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After 37 jihadi arrests in Assam, vigilance stepped up in NE states bordering B’desh

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Pak Intruder
India-Pakistan border. (File Photo: IANS)

After the arrest of 37 jihadi cadres in little over a month in Assam for their alleged links with the Al-Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent and the Ansarul Bangla Team, a Bangladesh-based terror outfit, the northeastern states which share border with Bangladesh have stepped up the vigilance.

Police and intelligence officials in Agartala and Shillong on Friday separately said the strict surveillance over the jihadi activities have further intensified and intelligence inputs between the various security agencies being shared for taking further course of action.

Meghalaya Director-General of Police Lajja Ram Bishnoi said in Shillong that after getting the inputs of jihadi activities in Assam, directions have been given to all the police stations and outposts particularly in those areas having borders with Bangladesh to keep a close watch on the bordering villages.

“Our intelligence officials and police personnel are alert over the jihadi activities,” the police officer told the media.

In Agartala, a senior police officer said that Border Security Force (BSF) troopers and the people of the bordering areas have been alerted to keep a close watch in their respective areas.

The three cadres, who were recently arrested in Tripura for their links with the banned Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), have been subsequently taken to Assam as part of the investigation against the jihadi group.

Intelligence officials found links between these three persons with the four arrested in Bhopal in April for their affiliation to the JMB.

Top central and Tripura intelligence officials interrogated Imran Hussain, 25, an Imam, Abul Kashem 32, a teacher, and Hamid Ali, a farmer, who were arrested from Jatrapur, a village in Sepahijala district of Tripura along India-Bangladesh border.

They were booked under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA).The Investigation Agency filed charge-sheet against eight of the 37 arrested in Assam for alleged links with fundamentalist organisations.

Of the eight, seven are from western Assam’s Barpeta district and one from Tripura.

The Assam government had handed over the cases of “jihadi terror modules” to the NIA after the preliminary investigation.

Four Indian northeastern states of Tripura (856 km), Meghalaya (443 km), Mizoram (318 km) and Assam (263 km) share an 1,880-km border with Bangladesh.

Vast areas of the sensitive borders with Bangladesh remain unfenced.

(The story has been published via a syndicated feed with a modified headline.)

The new navy insignia celebrates Bharat’s naval heritage

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day

PM Modi unveiled the new insignia (flag/emblem) of the Indian Navy that completely sheds colonial baggage. The new insignia is also a tribute to the country’s rich maritime heritage. “Today on September 2, 2022, we have finally discarded a colonial burden”, the PM said in his address while inaugurating the flag while commissioning the INS Vikrant, Bharat’s first indigenous aircraft carrier. The change is in keeping with PM Modi’s vision of decolonizing Bharat as emphasized in his Independence Day speech.

What is the new naval insignia?

The new flag consists of the tricolour in the upper left corner and the navy’s new insignia in the lower right-hand corner. The insignia consists of the national emblem with the national motto satyameva jayate in Devanagari resting on an anchor, and the navy’s motto shan no varunah (be auspicious unto us Varuna) within a blue octagon and a double gold border.

The octagon represents the eight directions and symbolizes good fortune, eternity, and renewal and draws positive energy from all directions. It also shows the Bharatiya navy’s multidirectional reach and multidimensional capabilities. The octagonal shape with the twin golden borders draws inspiration from Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s royal seal.

The evolution of the Indian Navy’s insignia

The naval services date back to the colonial era and were renamed the Royal Indian Navy on October 2, 1934. The first ensign of the Indian Navy carried the UK flag on a blue background and carried the symbol of the UK’s Imperial Legislative Council. The prefix Royal was dropped after the country became a republic on January 26, 1950. The flags of Bharatiya defence forces earlier carried the Union Jack which was replaced with the tricolour after Bharat became a republic.

The naval ensign has been changed four times earlier as well. The flag comprised of the Union Jack and the St. George’s Cross. Even after the Union Jack was replaced with the tricolour, the George’s Cross was retained. The cross was maintained till the third change in 2001 when the Vajpayee government had the George’s Cross removed. In 2001, the insignia comprised of the tricolour, and the national emblem resting on an anchor.

insignia

The fourth change took place in 2004 when the Sonia Gandhi-controlled Manmohan Singh government returned to power. The St. George’s Cross was brought back with the national emblem engraved inside the cross.

The St. George’s Cross

The St George’s Cross is a Red Cross on a white background that not only has colonial origins but also deep Christian roots. It is named after Christian Saint George who was a crusader in the third crusade.  

