Indian ‘Jirga’ orders rape of 2 sisters whose brother eloped with woman

rape protest

UTTAR PRADESH: A village council IJirga) in India’s Uttar Pradesh state has ordered the rape of two young sisters to punish them in place of their brother who eloped with a woman of a superior caste, Hindustan Times reported.

The sentence was handed down after the brother of 23-year-old Meenakshi Kumari and her 15-year-old sister ran off with a married girl belonging to the dominant Jat community. The tribunal — locally known as a panchayat — also ordered for the sisters to be paraded naked with their faces blackened.

After receiving threats, Kumari and her family — who belong to the Dalitcaste, also referred to as ‘untouchables’ — fled their village in UP’s Bhagpat district for New Delhi, some 50 kilometres away. The appalling punishment was brought to light after rights group Amnesty International launched a petition calling for local authorities to intervene immediately and save the girls from being raped.

Amnesty says in the petition: “Nothing could justify this abhorrent punishment. It’s not fair. It’s not right. And it’s against the law.”

Kumari filed a petition in India’s Supreme Court, seeking protection for herself and her family. She alleged that local police filed a false narcotics case against her brother, under pressure from the Jat girl’s family. Even though he was granted bail by a local court, the family was too afraid to go back to the village to arrange surety documents to get him released.

A Supreme Court bench issued a notice to authorities, asking for a probe into the incident. Kumari said in the petition that her brother and the girl were in love for the past three years. However, the girl was married off to boy from the Jat community against her wishes.

A month after her marriage, the girl escaped her husband’s home and eloped with Kumari’s brother. The couple surrendered after alleged torture by the girl’s family and UP police. The girl, who claimed she was pregnant with her lover’s child, was sent back to her parents while the boy was detained under a false drug case.

After Kumari’s family moved to Delhi, fearing for their lives, their house was allegedly ransacked and taken over by members of the Jat community. Hindu scriptures separate people into Brahmin priests, warriors, farmers and labourers, while the rest are beyond definition – called Dalits. These low-caste Hindus were once considered “untouchables”, performing the most menial and degrading jobs. The ancient caste system has persisted in India – mostly in villages — despite the country’s economic success and exposure to Western culture which has re-moulded social paradigms in the nation.

Musharraf coming back in politics with new political party

MusharrafLAHORE: Pakistan’s former military dictator Pervez Musharraf could soon stage a political comeback as head of a new party combining all factions of the Muslim League except the ruling PML-N of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, ahead of local body elections. Efforts have been intensified to form the party – United Muslim League – after uniting all factions of Muslim League except Sharif’s PML-N.

PML-Q President Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain yesterday held a meeting with 72-year-old Musharraf, head of All Pakistan Muslim League at his residence in Karachi and agreed to merge all factions except PML-N to form a “new look party”.

“I met with General Musharraf, PML-Functional chief Pir Pagara Sibghatullah Shah Rashidi and former Sindh chief minister Syed Ghaus Ali Shah, who was once a close aide of Sharif. They all are unanimous on formation of the United Muslim League,” Shujaat told reporters.

He said efforts are also on to take all those Muslim League leaders and workers on board who are not happy with the policies of the Sharif brothers – Nawaz and Shahbaz Sharif. The new party is likely to be formed before local body elections scheduled to be held by the end of the year.

There has been a feeling in all Muslim League factions except PML-N, that they should be united and form a new political force to challenge the PML-N and Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf. They believe that under Musharraf’s leadership all the Muslim League factions can perform well.

Musharraf returned to Pakistan in 2013 after over four years in self-exile but faces a slew of legal cases including the high profile treason case under Article 6 of the Constitution for imposing emergency in the country in 2007, the first army chief to face such a prosecution. He has also been charged in the judges’ detention case. Courtesy: PTI

Modi Sarkar too ‘show-baaz’, says Sonia Gandhi

Modi mass murderer
PATNA: Top opposition leaders including Sonia Gandhi on Sunday lashed out at the Narendra Modi government for “doing nothing other than ‘show-baazi'” by slashing allocations to all major social security schemes like MGNREGA.

