Sanjha Morcha

Farewell ride

Farewell ride
General KJ Singh western command Chandimandir along with his wife. Tribune Photo: S Chandan

Officers and troops of the Western Command, Chandimandir, on Saturday bid farewell to its General Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Lt Gen KJ Singh, who hangs up his boots on July 31 after 39 years of service .He laid a wreath at the Veer Smriti war memorial and reviewed a guard of honour. He was felicitated by senior officers and later driven out in a traditional horse-drawn carriage with his wife.Lt Gen KJ Singh will spend the last day of his service with his regiment, 63 Cavalry, near Amritsar, into which he was commissioned in 1977.


Army has to fire, can’t use lathi: Parrikar

PUNE: If the civil administration decides to use the army “for protection and killing an insurgency network”, the army should be allowed to control it by “firing straight”, defence minister Manohar Parrikar said here on Saturday. “I don’t want to train the army to use lathis,” he added.

Top Comment

I am slowly but surely becoming fan of this defense minister who i didn”t like before. Yes i agree with him about army not using lathi. Keep up the good job defense minister. This is the first minis… Read MoreSunder AswaniThe issue has come to the fore because of a recent judgment about the Northeast+ , he said, referring to the Supreme Court lashing out over the long deployment of the armed forces and the imposition of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), which seeks to grants army personnel legal immunity for their actions, in Manipur.

“We can’t lose people. So, wherever the army is used, the powers will have to be there, otherwise don’t use the army. In fact, I will be very happy if we don’t use the army anywhere in the country, other than disaster management,” he said.

Earlier in the day, asked by reporters to comment on the Kashmir situation+ , Parrikar, who was inaugurating a new building for the office of the principal director of defence estates, said the question should be directed at the home minister as the defence ministry is not directly involved in maintaining law and order in the state.

Referring to videos on social media showingIndian army men purportedly indulging in brutality, Parrikar said these were morphed and asserted that the Indian Army is not a brutal force. “We don’t kill for the sake of it. Kabhi kabhi galti hota hai. Indian army is capable of killing, but it is not a brutal army.”

Stay updated on the go with Times of India News App. Click here to download it for your device.


At sea over China G Parthasarathy Imaginative diplomacy needed to manage the assertive Dragon

At sea over China
playing safe: Despite heartburn, most neighbours do not wish to antagonise China.

