Sunday, March 27, 2011

Chhattisgarh Should Learn From AP : Moily

Raipur, : Chhattisgarh should learn from the Andhra Pradesh government on how to get rid of Naxalism as its failure to curb the “menace” is affecting neighbouring states now, Union Law Minister Veerappa Moily  said on Sunday.

“The Chhattisgarh government’s failure in curbing Naxalism has begun to affect neighbouring states too,” he told reporters here.

Chhattisgarh should learn from the Andhra Pradesh government on how to get rid of Naxalism by improving law and order and by having socio and economic development, he said.

When a dam is filled to the brink, it overflows, similarly Naxalism has increased to such a level in Chhattisgarh that it is diverting towards other states, he added.

Moily said both the Naxal menace and corruption were at their peak in the state.

“Chhattisgarh ranks among the most corrupt places in the country. Its position is like a diabetic patient who is easily susceptible to other diseases,” he said.

The state is facing problems like corruption, deteriorating law and order and non-implementation of Centrally-sponsored schemes, he added.

Asked whether Governor’s rule should be imposed in the state, Moily said the UPA government will not act against the spirit of the Constitution but the “law and order situation has really deteriorated in the state.” PTI

Pak Interior Secy Visits Golden Temple

Amritsar, : Pakistan Interior Secretary Chaudhary Qamar Zaman today visited the Golden Temple here responding to a “divine call” and said he prayed for the betterment of India-Pakistan relations.

Zaman, who crossed into India through the Attari-Wagah border to attend the two-day India-Pakistan Home Secretary-level talks beginning in Delhi tomorrow, visited the holiest Sikh shrine when his flight from Amritsar to the national capital got delayed.

“It was a very unexpected opportunity we got because of the delay of the flight and that was something... ‘jo hum kehte bulawa aaya tha...’ (what we say a divine call),” he said on reaching the Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi.

The Pakistan Interior Secretary said he prayed for better relations between India and Pakistan.

“Hum wahan behtarin taluqat ke liye dua mangey (I prayed for better ties),” Zaman, who wore a blue head gear while visiting the 16th century temple, said. He was accompanied by other Pakistani delegation members.

He told reporters here, “Pakistan Government would not allow anybody to take forcible possession of land belonging to Gurdwaras in Lahore.”

He also said land belonging to Sikh religious places will not be allowed to be sold in his country.

Zaman was responding to a question on a controversy over construction of a plaza on a land belonging to 400-year-old Deewan Khana Gurudwara in Lahore.

On his visit to the temple, he said, “There was no schedule to go anywhere in India after reaching here, since I had to rush to Delhi. I am in India exclusively to attend the two-day meeting with my Indian counterpart G K Pillai.

“But, I don’t know, how a miracle happened and the plan which was scheduled to take me to Delhi got late by half-an-hour and destiny brought me to the Golden Temple.”

Zaman said, “My forefathers including my grandfather often told me about the spiritual significance of the Golden Temple and talked regularly about this spiritual place, which had created a strong desire in the deepest core of my heart to have a glimpse of this pious place and today I feel my spiritual mission has been accomplished.”

Talking about the World Cup Cricket, he said, “Cricket fever is prevailing on both sides and people of India and Pakistan always love to watch a match between the two countries.”

No Differences With RBI On New Bank Licence Norms: Pranab

Mumbai : Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee today termed as “conjectures and media speculations” the reported differences between him and the Reserve Bank of India on capping FDI at 49 per cent in new commercial banks, the licences for which are likely to be issued soon.  “These are all conjectures. There is no question of happiness or unhappiness. We have just received the draft guidelines from the RBI and it is being examined. These are the two wings of the government; we work together and do not indulge in these kinds of speculations,” Mukherjee said as he rubbished his reported differences with the central bank on the draft proposals.

The Finance Minister was interacting with the media after addressing a post-budget meet organised by the Assocham.  The norms seek a cap on foreign direct investment in new private sector banks at 49 per cent.

Earlier in the day, Mukherjee said: “We are studying the Reserve Bank’s final draft proposals (on new private bank licences). We would take a call on it soon.”  He was said on the sidelines of Sir Sorabji Pochkhanawala (founder of Central Bank of India) Memorial Lecture 2011 as part of the bank’s centenary year celebrations here.  There were reports in a section of the media that the Finance Ministry was opposed to the RBI suggestion to restrict FDI in new banks to 49 per cent as the change in norms would hurt investor sentiment. The Ministry reportedly asked RBI to reconsider the same.

