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Three soldiers missing as avalanche hits forward post in J&K

Three soldiers missing as avalanche hits forward post in J&K
Photo for representation only.

Srinagar, December 12

Three soldiers were missing after an avalanche, triggered by fresh snow, struck a forward post in Gurez sector in Bandipora district of Jammu and Kashmir, police said on Tuesday.The avalanche hit an Army post at Baktoor near the Line of Control in Gurez sector during the intervening night, a police official said.He said at least three soldiers were reported missing after the avalanche.

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“Efforts are on to trace the missing soldiers but continuous snow was hampering the rescue and search efforts,” he added.An Army porter is missing since Monday after he came under an avalanche in Tulail in Gurez sector. PTI


Asean outreach continues; India, Cambodia to step up maritime ties Prime Minister Modi meets Malaysian counterpart, talks defence

Asean outreach continues; India, Cambodia to step up maritime ties
PM Narendra Modi with his Cambodian counterpart Hun Sen in New Delhi on Saturday. PTI

Smita Sharma

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, January 27

Continuing with his diplomatic engagement with ASEAN leaders, Prime Minister Modi today held delegation-level talks with Cambodian PM Samdech Hun Sen.The two sides discussed cooperation in development partnership, defence, trade and investment, energy conservation, agriculture and tourism. Four MoUs were signed, including mutual legal assistance in criminal matters. The delegations discussed the possibility of extending the India-Myanmar-Thailand trilateral highway further to Cambodia and beyond and expand air connectivity.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)Resonating with the Delhi Declaration issued after the ASEAN-India summit, the India-Cambodia joint statement stressed on “security of sea lanes of communication to maintain peace and ensure safety and security of navigation in the Indo-Pacific region”. “They also agreed that peace and maritime security is important for both countries. To that end, they support complete freedom of navigation and overflight and pacific resolution of maritime issues based on international law notably the 1982 UNCLOS,” added the joint statement.Earlier on Friday, Modi held bilateral discussions with Indonesian President Joko Widodo. Indonesia has proposed to invite countries in the region to discuss the Indo-Pacific concept.The two sides sought to strengthen the Indian Ocean Rim Association. “The Indonesian President lent his support for the concept of Indo-Pacific during his meeting with Modi,” said Preeti Saran, Secretary East in MEA. Defence, security, trade and investment, counter terrorism and people-to-people links figured prominently in Narendra Modi’s bilateral meeting with Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak.


Ink four pacts 

  • A credit line agreement of $36.92 million was signed for Cambodia’s water resource development project
  • A cultural exchange programme was signed for 2018-2022
  • An agreement on mutual legal assistance in criminal matters was inked
  • An MoU was inked on cooperation for prevention of human trafficking

 


The deep state reigns supreme in Pak

Pakistan’s deep state comprising its powerful army, intelligence agencies, notably the sinister ISI and the many terror ‘tanzeems’ it nurtures, called the shots as Pakistan was hit by a radical tornado led by Rizvi.

The deep state reigns supreme in Pak
Khadim Husain Rizvi. reuters

Lt-Gen Kamal Davar (retd)

