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Pak, UAE currencies seized in fresh raids

Terror funding: NIA searches 7 more locations in Srinagar, Jammu, Gurgaon; incriminating material found

Pak, UAE currencies seized in fresh raids
An NIA team after conducting a raid in Srinagar on Saturday. Tribune Photo

Majid Jahangir

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, June 4

The National Investigation Agency today recovered currencies of Pakistan, UAE and Saudi Arabia as it conducted raids for the second consecutive day on Sunday at seven more locations belonging to separatists and traders suspected of hawala activities in Srinagar, Jammu and Gurgaon. The NIA has been probing funding to separatists to fuel unrest in the Valley.The residence of Ayaz Akbar Bhat, a close aide of hardline Hurriyat leader Syed Ali Geelani, at Maloora, Srinagar, was searched for at least five hours. Raids also took place at the residence of Javed Ahmed Baba, alias Gazi, who is also part of Geelani’s Hurriyat, and a cross-LoC trader, Tariq Ahmed Khan, at Pantha Chowk on the outskirts of Srinagar.“Fresh searches were carried at seven more locations belonging to secessionist and separatist elements and traders suspected of hawala activities and terror funding in J&K. Searches were also carried out at one place in Jammu. The Gurgaon residence of businessman Zahoor Watali (whose house in Srinagar was raided on Saturday) was also searched.During the course of raids, a few thousand Pakistani rupees and currencies belonging to the UAE and Saudi Arabia have been found and seized apart from other incriminating material. The persons concerned are being questioned about the same,” an official spokesman of the NIA said, adding that the searches were continuing.The NIA is probing the entire chain of players behind the financing of secessionist activities, including throwing of stones on security forces, burning of schools and damaging government establishmentsOn Saturday, the NIA had raided 26 locations in J&K, Delhi and Haryana and recovered letterheads of militant groups Lashkar-e-Toiba and Hizbul Mujahideen, besides cash worth a few crores, gold jewellery and coins worth about Rs 40 lakh, from financiers, hawala operators and office-bearers of separatist groups, the NIA had said.Prominent among those whose houses were searched yesterday included businessmen Zahoor Watali and Raja Zahoor Khan and separatists Farooq Ahmad Dar, alias Bitta Karate, Nayeem Khan and Shahid-ul-Islam. The bank accounts and lockers of those under scanner have been frozen.The NIA raids have been carried out following the questioning of three separatist leaders — Nayeem Khan, who was seen on television during a sting operation purportedly confessing to receiving money from Pakistan-based terror groups, Farooq Ahmed Dar, and Gazi Javed Baba of Tehreek-e-Hurriyat, in the national Capital last month.Meanwhile, the moderate Hurriyat Conference while condemning the raids said people of Kashmir were “mature enough to understand that such arm-twisting tactics to scare the leadership and malign them are actually attempts to take away the focus from the problem in Kashmir and distort the narrative of the Kashmir dispute.”


Fruit dealer detained  Jammu: The NIA on Sunday conducted a raid and seized documents at a fruit dealer’s shop in Jammu. The businessman, Kamal Aggarwal, has been detained for questioning. The NIA team reached Jammu in the morning to conduct the raid. Aggarwal, a well-known businessman of the city, is also a member of the LoC traders association. The NIA is probing a link between LoC traders and separatists.  “The NIA is investigating the role of businessmen in exploiting the fault lines in the LoC trade, which is helping separatists get money easily and without much risk,” a source said. TNS


5th Commando Battalion to be stationed in Bathinda

5th Commando Battalion to be stationed in Bathinda
The building in Police Lines allotted to the 5th Commando Battallion. Photo: Vijay Kumar

Gagandeep Sharma

Tribune News Service

Bathinda, June 29

For security and confidential inputs received by the state police, the Punjab Government has decided to shift the 5th Commando Battalion from Bahadurgarh (Patiala) to Bathinda.The battalion will reach the district next week. The battalion was headquartered in Bahadurgarh Qila, a historical place in Patiala.The new office of the battalion will be situated in Police Lines, Bathinda.As per sources, the state government’s decision is based on intelligence reports submitted by officials of the Malwa zone.Followers of Dera Sacha Sauda and ‘Panthak’ organisations have been active in the region.The state government doesn’t want to take any risk and plans to requisite measures.As many as six senior officers of the state police will be deputed with this battalion along with a gazetted officer.The district police have started the process for the accommodation of these officers.The district had acquired VIP tag when Harsimrat Kaur Badal became Member of Parliament in 2009.Due to the visits by members of the Badal family, the police had made elaborate security arrangements till March 2017.Jaspreet Singh Sidhu is the Commandant of this battalion and he will also shift to Bathinda.SSP Naveen Singla confirmed that the battalion would be shifted here. “We have made arrangements for the office and accommodation of the personnel,” he added.“Three companies of battalion will be available every time in the district. We will use them to maintain law and order. Policemen of this battalion will be deputed for VIP duty in district,” the SSP said.


