Sunday 28 July 2013

Celina Jaitly's fight for LGBT rights goes to United Nations - India

28  july  2013

Celina Jaitly's fight for LGBT rights goes to United Nations

Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

Celina Jaitly's fight for LGBT rights goes to United Nations

The actress will support a year-long UN campaign for the LGBT community
Bollywood actress Celina Jaitly, a prominent voice for the rights of gays and lesbians in the country, will support Free & Equal, the United Nation's (UN) year-long campaign for equality and justice for people practising alternate sexuality. She hopes to create awareness about the problems faced by the LGBT community.

A press release from the United Nations Human Rights names Celina along with pop star Ricky Martin, and Brazilian singer Daniela Mercury who have taken the pledge to support the campaign.

The Free & Equal campaign aims to raise awareness about homophobic and transphobic violence and discrimination, and encourage greater respect for the rights of LGBT people.

When contacted in Singapore, Celina said: "I have spent half of my life fighting for the cause and finally with the backing of United Nations Human Rights and with the help of people I respect and love, I can take the campaign to another level. To get a platform like this to reach out to people across the world is a dream come true."

The No Entry fame actress feels there is a long way to go before we come anywhere close to realising equality for the LGBT community in India.

"In India, there is only lip service for them. Equality is a basic human right and it cannot be denied to any community. There is a lot violence against the LGBT community across the world. At least in Mumbai they are relatively safer."

For Celina even getting important people to support her cause is impossible.

"A lot of people in the entertainment industry feel that if you support gay rights, you might be considered a part of the gay community. Through the United Nations' campaign I hope to broaden the base of understanding the problems of the LGBT.

"At the moment in India, we only have tolerance, no understanding for the community, and that too in selected enlightened sections of society. I feel mainstream sections are only able to mask their intolerance towards homosexuality. Is that enough?"

Celina recalls with shock and disgust the incident involving the Aligarh Muslim University professor Shrinivas Ramchandra Siras, who was caught on camera making love to a man. He later died under mysterious circumstances.

Wonders Celina: "What was that poor man's fault? That he preferred people of his own sex? It's okay if people prefer not to come out of the closet. But if they do they should not be punished for it.

"Gay people should not be segregated at work places or in social spaces because of their sexual preference. I hope to work towards that through the United Nations initiative."

Right now Celina's prime focus are her twins.

"Until they are two, they need me and I need them too. So I am completely focused on that, though I still need to keep going to Mumbai constantly for my endorsement activities. Once the twins start going to play-school after three months, I'd have a bit more time on hand."

Celina also intends to start producing films from next year.

"But my first production would not have me in the cast," she said.

Saturday 27 July 2013

Telangana tangle: Will resign if Andhra Pradesh is split, Congress ministers to Sonia Gandhi - India

27 july 2013

Telangana tangle: Will resign if Andhra Pradesh is split, Congress ministers to Sonia Gandhi



Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
New Delhi: 
The massive political conundrum for the Congress about creating a new Telangana state was exemplified again today with senior ministers from Andhra Pradesh writing a letter to party president Sonia Gandhi threatening to resign if the state is split. The leaders also met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
Here are 10 big developments so far:
  1. At a meeting yesterday, the Congress president Sonia Gandhi reportedly said the region of Telangana - one of three that makes up Andhra Pradesh - should be turned into a state.
  2. The party knows there will be a backlash within and outside the Congress, but the decision could be politically advantageous ahead of the national election. 15 Congress ministers from the state wrote to Ms Gandhi today threatening to resign over the bifurcation of the state.
  3. The ministers who protested today said the government has "underestimated" the feelings of people from other regions in Andhra Pradesh and asked how a national party can jump to such a decision for short-term electoral gains.
  4. The government's decision may be announced before Parliament meets for the monsoon session on August 5.
  5. In anticipation of a decision to bifurcate the state, three state legislators from the Congress have resigned because they say they want Andhra Pradesh to "remain united."
  6. They have been followed by another 16 from the YSR Congress, which is headed by Jagan Mohan Reddy.
  7. The five-decade struggle for a Telangana state was forced onto the national agenda in 2009 by the Telangana Rashtra Samithi or TRS, headed by K Chandrasekhara Rao. He fasted for 10 days, triggering huge rallies of support.
  8. In response, in December 2009, in a surprise announcement, the Centre said it was sanctioning statehood. But within days, the government backtracked as violent protests erupted in the other two regions - Coastal Andhra Pradesh and Rayalaseema
  9. At the heart of the tug-of-war is Hyderabad, and its robust IT-driven economy. Telangana wants to claim Hyderabad as its state capital. Leaders of the other two regions say they cannot afford to lose the employment and investment opportunities invested in the city. As a compromise, the Centre is reportedly in favour of making Hyderabad a shared capital between the new and old state for the next five or 10 years.
  10. Andhra Pradesh has 42 Lok Sabha seats. The Centre reportedly wants to move two districts from Rayalaseema to Telangana. This will divide the seats equally between the new state and the old, and also check the growing popularity of Jagan Mohan Reddy and the YSR Congress. Mr Reddy's stronghold lies in Rayalaseema. By carving it up, the Congress hopes to divide his supporters.

