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Congress Undemocratic Ideology - 3
#81
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Sikh pogrom accused in Cong list </b>
Pioneer.com
Rajesh Kumar | New Delhi
Tainted candidates out number those with clean image
Despite making a song and dance about fielding clean candidates for the MCD elections, the Congress list released literally at the eleventh hour is full of elements who could fall within the ambit of the word criminal. While the party leaders, on one hand, used the issue of criminalisation to axe the rivals, they looked the other way in case of the others.

While former <b>Deputy Chairman of the MCD's Standing Committee Ashok Jain was kept out for facing a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) case, his colleague and accused in another CBI case, Ishwar Bagri fielded once again. The party has nominated him from Harsh Vihar municipal seat.</b>
 
There are several names, which would raised the alarm about the real intent of the Congress party<b>. Balwan Khokhar found guilty in 1984 Sikh carnage in the Capital by Nanavati Commission of Inquiry has been given ticket from Raj Nagar seat. </b><b>The Commission, in its report tabled in both Houses of Parliament noted that "there was credible material" against Congress leaders Sajjan Kumar (now member of Parliament) and Balwan Khokhar that they were "probably involved as alleged by witnesses."</b>

<b>Matloob Karim, the third angle of Naina Sahni love triangle leading to infamous Tandoor murder case has been nominated from Turkman Gate</b>. Also finding mention in the list are <b>several contractors of MCD infamous for swindling funds and delivery poor works. Sushil Tiwari, Sunil Vohra, Brahm Singh are MCD contractors.</b>

The Vigilance department is investigating against Amit Mallik's father who is a contractor. The case, which is being investigated, is pertaining to Bawana college contract.<b> Ramesh Pandit, caught red-handed with sex-worker, has been fielded from Ghondli seat. Bansi Lal, a sitting councillor has been facing criminal case, has managed to get ticket for his wife.</b>

The party has grounded 66 sitting councillors including Leader of the House of the MCD Jitender Kochar, Nathu Ram Nagar, Subhash Anand, Memwati Barwala, Khajan Singh, Virender Kasana, Ratan Singh Panwar and Talat

The list of 269 candidates announced by the party after a marathon meeting that ended in the early hours on Sunday. High drama followed the announcement as disgruntled ticket aspirants and their supporters shouted slogans against Delhi Congress chief Rambabu Sharma and smashed window panes of the DPCC office.

The protesters alleged that Sharma ignored genuine party workers and pocketed money from hopefuls to allot them tickets. The Congress leaders, however, did not give any reason for denying ticket to Kochar. Prominent among those who lost seats include Memwati Barwala, Subhash Malhotra, Neeraj Basoya, Praveen Massy and Ashok Jain.Among the young faces who have been given a chance are Delhi Youth Congress President Amit Malik, Delhi University Students Union (DUSU) President Amrita Dhawan, DUSU leaders Rohit Chaudhary, Tarun Kumar and Shashikant Sharma.

But Kochar even failed to get his wife a seat from Hauz Rani ward, his traditional stronghold, while Rakesh Joshi also managed to get a seat for his spouse. Mamata, Joshi's wife, will be fighting from Karampura seat, from where Joshi won last time. However, the Delhi Congress could not finalise its candidates for CR Park, Subhash Mohallah and Sangam Vihar East.
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#82
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Ajit Jogi hospitalised following arrest in murder case  </b>
Raipur, March 19: Former Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Ajit Jogi was arrested today on charges of murder and admitted in a hospital here.

Jogi was arrested at Gandai in Rajnandgaon district on a non-bailable arrest warrant issued by a court in connection with the 2003 murder of then state NCP treasurer Ram Avtar Jaggi, police said.

The case was filed by Jaggi's son Satish.

Jogi was brought here at about 5 am and admitted in Escort Heart Centre. A doctor attending on him told that Jogi was under sedatives due to high blood pressure and other complaints and was put in the ICU for observation.
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

India's great leaders, protector of law, work for poor and deprived people are scared of prison after committing crime.
According to his religion this should be sin.
Mera Bharat Mahan. India Shinning !!!


#83
<!--QuoteBegin-Mudy+Mar 19 2007, 10:35 AM-->QUOTE(Mudy @ Mar 19 2007, 10:35 AM)<!--QuoteEBegin--><!--QuoteBegin--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Ajit Jogi hospitalised following arrest in murder case  </b>
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->According to his religion this should be sin.[right][snapback]65826[/snapback][/right]<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->Murdering is not a sin in christianity, else why is large-scale mass-murder and genocide its trademark?

Needn't worry about Ajit Jogi, the trusted christo-pet of Sonia. He won't be sent to prison after his stay in l'hopital. And even if he were, his personal Santa will spring him out of jail in no time.
#84
Hindus betraying Hindus
March 18, 2007


Hindu youth reduced to second class status

By O.P. Gupta, I.F.S. (retd.)


It is painful to see how a class of 'secular, progressive and liberal' Hindu politicians right from the days of the 1916 Congress-Muslim League Lucknow Pact till date in the form of the Sachar Committee report has been systematically collaborating with Muslim and other minority politicians in concocting justifications to reduce, bit by bit, the educational, employment and economic (E3) opportunities for Hindu boys and girls, including leftist Hindu boys and girls.

Religious minority institutions have been empowered by none other than our 'secular' Hindu politicians to treat Hindu applicants as second-class citizens of India at the mercy, whims and fancies of "minority managements" even where these institutions receive under Article 30(2) state grants out of taxes largely collected from we Hindus.

As the political parties in their manifestos openly declare that they will give special considerations to Muslims and Christians, they cannot be accused of betraying Hindu youth. Those Hindu parents who give their votes blindly to such political parties are the real ones who by casting their votes to such parties accept in principle that minority students be given special preference over their own children and, thus, unknowingly, end up betraying their own children, grandchildren and the Hindu youth.

It is painful to see how Hindu parents are being media managed to harm and hurt educational, employment, economic and business opportunities of their own children and grandchildren by giving their notes and votes to such political parties which shout from their political rooftops that they will give special preferences to Muslims and Christians over Hindus.

Since the employment situation is worsening day by day, it is important that those Hindu parents who have college going children or grand children, and, those Hindu youth who will soon be entering into employment market seriously look for and identify those Hindu politicians who are bent upon to reduce their E3 space.

In January 2007, the Department of Personnel and Training, Government of India, sent a note to all "heads of departments, public sector banks and financial institutions, quasi-government organisa-tions, autonomous bodies and all appointing authorities," asking them to "scrupulously observe" guidelines to make selection panels more representative. All selection panels recruiting ten or more vacancies must have one member belonging to a minority community.

What is more important, the departments have been instructed to submit half-yearly and annual reports, beginning March 2007, detailing number of vacancies at all levels—Groups A, B, C and D—and the number of minorities hired. Dr Manmohan Singh is the Minister for DOPT. This circular instructs to give special considerations to minorities in all appointments, so danger bell is ringing loud and clear for all Hindu job-seekers whether they are leftists or rightists that despite their better profiles percentage of Hindu intake will be reduced adversely affecting them all.

A one man Commission headed by Justice Ranganath Mishra was silently set up by the UPA government which is looking at status of non- Muslim minorities, and, is mandated to recommend ways of helping them get better representation in government services. Its report is due by March 31, 2007. So this Commission is also looking at ways and means to further reduce percentage of Hindus in public services, bank loans etc.