Earlier, the Christian hymn ‘Abide With Me’ played during the Beating the Retreat ceremony was dropped and replaced with a suitable Bharatiya tune. The change in insignia is in keeping with Bharatiya military’s policy of bringing decolonization through changes in military band tunes, pre-independence war honours, mess procedures, and emphasis on Bharatiya war heroes in military studies thereby indigenizing the armed forces and ensuring a connection with Bharat’s pre-colonial era.  

Even though it took eight long years for the Modi government to bring the change, it is appreciable that the country is shedding its colonial baggage and taking pride in its civilization. Bharat has a rich maritime heritage and several dynasties have maintained naval fleets.

Bharat’s maritime history

Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj was one of the few emperors to possess a naval fleet. His navy set forth to encounter the Abyssinians under the command of Mainaik Bhandari and one ‘Daryasarang’ identified by his title alone. In the course of arranging safe anchorages for his navy, Raje strengthened several maritime forts along the Konkan coast. 

Mauryas, Pallavas, Cholas, Cheras, Vatapi Chalukyas, and Palas were some other dynasties that had well-developed navies. Raja Bhoja’s Yuktikalpataru is an ancient Bharatiya work that deals with the subject of shipping in detail. Arthashastra mentions large boats with a captain, steersman and servants to hold sickle and ropes and pour out the water.

The naval legacy of Bharat requires a detailed series in itself but suffice here to say that several dynasties have contributed to the country’s rich maritime heritage.

(Featured Image Source: newsislands.com)    

Hindus under attack: a weekly roundup of hate crimes, persecution, and discrimination against Hindus

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Hindu

Attacks on Hindus and Hindu Dharma, both in Bharat and overseas, are frequent and unrelenting. In many regions of the world, this persecution is like a genocide slowly unfolding before our eyes. For decades, the world has ignored the actual depth and breadth of these attacks, driven by disturbing anti-Hindu bigotry. From murders, forced conversions, land grabs, assault on festivals, desecration of temples and murtis, hate speech, and sexual violence to institutionalized & legal discrimination, Hindus are facing an increasing assault on their very existence along with an unprecedented Hindu hatred.

In this weekly summary for the period from 28 August to 3 September 2022, we hope to provide a snapshot of such crimes and hopefully awaken more people around the world to this human rights crisis:

Bharat

1) A 16-year-old Hindu girl was shot at by stalker Arman Ali near her home in Sangam Vihar, South Delhi. The bullet hit her shoulder and she is being treated in a private hospital’s intensive care unit.

2) The Madras High Court has directed a Hindu petitioner to obtain consent from the local jamaat before installing a Ganesh pandal.

3) Ankita was set on fire by her stalker neighbour Shahrukh Hussain.

4) Another plaintiff in the Shringar Gauri-Gyanvapi mosque dispute case claimed to receive threatening calls from international numbers.

5) In a new grooming case, Vadodara police booked Izhar Kalusha Dewan for blackmailing a Hindu girl using pictures and video of her private parts he had taken during a video. He forced the girl into a physical relationship by threatening to make the pictures and video shot during the call viral.

6) On Saturday (August 27) night, a minor Hindu girl was abducted and gang-raped. The girl was being taken to Bangladesh by her abductors but police chased and managed to recover her near the Bangladesh border. Police have reportedly arrested 4 men – Suleman Ali, Rahim Uddin, Nasir Uddin and Chhair Uddin.

7) A teenager has been arrested in Lucknow for stalking a 14-year-old girl and then holding her hostage near a commercial complex.

8) A woman engineer in Uttar Pradesh’s Mirzapur district has been raped by a contractor named Suhail Khan. The victim is working as a Junior Engineer (JE) in Jal Nigam (Rural), in which the accused works as a contractor. Khan used to call the victim his ‘sister’, and she had been tying rakhi to him for several years.

9) After a 24-days-long investigation, the Nainital police have solved the mystery of Anjali Arya’s disappearance. The police have also arrested her “lover” Mohammad Yameen Ahmed. The accused had killed Anjali by slitting her throat because she was asking him to marry her after their courtship.

10) An SC (Scheduled Caste) man was brutally thrashed by a Muslim mob in Bihar’s Madhubani. As per reports, the man was assaulted on suspicion of theft by Mohammad Akram, Mohammad Munna, and others. The case came to light after its video went viral on social media.

11) Ten Cows of a temple Gaushala in Jalna’s Partur Taluka’s Amba village were electrocuted by Latif Shaikh (Tweet archived here). 6 cows and 4 calves were killed in the heart-wrenching incident that occurred on August 26. The villagers were upset as the incident took place on Bail Pola day and hence, they didn’t celebrate the festival meant to worship and thank the cattle.

