fresh, contemporary stories which are relevant to what’s happening in our world today,” said Bhilawadikar. After “an amazing festival run,” he said, “As a tiny team of two, we will continue to search for the right investors and collaborators that’ll help us release the film worldwide.”

Indian American Anoushka Shankar among 2016 Grammy Nominees

Sitar player Anoushka Shankar, daughter of the famous Sitar maestro Pandit Ravi Shankar, is among the 2016 Grammy nominees. Shankar, 34, has been nominated in the Best World Music Album category for her solo album ‘Home’, which is a pure Indian classical album showcasing the meditative and virtuosic qualities of the Indian raga. ‘Home’ features two ragas, one of which is a creation of her late father Ravi Shankar. This is her fifth nomination in the same category.

Also vying for this prestigious award is Indo-British director Asif Kapadia, who is among the other four among the Indian-origin nominees for the 58th Grammy Awards, which will be held in February 2016. Kapadia features in the nominees list of Best Music Film category for ‘Amy’, his documentary on late singer Amy Winehouse.

Indian origin musician Jeff Bhasker features in the top category -Record of the Year – for Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars’ ‘Uptown Funk’. His other nomination is in the Producer of the Year, Non-Classical category.

‘The Afro Latin Jazz Suite’ in the Best Instrumental Composition category has garnered a nod to Indian origin Rudresh Mahanthappa. He and fellow artistes will be competing with another Indian origin talent – composer David Balkrishnan (Confetti Man) in the same section. The 58th Annual Grammy Awards will take place on February 15 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, next year.

In the 1960s, the late musician Ravi Shankar became an ambassador for Indian classical music. He performed at Woodstock, collaborated with the Beatles and introduced Western audiences to the sitar, the Indian stringed instrument. For the last two decades of his life, Shankar was often joined on stage by his most dedicated student: his daughter Anoushka.

Indian American Anoushka Shankar among 2016 Grammy NomineesAlong with performing alongside her father, Anoushka Shankar has experimented with DJs, made an album of flamenco music and teamed up with her half-sister Norah Jones. But on her latest album, Home, Shankar has returned to her father’s classical training. She told All Things Considered that it’s a collection she’s wanted to make for a long time, but it happened to come together just two years after her father passed away.

“He taught me right from the beginning,” Anoushka Shankar says. “So, in a way, the album did sort of feel like a real focusing on him and a process of reconnecting with him through playing the music that I’ve learned from him.”

In the booklet for Home, Shankar included an essay written by her father in the 1960s as an introduction to Indian classical music — but she also encourages listeners to approach the music without learning about it first.

“I think sometimes when you speak about something like ‘Indian classical music’ and ‘ragas,’ and all of that’s new to people, it can be quite intimidating, in the same way that I have sometimes found opera and Wagner intimidating — one doesn’t know where to begin sometimes,” she says. “So I’m quite keen to just say, ‘You know, just listen.’ If one’s curious and wants to know more, one can, but in the beginning you can also just listen.”

The listening, Shankar says, should take some time. “This music is a slow burn, you know? If someone’s used to the average two-and-a-half-minute song on the radio, it can be hard to understand what’s going on, because at two and a half minutes we’re still just playing the first notes and establishing things,” she says. “Give it the time to open up and play, and then it sort of seeps under your skin, and it has a very profound impact as a result.”

Historic ‘Paris Agreement’ to Address Climate Change

Negotiators from nearly 200 countries reached an agreement Saturday, December 12th this year on what they say signifies the most important international pact to address climate change since the issue first emerged as a political priority, decades ago. French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, who headed up the United Nations conference, commonly known as COP 21, said the final deal successfully resolved points of contention that had taken negotiations into overtime and called the agreement “the best possible text.”

“We have come to a defining moment on a long journey that dates back decades,” said UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon before passage of the agreement. “The document with which you have just presented us is historic. It promises to set the world on a new path to a low emissions, climate-resilient future.”

Historic ‘Paris Agreement’ to Address Climate ChangeThe deal, known as the Paris Agreement, represents remarkable compromise after years of negotiations in which developing countries wrangled with their developed counterparts and failed to come to agreement on several key occasions. Supporters say the agreement will help define the energy landscape for the remainder of the century and signal to markets the beginning of the end of more than one hundred years of dependence on fossil fuels for economic growth

The historic agreement, containing a strong long-term goal to reduce carbon emissions, provisions explaining how developing countries will receive financing for their efforts to adapt to climate change, and a transparency system to ensure that countries meet their promises to reduce greenhouse gas emissions were among those key goals. The agreement includes a long-term goal of holding global temperature rise “well below” 2°C (3.6°F) by 2100 and recognizes a maximum temperature rise of below 1.5°C (2.7°F) as an ideal goal. The 2°C target is needed to avoid the most devastating effects of climate change, according to climate scientists, but it would not be enough to save many of the world’s most vulnerable countries. Those nations, largely small Pacific Island countries, launched a large-scale push for the more aggressive 1.5°C target to be included in the agreement. The draft text also calls for “global peaking of greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible” and for the continued reduction of greenhouse gas emissions in the second half of this century as science allows.

Historic ‘Paris Agreement’ to Address Climate ChangeMeasures to finance efforts to fight climate change in the developing world had also been a key sticking point in negations. The agreement renews a commitment by developed countries to send $100 billion a year beginning in 2020 to developing countries to support their efforts to fight climate change. The deal describes the sum as a “floor,” which may presumably be increased.

The notion that developed and developing countries should have different responsibilities has been a key principle of climate negotiations since countries first gathered in a large-scale conference to address global warming in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. A gathering that year divided countries into two groupings based on their development status and required vastly different efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from each group.

But as officially “developing” nations like China grew rapidly—with accompanying carbon emissions—the U.S. and other developed countries have not asked to do away with the notion of different responsibilities entirely, but they have called for a less stringent system that takes into account economic growth and other factors that affect their capabilities. Such a system would take into account the evolving capabilities of developing countries.

Historic ‘Paris Agreement’ to Address Climate ChangeWhen the two weeks long Paris Climate talks began, India came to the table walking a tightrope. While wanting to show to the world that the world’s fourth-biggest carbon emitter was ready to play a constructive role in international climate negotiations, India needed to show citizens back home that addressing climate change would not detract from development goals—particularly the need to bring power to the quarter of the population that goes without it.

India needed to sign onto whatever deal negotiators reach in Paris for the agreement to have legitimacy, given its importance in the global economy and its sheer size. India, the country of 1.2 billion people to continue to rise in the rankings of top emitters as its economy grows and as a greater share of its population gains access to electricity. “India is sometimes the man in the middle,” said Anjali ‪Jaiswal, director of the India Initiative at the Natural Resources Defense Council. “India’s role here at the [conference] is often bridging the many nations across the world and also bridging development with climate action.” In the end, India has emerged as a key player in shaping the agreement, leaving observers to hope that it will not play the same role slowing negotiations at the last minute that other key developing countries have played in past conferences.

India’s position has made it a key player in the effort come to an agreement. The U.S. in particular has lobbied hard with Secretary of State John Kerry holding at least two bilateral meetings with Javadekar and Obama speaking by phone with Modi.

India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi has repeatedly said that the country needs to address climate change, not because of pressure from Western countries but because of the potential damage warming could cause worldwide and in India especially. The country set an ambitious goal of receiving 40% of its power from renewable resources by 2030 and in recent weeks launched a solar power alliance aimed at growing solar power production in the developing world. The country also recently set a target to develop 100 GW of solar power capacity by 2022, a huge ramp up from current capacity.

Modi defended a principle that developed countries should have more stringent responsibilities than their developing counterparts—a concept known as “differentiation”—and suggested that the principle should be a bedrock part of nearly every provision of the agreement. “Climate justice demands that, with the little carbon space we still have, developing countries should have enough room to grow,” he said at a speech at the beginning of the Paris summit.

Part of what underlies India’s position on differentiation is the belief that the efforts taken by the country so far outweighs its contribution to climate change. India’s per-capita carbon emissions add up to just 1.7 metric tons, 10 times less than America’s per-capita emissions. Prakash Javadekar, India’s environment minister, told the media in an interview that his country had done four times their fair share to address climate change, based on past carbon emissions, while the developed countries have done far less. “The developed world has done much less than their fair share,” said Javadekar. “Everyone must at least do what their fair share demands. Then it will be a collective action. Then it will be more robust.”

Karina Kohli Is Crowned Miss India USA 2015

Karina Kohli of New York was crowned Miss India USA 2015 during a glittering beauty pageant held on December 6th at the Royal Albert’s Palace, Fords, New Jersey. Karina, 18, is studying acting at New York University, was crowned by outgoing queen Pranathy Gangaraju.  Karina will represent the USA in the 25th Annual Miss India Worldwide Pageant, to be held in New York, USA in September 2016.

Aanchal Shah from Florida was crowned Miss Teen India USA and Neha Multani Verma of New York was also crowned Mrs. India USA. Organized by the New York-based IFC, headed by Dharmatma Saran, Founder and the Chief Organizer of the Pageant, the 24th annual pageant had a record number of 55 contestants from across the nation competed to win the coveted title this year.

Miss Talented - Nandini Iyer
Miss Talented – Nandini Iyer

Nandini Iyer, 27, of New Jersey and Visakha Sundar, 21, of Virginia, were respectively declared first and second runners up among 20 contestants from various parts of the country, in the gala event attended by over five hundred people. The other two five finalists were Karishma Malhotra from New York and Nicky Kandola from Virginia.

Aanchal, 16, from Florida, would like to become an oncologist. She was crowned Miss Teen India USA among 17 other contestants.  The first runner up among the Teens was Akila Narayanan, 17, from Massachusetts and the second runner up was Rhea Manjrekar 16, from New York. The other two finalists were Manjari Parikh from New York and Shirin Bakre from Massachusetts.  The sub-contest winners in Teen section were – Manjari Parikh – Miss Talented, Aanchal Shah – Miss Congeniality, Akila Narayanan – Miss Social Media and Simran Kota – Miss Photogenic.

Miss Teen ​​Talented - Manjari Parikh
Miss Teen ​​Talented – Manjari Parikh

Neha Multani Verma, 29, is an executive with a large real estate corporation.  The first runner up is Sheetal Kelkar, 36, from New Hampshire and the second runner up is Aradhana Thawani Padilla, 24, from Texas.  The other two top five were Radhika Treon from Massachusetts and Protyusha DasNeogi from Washington State.  The sub-contest winners in Mrs. Section were Chhavi Gupta – Mrs. Congeniality, Aradhana Thawani – Mrs. Photogenic and Pavana Gadde – Mrs. Social Media.

The pageant started with a stunning performance by all the contestants led by the outgoing queens Miss India USA – Pranathy Gangaraju, Miss Teen India USA – Riya Kaur and Mrs. India USA Namita Dodwadkar choreographed by Shilpa Jhurani.  All contestants presented their best in the Indian and the Evening Gown segment after which the top ten were selected. The top ten contestants from Miss section then amazed the audience with their talent which included Bollywood dances, Indian classical dances, contemporary dancing and singing. In the Miss section Nandini Iyer was awarded Miss Talented.  Winners of the other various sub-contests were

The three winners with chief organizers Neelam and Dharmatma Saran
The three winners with chief organizers Neelam and Dharmatma Saran

Miss Congeniality – Visakha Sundar, Miss Social Media – Nandini Iyer, Miss Photogenic – Akshaya Vijaykumar, Miss Bollywood Divya – Spoorthy Bharadwaj, Miss Catwalk – Ishpreet Gill, Miss Beautiful Hair – Aishwarya Balaji, Miss Beautiful Smile – Karishma Malhotra, Miss Popularity – Nandini Iyer, Miss Beautifu Eyes – Anita Ganesan, Miss Beautiful Skin – Piyali Nath. Trina Chakravarty, Roshi George, and Asma Molu were emcees and Nishi Bahl was the choreographer and was assisted by Shilpa Jhurani.

The panel of judges included Raissa Nagapin – National Director of Miss India Guadelope, Chandra Mouli – Film Producer, Neetu Thomas – Fashion Designer, Subbu Sundaravelu – Director of SAP Managed Services at ProMorphics LLC and Ines Hernandez- Fashion Designer and Political Activist.  Dharmangi Bhatia, CPA, was the official accountant.

The pageant, known around the world is not just for the sake of beauty and talent alone. True to its traditions, charity and supporting noble causes has been its hallmark since its inception. Dharmatma Saran, Chairman & Founder, presented an appreciation plaque to H. R. Shah , Albert Jasani, Nishi Bahl and Shilpa Jhurani for their support in organizing this year pageant.   “I am very thankful to the Indian community for its support through the years,” said Dharmatma Saran, “and especially thankful to H.R. Shah and Albert Jasani for supporting the pageant.”

H.R. Shah receiving a plaque of appreciation by outgoing Mrs. India USA, Namita Dowadkar
H.R. Shah receiving a plaque of appreciation by outgoing Mrs. India USA, Namita Dowadkar

Dharmatma Saran is the founder and chairman of the India Festival Committee (IFC), an organization conducting Indian pageants and fashion shows in USA and worldwide. Saran established India Festival Committee in 1974. He has been organizing the Miss India USA, Miss India New York and Miss India Worldwide pageants annually ever since.

Dharmatma Saran and his friends had organized  a cultural and fashion show, with a view to showcase the Indan culture and tradition to the Western world on the sprawling lawns of Central Park as early as in 1974.  Eventually, these shows transformed into competitions, and the first Miss India New York and the first Miss India USA were held in the basement of the Air India Office in 1980.

Miss India USA 2015 Karina Kohli flanked by Mrs. India USA Neha Multani Verma (L) and Miss Teen India USA Aanchal Shah (R)
Miss India USA 2015 Karina Kohli flanked by Mrs. India USA Neha Multani Verma (L) and Miss Teen India USA Aanchal Shah (R)

“The pageants were a hit from the very beginning,” says Saran, an architect of the Miss India pageantry in the US. Soon, the venue shifted from the basement of Air India to the glamorous ballrooms of the Marriott Grand Marquis and the New York Hilton. With more popularity and appreciation from the community, the show has come to be much sought after today. The concept grew too.

Coffee Compounds That Could Help Prevent Type 2 Diabetes Identified

Much to coffee lovers’ delight, drinking three to four cups of coffee per day has been shown to decrease the risk of developing type 2 diabetes. Now, scientists report in ACS’ Journal of Natural Products that they have identified two compounds that contribute to this health benefit. Researchers say that this knowledge could someday help them develop new medications to better prevent and treat the disease.