Addressing the ‘Swabhiman Rally’ here along with top leaders of JD(U), RJD and SP, Gandhi said “Modi-government has completed one-fourth of its time. Till now, what has it done other than ‘show-baazi’..It has done nothing. You know better than me.”

She attacked the BJP-led regime for not fulfilling its promise to provide employment to one crore people but also restricting job opportunities in the government and said the funds for major social security schemes like MGNREGA have been “heavily slashed”.

Targeting Modi for his DNA remarks, Gandhi said the Prime Minister has demeaned Bihar and shown its people in a bad light. “Some people take pleasure in mocking Bihar. Whenever they get opportunity they comment about its DNA and culture. They also call it BIMARU,” she said.

On government’s decision to allow Land Bill to lapse, Gandhi said that Modi had to bow to people’s will by giving up the ordinance, TOI reported on Sunday.

“This is an anti-farmer government. They want to grab their land and distribute it among their rich friends. We fought for the protection of farmers’ rights in the Parliament and in the end government had to bow down,” she asserted.

Present on the dais were Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar, RJD chief Lalu Prasad, JD(U) chief Sharad Yadav and SP leader Shivpal Yadav, among others.

Members of Election Commission of Pakistan refuse to resign

imrankhan

Updated on Sept 1, 2015

CorporateAmbassador/ISLAMABAD: Three members of Election Commission of Pakistan who first indicated to step down down after PTI Chairman Imran Khan’s decision of staging a protest outside ECP office in Islamabad from Oct 4, have no changed their mind and refused to tender resignations.

The Chief Election Commissioner Sardar Raza Khan summoned an urgent meeting of the ECP members, commissioners on Monday (Aug 31) to discuss resignations and Imran Khan’s deadline of protest. In that meeting the members of the ECP unanimously said they will not resign saying they have no role in irregularities and mismanagement in 2013 elections.

When the media reported the possibility of the resignations of three members of the ECP soon after PTI’s decision to hold protest outisde ECP, every one in the country felt relaxed, thing that the ECP would be cleaned from the inefficient officials who failed to hold fair and free elections.

According to the Judicial Commission report, the ECP officials, Returning Officers failed to hold transparent elections in some constituencies and the political parties and general public demanded accountability of the ECP officials and ROs involved in ”irregularities in elections”. The PML(N) govt would certainly not punish them as it is the key beneficiary, the Election Commission and Judiciary should begin this process. I believe the PTI’s next task would be the accountability of the rotten eggs in ECP and judiciary (ROs).

An interesting development in the decisions of the Judicial Commission and Election Tribunals is that they did not find any rigging in elections, but said ”irregularities” and negligence of the Election Commission and ROs, in some constituencies changed the results.

This is really funny, in sime words irregularity means fraud and the people who committed frauds in 2013 elections are yet to be held accountable. The PML(N) leaders and Govt ministers are giving funny statements by saying the Judicial Commission and Election Tribunals did not find out ”rigging” and it was just ECP’s failure/irregularity and why the PML(N) candidates be punished for the fraud committed by the ECP and ROs. Who is the beneficiary of this fraud and why the beneficiaries not punished? This is an intriguing aspect of the 2013 elections.

A simple example of this fraud is that “if someone commits a dacoity, hands over all the looted money to me and when the dacoity comes to the limelight, I would justify it by saying that I didn’t commit the dacoity and I am not responsible for it. I would also not like to surrender the looted money and ask the police and govt to take action against dacoits only.” How funny is this and this example befits the PML(N) and the other candidates belonging to any political party who have won elections on the basis of the irregularity and negligence of the Election Commission and the Returning Officers.