12) Days after 17-year-old Ankita’s brutal death at the hands of Shahrukh Hussain, three brothers, Irfan, Irshad, and Israr, have been held for murdering 19-year-old Ankit Gautam. The incident was reported from Padriya Chet Singh village under Ruthauli Police Station, District Basti, Uttar Pradesh, on Friday, August 26.

13) At least 50 Hindu SC (Mahadalit) families from a village in Jharkhand’s Palamu district were attacked and driven out of their homes by members of the Muslim community in the area.

14) The vanvasi (‘tribal’) community in the Tamiya block has filed a complaint against Christian missionaries who have been converting people in the name of “medical treatment.”

Pakistan

Abduction, rape, forced conversion, and marriage of minor Hindu girls are common occurrences in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan. At least 1000 minority girls suffer such sex slavery every year in Sindh province alone. Apart from this, Pakistani Hindus face systemic and institutionalized discrimination and neglect, such as frequent attacks on Hindu temples, demonization of education curriculum, police and judicial antipathy, denial of fundamental rights, and even untouchability.

1) In a shocking incident from Dec 2021 that went virtually unnoticed, an 8-year-old Kavita was brutally gang raped in Umarkot, Sindh province of Pakistan. The rapists scratched her entire face and gouged her eyes. She was taken to the hospital, still bleeding and in critical condition.

2) Arjun Kohli appears to be the latest victim (Tweet archived here) of persecution of minorities in Islamic Pakistan. His dead body was fished out by Mirpurkhas Sindh villagers with Kohli’s hands and feet tied. A neck was found around the neck and there were signs of strangulation as well.

3) A young Hindu girl was gang-raped for 2 days in a flood-hit area of Sindh, Pakistan, on the pretext of being given food.

Bangladesh

Attacks on Hindus in Bangladesh are relentless and designed to gradually cleanse the religious minority from the country. According to a study by Prof. Abul Barakat of Dhaka University, no Hindus will be left in Bangladesh by 2050 due to systemic and institutionalized persecution. Temple desecration, land grabbing, mob attacks after false blasphemy charges, rape/forced conversion of women, and hate speech are some tools used to intimidate and drive Hindus out.

1) Islamists are destroying the livelihood of poor Hindus in Bangladesh.

2) Bhagwan Ganesh murti was vandalized in Chittagong on August 30 (Tweet archived here).

3) Hindu temple and homes were attacked on September 1 in Dhaka’s Nawabganj (Tweet archived here).

Most hate crimes are driven by anti-Hindu bigotry encoded in certain religious teachings and political ideologies. While the anti-Hindu hate in Islamic countries is evident, there is another subtler form of anti-Hindu sentiment within institutions and the public sphere of ostensibly secular states (like India) that provides an enabling environment for Hinduphobia and hate crimes. This subtle, everyday discrimination can be missed unless one studies prevailing laws and patterns. The gradual ban on firecrackers during Diwali is a good example – it might seem pollution-related on the surface, but the double standards at play become apparent when one looks at the larger picture of restrictions on Hindu festivals and the lack of sound reasoning behind the ban.

We request all readers to share other anti-Hindu hate crimes that we might have missed in this period in the comments below or by dropping an email to hindupost.in@gmail.com. We also solicit support in maintaining the Hindu human rights tracker database.

SC brusquely dismisses plea to make Sanskrit national language

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temples

The Supreme Court on Friday refused to entertain a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) seeking a declaration to make Sanskrit the national language of India.

Dismissing the plea, a bench of Justice M.R. Shah and Justice Krishna Murari said the matter is a policy decision that requires an amendment to the Constitution, and cannot be ordered by the court.

“How many cities in India speak Sanskrit? Do you speak Sanskrit? Can you recite one line in Sanskrit or at least translate the prayer in your writ petition to Sanskrit,” the court asked during the hearing.

Filed by Gujarat’s former Additional Secretary, K.G. Vanzara, the Public Interest Litigation (PIL) was seeking the court’s direction to the Centre to notify Sanskrit as a national language.

“India should learn from Israel who in 1948, made Hebrew, considered to be a dead Language for the last 2000 years, along with English as official/national Language of Israel,” his plea read.

(The story has been published via a syndicated feed with a modified headline.)

41% of Black, minority workers in UK suffer racism at work: Study

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About 41 per cent of Black, brown and minority ethnic workers (BME) in the UK say they have “faced racism at work in the last five years”, according to a latest study.

