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Ladies club of AMU organizes fete

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By TCN News,

Aligarh: The Ladies’ Club, Aligarh Muslim University organized a fete at the Ismat Literacy and Handicraft Centre. The members of the Club set up stalls and presented handicraft items made at the school on exhibition-cum-sale.

Inaugurating the fete, Lt. Gen. Zameer Uddin Shah, Vice Chancellor, AMU congratulated the Club members for serving the cause of women empowerment. He said that providing opportunity for quality education and employment is true service to the nation. He said that the school that the Ladies’ Club has started for the girls of underprivileged section is a great service to the society.



Mrs. Jamila Majid Siddiqui addressing the ladies Club Function

General Shah assured of his unflinching support in philanthropic exercise of the Club.

Welcoming the guests, President and founder of the Ismat Literacy Center, Jamila Majid Siddiqui said that the Centre had been organizing this fete regularly. She said that the Centre was established 15 years ago and it runs purely on donations and volunteer work.

Guest of Honour, Vivek Bansal, MLC, encouraged the members, teachers and students of the Center and urged them to work for the promotion of education among women in order to reform the society at grassroots level.

The Patron of the Club, Sabiha Simi Shah, handed over the eco friendly products fashioned for the fete to the Coordinator of the Center, Sabiha Naz Lari. He said that all the girls coming from weak and marginal sections get free literacy and vocational classes at the Center.

Joint Secretary, Faiza Abbasi said that the members had made interesting items from waste paper to give society a message to reduce use of polythene. It also fetched revenue from the sale in the fete. Secretary, Azra Farooqi conducted the Programme and Cultural Secretary Samina Khan moved the vote of thanks.

Vice President Ms. Sajida Nabi, Associate Vice President Ms. Farida Zafar Alam, Treasurer Ms. Asif Izhar Ali, Joint Secretary Ms. Nishat Iqbaluddin and several distinguished ladies visited the daylong Fete. Noted scientist, Dr. Shahid Jameel also graced the function.


Dr Ilias Ali of Assam honoured

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By TwoCircles.net Staff Reporter,

Guwahati: Dr Ilias Ali of Gauhati Medical College and Hospital (GMCH) has been honoured with Samajseva Padmashri Samman 2013 by a social trust in Pune for his immense contribution in controlling population growth in Assam and other areas.

Malatidevi Manav Vikas Samajik Trust, a Pune based organization recently handed over the award to Dr Ali who has been the state Nodal Officer of No Scalpel Vasectomy (NSV) since 2009 in Assam.



Dr Ilias Ali

“It feels good to be honoured or to get your work recognized. It means more responsibility on my shoulder. I hope such recognitions will encourage me to work more towards controlling the population growth,” said Dr Ali after getting the honour.

The trust office bearers said that they felt honoured to give the honour to Dr Ali for his efforts to bring the message of birth control measures in the overall development of the society. Dr Ali who is the professor of surgery cum HOD of Emergency Medicine and Trauma Centre of Gauhati Medical College and Hospital (GMCH), Assam’s premiere medicine institute is known for his efforts to bring the people of rural areas towards adopting the population control measures.

“It was very difficult initially to go deep inside the people as there is a notion that such measures of birth control are anti-Islamic. The village people or even the religious heads were the hurdles but I used the quotes from the Holy Quran to make them understand the reality and how this earth can be protected,” said Ali.

Dr Ilias Ali who has applied the birth control measures on more than 40 thousand people so far in the state was also invited by a Florida based international organisation for his service in population control in several African countries. Ali was a part of No- Scalpel Vasectomy International’s (NSVI) mission in African countries to check population last year.

Besides, he was invited to New Delhi on the occasion of World Population day on various platforms to sensitize on the measures of population control number of times. He was also lauded by Assam chief minister Tarun Gogoi a few weeks ago for his efforts to reduce the birth rate in the state.

Delhi Police stops Muslim groups from protesting outside Myanmar Embassy

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By TwoCircles.net Staff Reporter,

New Delhi: Delhi Police today prevented a group of Muslim organizations from holding protest outside the Myanmar Embassy. Several Muslim bodies had called for a march to the Embassy of Myanmar against the killings of Rohingya Muslims in that country.