Patients with type 2 diabetes become resistant to insulin, a hormone that helps turn glucose from food into energy. To overcome this resistance, the pancreas makes more insulin, but eventually, it just can’t make enough. High blood glucose levels can cause health problems, such as blindness and nerve damage. Several genetic and life style risk factors have been linked to the development of type 2 diabetes, but drinking coffee has been shown to help prevent its onset.

Caffeine was thought to be responsible, but studies have shown it has only a short-term effect on glucose and insulin, and decaffeinated coffee has the same effect as the regular version of the drink. To investigate which of coffee’s many bioactive components are responsible for diabetes prevention, Søren Gregersen and colleagues tested the effects of different coffee substances in rat cell lines.

The researchers investigated different coffee compounds’ effects on cells in the lab. Cafestol and caffeic acid both increased insulin secretion when glucose was added. The team also found that cafestol increased glucose uptake in muscle cells, matching the levels of a currently prescribed antidiabetic drug. They say cafestol’s dual benefits make it a good candidate for the prevention and treatment of type 2 diabetes. However, because coffee filters eliminate much of the cafestol in drip coffee, it is likely that other compounds also contribute to these health benefits.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi Meets With President Obama in Paris

President Obama met with Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India to discuss their efforts to put in place a lasting framework to address global climate change.  The two leaders discussed the urgent threat posed by climate change and reaffirmed their commitment to a successful agreement in Paris.

According to a White House Press Release, the two leaders agreed that the Paris agreement must drive serious and ambitious action by all nations to curb carbon pollution, while at the same time protecting the ability of countries such as India to pursue their priorities of development, growth, and poverty eradication.

The President and Prime Minister committed their teams to work closely to achieve these objectives.  Additionally, the President welcomed Prime Minister Modi’s initiatives to increase renewable energy deployment in India, his leadership to form a solar alliance, and our partnership to launch Mission Innovation, a ground-breaking new initiative that will accelerate the pace at which we can develop and deploy affordable clean energy technology to populations around the world.

In addition to the climate agenda, the two leaders discussed additional steps to deepen their countries’ strategic partnership on bilateral, regional, and global issues.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi Meets With President Obama in Paris
Prime Minister Narendra Modi with President Obama

Meanwhile, the White House heaped high praise on Prime Minister Narendra Modi saying he has a clear understanding of the India-U.S. relationship and a clear vision for where he wants to take his country. President Barack Obama “certainly does respect Prime Minister Modi and has appreciation for his skills and abilities as a politician,” the White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters here Wednesday when asked about the relationship between the two leaders.

“He also is somebody who is given the very difficult challenge of sitting atop the world’s largest democracy — that’s not easy work, and the President of the United States has special insight into how difficult it is.”

Obama has found “Modi to be somebody who is honest and direct,” he said. He is “somebody who has good command of the facts; somebody who has a clear understanding of the issues that confront his country and our relationship,” Earnest said. “He is also somebody that has a clear vision for where he wants to take his country. And that makes him not just an effective politician but an effective Prime Minister.”

Earnest noted that Obama “has had the opportunity to consult with Prime Minister Modi on a number of occasions. And I think that isn’t just a testament to their good working relationship — it actually is a testament to the important issues that are at stake between our two countries.”

“And the ability of the leaders of our two countries to work through those issues and to advance our shared interests is a good thing — it’s a good thing for the world, it’s also a good thing for the citizens of our two countries,” Earnest said.

Asked if Obama had invited Modi for a seventh meeting early next year at the White House, the spokesman said he was not “aware of any meetings that are on the agenda at this point, but I certainly wouldn’t rule out another visit by Prime Minister Modi before the end of next year.”

5 Most Targeted Tourist Attraction in Kerala

One of the ten heavens of the world by National Geographic Traveler, the state Kerala is arranged on the tropical Malabar Shoreline of southwestern India. Considered as standout amongst the most popular tourist destinations in the nation, Kerala is celebrated particularly for its ecotourism activities.

Regularly alluded to as “God’s Own country”, the seaside state Kerala is rich in unique conventions and society and lavish unspoiled tropical excellence. Above all, Kerala is known for its elephants, elaborate sanctuary celebrations, and the peaceful backwaters. Kerala is not just some backwaters and hill stations as it is generally publicized however it has so much more to offer. Kerala is a standout amongst the most targeted tourist destinations in India. Kerala is often termed as paradise set in green.

Fort Kochi: Known as the “Gateway to Kerala”, Kochi is a charming city which encased reminiscent of Arabs, British, Dutch, Chinese, and Portuguese building design. The chronicled destinations in Fort Kochi draw greater number of guests to the range where Fort Kochi is a territory in the city of Kochi. A hand sized scoop of water-bound locales at the south-west of the territory Kochi and by and large known as Old Kochi or West Kochi is a standout amongst the most tourist targeted place in Kerala.

Explore the universe of its own, discover the Fort Kochi glimpse of Fort Immanuel, Dutch cemetery, the ancient Thakur House, colonial structure; David Hall, Parade Ground, Church Road, the Bastion Bungalow, Vasco-da Gama square, the Pierce Leslie Bungalow, the Princess Street, the Loafer’s corner, the large wooden gate facing the Parade ground; the VOC gate, the Bishop’s house that was built in the year of 1506 and many more.

Kerala Backwaters: A standout amongst the most quiet and unwinding things one can do in Kerala is taking a trek in a houseboat at backwaters. The Kerala backwaters are a chain of salty tidal ponds, lakes, waterways where the framework incorporates five huge lakes joined by trenches, both artificial and characteristic and augments basically a large portion of the length of Kerala state.

As we all realize that; the backwaters were framed by the activity of waves and shore ebbs and flows making low boundary islands. Enjoy the experience of freshly cooked Indian food and chilled beer on board where one can spend the night out on the middle of a lake too. Kerala backwaters are one of the most amazing sightseeing place as well as tourist most attracted place in Kerala.

Munnar: Lies 1,500 m to 2,695 m over the ocean level, Munnar is one of the most amazing place that surrounded by sprawling tea plantations. Represented with the common magnificence of slowing down, cloudy Hills and woods laden with colorful plants and untamed life, the spot likewise encased an acclaimed tea museum.

Munnar is a delightful Hill station and was the midyear resort of the British. The most astounding top in south India, Anamudi is a standout amongst the most popular spots for Adventure enthusiasts. Explore Eravikulam National park or go rock climbing and Para coasting. The mainstream place for Indian honeymooners and vacationers focused spot is the immeasurable tea estates territory arranged on the Kannan Devan Hills town in Devikulam Taluka and is the biggest panchayat in the Idukki locale in Kerala.

Varkala: The stunning shoreline with a long slowing down of precipice and perspectives that reach out over the Arabian Sea, Varkala shoreline is flanked by coconut palms, quaint shops, shoreline shacks, hotels and guest houses. Spotted 51 km north of Thiruvananthapuram city in Thiruvananthapuram locale and 37 km south of Kollam, south Kerala, the beach Varkala is a smooth and calm village, the Papanasam Beach which is likewise called as Varkala Beach is one of India’s best shorelines.

Investigate 2000 year old sanctuary; the Janardhanaswamy Sanctuary that stands on the bluffs neglecting the shoreline, the Sivagiri Mutt, established by the incredible Hindu reformer and logician Sree Narayana Master is simply close by. The Samadhi which is the last resting spot of the Guru is one of the tourist most targeted place in Kerala.

Wayanad: Secured with thick backwoods, stands 700 to 2100m above ocean level, the land of tribal’s with the highest concentration of tribal population in Kerala Wayanad is a bright green mountainous region that stretches along the Western Ghats. Inexhaustible coconut palms, thick woods, paddy fields, and grandiose tops structure the scene, Wayanad has a lot of beautiful advance because of its identity.

Enclosed countless number of ancient temples, rock caves relating to the stone-age era, churches, mosques and antique monuments , the place is an ideal terra firma for adventure enthusiasts, explore the popular attractions for trekking precisely; Chembra Peak and Meenmutty Falls, explore old Jain temples, climbing to Edakkal Caves and wildlife spotting at Muthanga and Tholpetty Wildlife Sanctuaries. Another highlight of Wayanad is the many delightful homes stays in the area.

Satya Nadella: Microsoft Working on Password-free World

With growing concerns over security of emails and mobile phones, technology giant Microsoft on Thursday said it is working on ways to rid tech users of their worries over passwords.

“One of the biggest security issues is passwords. One of the things that we are working on is a world where passwords are not going to be the ones that, you know, can get hacked but you really have other biometrics that really help us secure our computing interfaces,” Microsoft Corp. CEO Satya Nadella said in Mumbai.

He was delivering the keynote address at “Future Unleashed: Accelerating India,” Microsoft’s customer conference. Hyderabad-born Nadella said the company has a sense of purpose that is about empowering every person on the planet to achieve more.

“We had a mission of putting a personal computer PC on every desk in every home, but in retrospect that was a goal…Our mission was to empower every individual and organization. That’s really what I look at as we go forward,” said Nadella, who has completed 25 years at Microsoft. Nadella runs an average of 5 km. a day reads 10 books on weekends.

Syed Akbaruddin Named India’s Ambassador to UN

“Syed Akbaruddin, (IFS:1985), currently additional secretary in the ministry, has been appointed as the next ambassador/permanent representative of India to the United Nations in New York,” an official statement said. Akbaruddin will be replacing Asoke Kumar Mukherjee, who will be retiring. As India’s Permanent Representative to the global body in New York, Akbaruddin’s main task would be to push for India’s bid to gain permanent membership of the UN Security Council as well as to strongly advocate its position on key issues.

Akbaruddin was Chief Coordinator of the recently-held Indo-Africa Summit here which was participated by heads of state and government of 41 countries from African continent. After completing a very successful term as the External Affairs Ministry spokesperson in April this year, Akbaruddin was slated to go to Geneva as India’s permanent representative to the UN offices there. However, Prime Minister Narendra Modi handpicked Akbaruddin to be the chief coordinator of the IAFS, a mega event that was attended by all the 54 countries of Africa. The event went off smoothly with all visiting dignitaries praising the way it was organised.

The permanent Representative or the UN ambassador is the head of a diplomatic mission of a country to the United Nations. Akbaruddin’s role as the permanent representative would be to propagate for India’s bid to have permanent membership of the UN Security Council (UNSC) and also put forth India’s opinion on different international issues.

Syed Akbaruddin Named India's Ambassador to UNThe senior diplomat and former high-profile spokesperson of the External Affairs Ministry, is currently serving as an Additional Secretary in MEA, is credited with bringing a whiff of fresh air into the Ministry’s External Publicity division during his three-and-half year tenure as the spokesperson. He had also brought an effective mix of social and digital media into the External Publicity division.

He had served at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Geneva and is considered an “expert” on the West Asia where he had served in various capacities. Vikas Swarup, author of best-selling novel Q&A which formed the basis for Oscar-winning movie Slumdog Millionaire, had replaced Akbaruddin as MEA spokesperson in April.

Abaruddin passed out as an Indian Foreign Service officer in 1985. He is considered an expert on India’s foreign policies in West Asia. He was appointed as an official of the Ministry of External Affairs in India in 2011 Prior to that, he was on deputation for four years At the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna. He was serving as an Additional Secretary at the Ministry of External Affairs  Most recently, he headed the External Publicity and Public Diplomacy division of the ministry and has also introduced social media to attract public feedback

The UN, which completed its 70th birthday this year, decided to have text-based negotiations with all 193-member countries for reforms and expansion of the UN Security Council for the first time ever. As India’s UN Ambassador, Akbaruddin will be tasked with pushing India’s bid for a permanent position in the UN Security Council.

Bobby Jindal Quits Republican Presidential Race

“I’ve come to the realization this is not my time,” Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, a onetime rising Republican star, said while declaring that he was withdrawing from the campaign to be the next presidential nominee of the Republican Party. Jindal, the first ever Indian American Governor, whose popularity has plummeted in his own state, dropped out of the presidential race on Tuesday, November 17, 2015, conceding that he was unable to find any traction. Jindal withdrew days before a runoff election in the Louisiana governor’s race, a contest in which the candidates in both parties have intermittently criticized the once-popular incumbent.

Jindal is the third candidate in the now 14-member Republican field to drop out of race. Rick Perry, the former Texas governor, and Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin also ended their campaigns.

During his months long campaign,  Jindal had unveiled a series of policy proposals, ferociously attacked Donald J. Trumpand spent considerable time courting conservatives in Iowa, which begins the presidential nominating process. None of it worked. He raised little money, did not rise high enough in the polls to appear on the prime-time debate stage and was overshadowed by unconventional candidates such as Trump and Ben Carson. “We spent a lot of time developing detailed policy papers, and given this crazy, unpredictable election season, clearly there just wasn’t a lot of interest in those policy papers,” Jindal said in an interview on Fox News Tuesday night.

Jindal, 44, a son of Indian immigrants, was first elected governor in 2007, two years after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans, and he initially enjoyed great popularity. But he fell out of favor in a second term characterized by fiscal crises and frequent out-of-state travels. Seventy percent of Louisianans disapprove of his job performance, according to a University of New Orleans poll taken this month.

He was his state’s secretary of health at age 24 and oversaw its public universities by 28.

Jindal, who effectively began his presidential bid by declaring Republicans “the stupid party” in the wake of the 2012 election, tried to win attention to his long-shot White House campaign with a number of gambits. He placed a hidden camera in a tree outside the governor’s mansion to record a family meeting in which he first informed his children he was running for president and released the video to the news media.

Jindal, the first ever Indian American to be on the campaign mode, seeking to win the White House has been trailing behind almost all other Republican candidates. After trailing behind in the campaign, it appeared that Jindal was gaining some momentum. In a survey published Nov. 2 by Public Policy Polling, Iowa GOP voters gave Indian American Bobby Jindal, R-La., a healthy amount of support.

Bobby Jindal Quits Republican Presidential Race
Bobby Jindal

Jindal, according to the PPP survey of 638 “usual Republican primary voters” in Iowa taken from Oct. 30 through Nov. 1, earned 6 percent support. The Louisiana governor is now slotted as the fifth-most supported Republican presidential hopeful, tied with former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee. In addition to polling about support, the survey asked about favorability, in which Jindal received 60 percent favorability. Bush, on the flipside, had only a 30 percent positive viewing, with 43 percent viewing him negatively. Carson and Cruz were the only two candidates ahead of Jindal’s favorability.

According to published sources, his record of good governance in his state is lackluster. He is described as a supporter of the rich. In his state, he was in favor of abolishing all corporate and personal income tax but in favor of raising the sales tax in order to make up for the loss of revenue to the state. His legislature wisely refused to go along with him for such regressive taxation.