The move will help the government and the RBI to discourage flow of hot money, which has crossed over USD 60 billion this fiscal, in the country.

The ministry has also reportedly asked the RBI to ensure the guidelines clearly say that the new banks would be exempted from Press Notes 2, 3 and 4. Without such exemptions, these banks would become foreign banks if overseas investment in them crosses 50 per cent, which in turn would lead to imposition of the same restrictions on them that apply on foreign companies.

Already the country’s largest two private sector banks—ICICI and HDFC’s nationality is under cloud as over 50 per cent of their stake are owned by FIIs.  Earlier this month, the RBI had submitted its final draft proposal on new private bank licences to the finance ministry in which it called for a holding company structure for promoters of new banks besides capping the FDI at 49 percent.

According to the proposal, the proposed holding company will own the bank. The guidelines in the draft proposal are not final but provide a clue to the thinking of the RBI on the matter. The norms governing new banks will be made public once the finance ministry responds.  The RBI suggested that the exposure of the bank to any entity in the promoter group shall not exceed 10 percent and the aggregate exposure to all the entities in the group shall not exceed 20 percent of the paid-up capital and reserves of the bank.

The central bank also wants the new banks to have a minimum capital Rs 500 crore and that they should be listed within two years.

The FDI hike in banking sector was first suggested by the NK Singh panel but the finance ministry and RBI had added a slew of stringent conditions to prevent ownership of banks going into ‘wrong’ hands.

A number of conglomerates such as the Tatas, the Aditya Birla group and Mahindra & Mahindra, L&F among others are keenly awaiting final guidelines, which are likely to be released by the end of this month. PTI

Rs 1,656 Cr Yamuna Action Plan-III Likely To Be Approved Soon

New Delhi : The government is likely to give its approval soon for the ambitious Rs 1,656 crore Yamuna Action Plan-III, which is exclusively focused on Delhi, to solve the problem caused by pollution in the river, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh today said.

“The project is funded by the Japanese Government. We will be getting the approval of the Union Cabinet in next couple of weeks. Under the Yamuna Action Plan-III, the existing sewage treatment network in Delhi will be modernised in a very big way,” he said.

Ramesh was talking to reporters here after a meeting with Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit and her Haryana counterpart Bhupinder Singh Hooda on the measures to be taken to clean the Yamuna.

In order to put an end to the daily controversy between Delhi and Haryana on the issue of pollution of the Yamuna, he said the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) will install continuous water quality monitoring stations at Palla and at Badarpur.

“There will be continuous monitoring of water pollution at Palla, where Yamuna enters Delhi from Haryana and there will be similar monitoring at Badarpur where Yamuna flows from Delhi back to into Haryana,” Ramesh said.

The first one was already being installed in Wazirabad today, the Minister said.

Ramesh said during his meeting with Hooda and Dikshit, it was also decided to solve the problem caused by pollution in the Yamuna at Panipat.

He said the sewage treatment capacity at Panipat was insufficient and the effluent treatment plants are not working to full capacity.

“There is common effluent treatment plant in Panipat.  Though 512 units have to be connected to that common effluent treatment plant, only 35 have been connected so far,” Ramesh said.

He said the Environment Ministry will support further expansion of sewage treatment capacity and effluent treatment capacity if it is required at Panipat so that there is no infiltration of waste water into the Yamuna when the river flows from Haryana to Delhi.

“This will be funded by the MoEF as part of its national river conservation programme. In next couple of week, this proposal will be finalised,” he added.

The Minister said 47 per cent of Delhi’s population is not covered by any organised sewerage network and this situation will continue till the completion of Yamuna Action Plan-III in 2015.

“That is the big challenge. We have 26 drains that are now putting untreated sewerage directly into the river Yamuna.

Today we reviewed the progress. And I am afraid that this situation will continue till the end of 2015,” he said. PTI

Former Maoist Sambashivudu Hacked To Death

Hyderabad : TRS polit bureau member Sambashivudu, a former top Maoist leader was hacked to death by unidentified assailants in Nalgonda district of Andhra Pradesh, police said today.