According to eye witnesses, as a bus full of protesters were leaving from Delhi’s Jamia Nagar area, a police took control of the bus and sat on the driver’s seat. The bus was then diverted to the Chanakyapuri Police station.

Speaking on the occasion, Dr. Zafrul Islam Khan, president, All India Muslim Majlis-e Mushawarat and Editor of English fortnightly The Milli Gazette, condemned the police action in preventing them from a ‘symbolic peaceful protest.’

SQR Ilyas, General Secretary of Welfare Party of India, lamented on the fact that even most Muslim countries are silent against the oppressions of the Rohingya Muslims, despite UNHCR calling them situation grave and terming them as the most oppressed minority community.

Homage paid to Ustad Sibte Jafar in Lucknow

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By Syed Hasan Zia Rizvi, TwoCircles.net,

Lucknow: A rich tribute was paid to legend elegy writer, poet and soazkhwan (Elegy Reciter) of Shiite world Sibte Jafar, who was murdered in the ongoing shia target killing in Karachi, Pakistan.

A city based NGO, Maulayi Lovers of Ahlebai Association (MLAA), organized a condolence gathering, where many scholars and renowned poets of Lucknow had assembled.



Maulana Mirza Mohammad Ashfaq, Member of All India Shia Personal law board, Maulana Athar, Maulana Mumtaz Ali, and Maulana Doorul Hasan were present on the occasion.

Poets like Hasan Raza Tabani, Haider Nawab Jafri and Shahnawaz recited his soaz and marsiyas.

Maulana Mirza Mohammad Ashfaq said in the speech, “Ustad was the epitome of knowledge and art, he have done a lot for the welfare of community and to maintain the legacy of classical arts and culture of marsiya and soaz. He was an educationalist, scholar, poet and renowned elegy reciter”.

He added, “Quran calls a martyr always living if he gives his life in the love of Prophet Mohammad (as) and His Family”.

MLAA also conducted the condolence prayers for the “martyrs of Pakistan killed in targeted Shia killings.”

President of MLAA, Maulana Mumtaz Ali said, “We demand support of Indian government to the relatives of Indians in Pakistan so that peace and brotherhood will prevail and innocents get the needed help”.

Set 15 % for implementing minority programs: UP Chief Secretary

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By TwoCircles.net Special Correspondent,

Lucknow: During a review meeting of the Prime Minister's 15 point programme for the development of minorities, Chief Secretary, Javed Usmani had directed the state government officials for setting a target of 15 percent for the minorities while implementing the 15 point welfare programmes. Usmani also directed that if the target of previous year has not been fulfilled, it should be added in the next year and achieved.

He mentioned the welfare programmes as Gramin Awas Yojana, development work in minority dominated slums, skill development through technical education, Swarn Jayanti Shehri Self Employment Scheme etc. In these schemes, 15 percent of the beneficiaries should be from minorities. He also directed that appointments on the 2911 posts of urdu teachers to be completed by June.

Usmani directed that the honorarium of madarsa teachers be directly remitted to their accounts. Out of the total anganwadi centers, 15 percent should be constructed in minority dominated areas. Usmani informed that nearly 12 lakh students had been benefitted under Merit cum means scholarship, pre metric and post metric scholarships.

Usmani also stated that district level officials should look out for good organisations, schools and forward their proposals for setting up libraries, hostels, classrooms to the Maulana Azad Foundation. He informed that 33 educational institutions had submitted their proposals to Maulana Azad Foundation in 2010-11, another 57 did in 2011 and 113 did in 2012.

Massive fire at shrine premises in Bahraich, nearly 125 shops gutted

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By TwoCircles.net Special Correspondent,

Lucknow: Massive fire gutted nearly 125 shops in the premises of shrine of Hazrat Salar Massod Ghazi at Bahraich nearly 200 kms from Lucknow on Monday. The fire tenders reached nearly two hours late while the shops were destroyed.