AS China’s military and economic presence in Myanmar grew following the military crackdown in 1988, concerns arose in India, about the possibility of Chinese military bases and surveillance facilities in Myanmar’s Cocos Island, bordering the Andaman Islands. A Chinese military analyst responded to such Indian concerns by arrogantly asserting: “The Indian Ocean is not India’s Ocean!” India had never asserted that it had territorial claims in the Indian Ocean. One of its most remarkable diplomatic achievements has been that it has settled its maritime boundaries with all its eastern neighbours. This was done not only with bilateral agreements on the maritime boundaries with Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Indonesia and Bangladesh, but also tripartite agreements to determine tri-junctions, with Myanmar and Thailand, Indonesia and Thailand and Sri Lanka and the Maldives.Unlike India, which settled maritime boundary issues in accordance with international law, China saw vast benefit, as early as 1947, in augmenting its access to huge oil and fishery resources by expanding its maritime frontiers, especially in the South China Sea. It claimed that its maritime frontiers historically lay on a “nine- dash line” across the South China Sea. As China grew militarily stronger, it enforced its maritime boundary claims, converting rocks into islands, while utilising its naval power coercively. A typical case of Chinese bullying was its use of force to fulfil its claims on the Scarborough Shoal, located 500 miles from its shores and barely 100 miles from the Philippines. Worse still, Beijing sought to exercise sovereignty over the entire South China Sea by issuing threats to passing naval vessels and seeking to enforce an “air defence identification zone”, requiring foreign aircraft to identify themselves even when on international waters.Blinded by arrogance at its growing military power, China has sought to challenge Japanese sovereignty in the East China Sea by air space violations and its navy adopting provocative postures. This was, and remains, a real flashpoint, as the US-Japanese Security Treaty contains an American guarantee to protect Japanese sovereignty over the disputed Senkaku Islands. Chinese actions have forced the Americans to respond, with submarines and aircraft carriers challenging Chinese claims in both the South China and East China Seas. China resorted to 570 air space violations across the Senkaku Islands in 2015. China today has maritime disputes with South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Indonesia. It was the Philippines that called China’s bluff and challenged its claims at the International Arbitration Tribunal, set up under the UN Convention of the Law of the Seas (UNCLOS). Even as China argued why India could not be admitted into the NSG, the international tribunal, whose verdict is binding, delivered China a resounding admonition.It categorically held that there was no legal basis for any Chinese “historic rights” within its unilaterally imposed “nine-dash line”. It rejected China’s claims on several rocks and barren islets to expand its maritime frontiers, as they were not islands as defined in the UNCLOS. This meant that China had no legal basis to claim sovereignty, or fishing rights across the Spratly Islands, including the most contentious Scarborough Shoal and the Mischief Reef, where China had sought to construct an artificial island. While rejecting the verdict, China adopted a belligerent posture, with its navy resorting to a show of force. Predictably, the US and Australia welcomed the verdict and called on China to comply, even though the US is not a signatory to the UNCLOS and settles it maritime disputes bilaterally. China has, however, clearly placed itself as a regional bully, with its pretensions of being a benign power shattered.It is clear that despite this victory on the rejection of China’s claims on its maritime boundaries, its affected neighbours have been restrained in their reactions. Nobody wishes to face the wrath of the wounded Dragon. Even the Philippines pledged itself to a peaceful resolution of the dispute. Moreover, even though five of the 10 ASEAN members face belligerent Chinese maritime boundary claims, others like Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia have made it clear that they are too dependent on China to cause it offence on this issue. The call across the ASEAN states, even by the Philippines and Vietnam, was for “restraint” in responding to the judgment.China, in turn, has come out with a white paper, indicating some flexibility in its approach. China did not reassert its “historic rights” over the whole area of the nine-dash line. The language used in the Chinese text appears to suggest that the tribunal’s judgment that the Spratly Islands are “rocks incapable of sustaining human habitation” has not been directly contradicted by China. There are suggestions in the white paper that China could move towards modifying some of its claims, in negotiations with parties like Vietnam. Just a few days prior to the judgment, the Chinese government mouthpiece Global Times made a distinctly positive reference to Vietnam, stating: “China and Vietnam will have more common ground to address their bilateral territorial disputes, which will transform the landscape in the region.” Global Times suggested: “Hanoi’s strategic purpose is to defend what it holds and legalise oil drilling in the waters it occupies. It won’t provoke China if there is no major threat.” China earlier objected to oil drilling in these waters.India should study these developments carefully. They signal a Chinese approach of splitting territorial claimants. Around 50 per cent of India’s global trade traverses the South China Sea. New Delhi has a vital interest in seeing that China does not have a legal basis to interrupt its freedom of navigation and over-flight rights in the South China Sea. Its statement after the verdict speaks of “self-restraint”, but also clearly reflects its concerns by urging all parties to respect the principles of international law, as reflected notably in the verdict. China is using its national power to establish its hegemony along its immediate sea-lanes, even as it steps up its presence across the Indian Ocean. Managing this assertiveness will require imaginative diplomacy in the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea. This would involve steps to establish a viable and stable balance of power in the entire Indo-Pacific region, working with partners like the US, Japan, Australia, Vietnam and others, while keeping channels of dialogue with Beijing open.


Sushma hits back at Sharif, says Kashmir will never become Pak’s

Behind Pakistan’s unabashed embrace and encouragement to terrorism lies its delusional though dangerous dream that Kashmir will one day become Pakistan’ s … This dream will not be realised even at the end of eternity. SUSHMA SWARAJ, external affairs minister

NEW DELHI: Mounting a scathing attack on Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif over his comments on the unrest in Kashmir, external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj said Pakistan’s embrace to terrorism was driven by its “delusional” but “dangerous” dream that Kashmir will one day become a part of Pakistan.

India and Pakistan have been trading charges ever since Kashmir was gripped in turmoil following the killing of Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani. Swaraj said Pakistan’s state machinery was in active partnership with “United Nations-designated terrorist Hafiz Saeed and other leading terrorists belonging to internationally proscribed organisations.”

“Behind Pakistan’s unabashed embrace and encouragement to terrorism lies its delusional though dangerous dream that Kashmir will one day become Pakistan’s, as Prime Minister Sharif said yesterday (on Friday)”, she said.

The foreign minister reinforced that Kashmir was part of India’s sovereign territory and said: “The whole of India would like to tell the Prime Minister of Pakistan that this dream (of his) will not be realised even at the end of eternity. The whole of Jammu and Kashmir belongs to India.” The minister also hit back at Pakistan for commemorating Wani’s death.

