Sanjha Morcha

China’s Navy Could Eventually Have Six Aircraft Carriers

China’s first homemade aircraft carrier left her home port of Dalian for her third sea trial on Oct. 28, 2018. The Type 001A flattop could commission into frontline service as early as 2019, according to the U.S. Defense Department — growing Beijing’s carrier force to two and giving China the world’s second-biggest flattop fleet.

The new trial will test the vessel’s weapons system, control system and communications system, Wang Yunfei, a retired Chinese navy officer, told Global Times .

The 55,000-ton carrier, which Beijing reportedly will name Shandong, is a modified version of Liaoning, China’s first flattop. Liaoning is the ex-Varyag, which the Soviet Union built in the 1980s but never commissioned.

China acquired the incomplete vessel in 1998. Liaoning commissioned into the Chinese fleet in 2012. Carrying J-15 fighters and helicopters, Liaoning deployed to the western Pacific in April 2018 for her first realistic war game.

Shandong, if that indeed is the new carrier’s name, shares Liaoning’s layout and limitations. Lacking catapults, she launches planes by way of a bow-mounted ramp. That arrangement places hard limits on how heavy Liaoning’s aircraft can be — and how much weaponry and fuel they can carry.

The U.S. Navy’s own carriers use steam catapults to launch aircraft weighing as much as 50 tons. By contrast, Lianong’s ramp layout probably limits aircraft to a maximum weight of 30 tons, a former Chinese navy source revealed . A J-15 weighs nearly 20 tons empty. Fuel accounts for most of the available 10-ton payload on most missions, limiting the fighter’s weapons loadout to just a few small missiles.

But future carriers could be better as China’s decades-long investment in naval aviation begins to pay off. “Observers speculate China may eventually field a force of four to six aircraft carriers, meaning Liaoning, the Type 001A carrier and two to four additional carriers,” Ronald O’Rourke, a naval expert with the U.S. Congressional Research Service, reported in August 2018 .

The United States is the biggest carrier operator, with 10 large flattops in service. France, the United Kingdom, India and Russia each possess one carrier. Several navies operate amphibious assault ships that can support fixed-wing aircraft.

A third Chinese carrier that’s under construction in Shanghai reportedly features catapults. “China’s next generation of carriers will probably have greater endurance and be capable of launching more varied types of fixed-wing aircraft, including [electronic warfare], early-warning and [anti-submarine warfare] aircraft,” the U.S. Defense Department explained in the 2018 edition of its annual report on Chinese military power .

With more and better flattops — and new aircraft to fly from them — China could greatly extend its influence across the Pacific and Indian Oceans. “By 2020, carrier-based aircraft will be able to support fleet operations in a limited air-defense role,” Jesse Karotkin, the Office of Naval Intelligence’s top China analyst, said in 2014.

“These improvements would increase the striking power of a potential carrier battle group in safeguarding China’s interests in areas beyond its immediate periphery,” the Pentagon explained in its 2018 China report.


Let’s be realistic about Imran Khan

Pakistan PM’s intentions are unclear and don’t matter. His limitations do, and these are clear

Imran Khan is right to say a war between India and Pakistan is unlikely as no nuclear power would lose. It doesn’t, however, mean that peace is about to break out. It also depends on what kind of war we are talking about. War and peace between enemies who’ve fought four wars on various scales in seven decades, continue a low-intensity conflict through most of these, and have existential fears about each other is too serious and complex an issue to be analysed in terms of events and speeches. Analysts — peaceniks and warmongers — on both sides have made that error often enough in the past.

I am no exception. Over the 33 years since my first reporting visit to Pakistan (summer of 1985, to cover the trial of Sikh hijackers of an Indian Airlines plane), I have over-read the situation more than once, on the positive and the negative side. That, despite the fact that I have probably spent more time in Pakistan as a journalist than most in Indian media.