The Returning Officers were the judges of the judiciary _ mostly the lower courts judges. Before 2013 elections the then Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry addressed the ROs selected to participated in the elections and this address became controversial.

Whose baby Daesh really is?

Daesh

Aijaz Zaka Syed/Arab News

Many western commentators have been raving about Barack Obama’s twin foreign policy triumphs in the last lap of his presidency. The best take came from Maureen Dowd of the New York Times. Having trashed him in June as the ‘lame duck whose chickens have come home to roost’ for his inaction in the face of mounting challenges including those on the Middle East front, Dowd now suggests that Obama may be a lame duck, but his bolder side, the one that got him elected, is rising.

By striking the nuclear pact with Iran and the once unthinkable rapprochement with Cuba’s last commies, Obama may have succeeded in saving his legacy just in time. While the normalization of ties with Cuba after nearly six decades of hostilities was perhaps inevitable considering the irrepressible Fidel Castro is out of action, the import of what Obama has delivered on the Iran front in the face of resistance from Israel and genuine concerns of Arab allies is overwhelming to fathom.
With one stroke of pen, he has changed the geopolitical contours and power equations in the region. The ayatollahs may still insist on principled opposition to the ‘Great Satan’ and pretend as if nothing has changed. But we all know the ground has shifted.

While Obama’s legion of fans may be forgiven for concluding that the last burst of brilliance of their hero, coupled with the success on health care and gay rights, would perpetuate his legacy, two of the biggest disappointments of the Obama presidency also happen to be on the foreign policy front.

According to Arab News report published on Aug 30, 2015, Obama’s betrayal of the Palestinian people and dithering on the Syrian front may have cost thousands of precious lives and directly contributed to the outbreak of cancer called Daesh, or the so-called Daesh. After those stirring words championing the Palestinians’ right to liberty and dignity and reaching out to the Muslim world, Obama dropped them like proverbial hot potatoes when confronted by the Israeli lobby.

His chicanery and inaction on Syria have destroyed one of the oldest and peaceful civilizations in the world with nearly half of the country’s population being uprooted. More than 200,000 lives have been lost.
Between August 2011 when Obama first called on Bashar Assad to leave and August 2014 when the US forces finally “intervened” in Syria to bomb the Daesh targets, the Baathist regime in Damascus has killed, bombed and maimed hundreds of thousands of Syrians. The blood of thousands of Syrians is not just on the hands of Assad and his thugs. World leaders are equally guilty. For while the US and its allies have publicly called for Assad to step aside, their actions have quietly and actually helped the regime dig in its feet.

As Omer Aziz put it in his Al Jazeera piece, in true Arab nationalist form, Assad portrayed himself as the only man standing between the West and the terrorists. This image — or mirage — won over many western “realists,” turning reality on its head.The West and its Israeli friends have never really wanted Assad’s fall, fearing the unimaginable specter of an Islamist takeover of Damascus. Whether those fears are justified or not, can there be anything worse than the mindboggling mess that stares us all in the face right now?

While the Baathist cowards unleash daily hell on utterly defenseless civilians, trapped in the remains of their towns and cities, the Daesh devils have turned the territory under their tyranny into a ghoulish laboratory where daily experiments are conducted in inflicting maximum ignominy and cruelty in the name of Islam.
We are running out of epithets and words to define the increasingly sickening depravity and spine-chilling pornography of violence. Look at the obscene killing of Palmyra’s 82-year old retired Antiquities chief. Dr. Khaled Al-Assad had spent 50 years in the service and protection of Palmyra’s ancient Roman ruins, a UNESCO World Heritage site.
He had refused to leave when Daesh swarms descended on Palmyra ignoring warnings from his friends and family. He was tortured for a month apparently for the location of the Roman city’s priceless artifacts before being beheaded. His headless corpse kept hanging from a lamppost in the town center.