History displays an immutable propensity of repeating itself in nations, institutions and organisations when some of its lessons continue to be discarded at the altar of political expediency or unenlightened self-interest. Neighbouring, restive Pakistan, despite its many abortive attempts with genuine democracy, fell once again on its knees to the unholy trinity of its ‘deep state’. Pakistan’s deep state comprising its all-powerful Army, its intelligence agencies notably the sinister ISI and the many terror ‘tanzeems’ it nurtures, called the shots as Pakistan was hit and near-paralysed, for nearly a month by a radical tornado triggered by a newly formed fundamentalist outfit, the Tehreek Labaik Ya Rasool Allah led by a Muslim cleric, Khadim Husain Rizvi, belonging to the Barelvi sect of Islam. That an elected government had to plead to its Army to restore law and order in the nation displayed for the ‘umpteenth’ time where power essentially rests in Pakistan and the unaccountability of the Pakistan army to its elected government. Provoked by a seemingly innocuous alteration in wording of the swearing-in for a Pakistani legislator, the radicals — whose number is alarmingly rising in Pakistan — termed the amendment as blasphemous and went into an overdrive, as they blockaded the Islamabad highway to Murree. Though there were hardly 3,000 protesters, they successfully choked road links around Islamabad and soon the protests spread to many parts of Pakistan. ‘Dharnas’, on the call of Rizvi were staged at Lahore, Peshawar, Faislabad, Sargodha and other towns and houses of some ministers torched. Over a dozen protesters were shot dead and around 255 injured as a result of the security forces firing at the agitators.The beleaguered PM Shahid Khaqan Abbasi asked Pakistan Army chief, Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa, to control the deteriorating situation. It can happen only in Pakistan that an army chief can refuse a legitimate order from his duly elected prime minister and get away scot-free! The wily general refused to take on the protesters but assured his PM that the army will ensure the security of governmental buildings and other sensitive installations. Importantly, the Pakistan Army played an important mediatory role in defusing the situation by persuading the Pakistan government to make the hapless Law Minister Zahid Hamid resign from his post as demanded by the extremist protesters. That the army’s sympathies rested with the radical elements on the streets tellingly revealed the contours of Pakistani politics likely to shape up soon. The timing of these protests, the release of the 26/11 Mumbai terrorist strike mastermind Hafiz Saeed, the waning of mainstream political parties and rise of radical forces portends an ugly future for Pakistan’s polity. Compounding the worsening milieu are efforts by former President General Pervez Musharraf to re-enter the political environment. His giving a clean chit and expressing his admiration for the terrorist kingpin Hafiz Saeed and the Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jamaat-ul-Dawa, especially in their nefarious efforts in J&K, must be factored in by India’s security establishment. Is Hafiz Saeed’s efforts to “politically mainstream” his newly established Mili Muslim League, the emergence of other radical political outfits are a mere coincidence or has the Pakistani Army’s subtle nod to make Pakistan into a totally militarised Islamic state? The emerging scenario, with the general elections slated in 2018 thus is fraught with ominous tidings with regards to the deepening of collusive ties between the army and the extremist forces in Pakistan.India, as it continues with its established policies of non-interference in the internal politics of a neighbouring country, yet cannot remain indifferent to the happenings in Pakistan. The emerging Pakistan army and radical elements nexus is fraught with danger for India, even Afghanistan and the region. China, with its economic investments in Pakistan, will back Pakistan’s deep state for its strategic interests. Even the US, at least till its commitments in Afghanistan, will, admonish Pakistan to lay off terrorism in its neighbourhood but continue to reward it financially and militarily. India will have to chart its own path to ensure its security with enhanced preparedness while it gets Russia, Afghanistan and Iran to synergise their efforts to keep a rogue, nuclear-armed Pakistan in check. Thouogh radicalism among the common folk in Pakistan is on the ascendant, there still exists a sane civil society and some of its diaspora which India needs to address and encourage with a multi-faceted approach. Being the largest nation in South Asia, India’s responsibilities, naturally, go beyond its borders.  


Army organises mini-marathon

Army organises mini-marathon
Children participate in a mini-marathon which was organised to celebrate the 70th Army Day in Bathinda on Monday. Tribune photo: Pawan Sharma

Tribune News Service

Bathinda, January 22

The Chetak Corps of the Indian Army has organised Chetak Mini-Marathon called “Lets run for the nation” to celebrate 70th Indian Army Day here today. The event was flagged off by Brigadier Tarundeep Kumar, Station Commander from Multipurpose Stadium. The DC and various other senior civilian dignitaries were also present.A total of 1,379 participants, including 342 children and 66 women, took part in the marathon with zeal and enthusiasm. The winners of the marathon were felicitated by Lieut-Gen PC Thimmaya, General Officer Commanding, Chetak Corps.In the 10 km category, the first prize was bagged by Lance Naik Mohkan Singh, second by Mr Preet Pal Singh and third by Gunner Arvind Kumar. In the 5 km category, the first prize was bagged by Sumit Awasti, second by Gurukumal Singh and third by Mohmmad Hamza.


Military families, the unsung war heroes

CHANDIGARH: What are the challenges they faced while their men were away on borders? How has marriage with the olive greens changed their lives? Wives and daughters of men in olives shared their experiences including joys and dilemmas of being a military family.