“In the last few days, the Pakistan leadership, including its Prime Minister praised Burhan Wani, a wanted terrorist, as a martyr”, the external affairs minister said.

She said Wani was carrying an award of ` 10 Lakh on his head because he had “perpetrated heinous crimes including the murder of elected representatives and security personnel.”

Sharif’s ‘delusional’ Kashmir dream will never be realised: Sushma

External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj issuing a statement. — ANI

New Delhi, July 23

In a strong attack on Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif for his statements on Kashmir, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj on Saturday told him that his dream of the state becoming a part of his country “will not be realised even at the end of eternity”.Taking umbrage at Sharif’s statement that “Kashmir will one day become Pakistan”, she said in a statement that this “delusional though dangerous dream” was the reason for Pakistan’s “unabashed embrace and encouragement to terrorism”.

“The whole of Jammu and Kashmir belongs to India. You will never be able to make this heaven on earth a terror hell,” she said.India’s reaction came amidst provocative statements issued on near-daily basis by Pakistan government and Sharif.Noting that in the last few days, leadership of Pakistan, including its Prime Minister, has praised Burhan Wani, a Commander of the banned militant organisation Hizbul Mujahideen, as “martyr”, Swaraj wondered did he not know that he was carrying an award of Rs 10 lakh on his head because he had perpetrated heinous crimes, including murder of elected representatives of local bodies and security personnel.”Even more condemnable than these deplorable attempts from across our border to incite violence and glorify terrorists is the fact that these attempts have been undertaken by Pakistan’s state machinery in active partnership with UN-designated terrorist Hafiz Saeed and other leading terrorists belonging to internationally proscribed organisations,” she said.Taking on Sharif for his comments that his good wishes are with the people of Kashmir, Swaraj said, “Sadly, it’s not Pakistan’s good wishes or moral or diplomatic support but its weapons and terrorism that it has exported to Jammu and Kashmir.”Pakistan’s dirty money, dangerous terrorists and duplicitous state institutions seek to destabilise the region.The statement of none other than the Prime Minister of Pakistan has betrayed this despicable design. But I would like to repeat that this dream of Pakistan will never be fulfilled.”Accusing Pakistan of using fighter planes and artillery against millions of its own people, the minister said it has no right whatsoever to point a finger against brave, professional and disciplined police and other security forces of India.”Their restraint and respect for their fellow citizens is evident in the unusually high number of the injured personnel– more than 1,700 – in the violence unleashed with the support from across the border in Jammu and Kashmir,” she added.At least 45 people have died and more than 3,400 have been injured in the violence that erupted in Kashmir after the killing of Wani by security forces on July 8.India has accused Pakistan of not only pushing in terrorists but also fanning discontent within the Valley by providing support to terrorist outfits in fomenting the recent trouble in Kashmir.Pakistan used Wani’s killing to needle India at the United Nations and issued statements where it accused India of atrocities in Kashmir. Pakistan also observed ‘Black Day’ on July 19 to express solidarity with the people of the Valley over the killing of Wani. — PTI


Missing AN-32 untraced Search operations continue, without luck

Missing AN-32 untraced
Parents of Flt Lt Deepika Sheoran who was on board the AN-32 with her photo in Bhiwani. Indervesh Duhan

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, July 23

Even as a massive search for the missing Indian Air Force AN-32 transport plane carrying 29 on board continued for the second day today, questions are being raised as to how the plane disappeared without the pilots sending out a distress call.The plane has been missing since Friday after it took off from the Tambaram airbase, Chennai, at 8.30 am on a routine flight to Port Blair.The last radio contact was at 8.46 am and the plane was last spotted on the radar at 9.12 am when it was 151 nautical miles east of Chennai, over the Bay of Bengal. The IAF informed Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar that the aircraft made a left turn with a rapid loss of height from 23,000 feet. Parrikar flew with a search sortie aboard Navy’s P8-I aircraft this morning. He was shown images originating from the scanners and sensors.Air Chief Marshal Arup Raha and Navy Eastern Command Chief Vice-Admiral HCS Bisht accompanied him.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)The disappearance of the AN-32 is being seen with concern in the IAF as the Soviet-built aircraft are designed to fly even during emergency situations. 