Prithvi-II test-fired

Prithvi-II  test-fired

India on Friday successfully test-fired its indigenously developed nuclear-capable Prithvi-II missile from a test range in Odisha as part of a user trial by the Army. The trial of the surface-to-surface missile was carried out from a mobile launcher from launch complex-3 of the Integrated Test Range at Chandipur near Balasore at 9.50 am.The trial was successful and mission objectives were met, said sources. Prithvi-II is thrusted by liquid propulsion twin engines and uses advanced inertial guidance system with manoeuvring trajectory to hit its target with precision and accuracy. The entire launch activities were carried out by specially formed strategic force command.


Please behave Keep decorum in the Assembly ::::PUNJAB NEWS 24 JUN 2017

Please behave

THE Punjab Assembly became a sorry spectacle on Thursday. An attempt to storm the well of the House led to AAP MLAs being evicted. In the process, some were hurt. Turbans of four members were knocked off, and some were injured. It is a sorry state of affairs when the chambers where laws are meant to be discussed and made become a battleground, literally. Marshals assigned to the House are being blamed for the rough handling of MLAs. There is a view that they have not been adequately trained. This may well be correct. The Speaker, too, is being accused of partisan conduct. Political posturing has reduced the legislative business to a farce.  The day after again brought together the legislators of AAP, the Lok Insaaf Party and the Shiromani Akali Dal.                                                                                                                                          Why is it that political debates devolve into chaos, often with a physical element? Why should there be a need to physically evict lawmakers? Should they not follow decorum and remove themselves if asked to do so by the Speaker. Surely, they can plead their case later, or others can do so on their behalf. The harm done to the institution, the vitiated atmosphere and extreme polarisation — all are part of the avoidable damage done when such things happen.  Not much debate takes place in the Punjab Assembly anyway, and nearly all of the Budget session has been lost to noise-making. Slogan-shouting was followed by a walkout, and thus some important legislative matters could not get debated. This is an unhealthy trend, and those who walk out do no favour to the voters who elected them. Those in the government and those sitting on the Opposition benches will do well to be reminded that their primary duty is towards the voters who want them to work towards improving their lot. Negotiation, give and take, and building bridges are the bedrock of politics. A precondition to all is civil behaviour. A sad day if people who could be role models need to be reminded of this.

Fastway evaded Rs 684-cr tax: Sidhu

Asks Capt to act against SAD-BJP ‘cartels’

Fastway evaded  Rs 684-cr tax: Sidhu
Local Bodies Minister Navjot Singh Sidhu. File photo

Ruchika M Khanna & Jupinderjit Singh

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, June 23

Punjab Local Bodies Minister Navjot Singh Sidhu today egged Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh on to act against business cartels allegedly allowed to flourish under the Akali-BJP rule, claiming his department had uncovered tax evasion worth Rs 684 crore by Fastway Transmission Private Limited.The multi-system cable operator (MSO) is believed to be linked to former Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal, though its managing director is Gurdeep Singh Kohli. While Sukhbir has denied he has any business or other interest in Fastway, Kohli has termed Sidhu’s allegations baseless.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)Speaking in the Vidhan Sabha, Sidhu said while his department had issued notices to the company for the alleged violations, it was now for the Chief Minister to register an FIR and order a Vigilance probe against the company that had caused huge losses to the state exchequer.“If we do not act now, we will be cowards,” he exhorted the Chief Minister, who was not present in the House.Several Congress MLAs have been demanding action against the Badals over alleged “sand, cable and drug mafia” that thrived under the previous government.All through the Budget session, many Congress MLAs, including Sukhjinder Singh Randhawa and Kuljit Nagra, have been gunning for the Badals over “illicit drug trade”. Sukhbir had even dared the government to order a probe against him.Randhawa had on Monday said in the House that the government was going soft on them, especially former minister Bikram Majithia.Sidhu today alleged the cable network business ran full throttle after the Akali-BJP government assumed power in 2007. “It was expanded with the intent to carry out loot of Punjab and finish all small businesses through monopoly,” he said.The minister claimed the company evaded service tax worth Rs 227 crore (by paying just Rs 23 crore against a liability of Rs 250 crore); entertainment tax worth Rs 184 crore, sales tax worth Rs 100 crore (Rs 220 crore if interest and fines are included); Rs 83 crore as unpaid charges towards digging of roads for laying cables; and Rs 100 crore as charges and interest for using poles of Punjab State Power Corporation Limited (PSPCL) for running the cable.“Isn’t it strange that the company that started with Rs 25 lakh capital made a profit of Rs 30 crore immediately and gave nothing to the treasury in 10 years of the Akali-BJP rule? My department has already started serving notices on Fastway Transmission for violations and unpaid local government taxes,” he said, adding that one lakh persons would be out of job once the “cable cartel” was broken.He also demanded a separate probe into alleged under-reporting of the total TV connections and cable operators engaged by the company. “Only 1.25 lakh cable connections were shown, but 80 lakh connections actually exist. They even used Reliance to lay their cable, while the telecom giant was laying its own underground optical fibre network,” said the minister.Congress MLAs Sukhjinder Singh Randhawa, Harminder Singh Gill, Kuljit Nagra, Fatehjung Bajwa, Inderbir Singh Bolaria and Kushaldeep Dhillon backed Sidhu, saying they would dig out Fastway cables in their constituencies.