ANIL DAYAL/HT(From left) Rita JP Singh, Maj Gen AK Sengar (retd), Daulat Oberoi and Ashali Verma during a session on the ‘Joys and dilemmas of being a military family’ on Friday.

“Because the army has grown so big, the problems are much different and more difficult than earlier. The army is a very large family which is full of cohesive and disciplined camaraderie and bonding. I have met people after 20 years and that bonding is the same. I have not found this bonding anywhere else,” said Daulat Oberoi, who spoke about the book ‘wedded to the olive greens’ written specifically to help women who have married officers. The book has become a ‘bible’ for newlyweds from civil societies.

A panellist Rachna Rawat Bisht said, “The biggest joy for an army officer’s wife is that you are married to an armyman, the country’s hero. The biggest challenge, however, is that he will never put you first. For him, the army is always going to be priority. That is the biggest challenge; that a call of duty will come, he will lace up his shoes, leave for the battlefield, and may never return.”

Sharing an incident, she said, “My husband was posted with Assam rifles and was transferred somewhere far. After he left, I got to know that I have conceived and I had to convey. I contacted him through an exchange but he could not understand as there was a lot of disturbance. Finally, the guy on exchange had mercy on us and said, ‘Sahib, aapke liye khushkhabri hai (Sir, there’s a good news for you).”


Smoke billows from Bellandur Lake after fire doused::5000 Armymen deployed

Smoke billows from Bellandur Lake after fire doused
Firefighters try to put out fire at Bellandur Lake in Bengaluru on Saturday. Bellandur Lake, known for its high levels of pollution, caught fire on Friday morning billowing huge clouds of smoke on the Yemlur side of the lake. PTI

Bengaluru, January 20

Black smoke continued to billow from the Bellandur Lake on Saturday, hours after a huge fire close to a nearby Army firing range was doused in a massive operation involving more than 5,000 armymen and fire fighters.

“Major fire that was there yesterday has been doused, but there is still smoke emerging in some small pockets,” a senior fire department official said.

He said they were now trying to ensure that the embers from which the smoke emanated do not re-ignite due to wind.

Water from the lake was used to put off the fire, the cause of which would be known after investigations, officials said.

The blaze started on Saturday in the highly polluted and biggest water body of the city, giving anxious moments to hundreds of residents living nearby before it was doused last night.

It had also spread towards the nearby Iblur firing range of the Army, the officials said.

The Army last night said the fire, which had spread to the perimeter of its facility, had been doused due to the untiring efforts of more than 5,000 of its personnel and fire fighting equipment of the Army Service Corps (ASC) Centre and College.

Lt Gen Vipin Gupta, commandant ASC Centre and College, said on Saturday that things were under control.

As voices were emerging that the fire may have started due to methane burst as a result of accumulation of chemicals and pollutants in the lake, authorities also suspect the involvement of local grass harvesters in starting it.

Fire department officials said the reason behind the fire has not yet been determined and their priority was to put off the fire completely. “Later, investigation will be done to know the cause of fire,” a senior official said.

Speaking to reporters after visiting the site this morning, Lt. Gen. Gupta said: “The area that is close to our camp is absolutely under control, there is nothing. The area that is close to the lake there is still lot of smoke, but it is under control”.

“We have a lot of fire tenders there and we are ready for any eventuality,” he said.

Lt. Gen. Gupta said this was the first time the blaze had spread to their camp. “It had never interfered with our activities, but now that it has come very close to us we will definitely take up the case with civil authorities,” he said.

Asked if the Army will take up the lake’s cleaning, he said they were always ready to help the civil administration.

But as far as cleaning was concerned “it is a very technical and professional job” for which people were available on the civil side, he added.

Spread over 1,000 acres near the infotech hub, the lake is highly contaminated as it receives 60 per cent of the sewage generated in the city. It is in bad shape despite the National Green Tribunal pulling up the government and its various agencies for failing to prevent pollution and not doing enough to restore the lake.

The Bellandur lake had caught fire in May 2015 and August 2016 also.

In 2015, the lake had turned into a frothy, foam-filled water body due to high concentration of pollutants in the waters. Foam from the lake spilling onto nearby roads and surrounding areas had become a common sight each time the city received heavy rainfall.