Suppose there are 10,000 vacancies, seats reserved for SC Hindus would be 1500, for ST Hindus 750 and for OBC 2700. Not many Hindus know that about 70 per cent of Muslims are already covered under the Mandal Commission formula and are enjoying benefits under the 27 per cent quota.

In Andhra Pradesh, the Congress government led by Shri Y.S. Rajsekhar Reddy reserved five per cent of seats in government colleges and in government jobs for Muslims. It means that only 9500 seats would be available to all categories of Hindus and other minorities having reserved 500 seats exclusively for Muslims. So, the number of seats available for SC Hindus will get reduced to 1425 from 1500, the number of seats for ST Hindus will get reduced to 712 from 750, and, the number of seats reserved for OBC will get reduced to 2565 from 2700. Number of general category seats in which caste Hindus fall will also shrink from 5000 to 4500. So giving special preferences to minorities over Hindu candidates, which is the core policy of Congress Party, equally hurts educational and employment opportunities of all groups of Hindus, whether SC Hindus, or ST Hindus, or OBC Hindus, or caste Hindus, or leftist Hindus. It is mere arithmatic. If more than 500 Muslims got more marks than the last Hindu candidate, then Muslim candidates will spill over into general category 9500 seats. Incidentally in Andhra Pradesh Muslims enjoy higher literacy rate than Hindus.

In February 2007, Chief Minister of West Bengal issued instructions that "at least 10 per cent of the appointees should be from the minority community." By courtesy of Leftist Hindu voters, the percentage of Hindus' job intake is set to fall in West Bengal.

Shri Arif Mohammad Khan, a former Union Minister in the Rajiv Gandhi government, has pointed out that 10 Muslim communities are already part of the Scheduled Tribes and another 83 Muslim communities are included in the OBC list. "Together," he maintains, "they constitute more than 70 per cent of total Muslim population leaving out only the Muslim creamy layer." Similarly, a good chunk of Christians are already included in the Scheduled Tribe and the OBC category.

In Bihar, the OBC quota has been divided by 'secular' Hindu politicians into backward and most backward to help put nine Muslim groups in the first category and 27 Muslim groups in the second category.

In Kerala and Karnataka, the Hindu politicians of Congress Party and the Communist parties have declared the entire Muslim community backward just to reduce the percentage of Hindus in colleges and in government jobs.

In Tamil Nadu, 95 per cent of Muslims are included into backward formula though Muslims have higher literacy rate in Kerala, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu than Hindus.

Dr Manmohan Singh is a Rajya Sabha Member from Assam and no wonder there is already five per cent reservation for Muslims in the recruitment for the Assam Police, adversely affecting employment opportunities for SCs, STs, OBCs and all other Hindus as shown above.

It is painful to see how a class of 'secular, progressive and liberal' Hindu politicians right from the days of the 1916 Congress-Muslim League Lucknow Pact till date in the form of the Sachar Committee report has been systematically collaborating with Muslim and other minority politicians in concocting justifications to reduce, bit by bit, the educational, employment and economic (E3) opportunities for Hindu boys and girls, including leftist Hindu boys and girls, pushing them to second and third-class status vis-à-vis minority boys and girls. It is a sad story of Hindus betraying Hindus.

This is symptomatic of the slave mentality, which is defined as a tendency to harm, hurt and humiliate members of one's own community so as to appease 'others' at the cost of one's own community. This habit is also known as gulamiat pasand (GP) or Genetically Acquired Slave Syndrome (GASS). These terms more accurately describe this class of Hindus. Raja Jaichand, Mirza Raja Man Singh of Akbar time, Raja Jaswant Singh of Aurangzeb time etc. were also Hindus but were GP type carrying GASS virus. In rural areas they are called 'Jaichandi Hindus'.

We Hindus are told day in and day out that India is a 'secular' state where religion should be a private matter and every citizen is equal before law. But in practice our secular Hindu parliamentarians and legislators have been passing such laws where the State asks for the religion of an individual and then discriminate against we Hindus. In this game of secularism, Hindu youth turn out to be the worst victims of GP Hindu politicians.

The Article 14 of the Constitution reads: "The State shall not deny to any person equality before the law or the equal protection of the laws within the territories of India." The Article 15(1) reads: "The State shall not discriminate against any citizen on grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex, and place of birth or any of them." The Article 29(2) reads: "No citizen shall be denied admission into any educational institution maintained by the State or receiving aid out of State funds on grounds only of religion, race, caste, language or any of them." The Article 30(1) reads: "All minorities, whether based on religion or language, shall have the right to establish and administer educational institutions of their choice." Article 30(2) reads, "The State shall not, in granting aid to educational institutions, discriminate against any educational institution on the ground that it is under the management of a minority, whether based on religion or language."

One may see that the pith and substance of the Article 30 is very much there in the 14 Points of Jinnah because 28 out of 31 Muslim members of the Indian Constituent Assembly which drafted the Indian Constitution were elected on tickets of the Muslim League of Jinnah. This fact is generally suppressed by 'secular' Hindu historians.

But on calculated mis-representations and soft-peddling by Attorney Generals appointed by Congress governments, the Supreme Court of India has ruled that equal treatment guarantee of Articles 14 and 29(2) was not available to Hindu boys and girls in minority-run institutions, and; that religious minority educational institutions under Article 30(1) can reserve up to 50 per cent of seats for co-religionist candidates with the result Hindu students including comrades with better marks do not get admissions in such institutions but minority students with lower marks easily get admissions within their reserved 50 per cent quota.

Religious minority institutions have been, thus, empowered by none other than our 'secular' Hindu politicians to treat Hindu applicants as second-class citizens of India at the mercy, whims and fancies of "minority managements" even where these institutions receive under Article 30(2) state grants out of taxes largely collected from we Hindus. In the minority institutions, the SC Hindus and ST Hindus are denied benefits of their constitutional reservations of 15 per cent and 7.5 per cent under Article 15. And, for this misfortune of Hindu boys and girls those Hindu voters are responsible who being unaware of harm they inflict upon their own children cast their votes in favour of 'secular' parties or don't go to cast their votes at all.

Hindu politicians have passed such laws that enable a minority student to get cheaper educational loans at three per cent interest per annum from the National Minority Development & Finance Corporation. A minority businessman can get margin money loan for business at five per cent interest from NMDFC. Minority students are required to repay educational loans in five years after completion of his course but a Hindu student has to repay education loan after one year of completion of his course. One may see details at (www.nmdfc.org ). A Hindu student or a Hindu businessman gets bank loans at much higher rates of interest and harsher terms whether he is a member of the Students Federation or that of the NSUI or the ABVP etc. This ill-treatment a Hindu voter has invited for himself and his children by giving his vote to the so-called secular parties or by abstaining from voting.

Congress and other 'secular' Hindu politicians have invented such a legal system where a Muslim candidate or a Christian candidate has all the legal rights to compete on equal footings with a Hindu candidate for employment, but there are thousands and thousands of posts paid from government funds for which Hindus cannot even apply, such as the post of the Principal and Vice Principal of St. Stephen's College, Delhi. GP Hindus have set up the National Minority Commission with nominal Hindu presence to ensure that minorities are not discriminated but there is no Commission to ensure that Hindus are not victimised by minorities.