Sambashivudu (45) was killed late last night near Gokaram village in Nalgonda district by about 10-15 assailants using sickles and swords. He died while being shifted to Hyderabad for treatment, they said.

Three TRS activists, who were travelling with him, sustained injuries in the attack and were admitted to a nearby hospital, Nalgonda district Superintendent of Police Rajesh Kumar told PTI over phone.

Sambasivudu was returning to Hyderabad after attending ‘Telangana dhoom dham’, a pro-Telangana cultural programme, at Sangem village in Veligonda mandal of the district.

Sambasivudu, whose original name was Konapuri Ilaiah, was state secretary of CPI(Maoist) and had surrendered before the government in 2009.

He joined the TRS last year to fight for separate Telangana and was made a member of the party’s polit bureau.

Sambasivudu was suspected to be involved in the naxal attacks on former Chief Ministers—N Chandrababu Naidu at Alipiri, the foothills of Tirumala Tirupati in 2003, and N Janardhana Reddy in 2007 at Nellore.

He was allegedly involved in a large number of other incidents like killing of MLA Ch Narsi Reddy and attacks on police stations.

TRS president K Chandrasekhar Rao and several other party leaders condemned the killing of Sambashivudu.

Rao paid his last respects to Sambashivudu at the state-run Gandhi hospital.

Meanwhile, Sambashivudu’s brother Ramulu alleged that the state government and police were behind his killing.

Revolutionary singer Gaddar, a Telangana supporter, claimed that Sambashivudu’s killing was part of an attempt by the government to suppress the separate statehood agitation.

Sambashivudu’s body was taken to his native place Dasireddygudem in Nalgonda district after post mortem at the Gandhi government hospital here. PTI

East Timor police take over from UN force

Dili: United Nations police returned full control of East Timor to the national force on Sunday, the UN and government said, more than four years after bloody clashes threatened to push the country into civil war.

Following a Sunday ceremony, from Monday the National Police of Timor-Leste (PNTL) will be responsible for the whole country, with the UN police in a supporting role, the statement by the UN and East Timorese government said.

"We will continue to work side-by-side," UN special representative for East Timor Ameerah Haq said.

"However, PNTL will be squarely in the driver's seat, and the UN will focus on providing the training and support Timor-Leste's police service needs to further strengthen its capabilities over the long term," she added, using the country's formal name.

The UN will maintain a presence of up to 1,280 police to support the PNTL until after the Presidential Election in 2012, when the UN peacekeeping mission plans to withdraw from the tiny southeast Asian state, the statement said.

"The resumption of policing responsibility by PNTL at this time has the advantage of enabling PNTL to assume its role before next year's elections and well before the anticipated withdrawal of the UN's mission," Haq said.

In 2006, unrest triggered by the desertion of 600 soldiers over claims of discrimination forced 155,000 people -- or 15 percent of the population -- to flee their homes, and prompted the return of UN forces to the tiny country.

But in 2009 the peacekeeping mission said the conditions were stable enough for the PNTL to start resuming their full responsibilities.

The first handover of control took place in Lautem district on the far east of the half-island state, followed by "nearly all districts and units with no increases in crime rates or public order incidents", the statement said.

East Timor won formal independence from Indonesia in 2002 after a bloody 24-year occupation that killed as many as 200,000 people.

Signs of new air raids on Libyan capital

TRIPOLI, Libya –  Anti-aircraft fire has been heard in Libya's capital Tripoli after dark, signaling that another round of international airstrikes on Moammar Gadhafi's regime is under way.

Residents in the contested city of Misrata in western Libya reported fighting Sunday between anti-government rebels and pro-Gadhafi forces firing from tanks on residential areas.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

RAS LANOUF, Libya (AP) — Libyan rebels regained two key oil complexes in a high-speed advance west on Libya's coast on Sunday, retracing the steps of their first march toward the capital with their path cleared by the world's most powerful air force.

Now that they have the oil, the rebels are making tentative plans to exploit Libya's most valuable natural resource. But production is at a trickle, the foreign oil workers and their vital expertise have fled the country, and even talk of a marketing deal with Qatar seems murky at best.