Jindal refused to accept federal funding of $1.65 billion to expand Medicaid to the poor. He is pro-life and anti-abortion, and against same-sex marriage. He is against public funding of embryonic stem cell research. He favors the teaching of intelligent design in schools. He was against enforcing laws for the prevention of hate crimes in his state. His state ranked last for transparency in the United States.

Month after month, week after week, Gov. Bobby Jindal has been working to make himself relevant to the 2016 presidential election. Every week, Jindal made some (increasingly) desperate attempt for attention and relevance. On the rare occasion he made an appearance in Louisiana, he’s done everything possible to establish himself as a champion of “religious freedom.” He signed an executive order to give license to businesses to discriminate against same-sex couples. He’s even championed an amendment to the U.S. Constitution that would outlaw same-sex marriage.

As per media reports, despite having made a wreck of the state’s budget (including structural deficits for years), he’s also sold his soul to Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform. He had approved more than $700 million in tax increases, in an attempt to earn GOP votes in Iowa and New Hampshire portraying himself as the candidate most violently against tax increases.

Republican presidential candidate Bobby Jindal, son of immigrant parents from India, said that immigrants who do not adopt American values represent an “invasion”. “Immigration without integration is not immigration; it’s invasion, he told ABC when asked about tough stances against illegal immigration taken by Republican front-runner Donald Trump and other party candidates. “Look, as a child of immigrants, my parents have never taken this country for granted,” said the Louisiana governor who was born in the US three months after his pregnant mother came from India. “When it comes to immigration policy, what I’ve experienced and seen is that a smart immigration policy makes our country stronger; a dumb one makes us weaker. We’ve got a dumb one today,” he said.

In the statement announcing his departure, Mr. Jindal indicated he would return to focusing on policy issues. “One of the things I will do is go back to work at the think tank I started a few years ago — where I will be outlining a blueprint for making this the American century,” he said.

Pratham USA Names three new directors to its National Board

NEW YORK, NY, November 6, 2015 — Pratham USA, a nonprofit organization that aims to improve the quality of education in India, announced on Friday the appointment of three new directors to its National Board.  Satish Cherwoo, Dr. Marie Goradia and Rajesh Shah join the board of directors as the organization celebrates its 20th anniversary.

Satish Cherwoo has over thirty years of experience trading commodities including futures and options for various global trading firms such as Louis Dreyfus Corporation, Marc Rich International, Land O’Lakes, and Consolidated Natural Gas. A longtime Pratham support, Cherwoo actively contributes to several organizations in the areas of education, healthcare and poverty alleviation in India.

Pratham USA Names three new directors to its National BoardDr. Marie Goradia is President of Pratham’s Houston chapter and has served on its board since 2010. Trained as a molecular biologist, she brings her expertise and dedication to several organizations, including the Asia Society and MD Anderson Cancer Center, on whose boards she also serves. She is a former President of Woodlands Toastmasters and currently serves as an Area Governor.

Rajesh (Raj) Shah is a President at M S International, Inc. in Los Angeles, where he has worked in an official capacity since 2003. Previously, Shah was a Vice President with Lehman Brothers in the Investment Banking Division with a focus on serving the needs of financial sponsor/private equity funds. Shah serves on the board of directors for the Orange County Chapter of Young President’s Organization and the Los Angeles chapter of Pratham USA.

In addition, the organization announced the appointment of Deepak Raj as President of Pratham USA. Raj succeeds Dr. Atul Varadhachary from Houston who stepped down in 2014.

Raj is the Managing Director of private investment firms Rush Brook Partners and Raj Associates. Previously, he worked for 24 years at Merrill Lynch, where he retired as Senior Vice President and a member of the firm’s Executive Management Committee, managing a team of 700 investment professionals. Raj serves on Pratham USA’s board of directors and is President of its New York Tri-state chapter.He is also the founder of the Raj Center on Indian Economic Policies at Columbia University.

“We are extremely pleased to have three new Board members and an Executive of this caliber to help guide the organization as we enter our next phase of growth,” said Chairman Dinyar (Dinny) Devitre. “Each of them is a highly accomplished individual with a great passion for Pratham’s cause. We are delighted to welcome them to their new roles in the organization.”

New President Raj said, “For two decades, Pratham has been singularly focused on improving the quality of education for India’s poor. I believe it represents our single brightest hope for educating India’s children and I am honored and humbled by the opportunity to help Pratham achieve its mission to have Every Child in School and Learning Well.”

Founded in 1995 to ensure that every child is in school and learning well, Pratham is now one of the largest non-governmental organizations in India’s education sector. Pratham employs low-cost, scalable methods and works in partnership with government and community stakeholders to deliver quality education to underprivileged children. Last year Pratham reached nearly 8 million children, adolescents and young adults through a range of programs in 21 of  India’s 29 states.

To learn more about Pratham and its programs, visit prathamusa.org.

“France is at war,” and the world too

“France is at war,” President François Hollande of France declared on Monday, November 16, 2015, and has called for an amendment the French Constitution to fight potential terrorists at home and for an aggressive effort to “eradicate” the Islamic State abroad. In the aftermath of the terror attacks in Paris that had killed 129 people Friday night in Paris, France has begun attacking the Syrian targets, home to ISIS that is believed to be behind the brutal murders of innocent civilians across this City of Lights.

“The deadly attacks across Paris last week that claimed 129 lives were planned and organised from Syria,” French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said on Monday. “The attack was organised, conceived, and planned from Syria,” CNN quoted Valls as saying in a radio interview. The prime minister said more than 150 raids were conducted on militant targets in different areas of France earlier in the day.

“France is at war,” and the world too“We are making use of the legal framework of the state of emergency to question people who are part of the radical jihadi movement… and all those who advocate hate of the republic,” he said.

At least nine people have been arrested so far. Five of the detainees were identified over the weekend, and on Monday another two were named by the Paris prosecutor as Ahmad al-Mohammad and Samy Amimour, a BBC report said.

President Obama on Monday stressed solidarity with the French people after deadly attacks rocked that nation and defended his administration’s policy in fighting ISIS. “ISIS is the face of evil,” Obama said at the conclusion of the G20 summit in Antalya,Turkey. “Our goal is to… destroy this barbaric organization.”

Three teams of terrorists — all outfitted with suicide vests and armed with Kalashnikovs — swarmed six locations in Paris on Friday night and killed 129 people in a spree of shootings and explosions. France’s president called the attacks — which ISIS claimed responsibility for — an “act of war” and on Sunday night launched airstrikes on the terror group’s de facto capital of Raqqa, Syria.

Meanwhile, most Americans feel despair, and a presentiment that it is only a matter of time before something similar happens here, media reports here suggest. Even as Americans have felt the pain of the French, they have worried, not surprisingly, considering 9/11, about whether their country is next.

Law-enforcement officials and transportation agencies in major U.S. cities stepped up security measures over the weekend in the wake of the Paris terrorist attacks. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Saturday that he has directed state agencies to be on high alert following the attacks and has beefed up security protocols on trains, bridges and popular tourists locations.

New York City Mayor Mayor Bill de Blasio said in an interview with NBC New York on Friday that the New York Police Department is on high alert. The NYPD’s antiterrorism officers have been deployed to the United Nations and at the French Consulate. “Thank God there’s no specific threats toward New York City that we know of,” de Blasio said. “We believe this…is isolated to Paris. But it is a very, very painful thing to see Paris go through this again.”

According to analysts, the terror attacks in France depended on four things: easy access to Paris, European citizens happy to massacre their compatriots, a Euro-jihadist infrastructure to supply weapons and security agencies that lacked resources to monitor the individuals involved. These are problems the United States does not have — at least not nearly to the degree that Europe does, undermining its ability to defend itself. American policy makers have eyed Europe’s external border controls skeptically for many years: The Schengen rules, which allow for free border-crossing inside most of the European Union, have made life simple for criminals.

Complicating matters is the ease with which a terrorist might slip out of Syria, cross through Turkey and enter Greece and the European Union, as at least one of the Paris killers appears to have done. Counterterrorism often boils down to a search for a few individuals, and the chaos surrounding the flood of refugees — a record 218,000 entered the European Union just last month — has exacerbated the difficulty of keeping track of such incoming security threats.

But the United States is faced more with the domestic challenge. It appears the Paris attacks involved both Middle Eastern operatives and Muslims from France and Belgium. Americans have traveled to ISIS-controlled territories at a rate of roughly a third that of their European Union coreligionists.

The United States may have some advantage: an intelligence, law enforcement and border-control apparatus that has been vastly improved since the cataclysm of 9/11. Post-9/11 visa requirements and no-fly lists weed out most bad actors, and both the Bush and Obama administrations demanded that countries in our visa waiver program provide data on extremists through information-sharing pacts called HSPD-6 agreements. Improvements continue, like an advance passenger information/passenger name recognition agreement with the European Union of 2012.

ISIS has neither an air force nor a navy. It cannot directly confront the military forces arrayed against it by the West in the aggregate. So it strikes back in the only way it can, with terrorist attacks on the civilian populations of the sponsoring nations, such as what happened in Paris on Friday night. These tactics are as predictable as they are horrific.

It is time for the world community to form something comparable to a NATO alliance for antiterrorist activities in the Middle East. The member states could determine from their military officials what military force would be required to surround Raqqa, Syria, and totally eliminate the ISIS presence in that city. When that is completed, the new coalition should pursue a similar strategy with respect to Mosul in Iraq and other ISIS strongholds.

The combat troops and the military resources for that alliance should predominantly come from Middle Eastern countries including Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Iraq, United Arab Emirates, Qatar and so on. The United States and European countries should provide training, equipment, intelligence, transportation and perhaps a small contingent of special forces.

The choices available to the United States, and our European allies, in response to such actions are equally stark: either vastly engage our troops in the field to defeat ISIS (“boots on the ground”), or end our military involvement and rely on the countries in the region to resolve what is essentially an outbreak of an old religious civil war using 21st-century weapons and media.

Obama underscored that the wave of terror attacks in Paris and the fight against ISIS necessitate that the two nations work more closely together to share intelligence — efforts that are currently underway. “Paris is not alone,” Obama said highlighting attacks in Beirut, Turkey and Iraq.

PREM RATAN DHAN PAYO – Interview with Salman & Sonam

SYNOPSIS:

Prem ‘Dilwala’ is a happy-go-lucky man who does ‘Ramleelas’ (stage plays based on Lord Rama) in Ayodhya, India. He knows all the Shlokas by heart and the purity of the scriptures resonates in all his pranks and fun. All that he earns, he donates to a charitable fund which is run by Princess Maithili. He is enchanted by the simplicity of her nature, her leading a normal life and yet being brave enough to save people in the middle of floods. He sets out to meet her. The film is all about him meeting her and the purity of the bond that they share. The film represents the unconditional love that all families must have for each other.

PREM RATAN DHAN PAYO - Interview with Salman & SonamDiwali lights up this year with Salman Khan and Sonam Kapoor who star together in Sooraj Barjatya’s grand epic PREM RATAN DHAN PAYO which releases in North American theaters this Thursday, November 12. The lead actors sat down to talk about their highly anticipated new film in this exclusive interview below.

Interview with PREM RATAN DHAN PAYO stars SALMAN KHAN and SONAM KAPOOR:

Q: How was working with Sooraj Barjatya on the set?

Sonam: Sooraj Ji is one of the most amazing people to work with. Besides the fact that he is an amazing filmmaker, there is such kindness and generosity as a human being that you just learn from it. And I am fortunate enough that he considered me for this film, because he makes few films, and decided to cast me. It was my luck. I’m very grateful for the opportunity. And I hope he keeps casting me in films!

Salman: The qualities that he has are very godlike. I think he is undoubtedly one of the best directors that we have ever had. As a human being, I think Sooraj Barjatya is on a different plane altogether. He is one of the finest humans that I have ever met. And he has been like this since he was 19. He’s the nicest person that you would ever meet. What he says he believes. He will never do anything that he is not convinced of. And he is one of the strongest people that I have ever met! He does not need to raise his voice. He does not need to show any anger. He is so clear in his thinking. And he speaks very little. He listens.

Q: In today’s distracted world, can this new film bring families together?

Sonam: I think that’s the reason that this film is so relevant. It’s relevant in the world of social media, and mobile phones, and the internet, and laptops and everything. I’ve gone to parties and 50% of people are on their phones and they aren’t interacting with each other. Think about the parties of before. I feel like it’s so relevant because the one thing that we actually lack, even though we have every medium of communication, is communication! We actually aren’t communicating and talking to each other and seeing each other. We can’t do without our phones and we don’t connect. And that’s why a film like Prem Ratan Dhan Payo is so relevant because the one thing in relationships that we as a generation lack is communication.

Salman: This film, Prem Ratan Dhan Payo, we’re watching this film. So I know this one particular guy. I know he is with his phone all the time. I want to see his reaction. So I stood behind him. He was watching the film. In the first fifteen minutes, he put his phone aside. Which I thought was a great quality. This film has that thing. It just gets you into it. But you need to see it with the right mindset. It’s a funny film that is full of humor, sensitivity, romance, but the plot is so beautiful, in all that romance and everything, it comes to this one small point, which is messing all of us up. That is that brothers and sisters should not fight. There is no reason why they should fight. They need to just sort it out. Just negotiate and finish it. It is all going to be fine.

Q: Tell us about the palaces and the grand sets of the film.

Salman: People lived in houses that were almost like palaces. So just imagine, this time he is making a film about people who actually live in palaces. Trust me. I have traveled. I have seen all of the palaces here. Stayed in them. Shot in them. I’ve seen all of them. We’ve shot in most of them for this film. About 3-4 palaces. We’ve gone back and we’ve put up our own palace, which perhaps would be as big and as grand as any other palaces. It’s big. It’s very large. It’s very beautiful. And you need that grandness.

Q: How much do you relate to the character that you are playing?

Sonam: With Maithili, she is a very modern day girl. She knows what she wants from the person that she wants to spend the rest of her life with, and she knows what she wants from life, and she is not afraid to ask for it. At the same time, she has her values intact. In a lot of ways, I hope that I get inspired by that. We all make mistakes when we are younger in a lot of ways. She’s got enough courage to be like I’d rather be alone and happy than unhappy and with somebody. And she has the courage to face that.

Q: You’re reuniting with Sooraj Barjatya after 16 years. How is this Prem different from the ones that we have seen you play in his films?

Salman: See the first one is always going to be special, Maine Pyar Kiya. Because that’s the Prem. Now Sooraj wrote Prem. I play Prem in the movie. Now does Prem make us? Or did we make Prem? We don’t know. Then came Hum Aapke Hain Koun. You know Sooraj just took it to another level of greatness. It is still one of the better films that we have made in our country. And then came Hum Saath-Saath Hain, which was a better film. And then now, we just finished this film, Prem Ratan Dhan Payo. It’s going to release on the 12th of November, and I think this gap of this 16 years. Me and him. I think Sooraj has grown, tremendously. He is a lot more simpler than what he used to be when he was 19 years old. We all get complicated. More and more complicated. We all start developing fears. He, right now, is fearless. And he is really simple.