Local Congress MP Kamal Kishore who arrived at the scene was chased away by the victims. People who had lost their belongings in the incident got agitated and even clashed with police. Heavy police force was deployed to control the situation.

As per primary reports the fire occurred due to short circuit. Hundreds of shops are set up in the shrine complex of Hazrat Salar Masood Ghazi. Around noon fire erupted near Zanjeera Market in a shop at Chaman Tara market. The first fire occurred in the artificial jewelry shops of Ehsanullah and Ahmed. Both the shops were gutted and the petromax kept at the Ehsanullah's shop blew and hit the wall in Musafir khana. Soon shops owned by Waqil Ahmed, Mohammad Saleem, Neelam Soni, Zahid, Asif, Manzar Altaf, Munna, Sonu, Raees, Basu, Usman, Rashid, Feroz, Bablu, Guddu, Waheed, Sonu, Sampat, Shakeel and Imtiyaz also caught fire.

Dargah Committee people were totally ill equipped to deal with such an emergency situation. They tried to extinguish fire using fire hydrants but in vain. Calls were made to fire office. Shopkeepers had no chance and could only watch the destruction. The fire tenders arrived after nearly two hours. By then around 125 shops were gutted. As many as six petromax which were kept in these shops blew causing panic.

There is an atmosphere like fair in the dargah daily with hundreds of people thronging the shrine. Vice President of the Dargah Committee, Shamshad Ahmed stated that letters were written to district administration for arranging fire tenders in emergency but nothing has been done. There are just four fire hydrants in the campus for meeting the eventuality.

District Magistrate (DM) Bahraich, Kinjal Singh stated that Dargah committee was found lacking on making arrangements for fire. She also stated that a notice will be served to them. For all regular days, the Dargah committee should make proper arrangements while during fair two fire tenders are stationed. She also informed that 10 revenue clerks have been pressed into service to assess the damage done. She stated that CM Akhilesh Yadav is keeping an eye over the developments and the home department had sought report. Proper compensation will be paid to the victims. “If the fire officers are found guilty action will be taken against them also,” she stated. Local Superintendent of Police has been given the task for conducting an enquiry.

Earlier, MP Kalam Kishore Commando too reached the scene but victims chased him away. They also clashed with the local police injuring several policemen and few vehicles. Heavy police force controlled them. “We will also probe whether MP incited them,” Kinjal Singh stated.

Report on Manipur 'killings' being considered, SC told

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By IANS,

New Delhi : The government Tuesday told the Supreme Court that it would respond to Justice N. Santosh Hegde committee's report on extra-judicial killings by security forces in Manipur.

The report was being considered at the highest level, including in the army, but it could not be assumed that whatever was said in the report was entirely true, the government said.

While allowing the government four weeks to file its response on the committee's findings, the apex court bench of Justice Aftab Alam and Justice Ranjana Prakash Desai said: "You can file any response but we will not accept any objection to the report."

The court said this taking note of Additional Solicitor General Paras Kuhad's submission that the Hegde committee report was being examined at the highest level.

"Please don't say that earlier it (killings) were 300 and now it is 50. Death is a death," Justice Alam told Kuhad.

As senior counsel V. Giri, appearing for the Manipur government, urged the court to frame the guidelines to curb such killings: "How many times this court will lay the guidelines. But the tragedy is that the guidelines are not observed."

The apex court January this year had set up a committee comprising former apex court judge Hegde, former chief election commissioner J.M. Lyngdoh and former Karnataka police chief Ajay Kumar Singh to inquire into six cases of alleged extra-judicial killings, including that of a 12-year-old boy.

The committee in its report had held that all the six extra-judicial killings were fake and there was a uniform pattern. The report said that people were killed by the security forces with impunity and in breach of the guidelines framed by the apex court and the National Human Rights Commission.

Muslim youth beaten for speaking to female Hindu classmate

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By TwoCircles.net Staff Reporter,

Bengaluru: In yet another violent incident directed at Muslim community in the coastal region of Karnataka, a group of Hindutva hoodlums attacked a Muslim boy, allegedly for speaking to his female Hindu classmate.

