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Maharaja Ranjit Singh Panorama suffers govt apathy

Tribune News Service

Amritsar, October 25

The park in front of the panorama without a fountain in Amritsar on Tuesday. Photo: Vishal Kumar

As the state government is inaugurating various memorials with ostentatious display, several buildings constructed during the last tenures of governments to keep the heritage alive are crying for attention.Former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee had laid the foundation stone of Maharaja Ranjit Singh Panorama on the bi-centenary of coronation of Maharaja Ranjit Singh in November 2001, just before Punjab Assembly elections. However, the construction work at the panorama completed in 2005 and the then Chief Minister, Captain Amarinder Singh, inaugurated the project in July 2006.During the past 10 years, cracks have emerged in the walls of the building. The LCD and other equipments, installed to tell the history of Ranjit Singh’s empire, are lying defunct. The air condition plant is also not working from the past one and a half years. The fountain installed in the garden in front of the panorama building is also missing.The Municipal Corporation, which has been operating the panorama, has been unable to maintain the building and installed equipments due to scarcity of funds.Ironically, the government did not release a single penny for its maintenance during the past several years. The project had been designed and constructed with the funding of the National Council of Science Museum, a body of the Ministry of Tourism and Culture, Government of India.Around 150 tourists, mostly foreigners, visit the panorama daily. The tourists give a good feedback about the content displayed on the panorama but non-functional machines annoy them.Senior officials of the Municipal Corporation said they had sent a proposal of maintenance to the government under the Heritage City Development and Augmentation Yojana. The government has now sanctioned Rs 50 lakh for the maintenance work of the panorama under the yojana.


Parrikar placates on rank down of forces

Tribune News Service & PTI

New Delhi, October 25

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Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar today asked for an internal cross-checking of facts to ascertain if a circular on equivalence of ranks of armed forces vis-à-vis civilian counterparts was issued erroneously.Officers in the armed forces are upset over the October 18 Defence Ministry circular that purportedly brings the rank of armed forces officers a notch down compared to their earlier status.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)The circular puts Major General (Rear Admiral in the Navy and Vice-Marshal in the Air Force) on the same level as principal director at the Armed Force Headquarters (AFHQ) Civil Service. Similarly, Colonel has been placed on the same level as joint director on a civil post. So far, Major General was equal to a joint secretary, which is higher than principal director, and Colonel was equal in status to director.The circular says the equations are to be followed at service HQs, and “has the approval of the Raksha Mantri”. Replying to a query, Parrikar said some people were trying to “misguide” as the issue related to only functional responsibility (of armed forces) and not status vis-à-vis civilian counterparts.“These are functional responsibilities. They (military officers) will be on the same platform as earlier. I will check up myself,” he said.Parrikar said he had asked for details of the circular and if there had been an error, it would be corrected within a week. Similar circulars issued in 2005 and 2008 would be studied, he added. “The government is sensitive to issues concerning serving and retired soldiers,” he said.

Rs 5-cr demand for film release wrong: Govt

  • I&B Minister M Venkaiah Naidu has termed ‘wrong’ the MNS demand of Rs 5 crore from director Karan Johar for release of his movie ‘Ae Dil Hai Mushkil’, saying the government has nothing to do with it
  • Defence Minister Parrikar said there won’t be “anyone’s catching of neck…. we don’t appreciate it… it’s a voluntary fund. We are not concerned with anyone demanding a donation”

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CONSTRUCTION IN BACKYARD UT fixes new norms

UT fixes new norms

Ramkrishan Upadhyay

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, October 23

The Chandigarh Administration has withdrawn the relaxation given in the past and fixed new norms for the construction of a room in the rear courtyard of houses.        Sources said under the new norms, the construction in the backyard will be limited to a maximum of 25 per cent of the width of the plot with the finished height to the top on the outside not exceeding 11 feet. The order issued by Finance Secretary Sarbjit Singh says that the “construction in the backyard (which by definition is meant to be an open space behind the house) wherever allowed, will be limited to a maximum of 25 per cent of the width of the plot with finished height to the top on the outside not exceeding 11 feet so as not to block the sunlight and flow of air in the adjoining houses. No layout  will be sanctioned, allowing construction beyond this limit in any size of the plot anywhere in the city.” With the decision, the owners of the houses will now only be allowed to construct a single-storey room in the rear backyard up to a height of 11 feet while earlier they were allowed to construct two-storeyed rooms up to a height of 24 feet 9 inch.The new norms will affect the owners of marla houses as it will become impossible for them to construct a room with the existing width, which is the lowest in all types of houses. An officer of the Administration said the decision had been taken with the aim of ensuring proper ventilation and light in the houses and to maintain the original character of the city. Sections 4 of the Punjab Capital (Development and Regulation) Act, 1952 empowers the Chief Administrator to issue any directions, as may be considered appropriate in respect of any site or building for the proposes of proper planning or development of Chandigarh.