The National Minority Commission does not reflect the religious demographic reality of India so it does not enjoy the confidence of Hindus in general. Either more than three-fourth members of the Minority Commission and other commissions should be Hindus in proportion to their population or these should be abolished being unrepresentative and undemocratic.

Dr Manmohan Singh, Prime Minister, his Sachar Committee and many liberal Hindus make a lot of fuss that Muslims are under- represented in civil services and in higher education. According to the Sachar Committee [page 64], only four per cent of the total Muslim population in India within age group 20 years and above are graduates. At page 65, the Sachar Committee reports that in case of Muslims (age 20 and above) the number of graduates was under four million i.e. only 1.6 per cent of Muslims are graduates if their population as per Imam Bukhari is taken to be 250 million or 2.6 per cent of Muslims are graduates if their population is taken to be 150 million. Since only educated persons can aspire for public jobs, it is natural that percentage of Muslims in government jobs should not be more than 2.6 per cent. Muslim percentage in government service is already more than this percentage by relentless efforts of Congress party to reduce the Hindu percentage.

Sachar Committee reports that while 26 per cent of those above 17 years age and above complete matriculation, this percentage is only 17 per cent for Muslims. So the recommendation is to open more schools and colleges in Muslim areas. The Sachar Committee does not tell that bulk of Muslims who drop out from schools seek gainful employment and start earning more at younger age than what they will earn even after graduating. The Census Report 2001 [Statement 10] lets the cat out of bag when it reports that in the category of household industries (HHI) workers, Muslims representation was 8.1 per cent which is double the national average of 4.2 per cent. This index is only 3.2 per cent for Hindus. In the category of "other workers" Christians enjoyed 52.8 per cent representation, followed by Muslims (49.1 per cent) and Hindus only (35.5 per cent). Thus, higher percentage of Christians and Muslims are in jobs than Hindu percentage and still Hindu politicians of 'secular' parties are working hard to reduce E3 space for Hindu students that too with the help of the votes of Hindu parents.

In a significant development, after the tabling of the Sachar report, Muslim MPs, cutting across party lines, handed over a wish-list of sorts to Human Resource Development Minister Arjun Singh: IITs and IIMs exclusively for Muslims, 5,000 schools, two lakh scholarships and more campuses of the Aligarh Muslim University across the country. A senior HRD official, present at the meeting, said, "The MPs said since IITs and IIMs have less than two per cent of Muslim students, the HRD Ministry should create IITs and IIMs exclusively for Muslim children." Urdu schools, they also demanded, should be given adequate infrastructure support. "Minority-run societies and NGOs, if they wish to open schools, should be given CBSE affiliation without any delay," an MP demanded. The Muslim MPs said that these suggestions should get reflected in this year's budget as well as the Eleventh Plan.

It is painful to see how Hindu parents are being media managed to harm and hurt educational, employment, economic and business opportunities of their own children and grandchildren by giving their notes and votes to such political parties which shout from their political rooftops that they will give special preferences to Muslims and Christians over Hindu youth in matters of education, training facilities, government jobs, jobs under police and paramilitary forces, employment in banks and other public sector undertakings and bank loans, educational loans, etc.

As the political parties in their manifestos openly declare that they will give special considerations to Muslims and Christians, they cannot be accused of betraying Hindu youth. Those Hindu parents who give their votes blindly to such political parties are the real ones who by casting their votes to such parties accept in principle that minority students be given special preference over their own children and, thus, unknowingly, end up betraying their own children, grandchildren and the Hindu youth. I suggest rather than giving their votes to their 'caste candidate,' Hindu parents should start casting their votes in favour of welfare of their own children and grandchildren as Muslim and Christian voters do.

The following data show that the Hindu politicians of the Congress Party have history, habit and precedent of giving second-class treatment to Hindus. Giving second-class treatment to Hindus still continues to be the hidden agenda and core policy of the Congress Party. The more the Hindus give their notes, votes and support to the Congress Party, the more emboldened this Party becomes to treat them and their sons and daughters as the second class.

Let us look at some manifestos of the Congress Party which has been consistently promising that if elected it will give preferential treatment to minorities over Hindus.

The 1996 Manifesto of Congress Party states: "(i) The Congress regards the 15-point programme for the welfare of the minorities as a charter of duties. (ii) It has established the National Minority Finance and Development Corporation—to support projects that promote the well-being of minorities—with a capital of Rs 500 crore. (iii) A Rapid Action Force comprising young men from different communities has been set up. (It is understood that percentage of Hindus in this Force under instructions of the Congress Governments is much below their traditional 95 per cent) (iv)The Minorities Commission has been given statutory status".

Congress Manifesto of 1998: "(i) Indira Gandhi's 15-point programme for minorities continues to be our blueprint. Each and every element of this programme will be implemented with renewed vigour. (ii) The Congress will create a new ministry for minorities to ensure better coordination and integration. (iii) A high-powered commission will be set up to examine and give recommendations on how the representation of minorities in public services could be enhanced in a meaningful manner. (iv) The Congress will amend the Constitution to establish a Commission for Minority Educational Institutions and provide direct affiliation for minority professional institutions to central universities".

Congress Manifesto 1999: "(i) to ensure the reinvigoration of Indira Gandhi's historic 15-point programme and the monitoring mechanism devised by Rajiv Gandhi. (ii) Measures will be taken to increase the representation of minorities in all public, police and para-military services both in the central and in state governments. (iii)The Constitution will be amended to establish a Commission for Minority Educational Institutions and to provide direct affiliation for minority professional institutions to central universities (iv)The National Minorities Development Corporation and the State Minorities Development Corporations will be made direct-lending institutions".

Congress Manifesto 2004: "(i) The Congress believe in affirmative action for all religious and linguistic minorities. The Congress is committed to adopting this policy for socially and educationally backward sections among Muslims and other religious minorities on a national scale. (ii)The Congress commits itself to amend the Constitution to establish a Commission for Minority Educational Institutions that will provide direct affiliation for minority professional institutions to central universities".

Hindu readers may note that the 2004 Manifesto boldly stated: "The Congress has provided reservations for Muslims in Kerala and Karnataka in government employment and education on the grounds that they are a socially and educationally backward class". But the Census report of 2001, as we have seen above, states that in Kerala and in Karnataka literacy rate of Muslims was higher than that of Hindus. Even the discredited Sachar Committee admits it. So it is dishonesty to call Muslims educationally backward in Kerala and Karnataka states but Congress and communist Hindu politicians are not ashamed to use false data just to reduce percentage of Hindus in educational institutions and in government jobs. Hindu voters of Kerala and Karnataka should take note of this fraud being played on careers of their children with help of their votes.

The Congress party and its UPA allies claim that they are the genuine well wishers of the SC Hindus. Is it true? Christians are demanding that their 'dalits' should be included in the 15 per cent reservation quota available to SC Hindus. Muslims are also demanding that 'dalit Muslims' be included in the same 15 per cent quota. No one knows precise definition of 'dalit Christian' and 'dalit Muslims'. Since Christians enjoy much better educational facilities as well as literacy rate than Hindu SCs, it is natural that Christians will grab a larger chunk of services within the 15 per cent quota further worsening the employment opportunities of Hindu SC boys and girls. Even Sachar Committee admits that Muslims also enjoy better literacy rate of 59.1 per cent compared to 52.2 per cent for SC & ST Hindus.