It takes you time — and patience — to appreciate the many unresolved ideological and political issues underlying our hostility. It is fashionable but juvenile to make comparisons with France and Germany. Imran is only the latest to use it, not the first. Nothing can be lazier. Neither France nor Germany was born by a division of the other. They fought many wars, but one was defeated with finality. Europe spent decades dismantling its toxic nationalism. There was America as the Big Daddy supervising this, and guaranteeing Western Europe protection. To put it brutally: That peace wasn’t reached because good sense descended on both sides. It is because one was defeated, devastated, divided and occupied by the world’s biggest powers. The first and the last opportunity for India-Pakistan peace was the Simla Agreement. We know who was insincere from the moment the agreement was signed.

This is precisely when Zulfikar Ali Bhutto (an elected, civilian leader with the vanquished Army deflated) launched Pakistan on to the path of pan-Islamisation and nuclearisation. He dissed that great Simla opportunity for permanent peace as a humiliating Treaty of Versailles and began preparing for a “thousand-year war” (his early 1970s boast, repeated about two decades later by his daughter as prime minister). Bhutto Senior wanted it to be a war Pakistan would never lose again. Hence the nukes.

That’s the reason Imran Khan can stand at a solemn religious celebration and remind the much bigger India that its conventional military power amounts to nothing.

Bhutto founded this post-1971 strategic doctrine. Let’s call it the ‘we-shall-neverlose-another-war to India’ doctrine. We could argue that Pakistan lost in Kargil. But the nukes closed India’s options. Or a provocation like that would have invited a full military response.

By the time Bhutto was done re-toxifying his country, his Army was set to reclaim power. It has gone through challenges, particularly from two full-majority governments under Nawaz Sharif. But now the template is set. An elected government is allowed as an optical necessity. Foreign, strategic, India-US-China policies, control of the nukes, temperature in Kashmir, Afghanistan are all out of the syllabus for elected governments.

In their own different ways, both Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif challenged it. One paid for it with prison, exile and life. The other with prison more than once, even with key family members, exile and disenfranchisement. Imran won’t make a pretence. Since Zia’s assassination and the return of some democracy, his is the first government elected and set up entirely with the institutional Army patronage. His party is truly the King’s Party in Pakistan’s politics. To ensure his election, the guy most likely to win was barred from contesting, campaigning, jailed with his daughter and son-in-law. The numbers Imran still fell short of were “arranged” overnight. Of course, his patrons were humane enough to free his rivals once the mission was accomplished. Imran isn’t about to make the blunder of his predecessors, and challenge the fauji-democracy template of divided powers. Or what an exasperated Nawaz Sharif described to me once as “aadha teetar, aadha bater” (half a partridge, half a quail).

Don’t be judgemental about Imran. Be realistic. On my first visit to Pakistan, eminent Pakistani lawyer, politician and activist, Aitzaz Ahsan, had described Zia’s partyless Muhammad Khan Junejo government as “bonsai democracy”. Pretty to look from outside, but never allowed to grow roots and branches outside of its little shelf-space.

Over the decades, Pakistan has cemented that template. One who challenges it, goes to jail, exile, death or all three. Imran Khan is smart. In all evidence so far, he’s Pakistan’s first volunteer bonsai. His intentions are unclear and don’t matter. His limitations do, and these are clear.

That’s the fundamental reality to remember before we get breathless over a gesture, an event, a speech, a pilgrimage.

Well begun but far from done

Kartarpur corridor is welcome, but let’s see how far it takes us

The inauguration of the Kartarpur corridor is a positive step, but whether this could be the means to the end called peace between India and Pakistan, remains an open question. Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan used an interaction with a visiting group of Indian journalists to say that it wasn’t in Pakistan’s interest to allow its soil to be used for terrorism against others. But the history of the relationship between India and Pakistan has been that of one step forward and two steps back. The first challenge is to sustain and keep the idea of the corridor alive beyond 2019, the year that coincides with the 550th birth anniversary of Sikh guru Baba Nanak Dev.