Monday 22 July 2013

Delhi rain nightmare: Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit leaves it to God - India

22  july  2013

Delhi rain nightmare: Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit leaves it to God


New DelhiAfter four hours of rain brought chaos to the streets of Delhi on Saturday, once again exposing the lack of preparedness among civic bodies, Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit has come out with a curious solution - pray to God.

"Pray to god. Everything is handled by the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) and I am not going to get involved in this," Ms Dikshit said today, when asked about the problems the people of Delhi have to face every time it rains.

Saturday's rain flooded the streets of Delhi in a matter of minutes, bringing traffic to a slow crawl in major areas and leaving people, even schoolchildren wading in waist-deep water in some parts of the capital. Clogged drains and lack of enough inlets for the rainwater added to the nightmare.

A comparison of images from Saturday and a similar spell of rain and flooding in the 1980s proved that nothing had changed in three decades, despite crores of rupees spent by civic bodies.

Public anger sparked a blame-game between the multiple civic agencies in the capital, but the chief minister seems to have washed her hands off the mess and left it to the gods.

Sunday 21 July 2013

US drops bombs on Australia's Great Barrier Reef Marine Park - India

21  july  2013

US drops bombs on Australia's Great Barrier Reef Marine Park

US drops bombs on Australia's Great Barrier Reef Marine Park

Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

Canberra: Two US fighter jets have dropped four unarmed bombs in Australia's Great Barrier Reef Marine Park when a training exercise went wrong.

The US 7th Fleet said in a statement yesterday that the two AV-8B Harrier jets launched from an aircraft carrier each jettisoned an inert bomb and an unarmed explosive bomb in the World Heritage-listed marine park off Queensland state on Tuesday.

The navy says the four bombs were dropped in a channel away from coral to minimize possible damage to the reef. None exploded.

The jets had intended to drop the ordnances on an island bombing range but aborted the mission when controllers reported the area was not clear of hazards.

The pilots conducted the emergency jettison because they could not land with their bomb load.

Saturday 13 July 2013

Too many areas of conflict of interests: Bedi - India

13  july  2013

Plain speak: Bishan Singh Bedi delivers the Nani Palkhivala Memorial Lecture. Photo: S.S. Kumar

Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
The Hindu Plain speak: Bishan Singh Bedi delivers the Nani Palkhivala Memorial Lecture. Photo: S.S. Kumar
Indian spin legend Bishan Singh Bedi stressed integrity in the Nani Palkhivala Memorial Lecture here on Saturday.

The former India captain and left-arm spinner revealed, “When I once asked Sir Donald Bradman if he could tell me in one word what he would like to be remembered for most, he answered ‘Integrity.’ He had this quality both as a cricketer and a cricket administrator.”

The 66-year-old Bedi, who claimed 266 wickets at 28.71 from 67 Tests, said, “today you see too many areas of conflict of interests among both administrators and players.”
Bedi added, “a player should be a good student of the game. And an administrator should be a good servant of the game. Cricket, the game, is the only boss. You cannot boss over the boss.”

Talking about the glitz and glamour of franchise based cricket, Bedi said, “cricket in itself is entertainment. You do not need induced entertainment in the game. In fact, cricket was invented in England to enable people overcome a period of depression.”

Dwelling on match and spot fixing, he noted, “we don’t know how it takes place but we know it happens. I think the people from my tribe, the players, are as responsible for it as the bookies.”
Bedi observed, “the cricketers should own up responsibility for several things harming the game. Take ball tampering for instance.”
He came down heavily on ICC for being ‘soft’ on the issue of ‘chucking’. “It is trying to gag the umpires and the players. You do not need rocket science to see whether somebody is bowling with an illegal action or not.”
The former spin ace said, “this is an area where we can do something but we don’t because everyone is turning a blind eye to it. There are so many chuckers who are getting away scot-free in all forms of the game. How can the doosra be a legal delivery? The umpires are not empowered.”
There was a lack of transparency in the present scenario, he felt. “The Sports Ministry wants the BCCI to come under the RTI. But when there is a move to bring the political parties under the RTI, they oppose it together. You cannot have the cake and eat it too. This is where the rot begins.”
The IPL, he said, was taking young cricketers to the ‘saturation point’ too quickly. “There is so much money in it that they lose the fire in their belly to play for the country. The hunger is not there.”
Bedi was critical of over-the-top celebrations in the modern era. “They are just doing what they are supposed to do. The game remains the same, the length of the pitch, the weight of the ball…but so many aspects around the game have changed.”
Later, answering questions, Bedi was unhappy with batsmen who refused to ‘walk’ after an obvious dismissal. “This game is about honesty and uprightness. I have seen Tiger Pataudi once ‘walking’ in England when he thought he was out leg-before. If a batsman has edged it, he should ‘walk’.”
Bedi believed DRS reduced the damage from umpiring errors and was baffled why the BCCI opposed it. “I think it helps the umpires,” he said.
S. Mahalingam, managing trustee, Palkhivala Foundation, welcomed Mr. Bedi and gave an overview of the activities of the Foundation. R. Anand, trustee, introduced the speaker and highlighted his achievements. V. Ranganathan, trustee, proposed a vote of thanks.