It is perhaps just as well that Dr. Assad did not live to see the destruction of the 2,000-year old Roman temple at Palmyra within days of his killing. Something that even the Crusaders and Mongol hordes did not touch has been destroyed by the folks who claim to “liberate” the Middle East and Muslim world.

Who are these crazed bigots then? Who is pulling their strings? I hate conspiracy theories. But it’s clear as daylight that whatever the factors that may have helped spawn Daesh – the US invasion and destruction of Iraq and disbanding of Iraqi Army and police, the rise and tyranny of Shia militias and their persecution of Sunnis, and above all, the failure to rein in Assad and his band of killers — Daesh now appears to be completely controlled and manipulated by forces that have long plotted the destruction of Muslim lands. Every action and atrocity inflicted by Daesh in the past one year — from beheadings and mass killings to rapes and mindless destruction of priceless heritage as Palmyra — all in the name of Islam of course appears calculated and designed to evoke and arouse maximum horror and revulsion worldwide.

No wonder Muslims around the world, especially those in the West, find themselves increasingly unwelcome. Daesh had to come along just when the world was getting ready to move on from the shock and awe of 9/11. So Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi may not be a Zionist as many in the Arab world suspect but the fingerprints of Mossad and our other benefactors are all over this baby. Even old Middle East watchers like Robert Fisk are coming around to the idea.

In his latest piece, the veteran British journalist wonders: “Why does Isis never attack Israel — indeed, why does its hatred of Crusaders and Shias and Christians and sometimes Jews rarely if ever mention the very word “Israel”? (So) It’s not the violence in Isis videos and Dabiq (Daaesh magazine) we should be concentrating on. It’s what the Isis leadership don’t talk about, don’t condemn, don’t mention upon which we should cast our suspicious eye. If we failed after 9/11 — when the political reasons behind this crime against humanity would have necessitated an examination of US Middle East policy and our support for Israel and dictators – we’ve sometimes held our ground when it comes to ‘terror’.” In these last few months in the White House, Obama may not have much time left to save the world. But he could at least ask his security and intelligence honchos some pertinent questions like whose baby Daesh really is and how come all those US-made weapons have ended up in the hands of the terror army?

Why do young men and women, born and brought up in Western lands, are rushing to join Daesh? Also, how do we solve a problem called Bashar Assad? What has kept him hanging on to power all this while and with whose support when his more powerful fellow travelers have all departed?

Obama may have chosen to do ‘nothing’ over Syria in order to avoid ‘another Iraq,’ as he once put it. But if Syria is in total ruin today, it is also chiefly because of what the US visited on Iraq. America cannot run away now from its responsibility, before clearing the mess it has made of the region.

Two French journalists arrested for blackmailing Moroccon King

MorocconkingPARIS: The Paris prosecutor’s office and a lawyer for Morocco’s King Mohammad VI say two French journalists have been arrested in France for allegedly trying to blackmail the monarch. The prosecutor’s office said the two, Eric Laurent and Catherine Graciet, remained in detention Friday.

Eric Dupont-Moretti, a lawyer for the King, told RTL radio Thursday that Laurent claimed he and Graciet were writing a compromising book about the monarch and demanded 3 million euros ($3.4 million) to keep it unpublished. Dupont-Moretti said the Moroccan leadership filed a lawsuit in Paris and the arrests came after a sting operation. The king has built a reputation as a moderate, modern leader. Laurent and Graciet co-wrote a book in 2012 about the king.

Pakistan guarding its nuke seriously, says White House

Nuke piles

WASHINGTON: Pakistan takes its responsibilities for securing its nuclear stockpile quite seriously. White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest made these remarks while commenting on a report by a US think-tank, also published in The Washington Post, which claimed that in 10 years Pakistan would have the third-largest stockpile of nuclear weapons in the world after the US and Russia.

Pakistan has rejected the report as “utterly baseless”. Mr Earnest said he had seen the think-tank report but did not have any official government assessment to share with the media. He said that President Barack Obama had a long-term goal of “a world without nuclear weapons”. He convenes an international summit every couple of years to promote this goal.