The nearby Varthur lake was also in the focus when it caught fire in May 2017. PTI


Henderson Brooks report not being declassified to save political skin: Capt

PUNJAB CM ADMITS ARMED FORCES NOT CAREER OF CHOICE FOR TODAY’S YOUTH, SAYS NEED TO INTROSPECT

CHANDIGARH: Punjab chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh was a fauji first at the Military Literature Festival here on Friday when he minced no words, saying that the Henderson Brooks report on the Sino-Indian War of 1962 was not being declassified “only to save political skin”.

ANIL DAYAL/HT■ (From left) Lt Gen A Mukherjee (retd), Brig MS Gill (retd), Punjab chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh, The Tribune editor­in­chief Harish Khare, Brig IS Gakhal (retd) and Maj Gen Shivdev Singh (retd) at the Military Literature Festival 2017 at Lake Club in Chandigarh on Friday.

“The Henderson BrooksPrem Bhagat report should have been made public long back. It is an open secret. It has not been declassified only to save political skin,” Capt Singh said.

“After the government order, the defence minister (Krishna Menon) was literally shifting platoons. There was a compliant corps commander who didn’t give brigade commander Hoshiar Singh a chance to fight. It was not the army fighting, it was a faulty government policy at work,” said Capt Singh, who was wearing his medals. He was commissioned in 2 Sikh Regiment in 1963.

He was interacting with veteran journalist Vir Sanghvi and military historians Thomas Fraser, Alan Jefferys, Lt Gen TS Shergill (retd) and Ed Haynes at a panel discussion.

Asked about India’s provocative foreign policy in 1962 despite no preparedness, Lt Gen Shergill said, “It was the lack of understanding by the government on what it takes besides the lack of spine of certain officers to admit what can’t be done.”

There was unanimity among the panellists that then prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru “died a disappointed man”. Then defence minister Krishna Menon and he clearly misread the situation despite intelligence inputs as far back as 1959 that China was planning an offensive.

WINNER OR LOSER?

Lt Gen Shergill said that military history has taught that only a force that endures can win. “The perception is that military history is written by the winner but who is the winner in a counterinsurgency situation? There is no clear winner or loser. The lexicon of conflict is changing and caution should be exercised in usage of terms,” he said.

Asked who had won the 1965 India-Pakistan war, Capt Amarinder Singh said, “It was more or less a draw. We had no ammo left and if it continued any longer, we’d be fighting each other with stones. It was a pathetic situation. India may have gained territorially but it was a negligible gain.”

‘NO POLITICS IN FORCES’ The CM denied any politicisation in the armed forces but declined comment on political interference. “The forces are disciplined and will always be,” he said.

Like most participants at the session, Capt Singh agreed that unlike the past, today’s youth were not drawn to a career in the armed forces. “It is a concern that many don’t want to join the forces and we need to find out why,” he said.

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Army jawan from Punjab among 3 killed in ceasefire violation by Pak Educational institutes shut along IB, LoC; over 8,000 border residents migrate

A woman shows mortar shells that landed outside her house. Tribune photo: Inderjeet Singh

Damage due to cross-border shelling by Pakistan in RS Pura sector. Tribune photo:Inderjeet Singh

Family members of Ghara Singh of Bera village. Tribune Photo:Inderjeet Singh

An injured in a hospital. Tribune photo: Inderjeet Singh

Locals move towards safer place in RS Pura. Tribune photo: Inderjeet Singh

A man takes shelter in a bunker. Tribune photo: Inderjeet Singh

Mandeep Singh

Amir Tantray

Tribune News Service

Jammu, January 20

Three people, including an Army jawan, were killed and six injured in firing by Pakistani troops along the International Border (IB) and Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu division for the third day on Saturday.

Nine persons have been killed so far in ceasefire violations over three days.

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An Army jawan was today killed after being hit by a bullet during cross-border firing in Krishna Ghati sector of Poonch district.

The Tribune staff photographer Inderjeet Singh had a narrow escape when shells landed near Jora farms where he was shooting the damage occurred to temporary sheds of Gujjars.