And that is what Sooraj has made out of Prem Ratan Dhan Payo. He has made a really sweet and simple movie about romance and about family matters with an incredible amount of entertainment and humor. I mean you’ve seen Sooraj’s films, every film also has a lot of entertainment and comedy. He doesn’t need to give a message. He just writes and the message automatically comes in. I believe that whenever Sooraj Barjatya comes in and makes a movie, he changes people. I mean now, when you saw Hum Aapke Hain Koun, when there was Maine Pyar Kiya, there was a lot of people who have named their kids Prem. They did a contest recently, of how many Prems are there. And Jesus Christ, there are lots of Prems! That is what Sooraj Barjatya has done. Brought people together. He’s brought back our culture. He changes people. When you leave a Sooraj Barjatya film, after the end of the titles, you emerge a better person.

Official Site: www.facebook.com/prdp

Trailer: www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vd4iNPuRlx4

Showtimes: www.fandango.com/premratandhanpayo_187629/movieoverview

Sachin, Shane to start Cricket Fever in USA With Inaugural Match in New York on November 7th

World renowned cricketers, Sachin Tendulkar and Shane Warne will headline Cricket All-Stars inaugural match in the same field in what is billed as the first historic display of cricketing legends from around the world on American soil.

Shane Warne and Sachin Tendulkar will captain opposing teams in a three-match T20 exhibition tour of the USA next month. The matches will be played in New York, Houston and Los Angeles and the event, titled “Cricket All-Stars Series 2015”, will feature more than two dozen retired internationals from other Test nations.

The matches will take place on November 7 at New York’s Citi Field, November 11 at Houston’s Minute Maid Park and November 14 at Los Angeles’ Dodger Stadium. The first two games are slated to be played in the daytime while the final game at Dodger Stadium is scheduled to be played under the lights at the 56,000 capacity facility.

The inaugural match between the two hand-picked teams— Tendulkar’s “Sachin’s Blasters” and Warne’s ‘Warne’s Warriors” – will kick off Nov. 7 at the 48,000-seat capacity stadium in New York feature some of the best cricket players from round the world Ricky Ponting from Australia, Brian Lara from West Indies, Wasim Akram from Pakistan, Muttiah Muralitharan from Sri Lanka and Jonty Rhodes from South Africa, among others.

“We’ve signed all the top players you’d ever want to see,” Warne told cricket.com.au. “I’m excited for cricket fans in the United States to be able to see these amazing players for the first time.” A portion of proceeds from the series will go to the ICC for the development of cricket within the country.

“Americans are so passionate about sports, and I think there’s a huge potential for cricket to take off,” Tendulkar added. “We’re also planning some other events and festivities in each city so we can reach as many fans as possible. It would be great some day to see cricket bats right alongside the baseball bats, basketballs and soccer balls in America.” The first match will be played on 7 November in New York.

“The players for each team have not yet been selected, but will be picked, and will be announced in front of the media Nov. 5. We have 30 top crocket players from around the world here in New York,” Raj Ramakrishnan, managing director of Melbourne-based United Sports Association which is co-promoter of the event along with New York-based Leverage agency, told the media.

“With over 400 cricket clubs, including college cricket clubs, there is already a lot of interest in the game here thanks not just to the South Asians, but people from the Caribbean and Australian. “We are confident that this event this year will definitely give a fillip to the game and its popularity,” Ramakrishnan added.

USA specializes in event production, hospitality, talent management, and licensing and media production. As part of the partnership, it will spearhead the production of several initiatives during the “Cricket All-Stars”, tour including VIP parties, galas and special functions with the players. They will also work seamlessly with Leverage Agency to produce the cricket matches, promote the tour and facilitate player engagement. Fans can cast their dream match-ups at http://cricketallstars2015.com/fantasy-league.php.

India’s government criticized over growing religious tensions

A leading economic analysis group warned Friday that rising communal tensions in India were damaging Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s reform plans and could scare off investors.

A report by Moody’s Analytics said members of Modi’s governing Bharatiya Janata Party, or BJP, were fueling strife with provocative comments, an apparent reference to recent controversies over beef consumption and other domestic issues that have riled minorities, particularly Muslims.

“While Modi has largely distanced himself from the nationalist gibes, the belligerent provocation of various Indian minorities has raised ethnic tensions,” the group said. “Modi must keep his members in check or risk losing domestic and global credibility.”

The comments by Moody’s Analytics, a research division of the corporation that operates a separate credit rating agency, add to a growing debate in India over Modi’s policies and allegedly pro-Hindu rhetoric. The Indian leader took office in May 2014 promising to focus on economic growth. However, his conservative party, which has ties to hard-line Hindu groups, has garnered more headlines for pursuing laws seen as catering to India’s Hindu majority and for questionable statements by its politicians.

Some BJP-led states have banned the consumption of beef on the grounds that it’s offensive to Hinduism, which regards the cow as sacred. In September, a Muslim in northern India was lynched by a Hindu mob on suspicion that he ate beef; eight of 11 men accused in the death reportedly are relatives of a local BJP worker.

A BJP lawmaker, Sakshi Maharaj, said afterward: “We are ready to kill and get killed for cows.”

Modi did not appear to help matters when he finally spoke on the issue three weeks later, calling the killing “sad and undesirable” but saying his political opponents were trying to exploit it.

In recent weeks, scores of leading scientists and artists have returned awards given to them by government bodies in protest of what they call a growing climate of religious and cultural intolerance.

n August, a 76-year-old secular writer and critic of Hindu fundamentalists, M.M. Kalburgi, was gunned down in his home in southern India. This week, students at the prestigious Film and Television Institute of India finally called off a strike they launched more than four months ago in protest of the government’s appointment of Hindu conservatives to lead the institution’s governing body.

An Indian activist participates in a candlelight vigil in New Delhi on Oct. 3 against the slaying of a Muslim who was killed allegedly for eating and storing beef in his house.
An Indian activist participates in a candlelight vigil in New Delhi on Oct. 3 against the slaying of a Muslim who was killed allegedly for eating and storing beef in his house.

Modi, a canny communicator who has cultivated a relationship with Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, has sought to project an image of a muscular, modernizing India, which plays well among his many middle-class supporters as well as audiences overseas.

But the Moody’s report, titled “India Outlook: Searching for Potential” and written by Sydney-based economist Faraz Syed, could rattle Modi’s government by drawing a connection between the sectarian strife and India’s lagging economic performance.

The report said India’s economic growth rate of 7.3% in September was “below potential” and the country’s exports could be hurt by a slowdown in global demand. It also noted that India’s stock market, which boomed on excitement over Modi’s victory, has fallen 11% because of the government’s “consistent failure to deliver key economic reforms.”

Modi faces another key test in early November with elections in Bihar, one of India’s largest and most impoverished states, where the BJP is locked in a tight battle with a coalition of rival parties.

Modi, who has campaigned vigorously in the state, drew criticism this week when he told a rally that the BJP’s opponents would take affirmative action slots from Hindu lower classes and give them to “another community.” Commentators said it was an unspoken reference to Muslims, who make up a large minority in Bihar and about 14% of India’s 1.2 billion population.

“Overall, it’s unclear whether India can deliver the promised reforms and hit its growth potential,” the Moody’s report said. “Undoubtedly, numerous political outcomes will dictate the extent of success.”

Special correspondent Parth M.N. contributed to this report.

GOPIO-New York Discusses NRI Property Issues and Protecting Assets in India During Seminar at Kerala Center

Increased international mobility of both capital and labor in recent years has forced advanced countries to examine their fiscal policies from international perspective. In this age of globalization, cross-border matters have become of great concern to individuals. Citizen of other countries, at times, move to the USA or own assets here, and U.S. Citizens often move or own assets outside the United States.

The Global organization of People of Indian Origin – New York chapter organized a community meeting where many issues of NRIs buying, selling and owning properties in India were discussed. It was jointly organized by the Indian American Kerala Center at its auditorium in Elmont, New York. The speakers were New York Attorney Anand Ahuja who is also the President of GOPIO-New York and Mr. Pambayan Meyyan, Senior Vice President of Forest Hills Financial Group. The meeting was chaired by GOPIO Founder President Dr. Thomas Abraham.

“Indian Americans, as an immigrant community to the USA, are greatly affected with this spur in globalization as most still own vast assets, particularly real estate back home in India,” said Attorney Anand Ahuja.  “As with owning assets outside USA, the Indian American community is at greater risks, therefore, any sale-purchase of real estate in India, estate, gift or tax planning should be considered from international perspective than just domestically,” Attorney Ahuja continued.

“This is a great opportunity to discuss these issues in a community forum and develop strategies for a community compaign and reach out to the Govt. of India and the state governments on NRI property issues back home,” said Dr. Abraham

Several issues were brought out at this meeting especially buying, selling and owning real estate properties by NRIs/PIOs in India. It was pointed out that there have been growing number of scams against NRIs/PIOs hereditary, residential and commercial properties and due to these reasons, NRIs/PIOs are being greatly discouraged to invest in India

“NRIs/PIOs are at a great disadvantage to contest property issues in courts in India due to the length of the time (10-20 years) it takes, and/or due to the fact that in both civil and criminal cases NRIs/PIOs need to be present on many occasions before the court,” said Dr. Abraham. The meeting requested GOPIO to take up this issue with Govt. of India to have Fast Tack Courts.

The meeting also called upon the Government of India to enact another legislation to provide Title Insurance to ensure that their ownership in real estate is protected against forged signatures on the deed and for any such fraudulent transfer of their properties.

It was also pointed out that NRIs and PIOs are subjected to higher TDS (tax deducted at source) than resident Indians for capital gains and while selling properties. GOPIIO meeting passed a resolution covering all these issues and plans to present it at the Regional Pravasi Bharatiya Divas to be held in Los Angeles on November 15th.

In a resolution passed at the end of the day, GOPIO urged the Government of India to enact legislation to designate Fast Track Courts for NRIs/PIOs for the speedy settlement of their property issues in India, and enact another legislation to provide Title Insurance to ensure that their ownership in real estate is protected against forged signatures on the deed and for any such fraudulent transfer of their properties.

GOPIO-New York Discusses NRI Property Issues and Protecting Assets in India During Seminar at Kerala Center
Speakers, organizers and some participants at the recently held community meeting on NRI Property Issues in India. Seated in front row from L. to R.: Kerala Center President Thambi Thalappillil, GOPIO Founder President Dr. Thomas Abraham, GOPIO-New York President and panelist Anand Ahuja, Panelist Pambayan Meyyan, GOPIO-New York Founder President Lal Motwani and Kerala Center Executive Director E.M. Stephen

 

Kamlesh Mehta Resigns as Nassau County Director of Business and Economic Development

Kamlesh Mehta, publisher of the South Asian Times, and a close associate of indicted Bethpage restaurateur Harendra Singh, has resigned as Nassau County’s director of business and economic development, amid a Newsday examination of his role in the county administration.

The resignation by Kamlesh Mehta  as Nassau County Director of Business and Economic Development  has created a huge stir in a leading mainstream media group and Indian American media. He was portrayed more than just having resigned from a government position by scrutinizing his public records of three decades in USA, resulting in clouds of thick doubts and negative rumors about him.

Born and brought up in Beawar, Rajasthan, Mehta started his diamond business in Mumbai before moving to New York in 1986 according to a September 2011 report by the Indo Asian News Service.

Before Mangano appointed him to his latest position in September 2011, Mehta was deputy director in the Nassau County Office of Economic Development since January 2010.

He was appointed deputy director when Mangano got elected by a thin margin over his opponent, a two-term incumbent. According to Newsday, Mehta boasted to Indian-Americans that he was responsible for getting those few votes that catapulted Mangano to office, which even if not true, is not an offense.

Newsday points to Mehta’s Facebook account carrying pictures of him handing out proclamations to Indian-Americans “burnishing” his image as a businessman. Quoting unnamed “associates” of Mehta, Newsday said, “Landing a job in Mangano’s administration enhanced Mehta’s stature in the Indian-American community, associates said, and he was seen as a conduit to influential county politicians.” But the report does not say if this is unusual or peculiar to this particular case, considering that political patronage pervades the entire American system.

Newsday questioned why Mehta was appointed to his position despite his checkered financial past — his home was foreclosed in 1999; he filed twice for bankruptcy and defaulted on payments. There are also lawsuits filed by those he borrowed or bought goods from and allegedly did not pay back. The report also reveals that the state of New York issued a $10,827 tax warrant against Mehta’s private business this February.

In September, the Newsday, a daily from Long Island, NY  filed two Freedom Of Information Requests with Nassau County for records of Mehta’s work in office as well as his role in presenting honorary proclamations to the Indian American community, but it did not receive responses by the time Mehta resigned.

On being a publisher of a most honorable, family-oriented weekly newspaper, Mehta said, “I am a strong advocate of Truth & Transparency. I did not decline to reply to the questions of the daily’s reporter. I, rightfully, wanted a written interview to avoid unwarranted sensationalization through selective quotes and remarks.”

On his resignation, Mehta, who was a diamond merchant, said, “Though the formal resignation was submitted on Oct 1st, it was first verbally mentioned back in June 2015 when my son decided to move out of state for his MBA starting in August 2015, and I was also assuming the leading office of an international service organization in July 2015. I had foreseen the pressing demands and need of more time for family enterprises and prior social commitments.

What was the big deal about resigning from a job? Thousands of employees resign everyday to move on their progressive path.”

According to him, “Though the indicted friend has filed not-guilty to the charges, if the media or anyone addresses me as if I am guilty by association, all those thousands of people are also guilty who are somehow linked with me. I will let my friends and readers decide on that.”

As per Mehta, “It was an additional demand by NYS on levy against employees related issue, which was promptly paid in full. Our accountants are working with NYS Tax Departments to get the refund.Yes, there were two dismissed, personal bankruptcies filed back in 1999-2001 to save the large equity in my home, which went into foreclosure due to huge losses in jewelry business & stock market. What was wrong with it? I never hide it, ever.”

Mehta points out that three disputes from the public record have been mentioned from his almost 30 years of business life in USA. There could be more, and more disputes can happen in future too if I am alive and keep dealing with other humans. “I will not say much on the pending case, except that in the claimed transaction of the year 1992-93, the monies were never taken by me or by/for any of my businesses. And there is also a Counterclaim in the amount of 7 digits filed by me against the Certified Public Accountant in the same matter. To the statements of the CPA, if published accurately in the news story, my response is: Everyone who knows us knows us well, they all know who is truthful, genuine, and a good person with pure mind, heart and soul. I also believe in Karma – only time will tell who did well. I have forgiven the sinners, hope God will also forgive them.”