Congress party and allies of UPA are supporting the demand to place 'dalit Christians' and 'dalit Muslims' under the SC category. Shri Abdul Rahman Antulay, Union Minister for Minority Affairs publicly stated in November 2006 that it was time to include dalit Muslims and dalit Christians in SC/ST Reservations.

Close on the heels of Prime Minister Sardar Manmohan Singh's "Muslim first" remarks made at the National Development Council meeting, a High Level Committee of the Human Resource Development Ministry led by Shri M.A.A. Fatmi, Minister of State, has made a case for review of the Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order 1950 so as to include Muslims and Christians in the SC category (Indian Express, February 19, 2007).

A NGO has already moved to the Supreme Court to include dalit Christians into the SC definition by amending the 1950 order, and; no wonder the Manmohan Singh-led Government may manage to lose this case by not presenting the case of Hindu SCs properly. So the danger bell for SC Hindu students is already ringing. The point is whether they and their parents are aware about it.

In its 2004 manifesto, the CPI(M) promised to extend reservation facility to 'dalit Christians' by including them in the 15 per cent quota. The 1998 Joint-manifesto of all Left parties also promised to include 'dalit Christians' into the SC reservations of 15 per cent quota.

BSP leader late Kanshi Ram was reported to have assured support of his party to include 'dalit Christians' in the Presidential Order of 1950.

DMK leader K. Karunanidhi, Chief Minister Tamil Nadu, also supports inclusion of 'dalit Christians' into the SC category.

In September 2004, Ram Vilas Paswan, president of Lok Janshakti Party had promised to grant Scheduled Caste status to socially and economically backward Muslims. In December 2006, he supported a sub-quota for Muslims within the 27 per cent OBC quota who are already covered under the Mandal OBC formula while supporting demand to include 'dalit Christians' and 'dalit Muslims' under the 15 per cent quota. Shri V.P. Singh also supports a sub-quota for Muslims within the 27 per cent OBC space.

On December 5, 2006 the Samajawadi Party led by Shri Mulayam Singh, the Congress party and their other allies in UP passed a resolution in the UP State Assembly demanding reservations for 'dalit' Christians and 'dalit' Muslims within 15 per cent quota which will harm the employment opportunities of SC and ST Hindus as Christians and Muslims both enjoy higher literacy rate over SC and ST Hindus.

So those SC and ST Hindus who do not want to harm and hurt career prospects of their children should never cast their votes in favour of any of these secular parties. SC and ST Hindu job seekers and students must explain difficulties which await them if their parents did not exercise their votes with due caution or abstained from voting.

No parent knowingly wants to hurt career of his children so it is duty of Hindu students studying in colleges and universities to brief their parents the misfortune which will visit them if they voted to any party which wants to include Christians and Muslims in the 15 per cent quota. A parent is so busy in earning livelihood that he does not get time to read the manifesto and thus understand dirty tricks of GP Hindu politicians being played against Hindu Youth.

Since the employment situation is worsening day by day, it is important that those Hindu parents who have college going children or grand children, and, those Hindu youth who will soon be entering into employment market seriously look for and identify those Hindu politicians who are bent upon to reduce their E3 space.

The problem of unemployment continues to worsen day by day and in this environment Congress and other secular parties are hell bent through the Sachar Committee to reduce employment space available to Hindu youth. The National Sample Survey Organisation's latest report of January 2007 shows that unemployment is much higher among youth (15-29 years age) as compared to overall population, and, that unemployment is rising.

The unemployment rate in Delhi has gone up from 3.2 per cent in 1999-2000 to 5.3 per cent in 2004-05 and in Kolkata from 7 per cent to 8.1 per cent. (Indian Express February 16, 2007)

At the end of December 2005 about 393 lakh job seekers were waiting for jobs on the live registers of 947 employment exchanges across the country against which only 1.73 lakh got jobs in 2005. About 50 to 55 lakh new persons register every year with the employment exchanges looking for jobs.

Over 52 lakh graduates and post-graduates were waiting for jobs in December 2005 in all the employment exchanges.

According to the Sept 2006 National Sample Survey report, 58 per cent of Indians were without jobs in 2004-05 and the unemployment rate was higher among educated ones than among less educated ones. In rural areas, 56 per cent of people were unemployed and in urban areas 63 per cent were unemployed. According to a study by the Hewitt Associates, by 2020, India will have the largest number of educated but unemployed youth in the world.

M.V. Rajasekharan, Minister of State told the Lok Sabha (August 23, 2006) that annual growth rate of employment creation during the 1983-99 was 2.7 per cent which slowed to 1.07 per cent during 1994-2000. Shri Suresh Pachaury, Minister of State informed the Parliament (August 23, 2006) that there was no proposal to remove ban on creation of new posts in the government sector.

Mulayam Singh Yadav, Chief Minister of UP has been claiming that he has fulfilled his promise to the Muslim community to raise percentage of Muslims in the UP Police to 15 per cent.Traditionally percentage of Hindus in the UP Police had been above 95 per cent. So the credit for reducing job opportunities of Hindu youth in the UP Police should go to those Hindu parents who vote for Mulayam Singh. It is a tragic case of Hindu parents voting for someone who is determined to reduce employment space of their own children.

In December 2006 press reported that Raghubansh Prasad Singh's Ministry of Rural Development, for the first time in the history of Independent India, set aside Rs 1,000 crore for religious minorities for the three schemes (i) Swarnajayanti Gram Swarojgar Yojana (SGSY) (ii) Indira Awas Yojana (IAY) and(iii) Sampoorna Grameen Rojgar Yojana (SGRY). Till now such physical and financial allocations were made only for SCs and STs. Thus, under these three schemes, funds are available to Hindus including those Hindus who had voted for Shri Raghubansh Prasad Singh in the 2004 election and has been reduced by Rs1000 crore by this Hindu politician. It is another tragic case of a Hindu politician betraying his own Hindu voters.

Even the discredited Sachar Committee Report admits (page 53) that the SCs and STs are still the least literate group both in urban and rural India but Manmohan Singh thunders that "Muslims" shall be have the "first" claim over national resources. We must stand up and tell this minority politician who never won confidence of any Lok Sabha constituency that if any group which has legitimate first claim over national resources it is the group of farmers and SC & ST Hindus. For the anti-Hindu policies of Manmohan Singh-led UPA government, the price was paid by Captain Amrinder Singh specially in the urban areas of Punjab in recently held assembly elections.

The National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) data shows that level of acute poverty is equally high among all communities including Hindus also. As much as 84 per cent Hindus in the below poverty line (BPL) category in rural areas live in conditions dubbed as "below double poverty line". But showing its anti-Hindu bias, the Congress is diverting huge funds only to address the poor among Muslims. Why it is not simultaneously addressing the poverty of Hindus too?

(To be continued)

[Shri O.P. Gupta recently retired in the rank of Secretary to the Government of India in the Indian Foreign Service (1971 batch). He has served as Ambassador to Finland, Estonia, Jamaica, Tunisia, Tanzania, etc., and Consul General, Dubai and Birmingham (UK).]
#85
I don't in which category this falls,

<b>No record on Netaji`s role in freedom struggle: Govt </b><!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->New Delhi, March 27: In a shocking revelation, Government has said it has no information in its records about the contribution of Netaji Subash Chandra Bose to India's freedom struggle.