The situation is even more serious among younger people — about 52 per cent of BME workers aged from 25 to 34 reported suffering racism during the same period, according to the study published by the Trades Union Congress (TUC), a federation of the country’s labour unions.

Racist incidents included overhearing racist jokes, being subjected to stereotyping or comments about appearance, receiving racist remarks, or outright bullying and harassment, reports Xinhua news agency.

The study also highlighted the reluctance of workers to report incidents of racist behaviour.

About 44 per cent said they did not report them because they “didn’t believe it would be taken seriously”.

Incidents of racism and discrimination have also had a clear negative impact on BME workers, says the study.

Around a third reported that the most recent incident left them feeling less confident at work (35 per cent), and a similar proportion said it made them feel embarrassed (34 per cent) and had a negative impact on their mental health (31 per cent).

“This report lifts the lid on racism in workplaces in the UK. It shines a light on the enormous scale of structural and institutional discrimination BME workers face,” TUC General Secretary Frances O’Grady said.

(The story has been published via a syndicated feed.)

Vikrant’s commissioning will cement Bharat’s Indo-Pacific thrust

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi will commission Bharat’s first indigenous aircraft carrier Vikrant at Cochin Shipyard. This will indeed mark a historic day. The commissioning of the carrier will dock with celebrations marking 75 years of Bharat’s independence. It will also give wings to the “Atmanirbhar Bharat” doctrine as the largest warship ever built has been designed and developed with homegrown Bharatiya talent and technology.

The 45,000 tonne Vikrant India has been the culmination of active collaboration between the Naval Ship Design Bureau and Cochin Shipyard Limited. The massive ship is 262.5 meters long and 62 meters wide. There are 14 decks, which can accommodate 1700 Naoveers. Capable of achieving 28 knots top speed she is expected to cruise at 18 knots on four LM 2500 gas turbine engines.

The Vikrant has a STOBAR configuration, enabling short take off by planes using ski jump and recover with the help of arrester wires. The ship will be capable of operating 30 fighter aircraft (presently MiG 29K) and a mix of Kamov 31 AEW helicopters, MH 60 R Multi Role helicopters and Dhruv Advanced Light Helicopters (Marine version).

The ship per se has over 75 per cent indigenous content. There are many industries associated with the building of the Carrier, including BEL, BHEL, GRSE, Keltron, Kirloskar, L&T, Wartsila India apart from 100s of MSMEs. Approximately Rs 19000 cr have been ploughing back into Bharat’s economy. This event puts Bharat in the league of six nations in the world that have capability to build aircraft carriers.

Vikrant has number of preliminary tasks to be completed before she joins the fleet for operational deployment. Foremost would be to establish airflow pattern on the flight deck at various speeds of the ship. This is an important parameter for launch of any aircraft/ helicopter from flight deck. The atmospheric air gets deflected by the high rising ski jump and later by the superstructure of the ship. Both these result in variations in wind direction and speed on various spots of flight deck. Post establishment of airflow pattern the helicopter test pilots of the three types of helicopters will carry out launch and recovery trials from various marked spots on the deck. This will assist the ship in marking those spots permanently. Based on data obtained and helicopter operating / handling characteristics, the Standard Operating Procedures will be evolved for generations to follow.

The fixed wing (Mig 29 K) carrier compatibility tests will be more exhaustive and time consuming. The airflow patterns will be fed into shore-based simulator and fly it to derive likely handling characteristics of the aircraft in those conditions. Gradually the test pilots will work out the wire pull out during recovery. For MiG 29K to operate, both launch and recovery aspects are important parameters since it must be right the first time itself given the high speeds involved. The operating data manuals will be produced for all future operations and will work as bible. The ship’s operations team has to be worked up for handling radar interceptions by day and night. One can imagine the tasks ahead. Once the ship has worked up with the aviation units, the fleet will integrate the carrier into a battle group or a task force.

Indian Navy’s operational philosophy is based on concept of Battle Groups centered around an aircraft carrier. Very often it is misunderstood that carrier needs ships for protection, not really. A composite battle group moves as one cohesive fleet of ships and submarines, each unit assigned different stations at large distances. The positioning is such that the battle group exercises sea control in a specific area for a particular timeframe as warranted by tactical situation. The fighters from carrier provide air cover to the fleet against any incoming hostile maritime patrol or fighter strike aircraft. In strike role these fighters also carry out weapon delivery on shores and inland targets in a joint tasking operation.