The concern among sceptics that India will not be able to control security in the 4.5-kilometre corridor doesn’t appear to be too insurmountable a challenge. Also, the chances that the opening of the corridor may lead to the revival of the Khalistan movement appear to be remote, because of a few significant reasons. One, a lot of water has flown down the Beas since the height of the Khalistan movement of the 1980s. The change is clear from the fact that the Congress government is in power in the border state again. Second, in terms of history, Pakistan has never had any claim on Punjab, unlike Kashmir, which remains an unresolved territorial dispute.

Having said this, the threat on account of Pakistan’s history has not gone away overnight. There is a strong possibility that our neighbour will stop exporting terror from its territory to India, in violation of the MoU signed in 2004 between Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf and former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. At the inauguration, Mr Khan said the Army and the PM were on the same page when it came to ties with India. While this is good news for Mr Khan, the more important requirement is for India and Pakistan to be on the same page in fighting terror. Only then can momentum be built for the popular support that is a prerequisite for any peace effort. At present, the mood in India is not in favour of a dialogue with Pakistan. With India set to go in for elections in 2019, Mr Khan’s gesture, although well meaning, appears to have come at the wrong time.


Pakistan must become a secular state for better ties with India – Army Chief

Pakistan must turn into a secular state to better its ties with India, said Army Chief General Bipin Rawat on Friday. He was delivering a lecture during the National Defence Academy (NDA) passing out parade ceremony in Pune.

“Pakistan is an Islamic State. They must willingly become a secular country like us. If they have to stay hand-in-gloves with us, they have to develop themselves as a secular state,” General Rawat said.

General Rawat’s statement comes amid Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan expressing willingness for greater engagement with India.

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan on Thursday acknowledged that it was not in the country’s interest to allow its soil to be used for terrorism. Khan said he is ready to talk to PM Narendra Modi at “any time”.

General Rawat said he feels that Pakistan’s claim of taking strong steps towards good bilateral relations is contradictory unless there is a direct impact visible on the ground about its claims.

The Army Chief added that a positive step from Pakistan is what is needed presently because India has a clear policy that terror and talks cannot go together.

Talking about the induction of women in the Indian Army in a front-line combat role, General Rawat said, “You will see an increase in the role of women in armed forces. We have not yet taken them in the front-line combat role. We feel we are not yet ready. Western nations are more open. Boys and girls are operating together in big cities here but people in the Army do not only come from big cities.”

Pak should turn secular for better ties with India: Army Chief Rawat

Pak should turn secular for better ties with India: Army Chief Rawat

Says the neighbouring nation first needs to see its internal condition. PTI file

Pune, November 30

Venturing into uncharted waters, Army Chief General Bipin Rawat on Friday said Pakistan should turn into a secular state from an Islamic nation.

Pakistan’s turning into a secular state is essential if the neighbouring country has to stay together with India, the Army chief said.

“If they (Pakistan) have to stay together with India, then they have to develop as a secular state,” Gen Rawat told reporters on the sidelines of the Passing Out Parade of the 135th course at the National Defence Academy here.

“See this staying together, staying separate, ispe Pakistan ko apni andruni halat dekhni hogi. Pakistan ne apne state ko Islamic state bana diya hai. Hum log secular state hai (Pakistan has to look at its internal situation. They are an Islamic state, we (India) are a secular state),” he said.

Gen Rawat said, “How can we stay together if you say I am an Islamic state and there is no role for anybody else,” he said. “If they are willing to become secular like us, then they seem to have an opportunity. Pehle dekhe karte hai ki nahi karte (Let us see if they do so or not).” The Army Chief also asked Pakistan to curtail terror activities.

Asked about Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan’s statement that Islamabad would move two steps forward if New Delhi took one step, Gen Rawat said the neighbouring nation should first take steps to curtail terror activities on its soil.

“I would like to tell Pakistan to initiate that first step (curtailing terror). In the past, India has taken several steps. When we say terror is being harboured in your country, show some action by curtailing terror activities which are used against India,” Rawat said.