Zubair, a computer science student at a private college in Puttur, was waylaid by two miscreants who assaulted him, when he was walking back home after attending his daily classes on Monday April 8.

In a complaint lodged with the town police, he said that after the first assault, another group of 10-12 people chased and attacked him again near Puttur bus stand for the same reason.

Zubair has been hospitalized with severe bruises.


Bihar's conjoined twins happy over apex court ruling

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By IANS,

Patna : Seventeen-year-old conjoined twins Saba and Farah welcomed the Supreme Court ruling Wednesday that did away with the option of a surgery to separate them and directed the state government to grant the family Rs.5,000 per month.

"We are very happy and excited, and thank the Supreme Court for its decision to rule out the surgical possibility to separate us. The court's verdict will provide us time to live together, like we have since birth," Saba, lying on a bed with Farah, at their Samanpur residence in the city, told IANS.

Farah said: "We are grateful, from the core of our heart. We are also thankful to Allah for it," she said.

The court has directed the state government to ensure that the twins get the best medical attention, and said the Patna district civil surgeon must ensure regular check-ups for the conjoined sisters.

The father of the girls, Shakeel Ahmad, said: "The court order has given us fresh hope." Ahmad, who runs a small roadside eatery here, said only the government could help the family.

Ahmad recalled that a few years ago, one of the rulers of a Gulf country had promised to the bear the costs of surgically separating the two sisters. "After initial consultations at Delhi's Apollo Hospital, everything was forgotten," he said.

American neurosurgeon Benjamin Carson had travelled to India to study the twins. He had agreed to perform the risky operation, with assistance from Indian doctors.

Carson had warned that surgery would be risky, and only one the girls might survive. Doctors have also said that the option of surgical separation might mean a series of surgeries, since one operation might not suffice.

Although the twins have distinct brains and are neurologically and psychologically normal, only one of them has kidneys.

The apex court Monday directed a panel of doctors, including those from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, to give their opinion on the scope of surgery.

The court direction came on a public interest litigation by Aarushi Dhasmana, a law student at the Pune-based Symbiosis Law School.

Aligarh’s Food Craft Institute wins national award

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By TCN News,

Aligarh: The Food Craft Institute, Aligarh has got the National Award for 2011-12 for excellence in Hospitality Education. The award is given by the Ministry of Tourism, Government of India. The State Minister of Tourism, Independent Charge, Dr. K Chiranjeev gave away the prestigious award to the Principal of the Institute Prof. Syed Iqbal Ali in a programme held in New Delhi.

The meritorious students and teachers of different Hotel Management Institutes and Food Craft Institutes were also felicitated with gold medals for achieving excellence in their fields of study.



Prof. S. Iqbal Ali receiving the award from Dr. KK Chiranjivi at New Delhi

Addressing the gathering, Dr. K. Chiranjeev said that the government was making all possible efforts to develop tourism as a main economic agenda in view of its proven role in stimulating inclusive economic growth, employment generation and social integration. He said that slow growth in share of Indian tourism in the world tourism market was a matter of concern. He said that there was an urgent need of evolving strategies and realign them with the latest global trends.

The Minister said that the Ministry had instituted National Tourism Awards to promote excellence and recognize the efforts put in by various stakeholder in the development and promotion of Indian Tourism.

Prof. S. Iqbal Ali said that the Food Craft Institute of Aligarh is the only institute in Uttar Pradesh. He said that several courses prescribed by the Ministry of Tourism have been started and a large number of students are working in renowned Hotels of the country. Prof. Ali also said that the information regarding the courses run by the Institute may be collected from its website www.foodcraftaligarh.com.

Modi disinvite: Australian academics issue statement in support of UPenn professors

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By TwoCircles.net staff reporter

New Delhi: A group of 15 academics belonging to different universities of Melbourne, Australia have issued a statement of solidarity with University of Pennsylvania professors who led a campaign against Gujarat’s Chief Minister Narendra Modi.

Campagin by UPenn professors led to a disinvite for Modi who was supposed to be the keynote speaker at 2013 Wharton India Economic Forum (WIEF).