Samidh Guha Among 3 Outstanding Leaders, Given 2015 Caring for Children Awards

October 22, 2015- New York, NY– The Coalition for Asian American Children and Families (CACF) celebrated its 29th year at the 2015 Culture+ Cocktails for a Cause on Tuesday, October 20, at the Rubin Museum in New York City. Three outstanding leaders were honored for improving the lives of Asian Pacific American children and families.

“All children have the right to grow up free from prejudice and empowered to become leaders in their communities,” said Kathy Ko Chin, president and CEO of the Asian & Pacific Islander American Health Forum, and recipient of the 2015 CACF Caring for Children award. “I thank the Coalition for recognizing me and look forward to our continued work together to promote better policies for Asian and Pacific Islander children.”

Samidh Guha, Partner at Jones Day, said, “I am really honored to be receiving this award from CACF and want to congratulate CACF for the incredible work that it does to improve the lives and the futures of APA children and families.  I would also like to recognize the amazing achievements of Kathy and Fatima, whose work and commitment to the betterment of the less fortunate is inspiring.”

Samidh Guha Among 3 Outstanding Leaders, Given 2015 Caring for Children Awards“I am honored to be recognized by CACF. During my time in the Bloomberg Administration I worked with CACF and its member organizations on key policy issues and real community needs,” said Fatima Shama. “In my new role at The Fresh Air Fund, I look forward to partnering once again to ensure we reach and serve NYC’s Asian American Children and Families.”

“CACF is a unique organization that brings together the diverse Asian Pacific American community so that when united, we are able to fight for better policies, funding, and services for children and families. We could not have asked for better honorees that embrace and embody the vision of CACF. With the funds raised from this event, CACF can continue its crucial work as a voice for the most vulnerable in our community,” said Sheelah A. Feinberg, Executive Director of CACF.

The 2015 Culture+Cocktails for a Cause was sponsored by the Ong Family Foundation; Abigail E. Disney & Pierre N. Hauser; Bloomberg Philanthropies; Satomi Kosuga; the Koh Family; HealthPlus, The New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation; Larry Lee, and Jennifer Cutis and Curtis McGraw Webster.

Gross National Happiness, Like the Gross National Product, Can Be Tracked by Data

You have no doubt heard of the Gross National Happiness (GNH). Counterpoised against the Gross National Product (GNP), Bhutan hoped to reshape its economy along spiritual lines instead of capitalism’s growth ethos. But, just like the GNP, the GNH can be tracked and its existence justified by data. At the estimable British site Aeon, Benjamin Radcliff, an American political science professor, writes:

Economists, political scientists and other social scientists in the growing field of the political economy of wellbeing, or ‘happiness economics’, are using empirical rather than speculative methods to better understand what makes for satisfying lives.

… In reviewing the research in 2014, Adam Okulicz-Kozaryn, a political scientist at Rutgers University-Camden in New Jersey, found that ‘societies led by leftist or liberal governments (also referred to as welfare states)’ have the highest levels of life satisfaction, controlling for other factors. Looking across countries, the more generous and universalistic the welfare state, the greater the level of human happiness, net of other factors.

But what is happiness? Radcliffe writes:

… we are not interested in deciding what happiness is – an undeniably difficult problem – but only in knowing if people are happy. … how much people find their lives to be positive and rewarding – in Einstein’s phrase, ‘satisfying’.

I would refer you to this fascinating article to learn more. These lines of Radcliff sum up his thesis, though.

… does the political programme of the left really best contribute to a world in which people lead positive and rewarding lives? This is not a philosophical or normative question. Nor is it a matter of political taste. It is rather a relatively simple empirical question that can be answered through the examination of the data on life satisfaction.

First, allow me to express my reservations about the idea of happiness. I find it insensitive to seek happiness in a world where many are suffering. Perhaps a more worthy goal is to lead a life in which you are thriving, hopefully because some of your life is dedicated to service.

Meanwhile, most of us have trouble with the idea of happiness as a starting point — even though its pursuit is featured in the Declaration of Independence. We think happiness has to be earned individually and as a family. I will spare you my thoughts about the self-esteem problems from which many Americans suffer and then project on others. (“If I don’t deserve to have anything handed to me, neither do the needy.”)

Susen Daniel Memorial Cancer Relief Fund Raises $100,000 for Cancer Patients in India

The Susen Daniel Memorial Cancer Relief Fund’s charity fundraiser was on track for its 30th straight year and raised an estimated $100,000, above their intended goal, for impoverished cancer patients based in Kerala, India, at the Sheraton Cerritos Hotel on Oct. 17 in California.

The annual gala mixed entertainment, including comedy by Ohio-based Indian American humorist Rajiv Satyal, with its serious message to not only render financial assistance, but to also increase the yearly number of recipients from 200 to 300, as Mathew Daniel, chairman and founder, welcomed guests and described the Woodland Hills-based non-profit as a trustworthy “neighborhood” charity.

With little to no overhead, Daniel told India-West, SDM and its core of volunteers and 15 long-standing board members have assisted about 3,000 cancer-stricken families to date by providing check disbursements for food and daily needs, which currently amount to approximately $150, or roughly Rs. 10,000, per person.

Monetary payouts are channeled via select hospitals in India such as the Regional Cancer Center, Trivandrum, where SDM’s first patient was assisted through its initial modest endowment fund.

The Amala Cancer Hospital, Thrissur; Calicut Medical College, Kozhikode; and Caritas Medical College, Kottayam, also joined SDM in its philanthropic efforts and contribute to the yearly list of “poorest of the poor patients” sent to SDM for further review and payee selection, according to Daniel.

Hospital beds and related expenses are also sponsored fully or partially at the cancer hospitals when patients cannot afford hospital stays, explained Daniel. The cost of sponsoring a bed is $750 a year.

Susen Daniel Memorial Cancer Relief Fund Raises $100,000 for Cancer Patients in IndiaSDM’s mission, as recalled by Daniel, was instituted in 1985, soon after his wife Susen succumbed to ovarian cancer. The realization of the low chances of surviving cancer, coupled with the lack of affordable medical care for the indigent, not only prompted Daniel to action, but gained momentum when he lost his daughter Sudha to breast cancer in 2002.

Master of ceremonies Reggie Pottukulam kicked off the event and introduced speakers and board members Ivy Thomas, Dr. Sajini George, and Abraham Mathew who urged support, echoed SDM’s contributions, and honored board members and donors such as Jay Zaveri, a longtime supporter of the organization.

Cancer spares no one, said Thomas, as she outlined SDM’s historical progress to support the poor in India, but “what does poor mean?” she asked the nearly 500 guests, going on to equate the daily cost of stay at one of SDM’s sponsored hospitals to the cost of a latte here in the United States, which many patients in India are too poor to afford.

Thomas also touched an emotional chord by relaying the expressions of gratitude from cancer sufferers who occupy the sponsored “free beds” at the hospitals. Most, noted Thomas, are bewildered that there are people half way across the world who cared and were willing to assist in their most “vulnerable” time.

Mathew, current president of SDM, instilled a sobering realism in his speech as he acknowledged its pains and growth. The swell of its endowment fund to $350,000 was called “remarkable” for a small organization.

But hope is mingled with hurdles, said Mathew, who stated that although checks are written directly to patients, not the hospitals, “most patients don’t have bank accounts” and a “majority of them pass away before funds can be received.” The benefit, though, in such cases passes on to the surviving family members.

Along with Mathew, Thomas and George, Daniel also honored board members Jai Johnson, Sunil Daniel, Vinodh Bahuleyan, Jay Nair, Joseph Ouso, C.A. Philipose, Priya Philipose, Dr. Ravi Raghavan, Ravi Vellatheri, Sunil Warrier and Binoy Yohannan during the event.

SDM secretary Jai Johnson closed the evening’s speeches with the statistic from the National Cancer Institute that “every 13th new cancer patient is an Indian.”

Aside from raffled prizes, entertainment was also provided by artists Joya Kazi Unlimited, Maya and Biju, DJ Greg Tria and Valley Malayali Arts and Sports Club. For more information please visit sdmcancerfund.org.

Lilly Singh Is 8th Highest-Earning YouTube Star on Forbes’ List

With more than six million subscribers on Youtube, her own hashtag and a recent Teen Choice Award nomination, there’s no question Lilly Singh is taking the Internet by storm. Indo-Canadian YouTube star Lilly Singh tied with two other celebrities to become the eighth highest-earning YouTube celebrity at $2.5 million as part of Forbes magazine’s first stab at ranking YouTube stars.

The comedienne, had a three-way tie on the list of the “World’s Highest Paid YouTube Stars,” appearing in the Nov. 2 issue of Forbes, with prankster Roman Atwood and chef Rosanna Pansino. The top earner was Sweden’s Felix Kjellberg, 25, better known as “PewDiePie” at $12 million. YouTube stars make money mainly by getting paid to interact with products on their channels and sharing ad revenue with YouTube. Some, such as Singh, also star in movies, write books, go on tour, sell music or cut endorsement deals.

The 26-year-old Canadian, who is known to online fans as IISuperwomanII, admits there have been some famous faces who have helped her forge an incredible career to date. Singh recently completed her “A Trip to Unicorn Island” world tour and will be releasing a documentary based on the tour soon. Forbes, better known for its list of billionaires, said it measured earnings before management fees and taxes and came up with the figures based on data from online sources such as Nielsen, IMDb and interviews with managers, lawyers, industry insiders and the stars themselves.

Lilly Singh Is 8th Highest-Earning YouTube Star on Forbes' List
Lilly Singh

Jaya Iyer Launches Gender-Neutral T-Shirts for Kids

Ever since Jaya Iyer’s daughter was a toddler, she had been fascinated by Saturn and its icy rings. When Swaha turned three, she had a space-themed birthday party. But when her mom went to find clothes with space images for Swaha, she couldn’t find any. They were all in the boys section. Jaya Iyer, an Indian American clothing designer is attempting to do away with gender-specific clothing for children. Iyer, 41, of Washington, D.C., launched her clothing line, Svaha, in response to not being able to find a girl’s shirt with an astronaut graphic on it.

Iyer, mother of two, who has a doctorate in fashion merchandising, started her own business called Svaha (which is how her daughter’s name is pronounced) to sell clothes that upend gender stereotypes. One shirt features a grinning green stegosaurus, the plates on its back adorned with polka dots. A second comes in a blazing pink hue, with an astronaut planting an American flag on the moon. That one should satisfy her daughter. “She was very upset with me for not ever buying her anything with astronauts on it,” Iyer says. “Then she started telling me: ‘I want a ninja on my shirt.'”

Svaha is one of several startups that have emerged in recent years with the goal of changing the standards that govern what kids wear. These upstarts aren’t looking to replace current kid’s apparel entirely. Instead, their founders say they want to provide children with more options. Handsome in Pink says it’s all right for boys to wear pink and purple. BuddingSTEM offers science-themed garb for girls. Perhaps the buzziest label is Princess Awesome, which raised more than $200,000 in a successful Kickstarter campaign, showing demand for pirate-themed dresses and girl’s apparel covered in the symbol for pi. Most of the ventures remain in early stages as online-only entities using crowdfunded or bootstrapped cash to sell small numbers of shirts or dresses.

Originally from Dharwad, Karnataka, Iyer earned her undergraduate degree in India and moved to the United States in 2001 to pursue her master’s in fashion merchandising from the University of Georgia and her doctorate in the same field from Iowa State University. “Since I have experience in this industry, I decided to create a line of T-shirts,” the Indian American entrepreneur told India-West.

Jaya Iyer Launches Gender-Neutral T-Shirts for Kids
Jaya Iyer with her daughter

Iyer launched a Kickstarter campaign with her Svaha partners, Eva Everett and Mansi Patney, and raised more than $30,000 to fund the project. With the funding in the rearview mirror, Iyer noted the hardest part was finding graphic designers and production on a limited budget.

“I wanted to make the T-shirts in the U.S., but, since I was going to do small quantity, nobody was responding to me,” she explained. “I have been able to find a factory in India who is able to help me with production.”

Iyer said the next hurdle Svaha faces is reaching a wider audience, but she remains optimistic it will be accomplished. Svaha has zero gender discrimination, according to Iyer.

“We have astronaut, cars and diggers, along with T-shirts in pink, blue and purple for both girls and boys,” she said of the product. “We also have many STEM-based designs for both girls and boys. “We want to provide children with clothes through which they are able to show their love for anything that they want,” the designer added. “It does not have to be limited to princesses and pink for girls and cars and blue for boys.”

In addition to the design, Iyer said all the customers rave about the feel of the shirts, saying it is like silk, though the shirts are 100 percent cotton. Soon, Svaha hopes to shift to 100 percent organic cotton. “We want to be different and appealing to our customers in many different ways,” she said. Svaha has opened an Amazon store and Iyer said the business is continuing to grow steadily, though the company still has “a long way to go.”

Currently, Svaha offers T-shirts and dresses but plans to expand to more dresses, leggings and boys and girls underwear. In the future, she would like to add non-clothing items like towels and sheets, among other things. Iyer has taught fashion merchandising at Marymount University in Arlington, Va., for nearly five years. She has also authored “Retailing in Emerging Markets” and has been a buyer at ThinkGeek.

What Winter Will Be Like Where You Live

Weather across the U.S. this past year has been one for the record books, from an historic drought in California to extreme snow in New England region. Now, as October nears its end, TIME looked at what the forecasts show for the coming winter. The forecast brings both welcome and unwelcome news. New Englanders and Mid-Atlantic residents, for instance, should be happy that they’ll avoid some of the icy cold that froze the region last winter. Californians are likely to receive heavy rain but not enough to resolve the state’s drought.

Across the country, El Niño is driving much of this year’s weather patterns. The climate phenomenon raises temperatures across the globe and changes the way air circulates. In the U.S., this typically means heavy rain in the south and lower temperatures across much of the country.

What Winter Will Be Like Where You Live

Indo-Canadian Candidates Win 19 Parliamentary Seats

In an ever growing clout of Indo-Canadians, 15 Liberal candidates of Indian origin, 3 from the Conservative Party and an Indo-Canadian belonging to New Democratic Party (NDP) won the election to the Canadian Parliament in the general elections to 338 seats. The Liberals got a parliamentary majority that will allow them to govern without relying on other parties.

The results of the national elections to the Canadian Parliament were declared on October 20th, 2015. The Indian-Canadians more than doubled their representation in the Canadian parliament from eight to 19 as Canadians voted out the Conservative Party by handing out a landslide to the Liberal Party.