Hope against hope in Bhiwani

Sat Singh

Tribune News Service

Bhiwani, July 23

“We pray that not only our daughter, but all 29 on board AN-32 return home safely,” the parents of Flight Lieutenant Deepika Sheoran stoically said here today. They have not given in to despair. They believe they will be reunited with their eldest child soon. The family belongs to Todda Dhani village in Bhiwani district.  “Deepika was a brilliant student. After BTech, she was preparing for the civil services when she decided to sit for the Combined Defence Services test. She made it in her first attempt,” recalled Dalip Sheoran with pride. An XEN (Public Health), he is posted at Hansi. Deepika joined the Indian Air Force in 2013 and her  first posting was at Port Blair. She married Kuldeep Dalal of Bhiwani, Commandant with the Indian Navy, on November 22, 2015. Her mother Prem Lata said she had spoken to her on the phone on Thursday night. “She told me that their plane would be returning to Port Blair on Friday.”  The Sheorans appealed to the Central Government to step up efforts to locate the missing plane and “bring back the survivors”.Meanwhile, Andhra Pradesh CM N Chandrababu Naidu today met family members of employees of the Naval Armament Depot (NAD) in Visakhapatnam. Eight employees of the depot were among those who boarded the AN-32 aircraft.

Before losing contact, pilot wanted to alter course

Vijay Mohan

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, July 23

The aircrew of the AN-32 transport aircraft that went missing over the Bay of Bengal on Friday had asked the Chennai air traffic control (ATC) for a course deviation a few minutes before it reportedly lost contact with the ATC, it is learnt.IAF sources said around 9 am, the pilot had requested permission from the ATC to alter his course by 10 degrees to the right, ostensibly because of the prevailing weather conditions.The weather in the search area today was bad, with overhead clouds, rough seas and visibility being 3-4 nautical miles.The recently upgraded aircraft, which is reported to have suffered three snags this months, had left Tambaram airbase near Chennai at 8.30 am on Friday and was to land at Port Blair around 11.45 am. It fell off the radar at 9.12 am, 151 nautical miles (280 kms) east of Chennai.Permission to change course, sources said, was accorded. The aircraft had been cleared to fly at an altitude of 23,000 feet, which it would have reached in about 15 minutes after take-off with full load.“The possibilities here are that the aircraft flew into the eye of a storm or suffered a structural or electrical failure. Sabotage also cannot be discounted at this stage. These situations give little or no reaction time to transmit a distress signal,” an AN-32 pilot said.In June 2015, a Coast Guard Dornier aircraft had gone missing off the Chennai coast. Its remains were located 33 days later. An inquiry could not establish the cause of the crash.Under IAF’s standard operating procedure, the long sea stretch between Chennai and Port Blair requires AN-32s to fly with full fuel which is 5.5 tonnes. Five tonnes is pumped by tankers through under-wing access nodes, while the remaining is “poured” through an opening above the wing roots that requires a technician to climb on top of the aircraft and manually operate the fuel cap.An AN-32 pilot recalled an incident many years ago where the fuel cap of an aircraft was not properly secured. Mid-way over the Bay of Bengal, the aircrew observed unusually high fuel consumption. Inspection after landing revealed that the unsecured fuel cap had blown off in the air. “The air friction over the wing is very high and volatile fumes from the aviation fuel could have produced a spark with disastrous consequences. It was a miraculous escape from the aircraft,” he added.


The questions that Kashmiris don’t ask – An Army veteran’s letter

he killing of Hizbul Mujahideen’s chief Burhan Wani in Kashmir has led to unrest and violence across Kashmir with 34 people dead. Some have eulogised Wani as a poster boy and a martyr while others have warned of romanticising violence. Major Gaurav Arya, a veteran of anti-insurgency operations in Kashmir, writes a brutal open letter to the dead Burhan Wani.