What will induction of Vikrant alter? A lot. After its induction, the Navy would be in a position to deploy two Carrier Battle Groups, one each on both Eastern and Western Seaboards. Much higher firepower on two sides of Indian peninsula alters the power balance in the Indo Pacific. Chinese aircraft carrier Fujian has taken to sea recently and is one year short of operationalisation. By the time the carrier gets fully operational with its aviation units, one can safely assume that it will be not before end 2024 or early 2025. China’s priority is Taiwan and therefore it doesn’t seem likely that aircraft carrier can be detached to Indian Ocean anytime soon.

On the other hand, the Indian Navy has the skills and concepts of carrier operations of over 60 years and that is a lot. It must not be lost. Carrier projects and provides visible deterrence to an adversary. It also demonstrates the intention of a country that it is ready not only to deter but also exercise the option of using its firepower at a place and time of its choosing. Carrier force is a force in being and warns an adversary by its shear presence.

Bharat is a formidable Quad partner and major player in exercise Malabar. The exercises have become complex with the combined operating procedures for anti- surface and submarine warfare. The fighter and Maritime Patrol aircraft of four nations have achieved interoperability and possibly interchangeability. Therefore, should an adversary have to be engaged in a conflict by the Quad in compliance of its stated charter, the Malabar component can be plugged in at short notice anywhere in the Indo Pacific. That would be most powerful conventional force in the world.

Vikrant’s arrival also indicates that one of the two carriers will always be protecting Bharat’s interests in the IOR while another carrier group is deployed elsewhere in the Indo Pacific. Therefore, Vikrant is reflective of Bharat’s intents in the Indo Pacific. With simultaneous induction of formidable MH 60 R multi role helicopters onboard the Vikrant one is looking at a powerful combination.

Now that we are ‘Atmanirbhar’ in aircraft carrier building, the expertise must be retained by taking quick decision on IAC II (the next indigenous aircraft carrier). It is also important to identify future carrier borne fighter aircraft which will replace the MiG 29 K and operate from both, the Vikrant and IAC II. We should not lose sight of the fact that aircraft carriers are designed centered on specific fighter aircraft and not the other way round. It is always more difficult to find an aircraft which can fit into aircraft carrier than to build a carrier with parameters of a known fighter aircraft.

Bharat is at the cusp of occupying its right position in the redefined world order. A farsighted decision on the type of maritime power that Bharat should possess is need of the time, ability of which the present government under leadership of PM Modi has often demonstrated. A visionary and bold step is called for which will give Bharat the teeth it needs to tackle present and future geopolitical shifts; wherein Bharat has the opportunity to be one of the poles in the impending multipolar world order.

(The story has been published via a syndicated feed with minor edits to conform to HinduPost style-guide.)

Locals demand reopening of Sterlite Copper plant closed after Church-led protests

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Image: Hindustan Times

Nearly 20 people, led by Murugan, Secretary, Pro-Sterlite Foundation, presented a memorandum to S.P, Singh Baghel, Minister of State for Law and Justice; Ashwini Kumar Choubey, Minister of State for Environment, Forest and Climate Change; and Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman demanding the immediate reopening of Sterlite Copper Smelting plant in Thoothukudi, Tamil Nadu.

The Federation, numbering in thousands, consisting of truck owners, truck drivers, raw material suppliers, contractors, women’s self-help groups, and others dependent on the plant, a plea for a quick resolution to reopen the plant. The urgency stemmed from more than 15,000 families losing their livelihood since the plant’s closure. These also include the port workers, lorry drivers, contract labour workers and sole breadwinning women.

“We have been suffering for more than four years since the Sterlite plant’s shutdown, and our livelihoods have been impacted severely,” states the memorandum.

It also added that the closure was due to an “orchestrated agitation by outside people. We have therefore formed a Pro-Sterlite Plant Federation to prove that the propaganda and misinformation by the anti-Sterlite groups in Thoothukudi are not true”.

The protesters also met the secretaries in the Ministry of Finance, including the cabinet and state ministers, the cabinet and state minister in the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change and the cabinet and state minister of the Minister of Law and Justice.

The pro-Sterlite protesters from Pandarampatti, Sankaraperi, Meelavittan, Madathur, Kummareddiarpuram, Naduvakurichi, Rajavinkovil, Puurpandiapuram, Sillanatham villages in Tamil Nadu had taken to the streets raising slogans in favour of the copper smelting plant after Sterlite Copper invited an Expression of Interest (EOI) from potential buyers for its contentious Thoothukudi unit.

The EOI was published in national and regional papers on June 2022.