This admission has come from a senior Government officer in response to an application by Delhi-based Dev Ashish Bhattacharya under the Right to Information Act.

Bhattacharya approached the Union Home Ministry with five questions in which he had sought information on what role Bose had in the freedom movement.

The applicant had also sought information whether India maintains any protocol with regard to Bose and whether he fits somewhere in that protocol.

"The information on points in your letter is not available in the records," S K Malhotra, Deputy Secretary in the Home Ministry said in reply to Bhattacharya's petition.

"It was shocking for me to have this response," Bhattacharya said.

<b>Netaji Subash Chandra Bose may have contributed immensely towards India and make people aware about their strength to fight British man-to-man but the Government says it has no documents to substantiate this</b>, said Bhattacharya.

"It is a common knowledge about formation of Indian National Army and that it came within the striking distance of Indian mainland before being pushed back from Moreh in Manipur but this historical fact, the government is reluctant to put on record in response to my application," he said.

The applicant had also sought to know as to how much had the government spent to spread the message of Netaji Subash Chandra Bose on his birth anniversary on January 23.

<b>"If government has decided to forget Netaji and his importance and contributions towards our nation then there must be some compelling reasons. What are those reasons,"</b> Bhattacharya asked in his application.

The Union Home Ministry when contacted said it did not have any records to supply to him.

"Now this is something shocking. How are we going to make our future generation aware of the great freedom fighters of the country who were instrumental in freeing us from the shackles of the British," Bhattarcharya said.

He said he had decided to file an RTI after not seeing even a small advertisement in the daily newspapers or television or radio on his birthday.

<b>"History of each nation is as important as its mankind. The persons who have played major roles for the welfare of the nation should always be remembered and their philosophy should be conveyed to the people of the nation on important occasions</b>.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

You may find Sonia and her family's and any future generation contribution in India's freedom struggle.
#86
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Modi takes on Centre over Mallika, IIT issues
Pioneer.com
Santanu Banerjee | New Delhi
<b>Gujarat CM says Plan panel 'becoming a political body'</b>
Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi on Monday criticised the Centre and the Planning Commission for sponsoring a controversial Rs 10 crore TV serial project by Mallika Sarabhai and denying his State an IIT.

During his meeting with Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Modi, according to officials from Gujarat, told him that these instances showed that an apolitical body like the Planning Commission was becoming a political body. 

Modi told Ahluwalia that the serial on women empowerment was done without taking the State into confidence when the issue was a State subject.

Incidentally, the controversial TV serial was given to Sarabhai without following a proper procedure of calling tenders from other producers. Gujarat Government sources said the TV project was terminated as the move by the Centre, the Planning Commission and the Prasar Bharti faced stiff resistance from the State Government.

But the project was revived by <span style='color:red'>pressure from 10 Janpath, State Government sources said</span>. The controversial and the huge-budget project now revived involved producing year-long Gujarat-centric serials on women and social issues for Doordarshan. The first episode of the serial was telecast by Ahmedabad DD last month.

However, Planning Commission member Bhal Chander Mungekar told The Pioneer that ``the Gujarat Chief Minister, however, did not mention any name, but the Deputy Chairman told him that since the Plan panel has nothing to do with it, his concerns would be conveyed to the Information and Broadcasting Ministry.''

According to Government sources, Modi's allegations, which earlier also stirred up heat and dust, is set to create problems both for the project and the Centre, which bended rules to give this project to Mallika Sarabhai.

Incidentally, several producers have already approached the Gujarat High Court challenging the controversial DD's contract to Sarabhai.

Much to the embarrassment for the Human Resource Development Ministry headed by Congress leader Arjun Singh, Modi also raised the issue of his State being meted out a step-motherly treatment on educational front.

He pointed out that despite his State's high developmental indicators, Gujarat was not allowed to set up the ``extension of Mumbai IIT.''

He told the Planning Commission that when last year the issue came up for a decision and when Maharashtra Government did not take kindly to the suggestion for setting up the extension, the HRD Ministry had persuaded the Maharashtra Government to create extension in the State and denied the opportunity to Gujarat.

<b>According to Gujarat Government officials, the State Government informed the HRD that the State was ready to provide land and other infrastructural resources for setting up an extension of IIT in Gandhinagar. "But Arjun Singh had had it stopped," said an official. </b>
Bhal Chander Mungekar, who looks after education in the Plan panel said on this issue also the Chief Minister was assured that his concerns would be conveyed to the HRD Ministry. ``At Planning Commission we do not take such a decision,'' he said.

<b>Angry on this issue, the Gujarat Chief Minister told Planning Commission during the meeting that if the HRD could think of big educational projects for Rae Barlei in Uttar Pradesh, why a State like Gujarat should be denied an IIT.</b>

Meanwhile, the Plan size for the current fiscal for Gujarat was fixed at Rs 16,000 crore. This includes additional Central assistance of Rs 90 crore for projects of special importance.

Earlier, during the briefing by the Commission, Modi said that the State had achieved a growth rate of 10.6 per cent for the last four years.

He informed that from a revenue deficit of Rs 6731.54 crore in 2001-02, now the State Government has a revenue surplus of Rs 1802.85 crore in 2006-07. As such, the Fiscal Responsibility Budget Management target of eliminating revenue deficit by 2007-08 has been met two years ahead of schedule. He also informed the Commission that the revenue receipts have grown by 21.14 per cent.
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#87
<!--emo&Smile--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/smile.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='smile.gif' /><!--endemo--> Going to town
Posted online: Monday, April 09, 2007 at 0000 hrs Print EmailCongress has let down ordinary city voters. It isn’t a big hit among rural poor either
THERE’S now so much evidence that the urban vox populi is going against the Congress that a political observer from, say, Mars would be convinced that the party by now has a firm strategy. The Martian, of course, doesn’t know the Congress. As a report in The Sunday Express on the Delhi municipal elections clearly pointed out, the <b>Congress seems to be harbouring a fantasy that cities are populated by the wealthy, who either don’t vote or don’t vote for the ‘pro-people’ Congress.</b> This thesis, as these columns have pointed out more than once, was born out of the excitement following the unexpected 2004 verdict. Farmers had supposedly voted the Congress in and they apparently wanted protection from rapacious market-wallahs.