On Khan’s statement as to why India and Pakistan could not be friends when Germany and France could be good neighbours, he said the neighbouring nation first needs to see its internal condition. PTI


3 terror suspects from J&K detained in Pathankot

3 terror suspects from J&K detained in Pathankot

File photo

Jammu, November 25

The Jammu and Kashmir Police with the help of their Punjab counterparts detained three terror suspects travelling in a Rajasthan-bound train at Pathankot railway station on Sunday.

Sources said the J&K Police spurred into action after receiving an intelligence input about the suspects on Pooja Express. They were on way to Ajmer from Jammu. The Kathua police were sounded, but the train had left the station.

“By the time we reached Hatli Morh railway station, the train had already left. Therefore, we sought the help of Punjab Police,” a J&K Police officer said.  “Three men have been detained and are being questioned,” Punjab Police (Border Range) IG SS Parmar said. 

Security agencies in Pathankot have been on alert after four persons, travelling in a hired SUV from Jammu, had snatched the vehicle from its driver at gunpoint near Madhopur on November 13. — TNS

 


How Japan helps India to keep an eye on China

Prime Minister Narendra Damodardas Modi, right, with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at the India-Japan annual summit in Gandhinagar, September 14, 2017.

Underlining New Delhi‘s growing strategic stakes in the Asia-Pacific, Japan could soon be the second country after the United States with which India has a logistics support agreement.

In New Delhi, on Monday, October 22, Japan‘s envoy to India Kenji Hiramatsu revealed that Prime Minister Narendra Damodardas Modi‘s annual summit meeting next week with his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe could kick off negotiations for an LSA, which would allow Indian and Japanese military units to replenish from each other‘s bases, with accounts to be settled later.

“We are hoping to start a formal negotiation process that will enable us to sign an acquisition and cross-service agreement, a mutual logistics support agreement. It is natural that two countries, which have such a large number of exercises, should implement an LSA,” Ambassador Hiramatsu said at a briefing on Modi‘s visit to Tokyo on October 28-29.

ACSA is the traditional term for a mutual LSA, which military partners sign to share logistics.

An Indo-Japanese ACSA would allow Indian warships, operating off the coast of China, to refuel and replenish supplies from Japanese military bases.

Similarly, Japanese warships in the Indian Ocean could replenish at Indian bases.

The only country with which India has a formal LSA is the US.

In 2016, New Delhi and Washington signed the so-called Logistic Exchange Memorandum of Agreement, a custom-designed US-India LSA.

Analysts said India and Singapore had an effective LSA, which had not been publicly acknowledged, but was part of a classified enhanced defence cooperation agreement the two countries signed in 2015.

By replenishing from Singapore bases, the Indian Navy can operate for long durations in the South China Sea.

An ACSA/LSA would visibly boost the low-key India-Japan defence relationship.

At the Shangri-la Dialogue in Singapore in June, Modi described relations between New Delhi and Tokyo as ‘a partnership of great substance and purpose that is a cornerstone of India‘s Act East Policy.‘

Besides initiating an ACSA/LSA, Ambassador Hiramatsu said India and Japan might also sign a maritime domain awareness agreement which would enable the two navies to share information about their respective areas of interest.

For example, if a Japanese P-1 maritime patrol aircraft detects a Chinese submarine in the Indian Ocean, it would pass on the information to the Indian Navy.

An MDA agreement puts more eyes on the job of monitoring an oceanic area of interest.

“We are expecting to sign an agreement between Indian and Japanese navies on MDA and maritime security, which will enable more cooperation in this domain,” Ambassador Hiramatsu said.

The spadework for these agreements was done by Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman during her visit to Japan in August.

Joint training exercises, involving India‘s and Japan‘s militaries, has also been boosted.

From November 1 to 14, a battalion from both armies (the Japanese called their military self -defence forces) will train together at the Counter Insurgency and Jungle Warfare School in Vairengte, Mizoram.

This will be the first time the two ground forces will exercise together.

In another first, Ambassador Hiramatsu revealed that Japanese air force observers would attend the upcoming Cope India exercise, which the US and Indian air forces conduct annually.

For the last two years, Japan has participated in the annual Malabar naval exercise, which used to be a bilateral US-India affair, but is now trilateral with the inclusion of Japan.