Several petitions have been submitted to the Chief Ministers and state offices requesting the reopening of the plant, a significant employment generator in the region before it was closed on charges of environmental pollution.

“The copper plant was the prime source of income for our family. After its closure, we have struggled to find a decent job in the local area. We have to travel far in search of work. Even then, it is difficult for us to make ends meet as the cost of surviving in big cities is high, and we are paid bare minimum wages,” said one of the protesters

With a yearly capacity of producing 4 lakh tonnes of copper, the Vedanta-owned Thoothukudi plant contributed 40 per cent of the country’s demand for refined copper. Post closure of this unit, Bharat’s copper export plunged by 90 per cent, and it became an importer of copper for the first time in 18 years. The country is now importing $2 billion worth of copper and bearing an export loss of over $1.5 billion, resulting in an overall loss of 20,000 crore to the economy.

Not only this, but due to the widespread application of copper and its by-product in diverse industries, the plant’s shutdown has crippled several other small and large-scale enterprises, creating a massive gap between demand and supply of the commodity. Sterlite was the only domestic supplier of phosphoric acid in the country, the raw material required for fertilisers. Besides, the Thoothukudi plant was also the largest supplier of sulphuric acid in the state, a chemical used in detergent and chemical industries. Prices of both chemicals have increased after the closure of the plant.

The plant was the only indigenous phosphoric acid provider and the critical slag and gypsum supplier to nearly20 cement companies. The downstream players depended on the plant to procure five raw materials: gypsum, sulphuric acid, phosphoric acid, copper cathode and copper rod. After the plant’s closure, associated industries dependent on the Sterlite plant faced considerable difficulties in terms of the cost of procurement of raw materials.

A report by the Jaipur-based Consumer Unity and Trust Society, financed by the NITI Aayog and the Government of Bharat, titled, “Economic Impact of Select decisions of the Supreme Court and National Green Tribunal of India: Synthetic Report”, stated that the closure of the plant resulted in losses of Rs 14,794 crore to the stakeholders, indirect and direct job losses of 30,000 workers.

There were losses of Rs 491 crore for all downstream industries, besides total tax losses of Rs 7,641.86 crore to the government between May 2018 and May 2021.

(The story has been published via a syndicated feed with a modified headline and minor edits to conform to HinduPost style guide)

Key Pak terror group LeT recruits, collects funds during floods

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Pakistan’s famed jihadi groups like the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) have come out in full strength to deliver relief work and help the flood-affected masses. Meanwhile, the Pakistani government has banned international NGOs from carrying out flood relief work even as it has made a global appeal for funds.

An investigation by Pakistani journalist Taha Siddiqui, editor-in-chief of South Asia Press, living in exile in Paris since 2018, reveals that LeT has resurfaced in all four regions of the country including Punjab, Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Sindh ostensibly to help in flood relief work. Siddiqui says: “The group is raising funds for the flood-affected while proselytising about jihadi ideology, amidst it’s so-called relief efforts.”

The investigation claims that the terror group is now collecting donations under a new name – Allah-u-Akbar Tehreek, and is working in close collaboration with Pakistani military and other organisations.

With eyewitness accounts, videos and photographs, the investigation shows that Hafiz Talha Saeed, son of LeT chief Hafiz Saeed, is behind the revival of the group. The other prominent organisers include Hafiz Abdur Raouf, who is known to be close to Hafiz Saeed and also Nadeem Awan who has been with the LeT since its early years.

The LeT has been banned by the US and the UN for its terror activities. Based out of Lahore in Pakistan, it has carried out terror attacks almost all over India, including the 7/11 Mumbai attacks in which over 150 people were killed. It has also been associated with terror activities in Afghanistan. With mounting international pressure, it has changed its name to Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) and Falah-e-Insaniat Foundation (FIF).

In an exclusive interview to India Narrative, Siddiqui said: “Whenever natural calamities strike Pakistan, Jihadist groups come out to raise funds and try to provide relief efforts. During such a crisis, people are vulnerable and these groups take advantage of their vulnerability to find recruits, to radicalise them and to preach extremist ideas.”

Siddiqui adds that in such circumstances, people are totally dependent for aid and need help so they are much easily influenced.

“The money that the jihadi groups raise can be used for other activities. There is no audit, there is no transparency where the money goes. So, when I saw the floods in Pakistan, I knew that this phenomenon will again occur because it has happened every time-during the 2005 earthquake and also the 2010 floods. In 2010, I had travelled with the JuD/LeT and saw how they were operating,” Siddiqui says.