Read: Soldier, BSF man, 2 civilians dieCentre must take effective measures to end cross-border firing: JKPCCResidents of border hamlets living in fear due to Pak firingOpposition stages walkout from Assembly over ceasefire violations

A defence spokesman identified the slain soldier as sepoy Mandeep Singh (23), a resident of Alampur village of Sangroor in Punjab.

He said the Pakistani Army initiated unprovoked and indiscriminate firing of small arms and automatics form 0820 hours in Krishna Ghati sector, resulting in grievous injuries to Singh who later succumbed.

The Indian Army retaliated strongly and effectively, the spokesman said.

The officials said two civilians, Gaura Ram (17) of Kapur R S Pura and Gour Singh (45) of Abdullian, were killed and five others injured in firing by Pakistani rangers along the IB in Jammu district.

A BSF spokesman said cross-border firing was underway in the area from Octroi to Chenab (Akhnoor) in Suchetgarh sector of R S Pura from this morning.

He said the firing in R S Pura sector stopped around 1.30 am but resumed again after four hours.

He said a BSF jawan in Pargwal sector was injured in the heavy firing and shelling and was later hospitalised.

The BSF is retaliating and the exchange of fire between the two sides was underway till the last reports were received.

A jawan of the Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) was injured in cross border shelling in Jammu, officials said. The jawan, constable Lallu Ram, was evacuated to a nearby hospital and was said to be stable.

The jawan, who belongs to the 14th battalion of the force, was deployed for rendering law and order duties along with the Jammu and Kashmir Police at the Kanachak police station, when he was hit by splinters of a mortar shell that landed in the area.

While a BSF jawan and a teenaged girl were killed on Thursday, four people–two civilians and one BSF jawan and an Army jawan–were killed and over 40 others, including two BSF personnel, injured in the Pakistani firing yesterday.

The heavy firing had forced thousands of border residents to flee their homes and authorities announced closure of educational institutions for three days along the LoC and IB.

Between 8,000 to 9,000 people living along the IB have migrated to safer places and most of them were living with their relatives, officials said.

Over 1,000 people are housed in camps in R S Pura, Samba and Kathua areas, they said. With PTI inputs


Twin surrenders Ashraf Jehangir Qazi

Twin surrenders

The writer is a former ambassador to the US, India and China and head of UN missions in Iraq and Sudan.

The writer is a former ambassador to the US, India and China and Head of UN Missions in Iraq and Sudan.

THE Nov 26, 2017, six-point agreement between the Faizabad protesters and the government/military was a major setback for the reputation and image of Pakistan.

There are still unanswered questions.

Was it the disqualified boss of the ruling party who engineered this episode to target the military boss? Or was it the other way around?

Whatever the answer, the government finally surrendered its constitutional authority to the military.

The military in turn transgressed its constitutional limits and ‘saved the country’ by conceding the unconstitutional demands of foul-mouthed religious politicians who threatened chaos throughout the country.

The twin messages sent by these twin surrenders are clear: at home Pakistan is for the taking by extremists; abroad it has made a laughing stock of itself.

What more could India ask for?

Pakistan’s national and foreign policy are now without a coherent governmental base.

Accordingly, they have no credibility.

Every ideal and value the Quaid’s Pakistan embodied has been betrayed.

Those who think the country has been saved need only consider: Saved from what? For whom? For how long? At what cost? Firm and just governance has been rendered impossible by corruption, fear and treachery.

The ousted prime minister; his brother in Lahore; the irrelevant current prime minister who cannot even address the nation; the bewildered remnants of the elected government; the opposition parties and their bickering and quarrelling leaders; the pathetic parliament which only produces rupee billionaires and dollar millionaires; the military and its intelligence establishment who wield unauthorized political power without knowledge or wisdom; the police who have been used, abused, discredited and finally betrayed; the bureaucrats — with honourable exceptions; some would also include the judiciary; and those violent opportunists who politically exploit the people’s passionate love for the Prophet (PBUH,) have all brought about this anti-Pakistan farce.Why should India try to destroy Pakistan when the country’s rulers are doing it themselves?

Why should India try to destroy Pakistan when the country’s rulers are doing it themselves?