Firm denies charge

Gurdeep Singh Kohli, managing director of Fastway Transmission Private Limited, claimed the allegations of tax dues or under-reporting subscriber base were false. “Most of the cable operators fall in the income bracket of less than Rs 10 lakh and so they are exempt from paying service tax. The entertainment tax at the rate of Rs 15,000 that the government alleged we did not pay, is payable by cable operators, not by multi-system cable operators like us. With regards unpaid charges for laying underground cables, nothing is due from our side. Permissions from the railways, forest department, local bodies and oil marketing companies have been taken for laying cables. While they allege we were showing just 1.25 lakh connections, against 80 lakh, the fact is our total connections are 22 lakh,” he said.

AAP MLA backs Sidhu

  • I had been raising this issue of monopoly of cable business for several years, when they blocked my channel from their cable network. I was a victim of this mafia and Sidhu’s expose has proved how they were patronised by the then government —Kanwar Sandhu, AAP’s Kharar MLA

Sidhu for war on ‘cable mafia’, will probe Fastway

COMPANY DENIES CHARGES, SAYS IT HAS TAKEN UNDERGROUND OPTIC NETWORK ON LEASE BY PAYING DUES

CHANDIGARH: A prime poll promise of the Congress did not get fulfilled in the budget session of the Punjab assembly that concluded on Friday. The government failed to bring in a law to end the hold of Fastway, allegedly owned by the Badals, on cable network, though minister Navjot Singh Sidhu on Thursday announced to probe what he termed the “Fastway scam worth Rs 500 crore”.

After passing of 11 bills in the absence of the opposition, Sidhu dished out figures on alleged tax evasion by Fastway, a company he said enjoyed “patronage” of the Badal family. He was replying to Congress’ Sukhjinder Singh Randhawa in Question Hour.

“It is a miracle,” he remarked, “A company started with Rs 25 lakh as capital showed profit of Rs 30 crore in its first year. Like a big fish, it ate away the small fish. It created a monopoly by intimidating cable operators. It rendered over 1 lakh youth jobless.”

He added, “Fastway evaded taxes of crores. There are 8,000 cable operators in Punjab — 6,000 directly under Fastway and 1,500 indirectly. But the company declares just 1,500… There are over 80 lakh TV connections, but it shows 1.25 lakh. It evaded sales tax on set-top boxes, gave no security refunds, and only 150 of the operators paid entertainment tax.”

He then claimed that Fastway had “bullied Reliance Communications, which was laying cables for 4G services, to lay its cable too, for free”. A company has to shell out Rs 500 for every metre of roadcutting, and Rs 1,000 for every manhole, he said. “But Fastway paid nothing.”

“We will uproot their network,” he said. “We have served them notices for taxes.”

AAP SUPPORTS SIDHU

AAP MLA Kanwar Sandhu, who as a TV channel editor had made allegations of “bullying” by the cable network, came out in support. “I’d sought CBI inquiry into the cable mafia. I had also written to Union minister Arun Jaitley. Rising above party lines, I support Sidhu for a policy to regulate the cable business.”

WHAT FASTWAY SAYS

In a statement, Fastway said operators and the company are separate entities. “The company has nowhere and never declared that it has only 1.25 lakh connections. All connections/subscribers are declared with regulatory authority TRAI. The company is regular in paying service tax.”

It added that of the 10,500 km of underground cable, “FW has taken 6,500 km on lease from companies such as Connect, Airtel, BSNL and Reliance Communications. FW owns the balance 4,000 km… Charges have regularly been deposited.”

As row with Cong reigns, SAD steals AAP’s thunder

HANDIGARH: Politics was out in all its conflicting hues in the Punjab assembly session that concluded on Friday. Turbans were tossed, MLAs manhandled, and at least two were hospitalised — it appeared that the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) was fighting a direct war with the Congress.

KESHAV SINGH/HTBLACK ROBE PROTEST: (From left) Three non­Sikh MLAs — BJP’s Som Parkash and Arun Narang, and SAD’s NK Sharma — wear ‘patka’ and turban to express solidarity in protest with SAD chief Sukhbir Badal and others, at the Vidhan Sabha complex in Chandigarh on Friday.Then, the SAD-BJP stood up, by the AAP’s side, made as much (if not more) noise, and managed to make its way into mindspace and headlines that the principal opposition party would have grabbed solo.

From providing “shield” to AAP MLAs in forcibly entering the House after they were suspended on Thursday, to escalating the issue with former CM Parkash Singh Badal’s hospital visit, the SAD led by Sukhbir Singh Badal used its experience.

It appeared ironic, yet symbolic of what happened, when Sukhbir got three top men of the AAP — HS Phoolka, who is leader of the opposition, journalist-turned-MLA Kanwar Sandhu, and Punjab unit co-president Aman Arora — to accompany him in his car to visit the AAP MLAs. Bikram Singh Majithia, whom the rookie party had promised to jail if it had come to power, was driving. The stated common issue was the “pride of the turban and Sikh Panth”.

Within the AAP too, there are conflicting voices. “Before the polls, we were terming Majithia responsible for the drug menace,” reminded an AAP MLA outside the House, “But our leaders sat in a car driven by him. It was wrong to use SAD MLAs as shield to re-enter the House too. A trap was laid, and we fell into it.”