Would that the Congress be a little rapacious about the market. It would help them, for example, with farmers keen to exploit market opportunities. It would also help them to connect with lower income urban groups, whose daily contact with market economics is often more than the better-off classes. Below middle class urban citizens, who include small entrepreneurs as well as many migrants for whom market-created jobs are vital, are not particularly comforted by statist interventions that protect public sector jobs from demands of efficiency or protect the better-off from utility rate hikes. They are also — and this is a tribute to political economic dynamism of reforms — aspirational. They don’t want to live in cities as taken-for-granted background noise. They want to be heard. <b>They thought they had been heard when in 2004 - the wealthy as usual didn’t vote in large numbers - their vote won the Congress a majority of the urban constituencies.</b>

The BJP was shocked at losing so much of the urban vote it and everyone else had thought will go to the party. The Congress didn’t realise at all what it had been gifted. Indian democracy is nothing if not a ruthless reminder service. The reminders are coming in now. And it is not as if the Congress has done a fantastic job of cornering the rural poor’s vote either. With the exception of Andhra Pradesh, better performing states in the rural jobs programme are not Congress-ruled. That’s another statistic that would make sense on Mars, but not to the Congress.

editor@expressindia.com
#88
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Swaminathan, Vatsyayan nominated to RS
New Delhi: Renowned agriculture scientist MS Swaminathan and noted art historian Kapila Vatsyayan have been nominated for the Rajya Sabha. Eighty-one-year-old Swaminathan, who is known as 'Father of India's first green revolution', was till recently the Chairman of the National Commission on Farmers. As for Vatsyayan, she will return to the Upper House exactly a year after her resignation in the wake of 'office of profit' controversy. 78-year-old Vatsyayan will continue as a member of the Rajya Sabha till February 15, 2012 as she has been nominated against the 'casual vacancy' caused by her resignation..
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

Congress way of honoring corrupt people and nominating them for RS.
#89

Another CON(gress) SCUMBAG politician called YSR in the CORRUPT news. What is new? <!--emo&:beer--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/cheers.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='cheers.gif' /><!--endemo--> <!--emo&:beer--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/cheers.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='cheers.gif' /><!--endemo--> <!--emo&:beer--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/cheers.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='cheers.gif' /><!--endemo--> <!--emo&:beer--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/cheers.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='cheers.gif' /><!--endemo--> <!--emo&:beer--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/cheers.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='cheers.gif' /><!--endemo-->


http://www.hindu.com/2007/04/11/stories/...251000.htm

Growing credibility gap

That Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy (YSR) should offer to institute judicial enquiries into three alleged scams speaks volumes about the credibility gap afflicting his regime. After winning a big electoral mandate in 2004, YSR began to govern on a confident note, making a number of positive socio-economic moves. Over the past year, however, everything seems to have gone wrong for him. The Telugu Desam Party and others in the opposition have been going hammer and tongs at the Chief Minister — for various acts of omission and commission during a tenure that has just reached the halfway mark. While replying to the debate on the Governor's address in the Assembly, the Chief Minister announced judicial enquiries into three major charges against him and those close to him. The first relates to a massive siphoning of funds from the Sarva Siksha Abhiyan (SSA); the second concerns the allotment of land to a cement factory in which his son is a Director; and the third is a land scam in which one of his advisers and some party functionaries have been charged. The SSA fraud has been going on for some time; the absence of a proper audit on the utilisation of these special funds has facilitated this systematic pilferage, with the opposition parties linking it to an aide of the Chief Minister. In the wake of the controversy, the offer of land to the cement factory, at prices claimed by the government to be higher than the market rates, was turned down by YSR's son.

Land scams seem to be the order of the day in Andhra Pradesh. No sooner did YSR assume office than the endowment land scandal surfaced, followed by another around the Outer Ring Road project. Now the opposition parties are charging that one of the Chief Minister's advisers and a few Congress functionaries close to him have profiteered by grabbing land from hapless farmers in the proximity of Hyderabad. With Ramoji Rao's Eenadu, India's third largest-read daily newspaper, aggressively investigating and exposing the scandals and the government's misdeeds, the State government showed its intolerant face — attacking the media baron's financial base in an unprecedented way but failing conspicuously to bring him to heel. The YSR government faces a crisis of legitimacy. If the judicial enquiries are to carry conviction, they must be conducted swiftly, without fear or favour. At a time when High Courts and the Supreme Court are unable to spare the services of sitting judges, the State government must persuade the Andhra Pradesh High Court to appoint retired judges with a proven track record to get to the bottom of the transactions that have eroded the credibility of the regime.
#90
<!--emo&:blow--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/blow.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='blow.gif' /><!--endemo--> Feedback Advertise RSS Feeds Home
India Monday, April 16, 2007
<b>Sonia Gandhi faces court challenge - over nationality</b>
From correspondents in Delhi, India, 06:32 PM IST
In a legal tussle linked to Congress president Sonia Gandhi, the Supreme Court Monday decided to examine in detail the issue of whether a 'registered' citizen of foreign origin could hold key constitutional posts like those of the president and prime minister.

The question came back to haunt the Congress, headed by the Italy born Gandhi, as the Supreme Court bench headed by Chief Justice K.G. Balakrishnan admitted a special leave petition - challenging a Delhi High Court ruling that the constitution does not bar an Indian from holding key constitutional posts on the ground that he/she is only a registered citizen and not one by birth.

Admitting the petition by Rashtriya Mukti Morcha (RMM) president Ravinder Kumar, the bench, also comprising Justice R.V. Raveendran, stated that the question was of paramount legal importance and issued notices to the central government and the Election Commission seeking their opinion.

Taking up the question for a first hand scrutiny by itself, the bench indicated that the matter could be even referred to a larger bench, considering its importance.

The bench, however, made it clear at the outset that 'the constitution in its present form does not bar any Indian citizen, whether by birth or registration, from occupying any key constitutional position'.

'It is for the electorate to decide,' the bench said.

'We will, however, examine the issue as the matter involves important constitutional question.'

Sonia Gandhi's foreign nationality has been a matter of intense debate since she took to politics in 1998, seven years after the assassination of her husband Rajiv Gandhi.

Appearing for the petitioner, senior counsel P.N. Lekhi said at least 202 countries in the world don't allow an alien-turned-citizen to hold key positions.

By virtue of the Delhi High Court's Nov 24 ruling, even people who are not Indian citizens by birth but have acquired the citizenship through registration would be given constitutional protection in occupying key authoritative posts in the country, he argued.

Lekhi said the court should examine the issue afresh and nip the prospect of an alien-turned-Indian citizen becoming the country's president or prime minister.

Ravinder Kumar, who had played a key role in exposing the payoffs to Jharkhand Mukti Morcha parliamentarians to save the erstwhile Narasimha Rao minority government in July 1993, had first raised the issue before the high court in May 1999.

This was soon after then president K.R. Narayanan had invited Sonia Gandhi on April 20, 1999 to explore the possibility of forming a Congress-led government at the centre in the wake of the fall of the 13-month National Democratic Alliance government led by Atal Bihari Vajpayee.
#91
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>AB 20 </b>
The Pioneer Edit Desk
What Bofors cost the Congress
On April 16, 1987, Swedish Radio broke the news of the Bofors bribery scandal, little realising it had lit a fuse in the incendiary chamber called Indian politics. Twenty years have passed, far bigger political swindles have overtaken this "original sin". Bofors is hardly riveting stuff for the post-1990 generation, those who came of age in recent years, with the Congress monopoly on power gone and a cynical absence of idealism being the hallmark of all parties. Yet, there is something about Bofors that makes it an enduring mystery in the corridors of power. Why? That the story has been kept alive by dogged investigators and a small community of Bofors buffs in public life, the CBI and the media is only partly responsible. <b>The larger point is that the Congress has never really been able to wash its 'hand' of the taint that its Prime Minister and his cronies were accused of taking bribes in a defence deal; or that successive Congress Governments stymied the probe. It was a Congress Government (led by PV Narasimha Rao) that had a senior Cabinet Minister handing a note to his Swiss counterpart, asking him to go slow on investigations. It was the current UPA Government that refused to let the CBI file necessary appeals in courts of law, and allowed prime suspect Ottavio Quattrocchi to walk away with what was almost certainly a segment of the bribe money stashed in a London bank.</b> On May 8, in Argentina, a similar cover-up by Indian authorities can be expected to free the infamous 'Mr Q' of his Interpol alert. On the other hand, it was Mr Joginder Singh who, as CBI director in the United Front Government, brought back crucial papers from Switzerland on the basis of which, in the NDA years, the Bofors chargesheet was filed. Much as the Congress may protest, the fact is the party's energies in the past two decades have been expended on wiping clean the Bofors footprints. The price it has had to pay for it is there for all to see.