The coastal complexes at Ras Lanouf and Brega were responsible for a large chunk of Libya's 1.5 million barrels of daily exports, which have all but stopped since the uprising that began Feb. 15 and was inspired by the toppling of governments in Tunisia and Egypt.

On the eastern approach of Ras Lanouf, airstrikes hit three empty tank transporters and left two buildings that appeared to be sleeping quarters pockmarked with shrapnel. Like oil port of Brega and the city of Ajdabiya before it, Gadhafi's troops appear to have left in a hurry, abandoning ammunition and disappearing without a fight.

"There was no resistance. Gadhafi's forces just melted away," said Suleiman Ibrahim, a 31-year-old volunteer, sitting in the back of a pickup truck on the road between the two towns. "This couldn't have happened without NATO. They gave us big support."

In Washington, Defense Secretary Robert Gates acknowledged that the Libya operation could last months, as the Obama administration tried to bolster its case for bringing the United States into another war in the Muslim world.

The U.N. Security Council authorized the operation to protect Libyan civilians after Gadhafi launched attacks against anti-government protesters who demanded that he step down after 42 years in power. The airstrikes have crippled Gadhafi's forces, allowing rebels to advance less than two weeks after they had seemed at the brink of defeat.

"As they move round the coast, of course, the rebels will increasingly control the exit points of Libya's oil," British Defense Secretary Liam Fox told the BBC. "That will produce a very dynamic and a very different equilibrium inside Libya. How that will play out in terms of public opinion and the Gadhafi regime remains to be seen."

The agreement with the tiny Gulf nation of Qatar could allow the rebels to exploit Libya's vast oil reserves — most of which are in the eastern territory they control. With no ships coming or going, Libya's tanks are full to the brim. Until they are emptied, there's nowhere to store any oil that is pumped from the ground.

Qatar, which has conducted at least one sortie over Libya, is the only Arab country known to have actively joined with the international force.

"We trust them, so basically they are the ones who are going to market our oil for us," Ali Tarhouni, the rebel finance official, told The Associated Press on Friday. "For Qatar there's no words to describe what they've done for the Libyan cause."

Officials at Qatar's ministry of energy and industry could not be reached for comment. Executives with the Arabian Gulf Oil Co., the National Oil Co. subsidiary in the east that broke free from its parent company, also could not be reached. Repeated calls to Libya's oil minister went unanswered.

Eastern oil officials said over a week ago they were still producing about 100,000 barrels per day from two key fields. But it was unclear whether such levels were sustainable given the security problems across the country and the exodus of foreign workers from the vital sector.

The Paris-based International Energy Agency said recently it believed that Libyan oil production had "slowed to a trickle" while exports had "ground to a halt." The IEA said it believed it could take months for Libyan oil to reappear on the world market.

Gates said the international action appeared to be a success, with the no-fly zone was in place and sustainable with "a lot less effort than it took to set it up." He said the Pentagon was planning how to draw down resources that will be assigned to European and other countries pledging to take on a larger role.

But asked on ABC's "This Week" if that would mean a U.S. military commitment until year's end, Gates said, "I don't think anybody knows the answer to that."

The Gadhafi regime on Saturday acknowledged the airstrikes had forced its troops to retreat and accused international forces of choosing sides.

"This is the objective of the coalition now, it is not to protect civilians because now they are directly fighting against the armed forces," Khaled Kaim, the deputy foreign minister, said in the capital, Tripoli. "They are trying to push the country to the brink of a civil war."

The rebel turnaround is a boost for President Barack Obama, who has faced complaints from lawmakers from both parties that he has not sought their input about the U.S. role in the conflict or explained with enough clarity about the American goals and exit strategy.

Obama was expected to give a speech to the nation Monday, and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Sunday defended the administration's decision.

Libya, she told CBS, "had a leader who used military force against the protesters from one end of his country to the other, who publicly said things like "we'll show no mercy," ''we'll go house to house," and the international community moved with great speed in part because there's a history here."

Pentagon officials are looking at plans to expand the firepower and airborne surveillance systems in the military campaign, including using the Air Force's AC-130 gunship armed with cannons that shoot from the side doors, as well as helicopters and drones.

Fox, the British foreign minister, ruled out supplying arms to the rebels. "We are not arming the rebels, we are not planning to arm the rebels," he said.

 
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