On Friday, when AAP leaders held a mock session after boycotting the proceedings, MLA Sukhpal Khaira repeatedly said in his speech that the SAD was “equally responsible” for woes of Punjab. “Our fight with the SAD will continue to be the same as it was.”

Phoolka later claimed, “It was the AAP’s trap against the SAD in which they fell! The Shiromani Gurdwara Parabandhak Committee and the Akal Takht would not have issued notices to the speaker against the tossing of turbans. The SAD did it for us as it has a say in these organisations.”

Sukhbir, when asked what led to supporting the AAP, said, “It was an issues of Sikh pride… If Congress MLAs had met with the same treatment, we would have done this for them as well.” The SAD’s strategy to hold protest on Friday, too, was relatively more organised, as the party’s MLAs wore black robes and even the non-Sikh MLAs wore turbans.

No ‘sand’, yet Cong on slippery ground

Govt escapes attack on mining auctions but faces firing from double­barrel Opposition

FOR FIRST TIME, A WOMAN ASSEMBLY STAFFER LODGED MOLESTATION PLAINT AGAINST AN MLA

CHANDIGARH: It is not just a numbers game. Even with nearly two-thirds majority in the Punjab assembly, the Congress was fearing its maiden budget session to be a washout over sand mining controversy that had embroiled one of its nine ministers in just two months of coming to power.

So the party had planned its strategy well — keep the enemy divided and be on the offensive from the first day. The Congress was waiting for the right time to strike at the AAP’s firebrand leader Sukhpal Khaira who was leading the mining war against his old-time rival, Punjab irrigation and power minister Rana Gurjit Singh whose name had surfaced in the mining row. And Khaira served it on a platter by live streaming a video of jostling Congress-Akali MLAs on Facebook and inviting a suspension from the assembly.

A day before him, the AAP’s ally Lok Insaaf Party’s Simarjeet Bains, too, had managed to get a suspension from the session. With a “sympathetic” speaker in Rana KP Singh, the government was on a roll.

Khaira and Bains were out and no one from the AAP was questioning it. The Badal clan was keeping out on its own — former chief minister Parkash Singh Badal, his son and SAD president Sukhbir Badal and the latter’s brother-in-law Bikram Singh Majithia — gave the debate on governor’s address a miss.

When the party tried to corner the government on farm debt waiver, CM Captain Amarinder Singh had his ammunition on sand mining stakes of Akali leaders ready. All he had to do was wave a “list” in the House.

UNEXPECTED BONDING

During the budget debate, too, Sukhbir-Majithia kept a low profile and AAP almost seemed like an ally. But simmering discontent between Bains and AAP’s legislature party leader HS Phoolka over their suspensions was threatening to boil over. The party was also getting divided in the Phoolka versus Khaira war.

Sukhbir, too, party sources said, was banking on Khaira to lead the mining attack. But he realised it was advantage Congress in their battle of one-upmanship with the AAP. So before his estranged cousin, finance minister Manpreet Badal, could score some brownie points in his concluding speech on budget on Thursday, he threw his lot behind AAP when it protested speaker’s diktat of not allowing Sukhpal and Bains entry into the assembly. An “ailing” former CM Badal too came into the play, paying a visit to hurt AAP MLAs at the hospital.

But the bonding happened over tossing of turbans and trading of charges and counter charges between AAP MLAs against the assembly marshals. In power, the Congress is not as tolerant to the liberties it took as Opposition when it too drove roughshod over assembly staff, who are sitting ducks whenever any party’s MLAs decide to go on a rampage.

Punjab voted for change. It seems to have got one. For the first time, a woman assembly staffer has lodged a complaint of “molestation” against an MLA and two of the AAP’s legislators have lodged cases for assault against assembly marshals and were hospitalised.

Ideologically as different as chalk and cheese, the AAP and SAD may not be able to hold hands for long. The AAP had dubbed Congress of being “in cahoots” with the Akalis and the Akalis had called AAP the B-team of Congress.

The Congress is relieved the “sandstorm” has blown over, for now. But the ground beneath its feet remains slippery.

Punjab govt transfers 31 IAS, 19 PCS officers

CHANDIGARH: Punjab government on Friday transferred 31 Indian Administrative Service (IAS) and 19 Punjab Civil Service (PCS) officers with immediate effect.

Himmat Singh has been given the additional charge of special chief secretary, food processing. DP Reddy has been given the additional charge of additional chief secretary (ACS), cooperation. G Vajralingam has been posted as ACS, technical education and industrial training, whereas SK Sandhu is now ACS, higher education and languages, as per orders issued at night. Viswajeet Khanna is ACS, social security and development of women and children.

Roshan Sunkaria goes as principal secretary, science and technology and environment, whereas Kirpa Shankar Saroj has been posted as principal secretary, general administration and coordination. Vijoy Kumar Singh has been given the additional charge of principal secretary, irrigation. Anurag Verma is now secretary, rural development and panchayats, whereas Rakesh Kumar Verma has been posted as secretary, industries and commerce. JM Balamurugan has been posted as secretary, sports and youth services, with additional charge of secretary, personnel. Jaspreet Talwar is now secretary, water supply and sanitation. Krishan Kumar is the new secretary, school education, and in addition secretary, employment generation and training. Kahan Singh Pannu has been posted as secretary, revenue.