The investigation shows that not only is the group recruiting young men for terror activities openly but it has also been granted clandestine access to their buildings, which have been shown as sealed by the Pakistani government.

All these activities are happening at a time when a Financial Action Task Force (FATF) team is visiting Pakistan to verify whether the country is still abetting and financing terror activities.

The investigation by the South Asia Press has procured photographs from across Pakistan and matched these with the social media accounts of some of the members of the terror group. Siddiqui says: “…several sources, including the group’s own members’ social media accounts confirm that they are involved in fund raising activities and they openly claim that these relief efforts are being done by Lashkar-e-Taiba/Jamaat-ud-Dawa, now called Allah-u-Akbar Tehreek.”

(The story has been published via a syndicated feed.)

क्या दिल्ली सरकार ने खोला है भारत का पहला वर्चुअल स्कूल? एक बार पुनः झूठा निकला अरविंद केजरीवाल का दावा

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Picture Source - News 18

दिल्ली के मुख्यमंत्री अरविन्द केजरीवाल अपने आपको भारत का सबसे ईमानदार और सत्यवादी नेता बताते हैं, लेकिन यह बात और है कि अपने आपको सबसे अलग दिखाने के लिए वह कई बार झूठ का आश्रय लेने में संकोच नहीं करते। वह अपने ‘दिल्ली मॉडल’ का बखान करते हैं, और अपने मीडिया के मित्रों और विज्ञापनों का उपयोग कर यह दर्शाने का प्रयत्न करते हैं जैसे उनके शासन में अलौकिक और क्रांतिकारी कार्य हो रहे हों। हालांकि उनके झूठ की पोल अधिकांशत: जनता ही खोल देती है!

बुधवार, 31 अगस्त, 2022 को आम आदमी पार्टी के संयोजक और दिल्ली के मुख्यमंत्री अरविंद केजरीवाल ने दिल्ली में देश के कथित ‘पहले वर्चुअल स्कूल‘ का उद्घाटन किया। उन्होंने ट्वीट कर कहा कि आज शिक्षा के क्षेत्र में बहुत बड़ी क्रांति की शुरुआत हो रही है। आज देश का पहला वर्चुअल स्कूल दिल्ली में शुरू किया जा रहा है। मुख्यमंत्री केजरीवाल ने आगे कहा कि हमें बाबा साहब का सपना पूरा करना है, देश के हर बच्चे तक अच्छी शिक्षा पहुंचानी है, दिल्ली के डिजिटल स्कूल में नौवीं क्लास के लिए एडमिशन शुरू हो गए हैं। इस वेबसाइट DMVS.ac.in पर जाकर बच्चे एडमिशन ले सकते हैं।

जैसे ही यह समाचार सामने आया, टीवी और सोशल मीडिया पर इस विषय पर वाद विवाद शुरू हो गया। जहां आम आदमी पार्टी समर्थक इसे एक ऐतिहासिक निर्णय बता रहे हैं, और ऐसा दर्शाया जा रहा है कि जैसे दिल्ली सरकार ने एक अनोखा और क्रांतिकारी कदम उठाया हो। हालांकि इनकी जांच परख करने के पश्चात यह पता लगा है कि यह दावा पूरी तरह से झूठा है। दिल्ली सरकार द्वारा खोला गया वर्चुअल स्कूल देश का पहला वर्चुअल स्कूल नहीं है, देश के अन्य राज्यों में और केंद्र सरकार द्वारा भी वर्चुअल स्कूल खोले जा चुके हैं।

उत्तराखंड में खुला था भारत का पहला ‘वर्चुअल स्कूल’

प्राप्त जानकारी के अनुसार अक्टूबर 2020 में, देश में सबसे पहला वर्चुअल स्कूल का उद्घाटन उत्तराखंड के तत्कालीन मुख्यमंत्री त्रिवेंद्र सिंह रावत ने देहरादून में किया था। इस बारे में देश भर के मीडिया में समाचार भी प्रकाशित हुआ था। इस स्कूल में भारतीय ज्ञान परंपरा, वैदिक गणित, विज्ञान, भारतीय शास्त्रीय संगीत, संस्कृति, कला और परंपराओं की शिक्षा दी जा रही है। इस स्कूल से देश के किसी भी राज्य के छात्र जुड़ सकते हैं और अपनी शिक्षा पूरी कर सकते हैं।