Bofors was not India's first scandal, but it was an opportune one. It came at a time when India's investigative journalism phase was nearing its peak. In the wider context, public disquiet with the Congress system was mounting. Whether it was for backing the loser in the Cold War, mismanaging the economy with strange notions of socialism, reducing 'secularism' to wily identity politics or presiding over a corrupt edifice, the Nehru-Gandhi legacy was being questioned. Bofors knocked down its moral pretensions. It also added immensely to India's vocabulary. Government apologists went to great limits to distinguish between 'bribes', 'kickbacks' and 'winding-up charges'. Terms like 'letters rogatory' and the intricacies of Swiss banking law became a staple for local newspapers. Even if the truth is never revealed, the Bofors nostalgia industry can live on forever.
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#92
From Telegraph, Kolkota, 24 April 2007

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->THE SAVIOUR SYNDROME
<b>- Rahul is out to save the Congress for the sake of his ancestors  </b>
Writing on the Wall
Ashok V. Desai

Ten Janpath in Delhi is a fortress. It is surrounded by a high barrier which hides all that goes on inside. The gates are always closed; nothing smaller than a tank could batter them down. Armed guards protect the bungalow round the clock. This is the house to which Sonia Gandhi moved from Race Course Road after Rajiv was assassinated in 1991. This is the house in which her two children grew up.

The high level of security is not abnormal; it is the same as for Central ministers. Nor is it unjustified. <b>Rabid Hindu nationalists have always hated Sonia for not being born in an Indian family. She has faced and continues to face scurrilous attacks; it is reasonable to fear that some amongst the Hindutwits would like to harm her or her children. </b>

Sonia after her widowhood has been an extremely private person. Powerful men always attract a crowd of hangers-on; those who surrounded Rajiv left when he died. Some were dropped by Sonia. The relations between Narasimha Rao and Sonia were never close. He gave her recognition that was proper, but not much more. While he was in power, Congressmen followed his example and avoided Sonia. <b>The press on the whole is as xenophobic as the Hindutwits. Seeing its hostility, Sonia learnt early on to avoid it — as well as anyone who may talk to the press.</b> So she has not had many close friends.

Hence, the Gandhi children grew up with little beyond their own company. Their attitudes were shaped by their sequestration. What did the mother and the children talk about on winter evenings? <b>No doubt, what the children’s ancestors had done for India was one of the topics. In the presence of all the hate and hostility outside the gate, what kept Sonia going — what kept her in India — was undoubtedly a sense of being an heir to the family that lived and died for India. It was the feeling that Rajiv had handed her a legacy of leadership to pass on to her children. Her opponents see a sinister conspiracy to keep the throne for her son; but there can also be an idealistic side to it.</b>  <!--emo&Sad--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/sad.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='sad.gif' /><!--endemo-->

<b>Rahul has been sailing these days in the sea of inhumanity called Uttar Pradesh. </b>He has been making waves there. First he said that if one of his family (meaning Rajiv or Sonia) had been Prime Minister in 1992, he would have prevented Hindu hooligans from destroying Babri Masjid. Then he said that it was one of his family (meaning Indira) that had divided Pakistan in 1971. Both were boasts. <b>But the first was also implicit criticism of Narasimha Rao who, according to some, allowed Babri Masjid to be pulled down by Hindutwit hooligans even though he had received advance information of their plans.</b> It led Manmohan Singh suddenly to shower compliments on Narasimha Rao.

In these remarks, <b>Rahul only repeated what must have been common evening conversation in the drawing room of 10 Janpath when he was growing up. What he said about Indira Gandhi is general knowledge. What he said about Babri Masjid is conjecture, but it is understandable seeing whose son he is.</b> His comments have upset many ranging from Ashok Singhal to Shahbaz Hussain, from Manmohan Singh to Muslim Mullahs. That is only politics; upsetting opponents — and sometimes even allies — is a part of its tactics. They have also brought him considerable publicity, which he can do with at this stage in his career. So I do not think his forays into controversy were unjustified or undesirable. Indira Gandhi also was fond of bragging about her achievements in her election speeches; it did her no harm. She and her father had some achievements to brag about. If one is too young to have any, like Rahul, one can only brag about the achievements of one’s ancestors.

The real question is whether his telling it will bring the Congress votes. Rahul obviously thinks it will. <b>Before the Congress returned to power in 2004, there was general consensus that it was in no condition to win. So everyone gave credit for the win to Sonia Gandhi.</b> More recently, Congress has lost state elections in Punjab, Uttaranchal and Delhi. The situation is reminiscent of the late 1960s; then too Congress lost a number of elections. Congressmen had lost appetite for a fight; Mrs Gandhi marched around the country, gave fiery speeches, and won elections single-handed.

I would not be surprised if the same feeling pervades 10 Janpath. It would be easy to believe just now that the Congress organization everywhere is moribund, that Congressmen are born losers, and it is only the name of Sonia that brings it whatever votes it gets. This is the feeling that is driving Rahul: he is out to save the Congress for the sake of his ancestors.

Is he wrong to appeal to his ancestors? I do not think so. Family loyalties are fierce in India: people do all sorts of things out of family pride. To think that Rahul would be a good patriot because he comes out of a patriotic family is quite a reasonable assumption, at least until he disproves it. There are worse ways of electioneering than reminding people of one’s distinguished ancestors — for instance, abusing and threatening Muslims as the BJP does.

Will it bring Rahul votes? Will it bring him to power? Maybe not. But politics is a gamble; one should not rule out the possibility that his tactic may work, especially in conjunction with his good looks and general air of decency.

But as a long-term strategy, this appeal to dynastic leadership is dubious. For it also sends the message: Sans moi, le deluge — <b>that the Congress will die without the Gandhis. The strategy brought Congress back to power under Sonia. But it made it a party of sycophants. One reason why Sonia does not meet her own partymen is the nauseating way in which they coddle up to her. This worshipful model has made Congress a party of minions, a party without ideology and without second-rank leaders — so much so that when Manmohan Singh became Prime Minister, his ill-wishers attributed his elevation to his loyalty to Sonia, not to his proven ability.</b>

What the Congress needs to survive and succeed is a large number of younger leaders. A sycophantic model will not bring young men and women of energy, passion and imagination to it; if Rahul aims to be the Great Leader — such as Manmohan Singh has anointed him to be — he will have only sycophantic, middle-aged opportunists to follow him.