Zirakpur, Kharar sans fire station; Mohali lacks in men, material

10 YEARS UNDER SAS NAGAR DISTRICT To tackle fire incidents in Kharar, Kurali, fire tenders are rushed from SAS Nagar station

Modern fire tenders is the need of the hour. I will raise the issue with Punjab government. GURPREET KAUR SAPRA, deputy commissioner, SAS Nagar

SAS NAGAR: About ten years ago, Kharar, Kurali, Zirakpur and Dera Bassi were brought under SAS Nagar district but when it comes to providing an essential facility like fire services, Zirakpur and Kharar have had no fire station units and have been forced to take the fire emergency services from SAS Nagar and Dera Bassi stations.

In Dera Bassi, there are four fire tenders but no hydraulic platform. Municipal Council president, Zirakpur, Kulwinder Singh Sohi said, “Fire station was needed but we have inadequate funds to manage it.”

SAS Nagar deputy commissioner Gurpreet Sapra said, “It is required because of immense congestion. The modern fire tenders should be taken as it can easily be moved in the congested areas . I will take up the issue with state government.”

COMPROMISING ON RESPONSE TIME

Even in the case of fire in Kharar or Kurali, fire tenders are rushed from the SAS Nagar fire station. The stipulated response time is seven minutes but the distance makes it impossible for the firefighters to meet the deadline. An official from Kharar council told that around four years ago the council had made a final proposal for the fire unit but was dropped at last moment.

An official said that fire station required a well-trained staff, vehicles that cost around ₹30 lakh and also high maintenance, that’s why MC was not putting efforts in this project.

‘SHORT ON FIRE SAFETY MEASURES’

President of resident welfare association, Kharar, Prithviraj Shukla said fire safety measures need to be adopted. In SAS Nagar, fire station has just 14 firefighters who function round the clock. Out of the total, only four are confirmed. The required strength at the fire station is 44 but usually, there is five personnel, including a telephone operator, on duty. Only four staff members are provided with uniforms while the others are on contract.

Moreover, the firefighters are not provided with any safety equipment or dress. They have to function without mask and fire safety suits, which are essential under the relevant rules and guidelines. In SAS Nagar, the fire station has one hydraulic platform and fire vehicle has the capacity to deal with the multiple stories up to 15 while they have nine fire brigade vehicles.

SAS Nagar has 994,628 population as per 2011 census and has a maximum number of multi-storey building in the state. Meanwhile, the whole district has one hydraulic platform fire vehicle.

 

Privilege motion against Sukhbir Badal passed

Privilege motion against Sukhbir Badal passed
Former Deputy CM Sukhbir Singh Badal and other SAD-BJP MLAs wear black robes during a press conference in the Vidhan Sabha on Friday. Tribune photo: Manoj Mahajan

Ruchika M Khanna

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, June 23

The Vidhan Sabha today passed a privilege motion against SAD chief Sukhbir Singh Badal, even as Akali-BJP MLAs continued their protest against Speaker Rana KP Singh over his allegedly biased conduct yesterday.The motion was moved by Parliamentary Affairs Minister Brahm Mohindra, alleging that Sukhbir had used derogatory language against the Speaker yesterday. It was unanimously passed by the House in the absence of all Opposition MLAs, who had walked out earlier.Sukhbir led his MLAs to the Governor later in the evening, demanding action against the Speaker for ordering the use of force against MLAs, the tossing of turbans of Gursikh legislators and the manhandling of women MLAs by the watch and ward staff. They also handed over a memorandum to the Governor.

Short-lived bonhomie

Yesterday’s bonhomie between SAD-BJP and AAP MLAs was missing today, with Leader of the Opposition HS Phoolka calling the Akalis corrupt and Kanwar Sandhu welcoming the expose of the cable mafia. Sukhbir later said that he had taken up the case of AAP MLAs yesterday as he was upset at the use of force on elected representatives.The alliance’s Hindu MLAs — Dr Sukhwinder Sukhi, NK Sharma, Pawan Kumar Tinu and Som Parkash — too wore turbans today.Tinu said this was a gesture in defiance of the “anti-Sikh” Congress government.

Shot in the arm for Punjab

The budget proposal to cut stamp duty rates is being seen as a life-saver for the realty sector

Geetu Vaid

The first budget presented by the Congress government in Punjab has brought happy tidings for the tottering realty sector in the state. A proposed cut of three per cent in stamp duty will serve as a shot in the arm for the sector that has been plagued by low sales, delays and a significant price correction in the state.

The 9 per cent stamp duty in urban centres, which was on the higher side, was the main reason that made a large number of owners defer getting the registries of their properties. As a result the state coffers were also denied the revenue earned in the form of stamp duty. Higher stamp duty also led to registries being done on a lower value than what was paid actually to the seller as the buyers wanted to save some money. This meant an increased percentage of cash component (black money) in property deals. “One direct consequence of  lowering of stamp duty will be that more properties will now be registered at the actual sale amount, which is a healthy trend for the realty market,” said Dipin Preet Singh, Director of Mohali-based Westcoast Investment Solutions. A large number of buyers who had purchased apartments in projects by different developers in the state had not got their properties registered after taking the possessions because of the high stamp duty rate.

