Jun 21

Message to Obama from India

Scribbled on Sunday, June 21st, 2009

I don’t think that we’ve been silent on the fact that India is a great friend of the United States and Pakistan is a great friend of the United States, and it always grieves us to see friends fighting.
I believe that there are opportunities, maybe not starting with Kashmir but starting with other issues, that Pakistan and India can be in a dialogue together and over time to try to reduce tensions and find areas of common interest. And we want to be helpful in that process, but I don’t think it’s appropriate for us to be the mediators in that process.

In reply to Obama’s lip service, here is India’s reply to him with love:

“I don’t think that we’ve been silent on the fact that the United States is a great friend of India and Iran is a great friend of India, and it always grieves us to see friends fighting. I believe that there are opportunities, maybe not starting with the Nuclear issue but starting with other issues, that the United States and Iran can be in a dialogue together and over time to try to reduce tensions and find areas of common interest. And we want to be helpful in that process, but I don’t think it’s appropriate for us to be the mediators in that process”

Another one:

“I don’t think that we’ve been silent on the fact that the United States is a great friend of India and Cuba is a great friend of India, and it always grieves us to see friends fighting. I believe that there are opportunities, maybe not starting with the Guantanamo but starting with other issues, that the United States and Cuba can be in a dialogue together and over time to try to reduce tensions and find areas of common interest. And we want to be helpful in that process, but I don’t think it’s appropriate for us to be the mediators in that process”

Jun 20

Shah Rukh Khan is in trouble for ‘insulting’ the Prophet.

Scribbled on Saturday, June 20th, 2009

The Muslim community is not happy with the actor’s remark on their Prophet Mohammed in the July issue of Time N Style magazine, in which he listed the Prophet as one of the most unimpressive personalities in history.

The police has filed an FIR against the actor following a complaint registered Shahrukh, the publisher of the magazine and the writer by the Mumbai Aman Committee, a religious organisation. The case was registered under section 295-a (deliberate and malicious acts intended to outrage religion feelings or any class by insulting its religion beliefs) and 34 (acts done by several persons with common interest) of IPC.

Shahrukh’s comment has invited wrath from the Muslim community. Farid Sheikh, President of Mumbai Aman Committee, said that they would not allow Shahrukh’s body to be buried anywhere in Maharashtra. Zarar Qureshi, secretary of the committee, also said that the actor has hurt the Muslim community by bracketed the Prophet Mohammed along with Adolf Hitler and Winston Churchill.

Source: oneindia.in

According to you who is the most impressive figure in history?
There are lots of them, some negative ones like Hitler, then Napoleon,Winston Churchill and if I can call it history, then Prophet Mohammed and from recent time — Nelson Mandela. And there are the nice ones like Gandhiji and Mother Teresa.

Source: timenstyle

Guess what ? So much for the freedom of speech ! I thought exile of Taslima Nasreen was enough but no we still have fascists right in our home who denounce the freedom of expression and speech.

Where is the media now ? Where are the free speech proponents ?

Jun 20

Rouge State Sponsor - China

Scribbled on Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Here is an interesting article from dnaindia.com

The world is never short of rogue states. Think North Korea. Burma. Sudan. And even Pakistan. Rogue states exist because they have sponsors.

For much of the 20th century, and especially before the fall of the Berlin Wall, the US and USSR backed every possible tinpot dictator in the world. Today, that chief sponsor of rogue states is China.

It backs each one of the four rogue (or near-rogue) states mentioned above. In its cynical pursuit of global hegemony, China provides succour to many unsavoury regimes as long as it can achieve its own strategic goals. These goals include finding cheap energy sources or overawing current and future rivals (Japan, Taiwan, India).

China has always been the biggest roadblock to India’s rise in the world, but what we know privately we have always sought to deny publicly. It all started with Nehru’s disastrous handling of foreign policy in the 1950s, which culminated in our humiliating defeat in the 1962 border war.

A vain Nehru ignored sane advice from people of the eminence of Sardar Patel and Rajendra Prasad and the Chinese ran circles around him all through the 1950s while they were building up their military might and subjugating Tibet.

Defence minister George Fernandes said that our nuclear tests were intended to redress the power asymmetry with China. He was roundly criticised for speaking the truth, but he has been proved right.

For the last 18 years, the Chinese have been watching with dismay as India first became a global IT power and then started growing nearly as fast as them. Businessmen may love China’s ability to give them a free run on profits (no labour laws, instant government decisions, etc), but the world gives India’s ragtag democracy a higher degree of respect than China’s centrally-driven capitalism.

Respect, though, is not enough. India’s problem is that Nehru’s ghost still hangs outside the Indian foreign ministry. We are paralysed by fear, hoping against hope that China will see reason and allow us to take our place in the sun.

Well, it won’t happen. China only recognises power, which is why it has pursued military superiority with such doggedness since the 1980s. It has opposed India formally, and behind the scenes, at every forum.

At the Nuclear Suppliers’ Group last year, China tried its best to scuttle the Indo-US deal. At the UN, China was the only country (apart from Pakistan) to steadfastly spike our dreams of permanent membership.

The Middle Kingdom is clearly the rogue state behind the clandestine transfer of nuclear and missile technology between Pakistan and North Korea. A nuclear and terror-supporting Pakistan is critical to Chinese plans to keep India bogged down in local insurgencies. A rogue North Korean state enables China to keep both South Korea and Japan off-balance.

At the Asian Development Bank, China’s was the hand that nearly stopped a loan for Arunachal Pradesh. In fact, the clearance of this loan — facilitated by India’s strong diplomatic pressure on the US, South Korea and Japan — shows that power needs to be projected when it comes to dealing with China. There is only one way to deal with China and that is by building our military, diplomatic and economic strength continuously.

Japan, South Korea and Vietnam could be our silent allies in this game, but even if the world does not want to play, we must be clear in our goals. We have to develop deterrent military and economic power to contain China and earn its respect. We have to dump the Nehruvian mindset of fooling ourselves into believing that China is a benign power. It is not.

Jun 20

Sri Lanka - Potential “Hong Kong” of India

by T on Saturday
May 21

Seymour Hersh’s comments on Bhutto murder bogus

by T on Thursday
May 06

How to reset Gnome Panel

by T on Wednesday
Apr 01

No more Wanda ? :’(

by T on Wednesday
Mar 16

If there is something not changed…

by T on Monday
Mar 15

Invaders Must Die - The Prodigy

by T on Sunday
Mar 11

Reliance surreptitiously implemented Fair Usage Policy

by T on Wednesday


July 2009
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