Last June, the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia referred to Pakistan as ‘a slave country’.

He can summon the prime minister and the army chief at a moment’s notice — even in the midst of a major domestic crisis.

This same crown prince is supposedly embarking on the path of ‘moderate Islam’ and clean government for his country to enter the 21st century while Pakistan chooses to sink ever deeper into the morass of religious extremism and criminally corrupt governance to stay far away from the 21st century!

Leave India and the US aside.

They are unfriendly countries.

What about China?

What must it think as it beholds the endlessly silly and scary spectacle in Pakistan?

What future can it envisage for CPEC and its strategic partnership with Pakistan?

At the very least, it will feel compelled to have alternative plans.

With religious extremism rampant in Pakistan, what assurances can Pakistan credibly extend to China or any other country with regard to stopping extremists from using its territory against them?

What are the implications of these surrenders for Pakistan’s constitutional, democratic and counterterrorism credentials?

How will an imploding Pakistan elicit support for its promotion of a just and stabilizing settlement process in India-held Kashmir, or effectively call out India for its many documented atrocities?

Learned analyses of Pakistan’s political, security, economic, social and external challenges, and discussions about road maps and timelines for their possible resolution, are all rendered irrelevant by the tragic state it has been reduced to by its rulers and guardians.

Moreover, the country’s elites, who rule without conscience or pity, readily plead their inability to address this situation while doing everything to ensure that it remains unaddressed.

They deliberately rob the people of faith in themselves.

The world sees the situation in Pakistan as not merely ridiculous, but dangerous, since it has a nuclear arsenal, which India and the US will argue has an even higher risk now of falling into the hands of extremists.

They will refer to the latest victory of the extremists over the government and security establishment.

What will Pakistan’s diplomacy — even at its best — avail in the face of such perceptions? Simple dismissals of obvious realities cut no ice at home or abroad.

Given the triumph of religious obscurantism, the politically motivated security establishment, and utterly corrupt and therefore cowardly governance, what can another election achieve even if it is held fairly and leads to a change of faces?

The parameters will still confine any elected government to tinkering on a ship that is sinking.

No amount of charisma, flamboyant rhetoric and heroic posturing will change anything.

What needs to be done is very well known. It is nonsense to suggest it cannot be done because the powers that be are too powerful and the people are imprisoned in low self-esteem and low expectations.

A mobilized, organized, informed and empowered people can get any task done.

They can defeat their indifferent and callous rulers.

All they need is the assistance, advice and participation of concerned Pakistanis.

They do not need anybody’s ‘leadership’ which sooner or later turns out to be just another betrayal.

They need devoted servants.

Pakistan is a poor country with horrible inequality and social indices.

Yet there are no significant pro-poor or progressive parties.

There are only religious, nationalist and populist leaders who are all right-wing, conservative and pro-establishment.

They all talk in the name of the poor and the weak but they walk with the mighty.

Only one national leader, within his limitations and despite his mistakes, has sincerely tried to serve the people.

Most of the rest are corrupt and all of them pander to religious and power centres.

They do not develop sustainable grass-roots movements and mobilization programmes relevant to emancipating and empowering the people.

Accordingly, most “leaders” are not worth addressing.

Only ordinary Pakistanis who still believe in the country that the Pakistan Movement envisaged are worth consulting.

Their varied talents and collective power need to be harnessed for a historic struggle to rid Pakistan of rulers without a cause, other than to escape accountability.

The writer is a former Ambassador to the US, India and China and Head of UN missions in Iraq and Sudan.

Published in Dawn, December 8th, 2017


Commandant’s parade held

Dehradun, December 7

The historic Chetwode Drill Square of the Indian Military Academy in Dehradun on Thursday played host to the commandant’s parade for autumn term 2017.Addressing the Gentlemen Cadets after reviewing the parade, IMA Commandant Lt Gen SK Jha urged them to live up to the Army’s core values of character, competence, commitment and compassion.“These values are reflected in the IMA’s Code of Conduct and Gentlemen Cadets aspiring for high ideals must demonstrate these at all times,” he added.The commandant’s parade marks the culmination of training of 409 Indian and 78 Foreign Gentlemen Cadets from seven friendly foreign countries. — TNS