In order to boost affordable housing, Minister for Housing & Urban Poverty Alleviation M Venkaiah Naidu had urged state governments to reduce stamp duty a couple of months ago. Punjab is one of the few states that have responded positively.

The move has got a positive response from industry mavens also. “As such, the stamp duty in Punjab was on the higher side as in most of the other states it currently ranges between 4 and 7 per cent. With the budget announcement it is now on par with other states. This  move  will reduce the purchasing cost for end users and will go a long way in achieving government’s mission of Housing for All by 2022”, said Rohtas Goel, CMD, Omaxe Ltd.

Echoing a similar sentiment Tejinder Pal Setia, Chairman, Mona Townships Pvt Ltd., said, “The state government should be complimented for presenting a budget which has addressed the concerns of the real estate industry. The decision to reduce stamp duty for urban areas bringing it on a par with that in the rural areas will work to the advantage of buyers, who will now be able to save Rs75,000 on a registry of Rs 25 lakh”.

Terming it as another step towards creating a positive eco-system for end users an official spokesperson of Emaar India group said, “The stamp duty reduction, along with implementation of RERA, will help in improving buying considerations, which will lift mood in the subdued realty sector; especially for organised players.”

Congress government is generally seen as a real-estate friendly one in the state and with such moves the stakeholders are now expecting better days for real estate growth in the state. “The reduction in ownership transfer fees for plots and houses is also a step in the right direction. The move to formulate the NRI Property Safeguard Act and appoint an ombudsman to protect NRI properties will encourage more and more Indians settled overseas to invest in Punjab”, added Setia.

“This rate cut which has been proposed only for one year will inspire a large number of such owners to get the registries done.  This way the falling graph of revenue earned by the state from this source will also improve. Thus, it is a win-win move for the buyers, developers as well as the state government”, added Dipin Preet.

 


Deepening crisis in Kashmir Onus on the Centre

Deepening crisis in Kashmir

IN less than 24 hours after the ban on social media was lifted in Kashmir, the government felt constrained to reimpose it on Saturday, following the killing of Sabzar Bhat, the closest aide of the much-talked about militant “commander” Burhan Wani, whose death in an encounter last year rocked the Valley for almost five months. Fresh violence, protests and clashes swept parts of the Valley on Saturday. The killing of Sabzar and one other militant in Tral over-shadowed the killing of six infiltrating terrorists at the Line of Control. There is no visible respite from the cycle of violence.  And the mood has soured up again, despite a realisation that another spell of prolonged agitation would not alter the basic parameters. The 2016 unrest crippled Kashmir’s economy and education system; and the Kashmiris stare at nothingness after having lost more than 90 lives and so many working days. This time, it may not be as long and intense phase of clashes as in 2016 because the restraint and effectiveness mantra is at play.  But the instantaneous protests on Saturday should discourage all those who were hoping for  or advocating a “Ramzan ceasefire”.These violent interruptions have dealt a blow to an incipient dialogue process. Two sets of dialogue-makers — one led by Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyer  and another by former BJP minister Yashwant Sinha — have cracked the  walls as they met  separatist  leaders  apart from other stakeholders. Their outreach sent a message that civil society groups in the country were concerned over Kashmir and cared for the people in  the Valley. That, however, did not change the mind of militants and radical Islamists who remain firm in their anti-India ideology. The situation in the streets remains volatile. No one seems to be having a clue how to break out of this logjam. The state government has run out of imagination — and, perhaps, also out of political will. The Centre alone can step in with a bold and positive initiative. But, unfortunately, that for now seems to be a forlorn hope.


Mob murders Kashmir cop in heart of Srinagar

DSP beaten to death outside mosque, 2 suspects arrested

A senior police officer was stripped and beaten to death by a mob after an altercation outside Jamia Masjid in Jammu and Kashmir’s capital Srinagar on Thursday night, officials said on Friday.

WASEEM ANDRABI/HTJ&K CM Mehbooba Mufti lays a wreath on the coffin of Mohammed Ayoub Pandith (left) in Srinagar on Friday.

The officer has been identified as a local deputy superintendent of police Mohammed Ayoub Pandith. He was working with the security wing of the Jammu and Kashmir police. “Another police officer sacrificed his life in line of duty. Dy SP Mohammed Ayoub Pandith of Security attacked and beaten to death by a mob at Nowhatta last night,” the police said in a statement.

Two persons have been arrested in connection with the lynching so far and a third has been identified.

Director general of police SP Vaid told the Hindustan Times that the officer was checking the access control in the area following a congregation. “All of them (involved in lynching of the officer) will face the law,” Vaid told reporters on sidelines of the wreath laying ceremony of slain officer at district police lines here.

“When he came out after checking access control in the area, he was surrounded by some miscreants who started manhandling him and asking for his identification. Initial investigation revealed that there was an altercation and the officer fired to get away from the mob. He was, however, overpowered and killed near Bata Chowk in Nowhatta area,” he added.