Indo-Canadian Candidates Win 19 Parliamentary SeatsGosal lost to fellow Indian-Canadian Ramesh Sangha of the Liberal Party in Brampton Center, and Grewal of the Conservative Party lost in Fleetwood-Port Kells, British Columbia. But the biggest surprise was created by Darshan Kang of the Liberal Party, who won the Calgary Skyview seat for his party for the first time in 50 years by beating fellow Indian-Canadians Devinder Shory of the Conservative Party and Sahajvir Singh Randhawa of the New Democratic Party.

The outgoing minister of state Tim Uppal retained his seat by beating Amarjeet Singh Sahi of the Liberal Party and Jasvir Deol of the NDP in Edmonton Mill Woods. Most Indian-Canadian victories came in Canada’s biggest province of Ontario.

In Brampton East, Raj Grewal of the Liberal Party beat Harbaljit Kahlon of the NDP and Naval Bajaj of the Conservative Party. Bajaj is the former president of the Indo-Canada Chamber of Commerce. In Brampton West, Kamal Khera of the Liberal Party beat Ninder Thind of the Conservative Party. In Brampton North, Ruby Sahota of the Liberal Party beat outgoing MP Parm Gill of the Conservative Party and white Sikh Martin Singh of the NDP.

While longest-serving MP Deepak Obhrai, a 65-year-old Conservative lawmaker, won for the seventh time from Calgary Forest Lawn, outgoing minister of state Bal Gosal and four-time MP Nina Grewal were prominent Indian-origin Canadians who lost their fight to hold back their seats to the Parliament.

“I have a strong record both as a representative of the constituency as well as working in government and in the opposition over the years I have been in Parliament,” Obhrai, who began his career as a Reform Party lawmaker, was quoted as saying by the Calgary Sun.

For over a century, Canada has benefited from the talent and hard work of newcomers from India. Tens of thousands of Indians continue to make the journey to Canada every year to help us build our country, our economy and, in many cases, to settle permanently and become Canadians.

Canada remains a destination of choice for visitors, students and business travellers from India. In 2013, Canada issued more than 130,000 visas to people coming to visit family, friends or as tourists. Canada welcomed almost 14,000 students and admitted more than 33,000 Indian citizens as permanent residents.

The Canadian government has been making changes to facilitate legitimate travel, welcoming more visitors, businesspeople and students to Canada than ever before. The Business Express Program (BEP), introduced in 2008, was created to ensure faster processing of visa applications for businesspeople. In addition, the Worker Express Program, which provides expedited service to applicants sent to Canada by companies under the BEP, was introduced in India in June 2009 and has since benefited more than 7,200 Indian citizens.

In addition to the BEP, in July 2011, the government extended the duration of multiple-entry visas from five to 10 years allowing visitors to enter and exit Canada for up to six months at a time over a 10-year period. The Parent and Grandparent Super Visa remains a fast and convenient option for parents and grandparents who want to spend longer periods of time with their families in Canada. By the end of February 2014, more than 31,000 Super Visas had been issued, and almost 97 percent of qualified Super Visa applicants were approved.

According to reports, more than 33,000 Indians became permanent residents in 2013, a 17 percent increase since 2008. The number of visitor visas issued in 2013 to Indian citizens represents an increase of 14 percent since 2008. Nearly four times more Indian students entered Canada in 2013 than in 2008 when 3,566 Indian citizens entered Canada as students. Canada welcomed more than 50,000 parents and grandparents to Canada during 2012 and 2013. Canada plans to welcome 20,000 more over the coming year.

Indian-Canadians make up over three per cent of Canada’s population of about 35 million and have become a significant political force. There were eight lawmakers of Indian-origin in Canada in 2011.

AAPI’s 10th Annual Landmark Global Health Summit To Be Held From January 1-3rd at Maurya Hotel, New Delhi

Chicago, IL:  “As the President for AAPI USA, I am very pleased to inform you that AAPI USA will be celebrating the 10th anniversary of its Global Health Summit from January 1 – 3, 2016 at the prestigious ITC Maurya Hotel, New Delhi,” Dr. Seema Jain, President of American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI) said here today. “GHS 2016 will focus on Women’s Health and Key areas of non-communicable diseases that are extremely important for India. In addition, a ground breaking launch of the first Trauma and Brain Injury Guidelines for India is planned for Jan 2, 2016 and the Hon’able Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi along with the Hon’ableUnion Health Minister, Shri J.P.Nadda will be invited to launch these guidelines.”

The 10th anniversary Summit,  promises to be one with the greatest impact and significant contributions towards harnessing the power of international Indian diaspora to bring the most innovative, efficient, cost effective healthcare solutions to India, Dr. Jain added. With the changing trends and statistics in healthcare, both in India and US, AAPI is refocusing our mission and vision of GHS 2016, AAPI would like to collaborate with local partners in India towards  making a positive meaningful impact on the healthcare in India. The mission of AAPI is to share best practice and experiences from leading experts in the world and develop actionable plans for launching demonstration projects that enable access to affordable and quality healthcare for all people.

According to Dr. Jain, in order to accomplish this mission, AAPI is backed by leading healthcare experts and professional associations, including Ministries of Indian Affairs and Health and Family Welfare, both from a Central and State level. “The announcement for this conference has also already attracted several India based professional associations including IMA,MCI,ASI,IPS,APA,API,ICON , to name a few. In addition, several international healthcare industry partners are looking for opportunities to participate in these events for greater collaboration on Research & Development and philanthropic engagements,” she said.

AAPI has organized nine Indo – US/Global Healthcare Submits and developed strategic alliances with various organizations. It is these learnings and relationships that have now enabled us to plan ahead and prepare for an outstanding event that has already received confirmation and endorsement from over 300 very prominent and talented physicians and surgeons that are very passionate, about serving their homeland, Mother India. The final attendance is anticipated to exceed over 800-1000 delegates.

AAPI’s Chief Patron the Minster of External Affairs of India, Smt. Sushma Swaraj has confirmed to be the Chief Guest for AAPI’s FIRST Women’s Leadership Forum scheduled for January 2, 2016 from 1.30PM, Dr. Jain said. Several prominent women leaders will be invited to the forum to discuss the future of women leaders in India, share personal examples of their challenges, struggles and successes. More details are being developed.

Among the many partners who will be joining and working together during and after the GHS 2016 alongside of AAPI are the leadership of Indian Medical Association, the Delhi Medical Association, Medical Council of India, National Board of Examinations, Apollo Group of Hospitals, MAX Hospitals, Antara Senior Living, Abbott Health Systems, Glaxo Smith Kline, Novartis Pharmaceuticals, Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences, Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance.

“The love for our motherland, which has made us come back to make a positive difference in the healthcare delivery system in India,” Dr. Ajay Lodha, President-Elect of AAPI, said. “GHS has come to be recognized for the many initiatives it has given birth to and the numerous joint recommendations of the standard of care for major diseases affecting the people of India.”

AAPI’s 10th Annual Landmark Global Health Summit To Be Held From January 1-3rd at Maurya Hotel, New Delhi“The scientific program developed by leading experts with the contributions of a  Scientific Advisory Board and International Scientific Committee, had for the very first time, live streaming of sessions, which were viewed live by physicians from around the world,” Dr. Gautam Sammader, Vice President of AAPI, said.  The Conference in collaboration with over 10 professional associations from all over the world, accredited from Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education for 14 hours of credits will be applied to participants.  Scientific sessions, including high priority areas such as Cardiology, Maternal & Child Health, Diabetes, Oncology, Surgery, Mental Health, HIT, Allergy, Immunology & Lung Health and Gastroenterology, Transplant and impact of comorbidities, will be part of the presentations held during the Summit.

After years of persistence and effort of several people, the upgraded and enhanced www.swaasthIndia.gov.in is now up and running. The purpose of this web site to enable physician volunteers from all over the world enlist in various healthcare camps, screening and other philanthropic activities being conducted in India. This website is now being promoted with all the state Ministers of Health and NGO’s to post information about such activities, once that is updated the international Indian medical diaspora will be able to volunteer for activities most relevant to their expertise and in their respective geographies, Dr. Jain informed.

The GHS will continue to offer educational and training programs on areas that need special attention, including high priority areas such as Cardiology, Maternal & Child Health, Diabetes, Oncology, Surgery, Mental Health, HIT, Allergy, Immunology & Lung Health and Gastroenterology, Transplant and impact of comorbidities by world leaders in the field of medicine.

“AAPI has successfully collaborated with past Governments and with the new Government at the Center, we are looking forward to have renewed participation and engagement in areas related to health seeking to make a positive impact on,” Dr. Jain pointed out. Healthcare in India. AAPI would like to make a positive meaningful impact on the healthcare in India. Dr. Seema Jain appealed to “all of you, AAPI members, well-wishers, friends and colleagues to join this effort and help ensure that we are putting in solid effort towards making quality healthcare affordable and accessible to all people of India.” For additional information on AAPI and its Global Healthcare Summit, please visit: www.aapiusa.orgwww.aapighsindia.org

India Critical Of U.S. Report on International Religious Freedom

The 2015 Annual Report of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom released by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has been criticized by India but lauded by Republican presidential candidate Senator Marco Rubio after its release October 14th.

The report listed India as a Tier 2 country, in which “the violations engaged in or tolerated by the government are serious and characterized by at least one of the elements of the ‘systematic, ongoing and egregious’ standard, but do not fully meet the CPC (countries of particular concern) standard.”

India Critical Of U.S. Report on International Religious FreedomSix out of 29 state governments in India enforced existing “anti-conversion” laws and there were also reports of religiously motivated killings, arrests, coerced religious conversions, religiously-motivated riots, and actions restricting the right of individuals to change religious beliefs, according to the report.

“In some cases, local police failed to respond effectively to communal violence, including attacks against religious minorities, although local officials used broad authorities to deploy police and security forces to control outbreaks of religiously-motivated violence,” it read. The local non-governmental organization Act Now for Harmony and Democracy reported over 800 religiously-motivated attacks from May through the end of the year, it said.

India snubbed the report that expressed concern over reports of religiously-motivated killings in the country, saying the Indian constitution provides every citizen equal religious, political and social rights.

According to media reports, External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Vikas Swarup said the report is “internal to the U.S. administration. It is widely acknowledged that the Indian constitution guarantees equal rights – religious, political and social rights – to its citizens, including its minorities; and any abuses are handled by internal process, including the judiciary, a vibrant media, civil society and the National Human Rights Commission etc.”

However, the report gave a thumbs-up to the Indian authorities as they “continued to enforce laws designed to protect ‘religious sentiments’ and minimize the risk of religious violence, which some argued had the effect of limiting freedom of expression related to religion.”

Meanwhile, Rubio called for Pakistan to be designated as a Country of Particular Concern, adding the State Department does not utilize the tools it has to name and shame violators of religious freedom. “Religious freedom must be a bedrock of American foreign policy. The stakes are too high for anything less. We need to redouble our efforts to serve as a beacon for religious freedom around the world and press countries to implement policies that protect religious expression and worship,” Rubio said in a statement.

The administration should re-designate countries every year for their religious freedom violations, Rubio urged. In its global overview, the report said, in 2014, non-state actors committed some of the world’s most egregious abuses of religious freedom and other human rights. Government failure, delay, and inadequacy in combating these groups often had severe consequences for people living under significant and dire restrictions on, and interference with, their exercise of freedom of religion, it said. Pakistan has been placed as a Tier 1 country, comprised of “countries whose governments engage in or tolerate particularly severe violations of religious freedom that are systematic, ongoing and egregious,” the report said.

Discovery Channel to premiere 90-min exclusive on AR Rahman

Discovery Channel is set to premiere ‘Jai Ho’, an exclusive 90-minute programme showcasing the spectacular journey of music maestro AR Rahman, spanning two decades and around 130 film scores, and his contribution to catapult Indian film music to the world stage.

Directed by National Award winner Umesh Aggarwal for the Public Service Broadcasting Trust, ‘Jai Ho’ will be aired by the Discovery Channel on Monday, 26 October at 9 pm. The Oscar-winning composer said initially, he did not find it “necessary” to have a documentary based on him, but later director Umesh Aggarwal convinced him.

“There were lot of offers before to do a documentary on me, but I felt it was not necessary. And after the Oscars and the brouhaha happened, I felt that people could get some kind of inspiration with my life through the journey of my life, through the way I’m making music,” Rahman said.

“And then Umesh, an award-winning filmmaker, contacted me and he said that initially it was only for the consulates all over. It was the kind of exposure which was good, but I didn’t know that all this would happen,” he added. However, the composer added that he “cannot watch myself”.

“People living abroad and having the Indian flag, they deserve to know about the people of India. I didn’t know it’ll come out charmingly like how it’s made. I cannot watch myself and hate to watch myself,” he said.

Discovery Channel to premiere 90-min exclusive on AR RahmanAggarwal said that it’s the first “definite feature” on Rahman. “I am confident that this film will convey his astonishing success and global phenomenon,” he said. Shot across the world, the film includes interviews of Aamir Khan, Danny Boyle, Mani Ratnam, Gulzar, Ashutosh Gowarikar, Shekhar Kapoor, Subhash Ghai and composer Andrew Lloyd Webber among others.

Through ‘Jai Ho’, viewers will also get an access into his personal life and his journey right from his coming together with Mani Ratnam for ‘Roja’, his first ever commercial, his Bollywood debut with ‘Rangeela’ to his versatile and successful work in films like ‘Dil Se’, ‘Taal’, ‘Rang De Basanti’, ‘Lagaan’, ‘Highway’, ‘Rockstar’ and ‘Raanjhanaa’, amongst others.

Rahman’s name figures foremost in the world of music whenever and wherever India is mentioned. He gave the music in Danny Boyle’s ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ and bagged his first ever music Oscar for India. The program also offers the viewers a window into his personal life including emotional moments like leaving school at the age of nine, getting his first pay check, marriage and record celebrations and more. The viewers will directly hear the double Oscar and Grammy-winner talk about all this and more.

Discovery Networks Asia-Pacific EVP and GM- South Asia Rahul Johri said, “Discovery Channel is delighted to offer viewers an inspiring program on the life and journey of the music legend AR Rahman. We are committed to present the comprehensive image of the enchanting India – its remarkable landscapes, achievements, culture and its laudable icons to viewers across the world.”

Kailash Satyarthi first Indian receives Harvard humanitarian award

In another recognition of his contribution in the field of child rights and abolition of child slavery, 2014 Nobel Peace Prize recipient Kailash Satyarthi has become the first Indian to be honored with Harvard University’s prestigious “2015 Humanitarian of the Year” award.