Recognising the Indian defence establishment‘s eagerness for technology partnership, Japan is also initiating the first joint military technology project with India.

“In the field of defence technology cooperation, we will cooperate on building unmanned vehicles and robotics,” Ambassador Hiramatsu said.

Japan is keen on selling the Indian Navy its sophisticated US-2 seaplane, but the deal has remained hanging for years.

“Last year, we decided to convene a meeting to discuss this very high technology, state-of-the-art aircraft. There is no doubt about the quality of the US-2. It can be used for rescue operations, transportation (and) logistics. Discussions are on, and I hope some progress will be made in this,” said Ambassador Hiramatsu.

While Japan has offered India ‘industrial participation‘ in building the US-2 in India, the navy has been unable to muster funding for this expensive aircraft.

Surprisingly, Tokyo has remained passive on what could be a game-changer for the India-Japan defence relationship — a contract to co-manufacture six Japanese Soryu-class submarines for the Indian Navy.

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, which builds the Soryu class vessels, did not respond to an Indian request for information.

Asked about this silence, Ambassador Hiramatsu responded that the Japanese government was discussing the matter internally.

However, given that Tokyo was willing to supply the Soryu-class submarines to Australia (which instead selected the French DCNS Short Fin Barracuda), the reluctance to supply India the Soryu-class vessel is intriguing.


‘Include our soldiers’ valour in textbooks’

(Location : Mohali and Ludhiana)

CHANDIGARH: Underscoring the need to acclimatise the younger generation with the historical events, Captain Amarinder Singh spoke for the inclusion of detailed chapters on India’s contribution to World War 1 and 2 in school curriculum.

Referring to his recent visit to Turkey’s Gallipoli Helles, where he paid his respects to the martyred Commonwealth soldiers, the Punjab CM said there was a marked difference in the awareness levels of youth about the military exploits there than in India.

Expressing happiness over seeing the cadets from the Mai Bhago Armed Forces Preparatory Institute, and the Maharaja Ranjit Singh AFPI, Mohali, Amarinder said this was a step forward.

A SPECIAL CHILDREN’S DAY FOR US, SAY CADETS The young cadets listened attentively and some even took notes as the CM narrated the figures from his book. Savleen from Chandigarh said they weren’t used to hearing people share such knowledge and hence a personal interaction with the CM made this Children’s Day all the more special.

For Gurkirat from Pathankot, coming from a family of army officials made her want to join the forces.

NEED TO INCREASE NUMBER OF GIRLS Mohali’s Gurleen said it’s the desire to do something beyond the ordinary. “I like to believe we are women of substance and I don’t feel any domain is a male’s bastion any longer,” she told HT.

Her batch mates however said the pressure remains as they have to fight for 50 vacancies while their male counterparts have over 170 seats.

“This Independence Day, vacancy count for women is expected to increase, so we are hopeful,” said Nivedtha from the Mai Bhago AFPI.

For the boys, it were the startling number of soldiers who were lost in the War that gave them goosebumps. Harshit from Dera Bassi, seeing his sister and brother-in-law in the forces made him work hard to attain his childhood dream.


Kashmiri youth resorts to violence due to rumours in colonies, mosques: Army chief

Kashmiri youth resorts to violence due to rumours in colonies, mosques: Army chief

Indian Army chief General Bipin Rawat on Monday issued a stern warning for those who are `misleading` the youth of Jammu and Kashmir.""

Indian Army chief General Bipin Rawat on Monday issued a stern warning for those who are “misleading” the youth of Jammu and Kashmir. Speaking to mediapersons, the Army chief said that at some places, “Maulvis might be giving false information to youth at mosque and madrassas”.

General Rawat said that rumours were being spread from some mosques ot colonies and as a result of it, thousands of people were coming on streets to protest against armed forces and state administration.

Urging the people of Jammu and Kashmir to not take up arms, the Army chief further said, “We have to tell the youth not to join militancy band, convince them that they will not live long and convince the family the same and then if they don’t listen they have to face the consequence. Kashmiri people are our people and we cannot allow violence.”