Bata Chowk is in the vicinity of Jama Masjid where thousands of people had gathered for nightlong congregational prayers at the mosque in the old city late on Thursday evening. Eyewitnesses said three people were injured in the firing.

News agency Press Trust of India reported a group of people had earlier spotted the policeman taking photographs outside the mosque. When they tried to catch him, he allegedly pulled out his pistol and fired shots that injured three people, it said.

Reports said Pandith’s security guards ran away after they found the mob too large to be handled. The policeman was allegedly stripped before killing him. Locals also destroyed police pickets in the area later.

Pandith, who belonged to Nowpora area, had been posted there for quite some time and many locals who regularly visited knew him.


Army: Relentless ops on to foil Pak terror bids

Tribune News Service

Jammu, May 27

The Army has termed the recent killing of militants on the Line of Control (LoC) and in hinterland as “relentless operations by security forces to thwart desperate attempts by Pakistan to boost terror activities in J&K.”This comes on a day when Hizbul Mujahideen’s commander Sabzar Ahmed Bhat was killed during a night-long encounter in the Tral area of south Kashmir.The Army also killed six infiltrators in the Rampur sector on the LoC. A few days ago Defence Minister Arun Jaitley had visited the area and boosted the morale of soldiers.In a statement today, the Northern Command, PRO, said, “Security forces in J&Khave mounted relentless operations to thwart attempts by Pakistan to boost terror activities from across the the Line of Control. In the last 24 hours, 10 heavily-armed intruders and terrorists have been successfully eliminated. In an ongoing counter-infiltration operation on the Line of Control in the Rampur sector, a group of six armed intruders have been intercepted and eliminated.”“In another counter-terrorist operation based on specific intelligence generated from local sources in Tral, south Kashmir, has so far resulted in killing two terrorists. On May 26, a group of heavily-armed intruders of Pakistan’s Border Action Team was successfully intercepted resulting in their killing,” the PRO said.In another operation on May 21, troops in the Naugam sector eliminated four terrorists thereby foiling a major infiltration bid. In all operations, the Indian troops have recovered a large quantity of war-like stores, he added.

NEWS ANALYSIS

Kashmir is in perpetual trouble

Arun Joshi

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, May 27

Kashmir is always waiting to erupt and it just needs a spark. The killing of Sabzar Bhat, believed to be the successor to Burhan Wani whose death last year had sent tremors across the Valley, played out some flashback scenes of 2016 on Saturday, though at a miniature level to show that the place and the people are not at rest.The efforts of the government to keep the situation calm did not withstand the test that came after the killing of Sabzar Bhat and one more militant Faizan in Tral on Saturday. Spontaneous protests and the usual use of force, showed that nothing had changed. The contingency plans were executed after the killing of militants. The anticipation part was missing as was in the case of Burhan Wani in July last year even after the Valley suffered an incalculable damage in the unrest that set new precedents in protests.Today, Kashmir may not be standing at the threshold of the disaster of last year because of the fatigue factor, yet the fact cannot be ignored that Kashmir did wail the death and prepared obligingly to observe the shutdown call by the separatists. Kashmir is not afraid of the separatists as they have reconciled to the fatalities of the situation, but they do not want to give an impression to the world that they would let the militants die unmourned.“Sabzar was not a match to Burhan, who had gained popularity through social media, but his being the aide of the high-profile militant who was described by Pakistan as a martyr and his name broadcast at the United Nations General Assembly last year, was enough of a reason for hundreds of militants to throng his village,” said Gulam Rasool Bhat, hailing from Tral. “It should serve as an eye-opener to the Government of India to know where sympathies of the people lay.”Two factors weigh with the people after such incidents: one, they feel that it is their duty to demonstrate their sympathies for militants because the “movement for azadi” is work in progress, and, secondly, they want to stay away from the trouble as much as possible. No driver is willing to risk his vehicle to be smashed by stones, and the showroom owners are more than cautious. They shutter their establishments at the first signs of trouble.It brings out the fact that they are not convinced that security personnel can save them from any trouble. That is where the faith in the system is getting eroded, and the government is shaking uncontrollably. That is where the problem lies. Security forces cannot be buffer in such situation when the politicians abdicate their responsibility and cocoon themselves in seclusion.

 


Army-ultras face-off close to Myanmar border

Tribune News Service Guwahati, June 21 Heavy gun battle ensued between the Army and a group of unidentified insurgents at Totak Chingnyu in Mon district of Nagaland bordering Myanmar on Tuesday night and subsequent search operation for ultras continued till Wednesday morning. The insurgents were suspected to have fled to the jungle. The Army said the firefight started when Army launched a search operation in the area on the basis of inputs about movement of insurgents. Noticing the movement, the army challenged them and the insurgents opened fire. Faced with heavy retaliation from the Army, the ultras fled to the jungle. The Army then launched a search operation in the area and it was called off on Wednesday morning. Mon district of Nagaland is a hotbed of insurgents from Nagaland, Assam and Manipur which use the route to travel to their base in Myanmar besides indulging in criminal activities like extortion in the area. –

See more at: http://www.tribuneindia.com/news/nation/army-ultras-face-off-close-to-myanmar-border/425535.html#sthash.84Z20CE2.dpuf


Opinion: Army Chief Bipin Rawat should know that India is not prepared for a two-front war

Opinion: Army Chief Bipin Rawat should know that India is not prepared for a two-front war

Last Saturdy, Chief of Army Staff Bipin Rawat declared in an interview to the news agency ANI that India was now prepared for a “two-and-a-half front war”. By this, he meant that India was capable of fighting a war with China and Pakistan simultaneously, while also taking on internal security duties in Kashmir.