In a statement issued today, academics at several Melbroune universities strongly condemned the “pernicious personal attacks” that has been launched against Ania Loomba, Suvir Kaul, and Toorjo Ghosh for their lead role in getting Modi disinvited.




Narendra Modi

Academics said that it is laughable that arguments are being made that Modi’s freedom of speech has been violated. Modi has access to huge financial and political power and continue to make his case in the gatherings of the powerful.

The statement also criticized the Congress government for its policies which is culpable of other kinds of genocidal violence in India. They said that “any “valuable dialogue on India's growth story” is incomplete if the voices of the marginalised who bear the brunt of Modi's, or even Ahluwalia's, violent economic visions are not adequately represented.”

Academics also made the case for importance of humanities studies. In recent years with more emphasis on technocratic education, humanities are getting marginalizing within the university system.

“We stand in solidarity with Loomba, Kaul, Ghosh and others at UPenn who are continuing their resistance, and again reiterate our strong condemnation of the personal attacks aimed at them for their courage to speak truth to power. We demand that the UPenn administration, which has remained a silent spectator to these attacks against their own staff, take a clear stand against these right-wing forces and uphold the academic freedom to engage in critical and reasoned dialogue, to debate and dissent within the university space,” read the statement.

Melbourne Academics in Solidarity with Ania Loomba, Suvir Kaul, Toorjo Ghosh and others at the University of Pennsylvania

We, academics and researchers based in Melbourne, strongly condemn the pernicious personal attacks against Professors Ania Loomba, Suvir Kaul and Toorjo Ghosh by the Hindutva lobby at the University of Pennsylvania.

Loomba, Kaul, and Ghosh, along with others opposed Narendra Modi's invitation as a keynote speaker to the 2013 Wharton India Economic Forum (WIEF). Their protest – in the form of a letter to the WIEF organisers that gathered signatures of support from across the world – was successful in making the organisers disinvite Modi: no mean feat given the widespread support that Modi receives from several industrialists and a majority of the Hindu, upper-caste, upper/ middle classes in India, and the Indian diaspora in the US and across the world. It is necessary to emphasise that it was the organisers who disinvited Modi, and not those who lodged the protest.

There is ample evidence in the public domain – independent fact-finding reports, survivor testimonies, damning revelations by public servants, state-instituted inquiry commissions, media investigations, and statements by the Supreme Court – that points to the Gujarat state's complicity, under Modi's chief ministership, in meticulously planning and executing the 2002 anti-Muslim pogrom.

Events since 2002 have only seen the proliferation of spirals of impunity, the celebratory hand-in-hand march of Hindutva and neoliberalism, the spectacular rise and rise of the idea of Narendra Modi, the co-option of the Muslim vote-bank by the Bharatiya Janata Party in Gujarat, the marketing and distribution of fear, the sanitisation of the public sphere in Gujarat, and the unending trials: legal and personal of the survivors.

It is in this context that the protest letter was sent to the organisers of WIEF, clearly stating the reasons for demanding that his invitation be rescinded. In response,WIEF organisers stated that they revoked the invitation because they didn't want to put Modi in a “compromising position”. In a statement they declared: “We do not endorse any political views and do not support any specific ideology. Our goal as a team is only to stimulate valuable dialogue on India's growth story...”

In support of the stand taken by Loomba and others at UPenn we strongly oppose such a lame and purportedly neutral posturing of liberal ideas. Inviting Modi, or for that matter even Montek Singh Ahluwalia (unelected representative of the Congress party which is also culpable of other kinds of genocidal violence in India) at WIEF is a clear indication of the ideology and practice that they wish to follow. Any “valuable dialogue on India's growth story” is incomplete if the voices of the marginalised who bear the brunt of Modi's, or even Ahluwalia's, violent economic visions are not adequately represented.

Many have accused those who resisted Modi's invitation of muzzling freedom of speech. Hindutva and other right-wing protesters outside the UPenn English Department (where Loomba and Kaul teach) recently carried placards with slogans like 'Free Speech Killed at Wharton, by the English Department' and 'UPenn English Dept.: Intellectual Al-Qaeda'. Clearly, in this case, the academic freedom to dissent and take unpopular political positions against the powerful is being equated with censoring Modi's freedom of speech.