Responding to a question on demands of Kashmiri politicians like former chief ministers Mehbooba Mufti and Omar Abdullah for dialogue instead of “muscular” policy to deal with issue of violence in the state, the Army chief said that terrorists would not be allowed to “create violence”

“The government has a clear policy that it will not allow terrorist to create violence. The government has already initiated dialogue through an interlocutor with the people,” said General Rawat.

General Rawat ruled out direct talks between Centre and terrorists, even as he said that separatists were free to hold talks with interlocutor if they wanted.

He said, “Interlocutor is talking to people. He is open to anybody who wants to speak to him. We’re doing indirect talks, if they (separatists) don’t want to talk, what can we do?” The Army chief added, “The head of the state isn’t going to talk to the terrorists; it’s not going to happen.”


Lawyer Who Took NDA Government To Court Seeks Hearing On PIL In Rafale

A bench headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi is likely to hear today the two PILs, filed by lawyers Manohar Lal Sharma and Vineet Dhanda, on India’s deal with France to buy the fighter jets

Lawyer Who Took NDA Government To Court Seeks Hearing On PIL In Rafale

A bench headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi is likely to hear today the two PILs.

NEW DELHI: A lawyer, the first to drag the NDA government to the Supreme Court over the Rafale fighter jet deal, has filed an interim plea seeking hearing on his PIL after assembly polls in five states in November to counter the allegation that his was a politically-motivated petition.

The poll panel has recently announced the dates for assembly elections in Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Rajasthan, Mizoram and Telangana. They would conclude by November end.

A bench headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi is likely to hear today the two PILs, filed by lawyers Manohar Lal Sharma and Vineet Dhanda, on India’s deal with France to buy the fighter jets.

The bench, also comprising Justices S K Kaul and K M Joseph, on October 10 had directed the Centre to provide in a sealed cover the “details of the steps” taken in the decision making process, sans pricing and technical information, which led to the deal.

Mr Sharma, who filed an interim plea in his pending PIL, has referred to certain media reports to allege that the French Dassault company “accepted to work with Reliance as an ‘imperative and obligatory’ condition for securing the fighter contract”.

The lawyer mentioned the plea before the bench which asked him to provide its copy today.

Besides seeking nod to initiate the detailed arguments, the lawyer has also sought a direction to Dassault Reliance Aerospace Limited and its head to file “all relevant documents of the Rafale deal belonging to them”.

The lawyer, in his PIL, has sought to quash the inter-government agreement between India and France on account of the violation of “defence procurement procedure” and subsequent registration of an FIR in the case.

COMMENT

The apex court had earlier termed the allegations made in the two PILs as “grossly inadequate” and had made it clear that it was not issuing notice on them, but had wanted to satisfy itself about legitimacy of the decision making process.


Pain must end, peace must prevail between 2 neighbours: Sidhu

BONHOMIE Praises Pak PM Imran Khan, saying history will remember him for giving a precious gift to the Sikh community

Both the govts should realise that we have to move forward. I believe that it can go further till Peshawar, till Afghanistan. NAVJOT SINGH SIDHU , Punjab local bodies minister

CHANDIGARH: The corridor from Dera Baba Nanak in Indian Punjab to Kartarpur in Pakistan holds a promise to bring the two neighbours closer, said Punjab minister Navjot Singh Sidhu on Wednesday.

AP■ MAN OF THE MOMENT: Punjab minister Navjot Singh Sidhu addressing the gathering in Kartarpur, Pakistan, on Wednesday.He said this at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Pakistan leg of the corridor.

Among those present on the occasion were Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan, his senior ministers, Union ministers from India Harsimrat Kaur Badal and Hardeep Puri and scores of Sikh pilgrims from both the countries.

Introduced by the anchor as ‘Sixer Sidhu’ whose friendship outclassed hate, the Congress politician was seen speaking animatedly with the Pakistan prime minister seated in the front row with other dignitaries.