The change

  • No two-storey buildings in future as height has been fixed up to 11 feet
  • Construction shall be limited to a maximum of 25 per cent of the plot’s width

More than mere BRICS in the wall:::—— Lt Gen Bhopinder Singh (retd)

The post-cold war era has seen commerce triumph over security, as the principal rationale of national groupings. In BRICS, India should also play to the cold economic realm and not focus on individual national aspirations.

More than mere  BRICS in the wall
Building BRICS: (from left) Brazilian President Michel Temer, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jingping pose during the BRICS summit in Goa. AFP.

Intergovernmental club memberships differ in composition, objective and criteria’s – they may exist as forums for propagating specific commercial interests (e.g. G-8, OPEC), common causes (OIC) or reflective of emerging aspirations (Group of Five or BRICS) etc.The timidity and generalities of “promoting international co-operation”, as in the case of the United Nations with 193 active members, is increasingly being criticised for lacking efficacy and representation with the exclusive preserve of the five permanent members (who have the critical “veto” power) to disallow any legitimate case. For instance, China has cocked a snook at the Indian efforts to declare Maulana Azhar Masood a terrorist by becoming the only UNSC member to veto the application. Inability to prevent conflicts or espouse meaningful causes, given the haphazard size and construct of the UN, has led to more focused and limited bodies of interested countries. If G-7 (or G-8, once Russia returns from its suspension for annexing Crimea) is the grouping of the most advanced economies, the G5 is the club of the five largest emerging economies, who have a unique set of aspirations and challenges from say, that of the G-8. The post-cold war era has seen commerce triumph over security, as the principal rationale of national groupings. The acronym, BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) is attributed to the mercantile vision of the then Goldman Sachs Asset Management Chairman, Jim O’Neill. He foresaw a certain growth trajectory and an inherent scale and potential of the member-states to play a major role in the global order. Representing over 3.7 billion population or half of mankind, 22 per cent of Gross World Product and an inherent growth energy that is fundamentally more powerful than the global growths – it has been posited as the growth engine of the world. However, perhaps more than any other multinational grouping, the dissimilarities of cultural-diplomatic-geographical dimension amongst the BRICS members, is the most pronounced of all groupings? It is perhaps the only club that is based on the promise of tomorrow, as opposed to the immediacy of today.The groupings are also reflective of the times that be, even though the genealogical economic honeymoon of the BRICS has ebbed considerably with Brazil and Russia facing deflation (or stagnation at best), and the fundamentals in China coming under extreme pressure and international hawk eye. BRICS remains an invaluably relevant forum for Russia, which faces international isolation from other multinational platforms, following Crimea and Syria. For India and China, this is a more interactive and focused forum which forces certain positions to be taken. For South Africa and Brazil. as the sole representatives from two continents, it offers “white spots” of commercial arrangements. While not a ranking-based or a region-based composition, it suffers from an “emotional” bind amongst members that could afford the BRICS to take powerful and united positions on global issues. Importantly, all four top heads of states who attended the first BRIC (later BRICS, with the addition of South Africa in 2010) summit in Yekaterinburg in Russia —- Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil, Dmitry Medvedev of Russia, Manmohan Singh of India and Hu Jintao of China are not in leadership roles, anymore. The recently concluded BRICS summit in Goa, took place against the dark backdrop of Uri-related “surgical strikes” and the accompanying national narrative of cross-border terrorism. As hosts of the summit, an obvious advantage of steering the “Goa Declaration” had the nations eyeballs stuck on the non-trade related aspects of the summit declaration. It is here, a more sobering verdict emerged with the familiar tactic of “veto” by China, and the reiteration of the cold logic of BRICS, as yet another forum that does not necessarily lead to any immediate thawing, dilution or movements from already established positions.  The newsroom-led soap opera led to a premature and exaggerated ‘thumbs-up’ accorded to the trite and rote language of the forum accepting that there cannot be any political or religious justification to terror. This is not surprising, as China faces Islamist issues in Uighur province, while Russia has the same in Chechenia. It was the missing fine-print of the term “cross-border terrorism,” which has singular and damaging implication for Pakistan or the fact that specifics of terror organisations found a mention of “Islamic State”, but not the more pertinent and topical, Jaish-e-Mohammed. Ostensibly, a familiar hand of China “vetoed” the consensus of the original draft.Further, China dampened the spirits by retorting to India’s attribution to Pakistan as the, “mothership of terrorism”, by stating that China was against, “the linking of terrorism to any specific country, ethnicity or religion” and that, “Everyone knows that India and Pakistan are victims of terrorism. Pakistan has made huge efforts and great sacrifices in fighting terrorism. I think the international community should respect this”. The lessons from the BRICS summit Goa is to nuance our expectation from every multinational meeting according to the realities of real politik that ultimately prevails over jingoistic fervour and unnecessary expectations. Some issues, however personal and burning to individual nations (like Pakistan-led terrorism for us), are only important to reiterate and state unambiguously, but not necessary to resolve conclusively. A lot of other relevant issues like commerce gets hijacked and become thevictim of the accompanying heat. China’s intransigence on India’s entry to the NSG, stand on Pakistan or Maulana Azar Masood are complex and rooted in diplomatic calculus of chessboard diplomacy. Like we insist that Pakistan should move beyond the so-called “core issue” of Kashmir to discuss trade, commerce and poverty eradication, likewise expectations from BRICS must set the commercial goalpost of unleashing meaningful trade opportunities. These should not be hampered by minefields of other sensitive issues facing individual member countries. Overt importance to semantical formulation of joint declarations is a frustrating task and the favourite pastime of prime-time news analysts. We must not peg all our efforts and expectations to the vexatious issues of the Sino-Pak relationship, which has logics, doctrines and strategic cords for the two countries, beyond the “non-conflicting” issue of terror, amongst themselves. China is not naïve to the role of Pakistan in terror mechanisations, neither is it naïve enough to accept the same. BRICS is still a very powerful and transformatory idea, albeit, an unnatural one that is beyond the confines of emotionality. We should play to its cold economic realm and not allow the individual national aspirations to let this grouping become another BRIC in the wall.The writer is a former Governor of Puducherry.