This accusation against Loomba, Kaul and others is at best laughable, and at worst tragic. It is laughable because it is oblivious to the different capacity to speak and be heard that characterises the distinction between a handful of academics resisting Modi, and Modi himself, whose huge popularity among rich industrialists keep him in a deified position of financial and political power. It is tragic because in the name of upholding freedom of speech these accusations against the dissenting professors are in fact an attempt at gagging their academic freedom.

Yet, what has been remarkable about the protest is that it has indeed succeeded in actually resisting Modi's presence, albeit virtual, at the WIEF. The protests have successfully contaminated the antiseptic discussions on economic growth in India that happens at similar gatherings of the powerful (notably, the India Today Conclave, Google Tech Summit and FICCI meet recently) who want Modi to share his story of Gujarat's so-called economic miracle, without questioning its violent foundations and accompaniments.

This success brings to light the acute importance of the humanities within any university. In today's neoliberal academy where technocratic education and courses are fast marginalising the humanities, this incident foregrounds the value of humanities education and need for those of us within the discipline of the humanities to resist its marginalisation. The protests outside the English Department at UPenn are a clear indication of how fascist forces actually fear the humanities.

We stand in solidarity with Loomba, Kaul, Ghosh and others at UPenn who are continuing their resistance, and again reiterate our strong condemnation of the personal attacks aimed at them for their courage to speak truth to power. We demand that the UPenn administration, which has remained a silent spectator to these attacks against their own staff, take a clear stand against these right-wing forces and uphold the academic freedom to engage in critical and reasoned dialogue, to debate and dissent within the university space.

Ben Silverstein, La Trobe University
Bina Fernandez, University of Melbourne
Debolina Dutta, University of Melbourne
Dianne Otto, University of Melbourne
Erica Millar, Deakin University
Fazal Rizvi, University of Melbourne
Jordy Silverstein, Monash University
Julia Dehm, University of Melbourne
Oishik Sircar, University of Melbourne
Patrick Wolfe, La Trobe University
Rajdeep Ghosh, La Trobe University
Randal Sheppard, La Trobe University
Sagar Sanyal, University of Melbourne
Sara Dehm, University of Melbourne
Sundhya Pahuja, University of Melbourne

Melbourne, 10 April, 2013

Protest against Modi in Kolkata

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By Zaidul Haque, TwoCircles.net,

Kolkata: Several groups and individuals, including students, and film actor staged protests in the city against Narendra Modi and shouted slogans, “Go back Modi” as the Gujarat Chief Minster addressed industrialists in the state capital on April 9.

Modi was invited in a conference organized by MCC Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Bharat Chamber of Commerce and the Indian Chamber of Commerce at the five star ‘Grand Hotel’ in Kolkata.



Protest against Narndra Modi in front of a Grand Hotel Kolkata on 9th April, 2013. He was invited in a conference called by three Traders Organisation.

The protest had started from the morning itself, by Bhasha o Chetana Samity, and supported by several leftist students’ bodies, including USDF, AISA and PDSF. Theater actors’ organization, Theater Fraternity and Minority & Dalit organization Rokeya Brigade, as well as Democratic Action Forum of Dalit Women and Minorities, Kaumi Ekta also participated in the protest.

Protestors staged drama, sang songs and read poems against Modi in front of the Hotel, holding placards that read `Go Back Modi’, `Killer of Gujrat Minorities.’

Police was, however, vigilant and stopped the agitation and drama midway. Protesters were briefly detained.

Secretary of Bhasha o Chetana Samity, Professor Emanul Haque alleged that the police used the batons to disperse the protesters, in which one student of Vidyasagar College, Shuvojit Maiti was seriously injured. He has now been admitted in the SSKM Hospital.



He further said that no matter how much Modi present himself as the Development icon, he cannot escape the responsibilities of the 2002 pogroms. His development plank is hollow as Gujarat fails on several fronts, he added.