Hizbul's Wani killing: Over 20,000 attend funeral

Ever since you were terminated in a forces-led operation in the Valley, 23 people have died. I don’t know why they died. The majority were possibly overcome with grief and fury and wanted to avenge your death. That did not happen, for obvious reasons. A policeman was thrown along with his vehicle into a river and he drowned. I grieve with your family and with the families of all those who lost their lives. Despicable though you may have been, I cannot find it in my heart to blame your family. You could have been an engineer, a doctor, an archeologist or a software programmer but your fate drew you to the seductive world of social media, with its instant celebrity hood and all encompassing fame. You posted pictures on the internet with your “brothers”, all you fine young Rambos holding assault rifles and radio sets. It was right out of Hollywood. Your rifle’s fire selector switch was set to “safe” and your weapon rested on your shoulder. I know it’s too late to advise you on such matters, but never do that in an operational area. The day you started with your social media blitzkrieg, you were a dead man. You encouraged young men of Kashmir to kill Indian soldiers, all from behind the safety of your Facebook account. Your female fan following was delirious. You were a social media rage. Unknown to you, there was an Army engineer nerd with a laptop, sitting in an airconditioned room in HQ XV Corps, tracking you 24/7. You died when you were 22. Had you survived this operation, you would have died when you were 23. Just a different date on the calendar, that’s all. The intensity of violence and the result would have been the same. I wish we had met and I could have explained to you (before killing you) that the old men of the Hurriyat Conference are like leech. They feed on the blood of men. They send young Kashmiris to face the Indian Army. What sort of a war is this, where lambs are sent to fight lions? I would have shown you the sheer duplicity of the Hurriyat, with their sons living abroad, pursuing professions other than jihad. Name one relative of Syed Ali Geelani, the head of the Hurriyat Conference, who is fighting the so-called Indian “occupation”? His son Nayeem Geelani is a doctor in Rawalpindi, and lives under the patronage of the Pakistani ISI. Zahoor, his second son, lives in South Delhi. Mirwaiz Umar Farooq’s sister Rabia is a doctor in the US. Mariyam Andrabi, sister of head of the radical Dukhtran-e-Millat, Asiya Andrabi, along with her family lives in Malaysia. Every Kashmiri separatist leader’s daughter or son is rich and safe, outside Kashmir. Jihad is for other people’s sons. And your parent’s son is dead. Dead from a 7.62 mm full metal jacket round to the head. Kashmir’s young and restless blame the security forces for killing them. But they never question the Hurriyat. No one asks Syed Ali Geelani why Burhan Wani is not from his family. Pakistani media was ecstatic when Kashmiris celebrated Eid this year along with Pakistan and not with the rest of India. This was reported as a blow to the unity of India. This is the first time in the 1400 year history of Islam that Eid was declared, not by witnessing the Shawwal moon, but by looking towards Pakistan. Well done. The Hurriyat has nothing to do with Kashmiris. This unrest, this bloodshed is just another business. If not, I would like to see the list of martyrs from the Hurriyat leadership’s families. The Hurriyat knows too well that Kashmir has fallen off the map of the world’s attention. No one cares and everyone knows that it is an artificially manufactured conflict. The Kashmir dispute exists because it is an inexpensive way for Pakistan to keep Indian forces bogged down in the valley. You were a terrorist. You chose to wage war against India. Like for all other such perpetrators in the past, it didn’t go too well for you. When you choose to fight against the Indian Army, know this – they will kill you. Your supporters now want blood. So be it.” –

Major Gaurav Arya (Veteran)http://www.sify.com/news/the-questions-that-kashmiris-dont-ask—an-army-veterans-letter-news-national-qhos73fjbaahg.html

 


Speed up Rafale deal: Govt to panel

New Delhi, July 14

The wait for India to procure 36 Rafale jets continues to stretch, as the committee negotiating to seal the deal with the French is still on the job. The Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) of the Ministry of Defence that met here under the Chairmanship of Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar directed the committee to submit its report expeditiously, sources said.

The decision to buy the jets was announced over two years ago but the negotiations over price and other issues continue in the €7.9 million deal (Rs60,000 crore) between France and India. — TNS


आतंकवादी को हीरो बताने वाले हैं देशद्रोही: मुल्तानी

अंबाला (रोजी बहल): अंबाला छावनी के पी.डब्ल्यू.डी. रेस्ट हाऊस में आज भूतपूर्व सैनिक वेलफेयर कमेटी के सदस्यों ने बैठक की, जिसमें बताया गया कि सैनिक अपने कर्त्तव्यों से पीछे नहीं हटेगी।

जानकारी के अनुसार वन रैंक वन पेंशन की मांग कई वर्षों से करते आ रहे पूर्व सैनिक अब भी अपने कर्त्तव्य से पीछे नहीं हटे हैं। सरकार द्वारा दी गई वन रेंक वन पेंशन से नाखुश पूर्व सैनिक अभी भी सरकार की मदद को तैयार खड़े हैं। तभी तो उन्होंने आज सभी पूर्व सैनिकों के साथ मीटिंग की अौर आने वाले समय में बाढ़ जैसी स्थिति से निपटने के लिए सरकार से अपील की है कि अगर कोई आपदा आती है तो सरकार पूर्व सैनिकों की मदद लें। पूर्व सैनिक सब तैयार बैठे हैं।