When he took over the Congress, Rajiv Gandhi was disgusted with such sycophants who surrounded him. He was very rude to them. He wanted younger, more intelligent leaders, and brought in a number of his own, Doon-School types. He had the right idea, but went about it stupidly. His ideal of building a young, democratic, vibrant Congress is as right as it was 25 years ago. Rahul will have a better chance of sustained success if he takes it up again. He should aim to be the first among equals, instead of forming his own one-man band.

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#93
<!--emo&:ind--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/india.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='india.gif' /><!--endemo--> <span style='color:blue'> NDTV Correspondent
Tuesday, April 24, 2007 (Lucknow)
The Congress party's Rahul Gandhi is said to be upset after few people came to an election rally he addressed in Lucknow.

Gandhi gave a short speech Monday at the event in Nakkhas area of old Lucknow.

The poor show was blamed on mismanagement by Congress party workers.

Gandhi's roadshows elsewhere in Uttar Pradesh were a big hit with a huge turnout of people. </span>
#94
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Purohit's revelation of Rajiv-RSS pact leaves Cong dumb </b>
Pioneer News Service | New Delhi
Former Congress MP Banwarilal Purohit's statement about a secret pact between the Rajiv Gandhi Government and the RSS in 1989 to allow shilanyas and construction of Ram temple at Ayodhya has left Congressmen ducking for answers.

Most senior leaders refused to react to the former Congress MP's statement as they found it embarrassing in the backdrop of Amethi MP Rahul Gandhi's controversial remarks that Babri Masjid would not have been demolished had someone from the Gandhi family been at the helm of affairs in 1993.

Party spokesman Abhishek Manu Singhvi, too, sought to challenge the credibility of Purohit, instead of specifically denying the statements asserted by him. "Mr Purohit is known to change parties and he changes his version whenever he changes a party," was all Singhvi could say.

Singhvi also wondered why Purohit had kept quiet about this all these years.

In a statement to the media in Nagpur on Wednesday, Purohit had said, "As the Congress' pointsman at that time I facilitated a meeting between then RSS chief Balasaheb Deoras and Rajiv's special emissary Bhanu Prakash Singh. It was secret one-to-one that lasted an hour. I played an important role in the Babri Masjid issue because of my personal conviction that creation of Ram temple at Ayodhya would correct a historic blunder."

<b>"Deoras agreed to extend electoral support to Congress if it allowed construction of the Ram temple. Soon after that Deoras had a meeting with then Union Home Minister Buta Singh in New Delhi where the deal was endorsed," </b>claimed Purohit.

<b>Asked why he had kept mum all these years, Purohit said he would have kept it a secret but was 'provoked' by Rahul Gandhi's "fantastic claims about historical events"</b> while campaigning in UP.
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<!--emo&Big Grin--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/biggrin.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='biggrin.gif' /><!--endemo-->
Now Madam Queen will divorce him or go for Vatican sanaan or purify her 10 Janpath Sandas with Alps snow.
#95
http://udayms.wordpress.com/2005/09/12/do-...now-your-sonia/

http://udayms.wordpress.com/2007/04/25/know-sonia-p2/


#96
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->It made one puke that a minister of the Government of India should say on television that he would pull out the tongue of a chief minister if the latter made a public allegation that assistance to the latter's state was being hindered in by the ministers in Delhi of the former's political party. Woe betide this nation that's let democracy and fundamental rights come to this -- though it wouldn't exactly be a loss if our despicable politicians suffer a tongue-lashing as well as a tongue-loss. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Who's Arvind Lavakare refering to in this article?
#97
Who else - LA-LOO
#98
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Two PMs who divided India

Second Opinion: MC Joshi

In a bid to woo Muslim voters, Mr Rahul Gandhi, during one of his road shows ahead of the Uttar Pradesh Assembly election, opted to play the Babri card. He chose the Muslim dominated area of Deoband to claim that if there had been any member of his family in active politics when the Babri structure was demolished, the eventuality could have been averted. Those who took this statement for a slip by a political novice had to think again when Mr Gandhi reiterated his statement while speaking to the media in Kanpur on April 4.

It is, therefore, necessary to put the record straight. On March 24, 1986, when Rajiv Gandhi was the Prime Minister, a $1.4 billion contract was signed between the Government and Swedish arms company AB Bofors for the supply of 155mm howitzers numbering over 400. On April 16, 1987, Swedish Radio disclosed that Bofors had paid kickbacks to top Indian politicians and key defence officials to secure the deal. The Opposition raised a storm alleging that Rajiv Gandhi was the main kickback beneficiary. Dubious cover-up efforts by the family loyalists resulted in serious differences between Rajiv Gandhi and members of his Cabinet, which climaxed in the resignation of then Finance Minister VP Singh from the Cabinet.

Subsequently, Mr VP Singh walked out of the Congress. Riding the Bofors wave, he became the Prime Minister after the 1989 election. On August 7, 1990, he implemented the Mandal Commission report to rob Devi Lal of his backward class vote-bank and the BJP of its Hindu following.

The BJP, which was till then with Mr VP Singh, parted company and aggressively picked up the Ayodhya issue to regain national focus. Subsequently, Mr LK Advani was arrested in Bihar while leading the rath yatra to Ayodhya. The killing of karsevaks in Ayodhya in police firing followed on October 30 and November 2, 1990. This precipitated the demolition of the Babri Masjid in 1992.

It was Rajiv Gandhi's folly that led to the rise of Mr VP Singh during whose tenure as Prime Minister, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mulayam Singh Yadav basked in the unfounded glory of unleashing brute police force on the karsevaks. Starting 1985, one governmental bungling after another turned the Hindutva forces more bellicose. In hindsight, it seems, the Babri structure might have remained had Rajiv Gandhi never been the country's Prime Minister.

http://www.dailypioneer.com/indexn12.asp?

main_variable=EDITS&file_name=edit4%2Etxt&counter_img=4
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#99
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Arjun has lost his balance: BJP</b>
PNS | New Delhi: The Bharatiya Janata Party on Monday took exception to the statement of Human Resource Development Minister Arjun Singh that the BJP would not be invited to the official celebrations to mark the 150 years of 1857 Independence Movement, as the party did not participate in the country's freedom struggle movement.

"Such a statement is atrocious and shocking," Vijay Kumar Malhotra, BJP's deputy leader in the Lok Sabha, said. "How could he question our contribution to the country's freedom struggle movement," he said.

Malhotra said that such a statement from Singh gave on the impression either he had lost his mental balance or was making such statement deliberately. <b>"There could only be two possibilities in such a situation. Either he has lost his mental balance or is making such statements deliberately</b>," Malhotra said. 
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INSIDE TRACK
-----------------------
<b>Not a debatable point </b>
An English language TV channel scheduled a debate on the role of the Gandhi family last Sunday. Amar Singh of the Samajwadi Party and Arun Jaitley of the BJP readily consented to participate in the programme, but the anchor was unable to persuade any of the usual spokespersons of the Congress — Kapil Sibal or Jayanti Natrajan — to take part. The channel even changed the title of the debate to a more innocuous sounding one, but even then there were no takers. Finally, Vasant Sathe, who is in semi-retirement was brought in. Similarly, when a Hindi TV channel wanted to discuss Rahul Gandhi’s controversial statements in Uttar Pradesh, the only Congressperson willing to take part was Rashid Alvi, who till recently was in the BSP. Mainstream Congresspersons know full well it is wisest to stay clear of any theme related to the Family.


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