The child rights activist received the award during a ceremony organised at the Harvard University campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Friday, last week. “I humbly accept the award on behalf of millions of left out children, for whose rights we strive to work for. Let us all pledge together to eradicate child slavery from the world,” Satyarthi said in his acceptance speech.

“We believe that your notable contributions to Indian child rights deserve special recognition,” wrote S Allen Counter Jr, director of the Harvard Foundation, to Satyarthi in the recognition letter.

The annual award is given to an individual whose work has served to improve the quality of life of people and inspired them to reach greater heights. Recently, Satyarthi succeeded in getting child protection and welfare-related clauses included in the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The crusader for child rights expressed the hope that he would “see the end of child labour” across the globe in his lifetime.

“I am positive that I would see the end of child labour around the world in my lifetime as the poorest of the poor have realised that education is a tool that can empower them,” Satyarthi had told IANS on the sidelines of a media interaction organised at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club last year. “Hence, they are educating their children while the number of child labourers are gradually decreasing around the world,” Satyarthi added.

Quoting figures from the International Labour Organisation (ILO), he said the latest data has shown that the number of child labourers around the world is 168 million as compared to 260 million in the mid 90s. Calling children his religion, Satyarthi said the issue of child labour has received a lot of attention after he won the Nobel prize but the momentum should be maintained.

“I never go to temples but when I see a child I see god in them. Children are my religion…This issue must not die. The children need a voice and they need everybody’s support especially the media,” he told IANS.

Satyarthi, along with Pakistan’s Malala Yousufzai, won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014. In January this year, Satyarthi met US president Barack Obama during his three-day visit to India to attend the annual Republic Day parade in Delhi. Satyarthi has worked for child rights for over 30 years through the Bachpan Bachao Andolan, an NGO which is credited with freeing over 80,000 children from bonded labor across India.

Aasif Mandvi, Kiran Bir Sethi, Chanda Kochhar Among ‘Asia Game Changers’

In a ceremony held at the United Nations, Asia Society honored Aasif Mandvi, Kiran Bir Sethi, Chanda Kochhar as ‘Asia Game Changers.’ Philippine boxing great Manny Pacquiao and nine other dignitaries were honored as the second annual class of Asia Game Changers for making a transformative and positive difference for the future of Asia and the world. Honorees also included Chinese telecommunications magnate Lei Jun, Indian/American comedian and actor Aasif Mandvi, and Emirati fighter pilot Mariam al-Mansouri. Chanda Kochhar, the CEO of ICICI Bank won the award for taking the Bank to the next level of achievements.

Kiran Bir Sethi, an education innovator whose Design for Change organization has improved learning outcomes across India, spoke of the importance of spotlighting instructors. “It’s because of honors like [Asia Game Changers] that the response goes from ‘oh, you’re just a teacher’ to ‘teachers are game changers’.”

Aasif Mandvi, Kiran Bir Sethi, Chanda Kochhar Among 'Asia Game Changers'Other honorees spanned the scientific, artistic, and military world across the continent: Isamu Akasaki, Hiroshi Amano, and Shuji Nakamura, inventors of LED light bulbs and 2014 Nobel Prize winners for physics; and Li Cunxin, the Artistic Director of the Queensland Ballet.

After receiving the award, Pacquiao credited his humble upbringing in a village outside General Santos City, Philippines, for forming his desire to give back to the community. “I’ve experienced in life not having shelter and having to sleep in the street,” he said. “So even with my success I will never forget my past.”

Against the backdrop of New York’s East River and Queensboro Bridge, Pacquiao and his fellow awardees mingled with Asia Society trustees, officers, and other guests from around the world. Josette Sheeran, Asia Society’s President and CEO, began the ceremony by noting that Asians have received insufficient recognition for their contributions to the world. “More than 950 Nobel prizes have been awarded since 1901, and less than six percent have gone to Asians — even though 60 percent of the world’s population is in Asia and Asia has 50 percent of the world’s patents.

“We at Asia Society want to recognize the brilliance of Asia — those who are changing the world for the better.” In his acceptance speech, Mandvi spoke of comedy’s role in eroding negative stereotypes and tackling issues — such as Islamophobia — that often elude more conventional comedians. Recounting a career that began in Off-Broadway productions before achieving widespread recognition a decade ago as the “Middle East Correspondent” for The Daily Show, Mandvi struck a characteristically humorous tone in his remarks. Referring to Pacquiao, his fellow awardee, Mandvi joked: “Little known fact about Manny — he also always wanted to be a fake news correspondent. I guess I won that, Manny. Good luck.”

Pacquiao was introduced by John McEnroe, the American tennis great. “I was fortunate enough to meet Nelson Mandela, and one of the things he said to me was that sports have the potential to change the world,” McEnroe said. “And Manny Pacquiao is one of the individuals who can do that.”

Priyanka Chopra Wins Best India Act, Now Nominated for Worldwide Act

Actress-singer Priyanka Chopra has been voted Best India Act at the MTV Europe Music Awards (EMA) 2015 after beating Monica Dogra, Indus Creed, The Ska Vengers and Your Chin, who were also nominated in the same category.

The pop/EDM singer is now pitted against Best Africa Act Diamond Platinumz in the Best Worldwide Act: Africa/India Act category. Fans will now vote their favorite in the category on the MTV website and choose the final winner.

An Indian artiste has never won in this category before (though Yo Yo Honey Singh was nominated twice), and if Priyanka snatches this win, it will be a first for the country.

Priyanka released her first single “In My City” feat. will.i.am in 2012, which sold more than 130,000 copies in its first week, topped the Hindi pop chart and was certified triple platinum. The song was also the theme of NFL’s Sunday night football in 2012-13 seasons. The singer received three nominations – Best Female Artist, Best Song and Best Video – for “In My City” at the World Music Awards in 2012.

In 2013, she followed it up with “Exotic” feat. Pitbull, which has over 73 million views on Youtube to date. “Exotic” debuted at number 16 on the Billboard Dance/Electronic Songs and number 11 on the Dance/Electronic Digital Songs chart in 27 July 2013 issue.

She then went on to do an EDM cover of Bonnie Raitt’s “I Can’t Make You Love Me.” She also collaborated with The Chainsmokers for their EDM track “Erase.”  This year, the “Quantico” star collaborated with N.A.S.A on the world music track “Meltdown,” where she sang English and Punjabi vocals. The song was released online last month and has received positive reviews.

EMA winners will be announced Oct. 25, during an event in Milan. There will be six Worldwide Act winners, each representing a different portion of the planet: Africa/India, Asia, Australia/New Zealand, Europe, Latin America, and North America

SHAANDAAR Opens on October 22

The newest song video from this month’s most anticipated Bollywood film SHAANDAAR has won over fans the world over with its distinguished and unique style. Shahid Kapoor and Alia Bhatt show off a whole new side in the new video for “Nazdeekiyaan.” The hilarious wedding comedy hits North American theaters on October 22.

SHAANDAAR Opens on October 22A big fat “Shaandaar” Indian wedding, which is actually a business merger between two of the biggest business families of India, is happening at an exotic castle in Europe. Mrs. Kamla Arora, the grandmother of the Arora family, the sole owner of the billion-dollar business and the property, has planned their wedding. Kamla Arora treats everyone like her servants including her three sons, Bipin (the eldest), Vipul and Vinay. Mr. Fandwani, the groom’s father, is a loud Sindhi businessman who is the counter to Kamla Arora: The Fandwanis dress in gold, accessorize in gold and if possible they drink and eat gold.

Based against the backdrop of the Shaandaar wedding is a love triangle between the protagonists – Aliya and Jagjinder Joginder and Bipin (Aliya’s father). Bipin believes there’s no guy that will be good enough for his daughter while Aliya is a dreamer but her dreams are whacked out and Jagjinder Joginder is a doer, he can make anything happen! And for obvious reasons, Bipin hates Jagjinder Joginder. The journey of Aliya, Jagjinder Joginder and Bipin in the chaotic and lavish wedding is the story of Shaandaar. It’s a fairy tale love story that everyone has always dreamt of.

Watch the elegant new music video for “Nazdeekiyaan” here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQoGk4V4BZk

Watch the making of Jagjinder Joginder with cast interviews here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1z02VSumUk

How Local Artisans Are Rebuilding Nepal

On April 25, a 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck Kathmandu, Nepal, killing over 9,000 people and injuring 21,000 more. In addition to tearing down basic infrastructure across a wide swathe of the country, the tremor also damaged several cultural heritage sites under protection by UNESCO.

In the months since, Nepal, one of Asia’s poorest countries, has struggled to rebuild. Amitabh Joshi, a Nepali filmmaker now based in New York, traveled back to his home country to profile men and women who, despite the enormity of the challenge, are slowly restoring Nepal’s invaluable heritage.

Why did the tragedy in Nepal motivate you to travel back there? How did you decide to tell the story of Kathmandu’s artisans?

Once the earthquake hit on April 25, it was very important for me to travel back to Nepal on a personal level. Like many other Nepalese who assembled online campaigns or volunteered their skills, I knew I had to do something. I felt that it was important to document the process of reconstructing these important cultural heritage sites. After I started filming and speaking to the organizers and artisans involved in reconstruction, it became apparent this was an important story to cover. Anil Chitrakar, who is profiled in the short video, spearheaded a section of the reconstruction work on Swayambhunath Stupa. He had the connections within the Newar artisan community to assemble the appropriate team. These artisan families have lineages that reach back hundreds of years.

We also interviewed Amit Buddhacharya of Swayambhunath Stupa, who is responsible for the upkeep and security of the entire site. His family has had the sole responsibility of protecting the site for thousands of years. It’s important to highlight the artisans that have been working at this very local level. There are larger organizations such as the Department of Archeology and the United Nations organizations UNESCO that are also present at these sites. Amit’s family and painters are working with UNESCO to recover an old mural in a building on the north side of Swayambhunath Stupa. Christian Manhart, the UNESCO representative, said that recovery couldn’t happen without the local support.

The last great earthquake took place in 1934. My grandfather was six years old when it occurred. The vast majority of people who lived through that earthquake are not alive today and the ones who remember it were very young. All Nepalese were aware of the potential for a large earthquake. It’s something that is part of the society, and everyone had this expectation. Most of the artisans were skeptical of the government’s role in reconstructing and developing earthquake resistant structures. In fact, the majority of the artisans we interviewed believe that the older structures are actually more earthquake resistant than the concrete buildings.

Alok Tuladhar, a local from Kathmandu Durbar Square, told me how the wooden beams within the brick buildings allow for a level of flexibility in the construction. There are other details of how the beams join at the corners of the building, which allow room for shifting. Many of the structures that collapsed had not been renovated in hundreds of years. There have been many private organizations and NGOs that have helped in disseminating information about more earthquake resistant structures for villagers. It will be interesting to see the decisions that are made in reconstructing these cultural heritage sites.

The Department of Archeology and other governing bodies of the seven cultural heritage sites have made it a point to open these sites to the public and tourists. These cultural heritage sites within Kathmandu attract thousands of tourists each year. Tourism is the second largest source of foreign income, accounting for about eight percent of the nation’s GDP. The lack of tourists will also have social ramifications. Local initiatives include the artisans and the site caretakers of these temples and structures.

But there is also division between the local initiatives and the large organizations from the UN and the Department of Archeology. There seems to be a need for a more concerted effort, in which local voices are heard. Many old sites that aren’t part of the traditional seven heritage sites might fall through the cracks and will not receive the attention needed and the locals are left to secure and reconstruct. It’s important to remember these are living cultural heritage sites important to the local communities. It’s amazing to see the amount of resolve and conviction these local artisans and neighbors have for these cultural heritage sites.

Educational Puzzle Games Hope to Reduce Kids’ Short Attention Spans

An Indian couple who have studied in the U.S. have teamed up to create a new three-in-one game which they hope will offer a new patient and joyful form of parenting. Rajat Dhariwal and his wife Madhumita Halder, of Bangalore, both studied at IIT and Carnegie Mellon University. They have taught children and wanted to find a way to change the Indian education system.

While teaching at the Rishi Valley School in Andhra Pradesh as science teachers, Dhariwal and Halder taught kids for four years through games, without using a single textbook. “This game-based learning not only made the most boring topics fun, but also the conceptual understanding was way better,” Dhariwal told India-West. “This inspired us to use this ‘power of play’ to change the world of children’s engagement options.”

As a result, the couple started the Bangalore-based company MadRat Games “as an ally to a patient and joyful form of parenting. We design games to help each child discover the mad rat inside them, and become calmer, wiser and happier,” he said.

They stumbled upon the idea when they noticed children were becoming increasingly dependent – and addicted – to screens, whether computer, tablet, phone or laptop. In 2013, Dhariwal and Halder had an extensive interaction with parents and almost all of them were anxious about this diminishing attention span. “We knew we had to create a game that would make kids snap out of the screens,” Dhariwal, who left a job at Amazon to teach children, said. “It also had to be a game that they would enjoy and learn from at the same time.”

Educational Puzzle Games Hope to Reduce Kids’ Short Attention Spans
Madzzle

They chose a jigsaw puzzle called Madzzle. After going through several prototypes, the game became a reality in 2014. Madzzle is a three-in-one game for kids ages 7 to 11. The puzzle actually rolls up and has patent-pending zero gap technology, which ensures kids have a seamless play experience. There are three explorer-themed games, including the Bermuda Triangle, the mysteries of the Amazon and Worldopedia.

Kids make the puzzle first by placing the jigsaw pieces in a perfect picture. They then go on an exciting object hunt. Following the object hunt is a data duel. “It’s a new game each time, as the kids challenge the opponent’s cards while learning interesting facts about the object on the card,” Dhariwal explained.

Each Madzzle has a unique feature. Bermuda Triangle has a pair of magnifying lens; Amazon has a glow in the dark mode; and Worldopedia has an illusion decoder and counters for the object hunt game. Dhariwal noted the game typically uses a lot of paper, and he wanted to reduce the carbon footprint.

“We also include magic beans, which are marigold seeds, in each Madzzle. Since a lot of paper is used in creating these games, this is our way of giving back to the planet,” he said. Dhariwal and Halder launched a Kickstarter campaign for Madzzle to extend it to international markets. The hope is that it can present itself to its target audience worldwide and get assistance in automating the product manufacturing. Currently, the game’s fabrication is by hand.

At press deadline, the crowd-funding campaign had raised $1,062, with a target of $25,000 by Sept. 28. Madzzle has test launched in 25 United States stores and recently won a parent’s choice award. “It would be a perfect gift for the curious kids,” Dhariwal asserted to India-West.