कमेटी के प्रधान अतर सिंह मुल्तानी ने कहा कि इस समय बरसात का मौसम है और अगर बाढ़ या त्रासदी आती है तो सरकार पूर्व सैनिकों से मदद लें। पूर्व सैनिक तैयार बैठे हैं। उन्होंने भी सैनिको को तैयार रहने के आदेश जारी किए हैं कि कहीं भी रहो अगर कोई आपदा आती है तो वे लोगों कि मदद करे।

उन्होंने कश्मीर में जो आतंकवादी हमला हुआ है, इसमें भूतपूर्व नेता मारे गए आतंकवादी को शहीद बता रहे हैं, वे देश के गद्दार हैं। उन्होंने कहा कि जो भी लीडर उनका समर्थन कर रहे हैं, वे देश के साथ गद्दारी कर रहे हैं । शहीद तो उनके देश के सैनिक हो रहे हैं जो देश कि दिन-रात सेवा कर रहे है। जो भी आतंकवादी को हीरो बता रहे हैं, उसे देशद्रोही घोषित करना चाहिए।

IMG-20160712-WA0034


दिल्ली में मजाक करते हुए मुझे थोड़ा डर लगता है : पर्रिकर

दिल्ली में मजाक करते हुए मुझे थोड़ा डर लगता है : पर्रिकर

पणजी : प्रधानमंत्री नरेन्द्र मोदी द्वारा सार्वजनिक जीवन से हंसी-मजाक गायब होने की बात कहे जाने के कुछ ही दिनों बाद, रक्षा मंत्री मनोहर पर्रिकर ने शनिवार को कहा कि उन्हें दिल्ली में मजाक करते हुए थोड़ा डर सा लगता है क्योंकि उसके गलत मायने निकाले जा सकते हैं।

गोवा इंजीनियरिंग कॉलेज के स्वर्ण जयंती के अवसर पर आयोजित समारोह में पर्रिकर ने कहा, ‘मुझे यहां (गोवा) रहना अच्छा लगता है। जब मैं गोवा में होता हूं, मजाक करने की स्वतंत्रता ले सकता हूं। दिल्ली में, मुझे मजाक करते हुए कुछ डर लगता है, क्योंकि यदि मैं मजाक भी कर रहा हूं.. तो उसका गलत अर्थ निकाला जा सकता है और भ्रम पैदा हो सकता है।’

उन्होंने दिल्ली में मीडिया का जिक्र करते हुए कहा, ‘वह हमेशा विवादों की खोज में रहते हैं। यहां (गोवा) हम सामान्य तरीके से मजाक करते हैं।’ इससे पहले एक निजी टीवी चैनल को दिए गए साक्षात्कार में मोदी ने कहा था, ‘चौबीसों घंटे वाले समाचार चैनलों के समय में, कोई भी एक शब्द उठाकर उसका बड़ा मुद्दा बना सकता है। लेकिन मैं आपको सच्चाई बताता हूं, सार्वजनिक जीवन में हास्य की कमी का कारण डर है। मैं खुद भी डरा हुआ हूं। पहले जब मैं भाषण देता था, तो उन्हें मजाकिया बनाता था, लेकिन उसका कोई मुद्दा नहीं बना।’

पर्रिकर ने कहा, ‘मुझे याद है, मैंने गोवा इंजीनियरिंग कॉलेज के महिला छात्रवास का उद्घाटन किया था और कहा था कि 30-40 साल पुराना मेरा महिला छात्रावास में जाने का सपना पूरा हो गया।’


Indian, Pak forces exchange sweets on LoC

Indian, Pak forces exchange sweets on LoC
Indian and Pakistani troops exchange sweets on the Line of Control on Wednesday. A tribune Photo

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, July 6

Indian and Pakistani security forces exchanged sweets along the Line of Control (LoC) in north Kashmir on the occasion of Eid-ul-Fitr today, the Army said in a statement said.”The security forces of India and Pakistan along the borders at Uri and Tangdhar today exchanged sweets and pleasantries on the festive occasion of Eid-ul-Fitr in a genial and cordial atmosphere,” the Army here said”The auspicious festival of Eid-ul-Fitr was marked by bonhomie at the borders with forces on both sides greeting each other and exchanging sweets,” it said. The Army said such gestures are deemed to “foster peace and harmony and promote prosperity and happiness.”