Picture Source – Amar Ujala

वर्चुवल उद्घाटन समारोह में अमेरिका, दक्षिण अफ्रीका समेत देश विदेश के कई बड़े संस्थानों के लोग भी जुड़े थे। संस्थान की संस्थापक रीना त्यागी ने बताया था कि वर्चुअल स्कूल शिक्षा के परंपरागत माध्यम को बदल देगा और छात्रों को उनकी सुविधानुसार जानकारी लेने में सहायता करता है और उनका आत्मविश्वास भी बढ़ाता है।

अगस्त 2021 में केंद्र सरकार ने एनआईओएस के वर्चुअल स्कूल का उद्घाटन किया था

अगस्त 2021 में केंद्रीय शिक्षा, कौशल विकास एवं उद्यमिता मंत्री धर्मेंद्र प्रधान ने एनआईओएस के वर्चुअल स्कूल का उद्घाटन किया था। इस संबंध में केंद्रीय शिक्षा मंत्री ने ट्वीट कर जानकारी भी दी थी। धर्मेंद्र ने बताया था कि इस स्कूल का उपयोग कर 3-9 वर्ष के 7.5 करोड़ छात्रों को पढ़ने, लिखने और अंकगणित में निपुण बनाने का प्रयास किया जाएगा। तकनीक का उपयोग कर शिक्षक और शिक्षार्थी के मध्य दूरी को कम किया जाएगा। वर्चूअल स्कूल की परिकल्पना मोदी सरकार की शिक्षा की ओर प्रतिबद्धता को दृष्टिगत करती है।

क्या होता है वर्चुअल स्कूल?

यह ऑनलाइन विद्यालय होते हैं, जहां तकनीक का उपयोग कर एक ही समय में शिक्षक सैंकड़ो छात्रों को पढ़ा सकता है। इसमें देश और दुनिया के छात्र अपने घर बैठे बैठे ही शिक्षा का लाभ ले सकते हैं। इसमें छात्र अपने मोबाइल फोन, टैब, या लैपटॉप के माध्यम से कक्षा से जुड़ सकते हैं, अपने कक्षा और गृह कार्य कर सकते हैं, और अपनी परीक्षाएं भी दे सकते हैं। इस तरह के विधालयों में परीक्षाएं तनाव मुक्त होती हैं और छात्र को उनकी तैयारी के अनुसार परीक्षा देने की स्वतंत्रता भी होती है। यह शिक्षा का एक सस्ता माध्यम भी होता है, और सुदूर क्षेत्रों के छात्र भी कम खर्च में अच्छी शिक्षा का लाभ ले सकते हैं।

दिल्ली सरकार के ‘शिक्षा मॉडल’ पर हो रहा है वाद विवाद

अरविन्द केजरीवाल ने यह दावा ऐसे समय किया है जब देश भर में दिल्ली के ‘शिक्षा मॉडल’ पर तीखी बहस छिड़ी हुई है। विपक्षी नेता और अन्य राज्यों के मंत्री भी उनसे वाद-विवाद करते रहते हैं और दिल्ली सरकार के दावों को झूठा बताते रहते हैं। इसी बीच, उनका कथित रूप से देश का पहला वर्चुअल स्कूल खोलने का दावा पूरी तरह से झूठा निकला है।

China registers fewest marriages since 1986

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China
Image; IANS

China registered the fewest marriages last year since its public records began more than three decades ago — adding to concerns that the country faces a looming demographic crisis, media reports said.

There were 7.6 million marriage registrations in 2021, data released by China’s Ministry of Civil Affairs last week showed, CNN reported.

That’s the fewest since 1986, when the ministry began publicly releasing the figures, according to the state-run Global Times, marking a 6.1 per cent decrease from the previous year. It was the eighth consecutive year when marriage rates have fallen.

At the same time, the average age of newlyweds is inching up, with nearly half of those married last year aged 30 and above.

The figures reflect a trend that is increasingly a cause for concern among officials in the world’s most populous nation, home to 1.4 billion people. Young people, especially millennials, are increasingly choosing not to get married or have children and even when they do, they tend to do so later in life, CNN reported.

Experts say the knock-on effect on what is already a shrinking workforce could have a severe impact on the country’s economy and social stability.

In just six years, the number of Chinese people getting married for the first time fell by 41 per cent, from 23.8 million in 2013 to 13.9 million in 2019, according to China’s National Bureau of Statistics.

The decline is partly due to decades of policies designed to limit China’s population growth, which mean there are fewer young people of marriageable age, according to Chinese officials and sociologists.

But it’s also a result of changing attitudes to marriage, especially among young women who are becoming more educated and financially independent, CNN reported.

(The story has been published via a syndicated feed.)