“And that continues to be a top foreign policy priority of his,” he said and noted that the next nuclear summit would be held in Washington next year. “The second thing is — and this applies not just to Pakistan but to countries around the world that have a nuclear stockpile — that they have a responsibility for securing that nuclear stockpile,” said Mr Earnest.

Political tumult in Gujarat becomes headach for Modi Sarkar

Modi mass murderer

CorporateAmbassador/ISLAMABAD: For the last few days, an extraordinary political tumult has wracked the western Indian state of Gujarat, home of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. An influential community — the Patidar caste, more commonly known as Patels because of the last name many hold — has rallied behind 22-year-old firebrand Hardik Patel to demand guaranteed places (‘reservations’) in the government bureaucracy and educational institutions. Patel’s temporary arrest earlier in the week set off riots; the army has since practically shut down several major cities. The movement should worry Modi deeply — and not only because of the violence.

Modi still most wantedIndia has a long list of disadvantaged caste and community groups, and an equally long history of demands for affirmative action. The country’s 1950 constitution specifically granted reservations to scheduled castes (formerly the ‘untouchable’ Hindu castes) and scheduled tribes. The Patels, however, are hardly underprivileged. They comprise roughly 20 per cent of Gujarat’s population; many are hugely prosperous landowners and businessmen. In the United States, Patel immigrants are well-known and successful in the motel business among others. They’re also politically powerful at home — four Patels have led Gujarat as chief minister, including the incumbent Anandiben Patel. They’re no one’s idea of a deprived community.

Modi top most criminalsMoreover, protests such as this week’s agitation should’ve faded after India abandoned an insular socialism for the path of economic liberalisation in 1991. Interestingly enough, the biggest churning in favour of broader affirmative action took place in the late 1980s and early 1990s (at the tail end of India’s tryst with socialism) when a large number of historically underprivileged castes (known as ‘other backward classes’, or OBCs) were granted extensive reservations in government jobs. The opening up of the economy since then should in theory have expanded opportunities for everyone. Gujarat in particular, under Modi and others, has grown at a rate faster than the Indian average and in double digits for around seven years between 2004-05 and 2011-12, Dawn.com reported on Sunday.

The Patels’ anger, though, shows that much more needs to be done to expand the size of the proverbial cake in India. Modi seemed to understand this when he took office 15 months ago after 10 years of a government that was more focused on redistribution than growth. Unfortunately, his attempts at growing India’s economy and increasing opportunities have been incremental, not radical.

His government’s record in upgrading India’s education system in particular is dismal: there’s been no reform at all. Most of India’s best institutions are funded by the state — whether the Indian Institutes of Technology, Indian Institutes of Management or top universities in Delhi and Mumbai. Governments of whatever political persuasion have taken that as a licence to interfere in the running of these institutions, compromising their quality. At the same time, the government doesn’t have the money to create new, quality institutions. And a complex net of socialist-era regulations continues to deter the growth of private-sector schools and universities. While foreign investment has been liberalised in other sectors of the economy, foreign universities aren’t permitted to set up campuses in India.

Although Patels have generally done well in business, most remain small entrepreneurs or farmers subject to the vagaries of the broader economy. Government jobs — half of which are already committed to members of various disadvantaged groups — are attractive for their greater stability and in some cases, prestige. As long as that remains the case, demands similar to the Patels’ will only surface again and again.

There’s little point in redistributing by force, or decree, limited opportunities. The only solution is the one Modi promised during his campaign: radical action to grow the economy and create more attractive employment and education opportunities for the millions of youth entering the job market every month. Yet so far he’s shown little willingness to privatise an inefficient public sector, and little ability to tackle fundamental land and labour reforms. Patel anger is a sign of how frustrated those younger Indians are growing with the pace of change. Already a quarter of the way into his five-year term, Modi would be wise to heed them.

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