Naval officer from Haryana dies in accidental firing onboard INS Kuthar

Naval officer from Haryana dies in accidental firing onboard INS Kuthar
Sub Lieutenant Tejveer Singh

Ajay Banerjee

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, October 11

A 24-year-old naval officer from Haryana who was posted on a warship, INS Kuthar, died on Tuesday afternoon while handling firearms onboard.Sub Lieutenant Tejveer Singh was injured in an accidental firing and was immediately shifted to a naval hospital, INHS Kalyani, in Vishapatnam, the Indian Navy said on Tuesday.The officer had been raised by an uncle and was not married.   His family has been informed of the his death and a Board of Inquiry has been ordered to investigate the incident. 


Lalu hails Army, flays BJP on surgical strikes

Rashtriya Janata Dal national president Lalu Prasad on Monday hailed the Army for its ‘successful’ surgical strikes in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) but mocked the NDA-led Central government for “trying to take credit” for it.

“BJP is falsely trying to take credit of brave acts of the Indian Army (for the successful surgical strikes on the launch pads of terrorists in PoK),” he told the press outside his wife Rabri Devi’s residence at 10 Circular Road before leaving for the last rites of socialist leader Ram Iqbal Worsi in Bhojpur district.

“The Army is known for its valour and it has given befitting reply to Pakistan’s attempts to push terrorists into the country and would do so in future as well. I am sure if the need arises, our brave Army would do a major surgery like this in future also,” the RJD supremo said.

Prasad dismissed opposition’s allegations of “rift” between him and Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar saying, “There is a strong bond between me and Nitish Kumar.” Prasad and Kumar are known as ‘Bade bhai’ and ‘Chote bhai’ respectively in the political circles in the state.

“I extended Durga puja greetings to Nitish Kumar yesterday. BJP is trying to create a rift between us but it is not possible … The coalition government in Bihar will continue to run successfully like it is doing now,” the RJD supremo added. — PTI


Pak may now target Army pickets at LoC

Ajay Banerjee

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, October 7

In the wake of surgical strikes by the Army across the Line of Control, several Army posts along the fence have been alerted fearing a possible counter-strike by the Pakistan army.Edit: Back to bickeringThe Indian Army maintains several fortified posts beyond the barbed wire fencing. These are manned by highly trained troops. Some of these are designated as highly sensitive posts because of their proximity to Pakistan army pickets. Other than the firepower of the Army, posts beyond the fencing do not have any additional protection.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)Border Action Teams on both sides are active and an assessment is that the Pakistan army may target these posts. Action by these teams had led to flare-ups in the past. It is learnt that the Pakistan army has carried out some changes in its patrolling pattern since the surgical strikes.