And when he spoke, the loudest and the most frequent applause was for him.

In his speech filled with poetry and religious couplets, Sidhu showered praise on Khan saying history will remember him for bridging the gap between the two neighbours and for ending the 70-year wait of the Sikhs of India.

“Bloodshed must end, pain must end, peace must return… We have paid a big price, someone has to douse this fire. This corridor is full of promise, it will bring the two countries close,” he said.

In an emotional speech, Sidhu said his parents used to see Gurdwara Darbar Sahib, which is just 4 km from the Gurdaspur border, from a distance and return with tears in their eyes as they could go no further . “My friend Imran Khan has wiped the tears of lakhs of Sikhs,” he added.

Sidhu said: “Indian Constitution calls for no discrimination on the basis of caste, colour and creed and this is the same thing Baba Nanak had said 550 years back. If the world has to be changed, the vision needs to be changed, thought has to be changed. No book in the history forbids people of any faith to pay obeisance at a religious place significant to their belief.”

Talking of his dream of a better connected world, he said: “It takes two to tango, both the governments should realise that we have to move forward. My father used to tell me that Punjab Mail went till Lahore. I believe that it can go further till Peshawar, till Afghanistan, till Moscow. Your vegetable, rice, can go up to Brussels. It is my dream and I assure that till I have blood in my veins I will be greatly thankful to both the governments.”

AFP■ FEASTING TIME: Sikh devotees partaking of langar on the premises of Gurdwara Darbar Sahib in Kartarpur, Pakistan, after the groundbreaking ceremony for the corridor to the shrine on Wednesday.

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan and other dignitaries look on during a presentation as part of the groundbreaking ceremony at Kartarpur; (right) devotee pay obeisance at Gurdwara Darbar Sahib.


Bolstering amity apt tribute to Guru Nanak, says ex-PM Foundation stone of 26 projects worth Rs 150 cr laid

Bolstering amity apt tribute to Guru Nanak, says ex-PM

Former PM Dr Manmohan Singh, Governor VP Singh Badnore and CM Capt Amarinder Singh lay the stone of 26 projects. Malkiat Singh

Deepkamal Kaur

Tribune News Service

Sultanpur Lodhi, November 23

“Sending across a message of communal harmony will be a befitting tribute to Guru Nanak Dev,” stressed former Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh, who visited Gurdwara Ber Sahib, along with his wife Gursharan Kaur, for the 550th birth anniversary celebrations of the founder of the Sikh faith, organised by the Punjab Government. 

Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh laid the foundation stone of 26 projects worth Rs 150 crore as part of the year-long celebrations,  including the upgrading of infrastructure in the historic towns of Sultanpur Lodhi, Dera Baba Nanak and Batala.

Dr Singh expressed concern over the growing menace of terrorism the world over. He said the path shown by the Guru alone could help tackle it.

“Punjab hi nahi, poori kayanat terrorism naal jhoojh rahi hai (not just Punjab, the entire world is grappling with terrorism). Only Guru Nanak’s teachings can help us in these trying times,” he said, reciting a verse, “Jagat jalanda rakh le, apni

kirpa dhar (protect the burning world through your divine grace).”

Emphasising that people must not be divided on religion and caste lines, he said an apt tribute to Guru Nanak would be to spread his message of peace and harmony.

Underlining the Sikh tenets of equality, as institutionalised by langar (community kitchen), and sharing one’s earnings with those less privileged, he expressed concern over the widening gap between the rich and the poor across the globe.

In pipeline to mark historic occasion

  • Rs 3,312 cr to facilitate pilgrims, plant saplings in each village
  • Release of 32 prisoners and remission of term for 2,952
  • Sehat Bima Yojana under which 43 lakh families will be brought under cover of Rs 5 lakh
  • 36 villages and 11 nagar panchayats visited by Guru Nanak to be developed
  • Institute of inter-faith studies planned at GNDU, Amritsar
  • Connectivity to Sultanpur Lodhi to be improved
  • Medical college and hospital at Kotli Nangal in Gurdaspur