There was just one problem with his assertion: the facts on the ground do not support Rawat. Even his counterpart in the Indian Air Force is not so sure. Just a little over a year ago, Chief of Air Staff Air Marshal BS Dhanoa, who was the vice chief at that time, said that the IAF fleet could not handle a two-front conflict. At a press conference, he had said: “Our numbers are not adequate to fully execute an air campaign in a two-front scenario”.

Modern conflict has made it clear that air power, and not land forces, generally shape the outcome of battles. If the IAF chief is clear that he does not have the fighter squadrons to fight on two fronts simultaneously, why did Rawat make such an assertion? This question is even more important given that even the Army, which Rawat commands, is far from fit to fight on a single front, let alone two or two-and-a-half fronts at the same time.

An obsolete Army

In March 2012, Chief of Army Staff General VK Singh wrote to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to apprise him of the Army’s woeful preparedness in the event of a war. Singh wrote that the Army’s tanks were outdated and running out of ammunition, air defence was obsolete, and the infantry was short of critical weapons.

In February, newspapers reported that India had decided to make “urgent purchases” to make up critical deficiencies in its defence preparedness. Reports suggested that the Modi government had cleared purchases worth Rs 20,000 crore to help the Indian military “undertake at least 10 days of ‘intense fighting’ without worrying about ammunition, spares and other reserves”. However, much of the equipment listed for this urgent purchase – tank ammunition, artillery guns, assault rifles –was the same as those Singh listed in his 2012 letter to the prime minister. Clearly, in the four years since that letter, the pace of upgrading and modernising the Indian Army’s weapons has been far from desirable.

Also, if the military needed urgent purchases to just fight an “intense war for 10 days” in February is there any truth in Rawat’s assertion made four months later? As per established practice, the Indian military should hold enough reserves to fight for 40 days. With emergency purchases being made to undertake just 10 days of “intense fighting” what was the reality?

The fact is that while India’s military equipment is ageing rapidly, replacements are just not keeping pace. The majority of its infantry soldiers still use the outdated Indian Small Arms System, or INSAS, rifle, considered to be unreliable because of frequent jamming and an outdated design. There were reports last year that the government had cleared the purchase of 185,000 modern assault rifles, but no tenders have been issued so far.

Similarly, the Army’s artillery wing has not been modernised since the Bofors gun was inducted in the 1980s. In 1999, after the Kargil War, the Army drew up ambitious plans to induct nearly 3,500 new artillery guns of various capacities and capabilities in the next “15 to 20 years” under the Field Artillery Rationalisation Plan. The first two light artillery guns landed in India only this month. Reality, clearly, is much harsher than an assertion.

All this means that structurally, the Army is in no better position than where it was during the Kargil war when India had to make emergency purchases of artillery shells from Israel. After the war, a committee was set up to recommend major restructuring by the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government. But most of the key restructuring recommendations, like appointing a Chief of Defence Staff, joint theatre commands, an integrated Ministry of Defence, are yet to be implemented.

Credit: PTI
Credit: PTI

A depleted force

The Air Force is in no better shape. It is authorised to have 42 combat squadrons as per the 11th plan, and is officially down to 33. Some senior Air Force officers say that the actual squadron strength may be less than that. This is so because the bulk of the Air Force fleet at present comprises the ageing MiG-21 aircraft, which are nearly 230 in number, and are slated to be eased out in the next 10 years. These aircraft continue to be deployed despite having crossed their maximum years of service due to India’s inability to replace them. In 2015, India decided to cancel a contract for 126 French Rafale aircraft, and instead decided to buy just 36. With the indigenous Tejas Light Combat Aircraft failing to find favour with the Indian Air Force, it continues to stare at a massive shortfall of aircraft.

As far as India’s naval defences are concerned, the Indian Navy, which is authorised over 190 sea-going vessels, is also struggling to maintain force levels. Its ambitious Project 75 submarine programme ­– under which six Scorpene-class submarines are being built by Mazagon Dock Limited in Mumbai – is almost five years behind schedule, and the submarines are nowhere near completion. In sharp contrast, the Chinese navy has already established a major presence in the neighbourhood, and is reported to have fielded nearly 12 naval vessels in the Indian Ocean according to Indian intelligence estimates.

India’s Special Forces are in no better shape. As the nature of warfare changes, the Special Forces are playing a leading role in all conflicts. Several recommendations, including by the Naresh Chandra Task Force set up by the previous Manmohan Singh-led government, have been made in the past to set up a joint Special Forces Command. But it has been stymied due to lack of consensus among the three services. All this is affecting India’s ability to operate in modern conflicts.

Rawat may believe that the Indian military is ready, but the facts on ground are a stark reminder that reality is very different from populist claims.