Families of Indo-Pak war heroes live in hope

Families of Indo-Pak war heroes live in hope
Paramjit Kaur, daughter of Sepoy Jagraj Singh, carries a picture of her father in Bathinda. A Tribune photograph

Bharat Khanna

Tribune News Service

Bathinda, October 4

Even as the war hysteria had gripped the minds of residents of the state and other border states but families of “martyrs” of the Indo-Pak Wars, who are allegedly lodged in jails of Pakistan, are still perplexed about their existence.The Indian Army had declared these sepoys as dead many years ago. But some of the “spys”, including Surjit Singh and Satish Kumar, released in 2012 from Pakistan, has defied claims of the Army. Since then families of these sepoys are running from pillar to post to get their near and dear ones released from Pakistan jails.Paramjit Kaur, daughter of Sepoy Jagraj Singh of Jeeda village in Bathinda, has been fighting to get her father back from Pakistan jails. Sepoy Jagraj (No. 1524871) of 102 Engr Regiment (Bombay) fought during the 1971 India-Pakistan War and was declared dead by the Indian Army in December 1971.“In September 2004, we got a letter from the Central Government that my father Jagraj Singh is lodged in a Pakistan jail and then in 2012, a spy, Surjit Singh, confirmed of having spent his jail term with my father in Shahi Qila Jail of Pakistan. Though a number of peace and trade initiatives between India-Pakistan took place, the Union Government did nothing to bring back its soldiers who went missing during the war. I was 14- month-old when I lost my father, who is now lodged in a Pakistan jail,” she said.The family of Bagher Singh (No. 4441319) who was declared dead on September 1, 1965, by the Indian Army is still fighting to get it confirmed and get him released from Pakistan jail as in the previous year, a spy, Satish Kumar, claimed that he was alive and lodged in a Pakistan Jail.Bagher, a 24-year-old youngster then, was enrolled by the Indian Army on May 18, 1963, and was part of the ‘6 Sikh Light Infantry’ when he was reportedly ‘killed in action’ in September 1965.Satish claimed that during his own jail term he had spent time with Sepoy Bagher in the Shahi Qila Jail in Lahore, Pakistan.“There are around 176 Indian soldiers of the 1965 Indo-Pak War and about 182 Indian soldiers of the 1971 India-Pakistan War who are lodged in different jails of Pakistan. I had spent about 12.5 years in various jails of Pakistan, including a jail in Rawalpindi; Qila Attak Army Jail, Peshawar; Shahi Qila, Lahore; Kot Lakhpat Jail; Central Jail, Meeyanwali; Bahabalpur; and other jails. In 1974, I had met Bagher Singh of Mansa, Jugraj Singh of Bathinda, and a person from Gurdaspur and many others. Many of these are declared dead by the Indian Government.” he said.Living her life as widow, Bagher Singh’s wife Gurdev Kaur passed away around a year ago taking her husband as dead. She gave birth to four sons, Jagroop Singh (54), Balvir Singh (52), Major Singh (51) and Makkhan Singh (51).I was 5 when I lost my father, says soldier’s sonBagher’s eldest son Jagroop said: “For the past many months we had not slept in peace after a spy revealed that he had seen my father alive, years after the Indian Army declared him dead. I was around 5-year-old when I lost my father, even he was alive or dead, as I never saw him after the 1965 Indo-Pak war. Earlier, the Army declared my father as ‘missing’ but after some months they declared him dead. The Army or we never got any clue that he was dead. Many times my unconvinced mother used to say that our father will return someday but then she used to convince herself that he was no more and might have been killed.”


Cong releases dates of cross-LoC attacks during UPA regime

NEW DELHI: The Congress asked the BJP-led NDA government on Tuesday to refrain from politicising the issue of surgical strikes across the LoC, even as it released dates of cross-border raids carried out during the UPA government.

The main Opposition party said the armed forces had successfully conducted such surgical strikes, particularly on September 1, 2011, July 28, 2013, and January 14, 2014.

“In its maturity, wisdom and in the interest of national security, the UPA government avoided making a loud claim for the effective response and action of Indian army, which had the full support of political leadership,” Congress chief spokesperson Randeep Singh Surjewala said.

The tussle over taking the political ownership of surgical strikes across the LoC has gained momentum in view of the upcoming assembly elections in UP, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Goa and Manipur.

Former J&K CM and National Conference leader Omar Abdullah tweeted a picture of a purported BJP hoarding in UP.

“And some people will lecture others about politicising the army action all the while turning a blind eye to hoardings like these that sprout,” he said

“No reward for guessing that this one is in UP. For the BJP & sections of the shouting brigade it’s always do as we say don’t do as we do!!!” Abdullah said in another tweet.

For its part, the Congress urged the government to“stop po li ti ci sing the sacrifices and bravery of Indian soldiers for myopic” political gains.

“I don’t think the cross-border action is a novelty or is unprecedented. Just ask the generals, they will tell you that there have been numerous incidences of cross-border action across the Line of Control (LoC). What has changed is that the government took political ownership. That is a conscious decision of this government,” senior Congress leader P Chidambaram said.

He said the UPA government’s policy was “strategic restraint” and it took a call that the cross-border action should be at the military level and leave it to the generals to say what they want to say.