HE NAMED ME MALALA

Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai took New York City by storm ahead of the release of her new documentary film HE NAMED ME MALALA which opens in New York and Los Angeles this Friday October 2, and in theaters nationwide on October 9.

Championing the right for girls worldwide to have equal access to education, the teen activist attended the red carpet premiere of the film at the historic Ziegfeld theater, delivered a passionate address to the United Nations General Assembly, sat down for a candid interview on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert, and spoke at the Global Citizen Festival in Central Park where she was introduced by Bono.

HE NAMED ME MALALA is an intimate portrait of Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Malala Yousafzai, who was targeted by the Taliban and severely wounded by a gunshot when returning home on her school bus in Pakistan’s Swat Valley.  The then 15-year-old (she turns 18 this July) was singled out, along with her father, for advocating for girls’ education, and the attack on her sparked an outcry from supporters around the world. She miraculously survived and is now a leading campaigner for girls’ education globally as co-founder of the Malala Fund.

Acclaimed documentary filmmaker Davis Guggenheim (An Inconvenient Truth, Waiting for Superman) shows us how Malala, her father Zia and her family are committed to fighting for education for all girls worldwide.

The film gives us an inside glimpse into this extraordinary young girl’s life – from her close relationship with her father who inspired her love for education, to her impassioned speeches at the UN, to her everyday life with her parents and brothers.

Photos attached from the HE NAMED ME MALALA premiere which was attended by Malala, her father Ziauddin Yousafzai, as well as many celebrity guests including Scarlett Johansson, Ivanka Trump, Elizabeth Shue, and Grammy winner Alicia Keyes.

Watch Malala’s speech at the Global Citizen Festival in Central Park:

http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc-news/watch/malala–every-child-deserves-an-education-533033539665

Watch a clip from Malala’s interview with Stephen Colbert:

http://www.cbs.com/shows/the-late-show-with-stephen-colbert/video/53DAC816-112D-723F-AC4C-07D96B8DD7C0/malala-yousafzai-stephen-do-card-tricks/

Download over 100 premiere photos here:

http://wdrv.it/1MtiOPK

Press downloads – movie stills, poster and trailer file:

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/4f8j9afm2v7sghs/AACzgWn_bpbfdtj2aIrI8wPoa?dl=0

HE NAMED ME MALALA opens exclusively this Friday, October 2, at the Lincoln Square and Sunshine theaters in New York City and the Arclight and Landmark theaters in Los Angeles. For more information on the film visit www.HeNamedMeMalala.com.

Pope to UN: Lack of Ethical Limits Can Enable Corruption and Ideological Colonization

Addressing the 70th Session of the U.N. General Assembly, Pope Francis warned that without recognizing certain ethical limits, social progress risks becoming a cover for abuse, corruption and ideological colonization.

Pope Francis addressed the members of the international organization on the second leg of his Apostolic Visit to the United Nations. He is the fourth Pontiff to address the United Nations, preceded by Blessed Paul Vi in 1965, St. John Paul II in 1979 and 1995, and Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI in 2008.

Recalling the organization’s 70th anniversary, the Pope praised the UN’s achievements in codifying international law, establishing human rights norms, as well as conflict resolution and peacekeeping missions around the world.

“Beyond these achievements, the experience of the past seventy years has made it clear that reform and adaptation to the times is always necessary in the pursuit of the ultimate goal of granting all countries, without exception, a share in, and a genuine and equitable influence on, decision-making processes,” he said. “The need for greater equity is especially true in the case of those bodies with effective executive capability, such as the Security Council, the Financial Agencies and the groups or mechanisms specifically created to deal with economic crises. This will help limit every kind of abuse or usury, especially where developing countries are concerned.”

Rights of the Environment and the Poor

The Pope called for the UN member states to protect the environment and to put an end to the exclusion of the weak and disadvantaged.

As part of the environment, he said, the care for the environment to mankind’s survival. “Any harm done to the environment,” he said, “is harm done to humanity.” Drawing applause from the delegations present, the Pope aligned with Christian and monotheistic religions in affirming that mankind is entrusted with the care for Creation by God and “is not authorized to abuse it, much less to destroy it.”

The Pope also highlighted the consequences of the misuse and destruction of the environment, which leads to the detriment of the weak and disadvantaged. Ultimately, both the environment and the poor become casualties of the current throwaway culture.

“Economic and social exclusion is a complete denial of human fraternity and a grave offense against human rights and the environment. The poorest are those who suffer most from such offenses, for three serious reasons: they are cast off by society, forced to live off what is discarded and suffer unjustly from the abuse of the environment. They are part of today’s widespread and quietly growing ‘culture of waste,’” he said.

Human Rights and ‘Ideological Colonization’

Continuing his address, Pope Francis also stressed the importance of place all people at the center of the UN activities, saying that integral human development and the full exercise of human development must be “built up and allowed to unfold” for each individual and family.

He also stressed that the right to education especially for young girls who are often excluded, must be respected and reinforced.

The 78 year old Pontiff called on government leaders to ensure the proper support for families, namely: lodging, labor and land. Religious freedom, education and civil rights, he said, are also crucial in creating support.

“These pillars of integral human development have a common foundation, which is the right to life and, more generally, what we could call the right to existence of human nature itself,” he said.

“The baneful consequences of an irresponsible mismanagement of the global economy, guided only by ambition for wealth and power, must serve as a summons to a forthright reflection on man: ‘man is not only a freedom which he creates for himself. Man does not create himself. He is spirit and will, but also nature’”

Pope Francis, however, reminded the UN of their duty to recognize ethical limits, warning that promoting the social progress and better standards of life can risk becoming an unattainable illusion or “for carrying out an ideological colonization by the imposition of anomalous models and lifestyles which are alien to people’s identity and, in the end, irresponsible.”

War and Arms Trafficking

The Pope also denounced war as the negation of all rights and an assault on the environment.

“If we want true integral human development for all,” he stressed, “we must work tirelessly to avoid war between nations and between peoples.”

Calling for the transparent application of the UN Charter, the Holy Father warned that a “Pandora’s Box is opened” when it is ignored. This particularly applies to the proliferation of arms and weapons of mass destructions.

“There is urgent need to work for a world free of nuclear weapons, in full application of the non-proliferation Treaty, in letter and spirit, with the goal of a complete prohibition of these weapons,” he said.

The Pope also lauded the recent nuclear agreement with Iran, saying that it was proof “of the potential of political good will and of law.”

“I express my hope that this agreement will be lasting and efficacious, and bring forth the desired fruits with the cooperation of all the parties involved,” he said.

However, the Pope also appealed for the current conflicts in the Middle East and Africa where Christians, minority religions, cultural and ethnic groups are made to witness the destruction of their “places of worship, their cultural and religious heritage, their houses and property, and have faced the alternative either of fleeing or of paying for their adhesion to good and to peace by their own lives, or by enslavement.”

The Jesuit Pope also recalled the conflicts in Ukraine, Syria, Iraq, Libya, South Sudan and the Great Lakes region.

“In wars and conflicts there are individual persons, our brothers and sisters, men and women, young and old, boys and girls who weep, suffer and die. Human beings who are easily discarded when our only response is to draw up lists of problems, strategies and disagreements.”

Sacredness of Life

Finally, the Pope rounded out his address defending the fundamental right to life in all stages of development.

He called for respect for the sacredness of every human life: “of every man and every woman, the poor, the elderly, children, the sick, the unborn, the unemployed, the abandoned, those considered disposable because they are only considered as part of a statistic.”

The Argentine Pope cited the words of his predecessor Blessed Paul VI, saying that such an understanding of respect for life calls for a higher degree of wisdom for the respectful use of creation for the common good.

Concluding his address, Pope Francis said that United Nations, like any human endeavor, “can be improved yet it remains necessary.”

“I pray to Almighty God that this will be the case, and I assure you of my support and my prayers, and the support and prayers of all the faithful of the Catholic Church, that this Institution, all its member States, and each of its officials, will always render an effective service to mankind, a service respectful of diversity and capable of bringing out, for sake of the common good, the best in each people and in every individual,” he concluded.

A.R. Rahman’s letter on blasphemy controversy

“This letter is for all those people, who have been aware of the recent events concerning me. I’m not a scholar of Islam. I follow the middle path and am part of traditionalist and part rationalist

I live in the western and eastern worlds and try to love all people for what they are, without judging them

I didn’t direct or produce the movie Muhammad (PBUH), Messenger Of God.” I just did the music. My spiritual experiences of working on the film are very personal and I would prefer not to share these.

Mr. Noori, a member of the Raza Academy, has said in an interview featured in “The Bayside Journal”, why he believes it is important to voice a complaint: Mr Noori: “See, as Muslims we have to do something about it since it is against our religion so that tomorrow, if and when we face Allah he doesn’t say that you didn’t do anything to stop this from happening. So we have to try”.

My decision to compose the music for this film was made in good faith with no intentions of causing offence.

In fact, the decision was based on similar point of view as expressed by Mr. Noori. What, and if, I had the good fortune of facing Allah (Sbt), and he were to ask me on Judgement Day: “I gave you faith, talent, money, fame and health…why did you not do music for my Beloved Muhammad (sals) film? A film whose intention is to unite humanity, clear misconceptions and spread my message that life is about kindness, about uplifting the poor, and living in the service of humanity and not mercilessly killing innocent in my name”.

Today there is a blur between the real world and the virtual world and I have taken aback to see that, for some years now, unethical, unacceptable and unkind remarks are made online concerning the Holy Prophet. These abhorrent comments are no doubt due to the lack of understanding. I have always felt that we must counter this reaction with love and kindness, and through the audio-visual media reach out to people who wish to broaden their understanding

We are indeed fortunate and blessed to live in a country like India where religious freedom is practiced and where the aim of all communities is to live in peace and harmony sans confusion and violence.

Let us set a precedent in clearing conflict with grace and dignity and not trigger violence in words or actions Let us pray for forgiveness, and from our hearts bless those who suffer in the world and bless the country that we live in. To so pray is to reflect the noble and enlightened nature of our Beloved Muhammad (PBUH).”

Nikki Haley Among Four Indian Americans Recognized in Politico Magazine’s ‘Politico 50’

Four Indian Americans have been recognized in Politico Magazine’s “Politico 50” this year for their contributions to politics in the U.S. The magazine names a list of 50 people whom they deem to be “thinkers, doers and visionaries transforming American politics” in the current year.

Among those acknowledged on the list include South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, columnist Ramesh Ponnuru (and his wife, political adviser April Ponnuru), economist Raj Chetty, and surgeon and writer Atul Gawande.

Haley, coming in at No. 9 on the list, was integral in the removal of the Confederate flag from outside the statehouse in the wake of the Charleston shootings, noted Politico. “It was a bright spot in a year marked by racial tension,” according to the magazine’s bio on Haley.

Ramesh Ponnuru and his wife April both came in at No. 32 on the list. Politico describes them as “the young reigning couple of forward-thinking conservative ideas.” Ramesh is a senior editor at National Review and a columnist for Bloomberg View, and is a critic within the Republican party, according to Politico.

At No. 39 on the list is Chetty, an economist at Stanford and Harvard universities. Chetty and a team of researchers did a study and found out that growing up in different neighborhoods has a serious impact on social mobility. As stated in the magazine, “Little political attention has been paid to the role of neighborhoods in social mobility since civil rights reform efforts in the 1970s. But thanks at least in part to Chetty’s fresh approach to the data, politicians are taking note again.” Presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., is now using Chetty’s ideas in public speaking events.

Gawande came in at No. 50 on the list. His essay in 2009 on skyrocketing healthcare costs indirectly led to President Barack Obama’s push for what would become the Affordable Care Act. The surgeon wrote a book released in the fall of 2014 saying doctors are not prepared to help terminally ill people die well. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy topped the list. Other notable figures included Pope Francis (No. 4), Secretary of State John Kerry (No. 7) and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg (No. 8).

NYC Taxi and FHV Drivers Rally at NYS Governor’s Office to Protect Full Time Jobs

Taxi drivers are taking to the streets to demonstrate against “Ubernomics,” a business model predicated on turning full-time driving jobs into part-time gigs, monopolizing service by flooding the streets and overtaking the heavily regulated taxi industry through “disruption,” and ultimately bringing in the driverless car to replace drivers altogether. In cities with legions of Uber cars, drivers report massive loss of income, both for taxi drivers and Uber drivers themselves. Earlier in the summer, Uber Chief Strategist David Plouffe said “the vast majority of Uber drivers have another job and their income from driving Uber is supplemental.” Professional taxi drivers say, what about the full-time jobs that have existed for generations?

“This income is not supposed to be supplemental. It’s the primary income for a quarter-million workers in this country. Uber has set everyone on a vicious race to the bottom where no worker wins,” said Bhairavi Desai, Executive Director of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance.

Uber and other App companies legislate the business model through state-wide laws that allow them to dispatch “on-demand” directly to non-regulated private motorists with personal cars. As a “Transportation Network Company” (TNC), they win special explicit exemptions from all laws governing taxis and for-hire service, including commercial insurance, commercial registration and inspections, vehicle standards, driver security background checks, tax requirements, and compliance with Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA.) There are also no protections against price gouging, or requirements for customer service.

Despite Uber and Lyft’s failed attempts over the past several years to pass TNC legislation in NYS, drivers say they fear the outcome of the Governor’s public pledge to support Uber and bring it across the state. “Since Uber doesn’t believe it needs to follow the same rules as taxis, the only other way it would be in upstate is as a TNC,” said Beresford Simmons. “Drivers in Buffalo are going to be swarmed in traffic during all the busy times, like rush hour and weekend nights. And when the work dries up, all those private cars are naturally going to enter the City where the work is. Whether NYC is in the law or not, we’ll be squeezed. And none of us can afford to lose more.”

With no cap on the number of TNC vehicles, cities like San Francisco have as many as 30,000 private cars competing for fares in a city served by 3,000 regulated taxis. Drivers have reported losing as much as 70% of their income, while the city is now plagued with the second worst traffic congestion in the country.

The laws also explicitly exempt drivers from employee classification, pre-empting state laws that otherwise have classified similarly dispatched black car and car service drivers as employees for decades.  Cities with strong regulated taxi and for-hire service would stand to lose significant revenue from taxes and fees, but city regulators would be precluded from banning such cars as the state would trump their authority.  There are also no limits on the number of vehicles.

Many states have defeated such measures and activated heavy enforcement to stop Uber’s illegal entrants into local markets. Most recently, Philadelphia seized dozens of cars and fined Uber $300,000. Countries across Europe and Asia have banned Uber due to its anti-regulation stance and Uber CEOs in Paris face criminal charges. Taxi and For-Hire-Vehicle Drivers in New York City urge Governor Cuomo to stand up to Uber and say no to TNCs.

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