Trinamul Congress MP, Kabir Suman later visited the Police Headquarter at Lalbazar and spoke to Joint Commissioner of Police (Sadar) Jawed Shamim.

All protesters were released later in the night.

Information Minister of Bangladesh to speak on current Situation at Jamia

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By TCN News,

New Delhi: The Academy of International Studies and Department of Political Science, Jamia Millia Islamia is going to organize an address and discussion on “Current Situation in Bangladesh” by Hasanul Haq Inu, Information Minister of Bangladesh and President of Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal.

The programme is scheduled to be held on April 11, 2013 at 3 PM in Mir Taqi Mir Conference Room, at the Administrative Block of the university.

Cultivating culture: A deluge of Urdu poets in Delhi

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By Bushra Alvi, TwoCircles.net,

New Delhi: National capital will once again witness a gathering of Urdu poets in the annual mushaira, Jashn-e-Bahar, on Friday 12 April 2013 at Delhi Public School, Mathura Road, from 7 pm onwards.

In an attempt to bring the best of contemporary Urdu poetry to its lovers, in its 15th edition, the mushaira will see the participation of Urdu poets from several countries. New faces will share the stage with seasoned poets against the backdrop of modern calligraphy by eminent painter M F Hussain and cutting edge new media and set décor reminiscent of the classical age of Urdu poetry.

Prof Waseem Barelvi, Javed Akhtar, and top Urdu poets from India like Sheen Kaaf Nizam, Mansoor Usmani, Popular Meeruthi, Nusrat Mehdi, Aqeel Nomani and Aalok Srivastava will share the stage with Fahmida Riaz and Kishwar Naheed from Pakistan. Prof Hiroji Kataoka from Japan and America’s Max Bruce, globally popular for the freshness of his verse, will also participate along with Harris Khalique, Islamabad; Omar Salim Al Aidroos, Jeddah; Mona Shahab, Washington; Farhat Shahzad, New Jersey; Zakia Ghazal, Toronto.

This promises to be the biggest non-official, non-political mushaira of the country.

“Poetry unites across cultures like nothing else does and the tradition of Mushaira is as old as poetry itself. It empowers us to serve our beautiful language. As it is, Urdu has always represented the best in the multi-cultural panorama that is India. We want to present the diversity in the practice of Urdu verse and its now global richness, to our audiences,” says Kamna Prasad, Founder of the non-profit Jashn-e-Bahar Trust that organizes this yearly international mushaira.

Japan is being represented for the first time at Jashn-e-Bahar this year. “In fact, we have invited three foreign poets whose madari zabaan (mother tongue) is not Urdu. This speaks for the new frontiers this language of love is exploring today,” says Prasad and adds that Jashn-e-Bahar Trust is committed to the growth, expansion and evolution of our beloved language. Urdu has created a remarkable global identity for itself and this year mushaira Jashn-e-Bahar emphasizes on significant contemporary and emerging aspects of Urdu’s poetic expression.

Kapil Sibal, Hon’ble Minister of Communication and Information Technology, will be the chief guest and Justice Markandey Katju, Chairman, Press Council of India, will be the guest of honour. The chief guest will also release the book ‘Nazir-e-Benazir,’ a collection of the verses of Nazir Akabarabadi, a people’s poet in true spirit also known as the ‘Father of Nazm’.

The mushaira is organised with the support of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), Delhi Public School, Mathura Road, Usha International, Tata Services, Sulabh International Social Service Organisation, Takshila, M R Morarka Foundation, Overseas Infrastructure Alliance, RKBK Fiscal Services Pvt Ltd and Sun Foundation.

Invites can be downloaded from the website www.jashnebahar.org . For further details contact: 41642893.

Lucknow MP Lalji Tandon admitted to hospital

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By TwoCircles.net Staff Reporter,

Lucknow: Bhartiya Janta Party's (BJP) MP from Lucknow seat, Lalji Tandon has been admitted to Lari Cardiology Center of King George Medical University at Lucknow on Wednesday. Tandon complained of chest pain and was taken to the hospital.

Doctors attending him informed that Tandon has low blood pressure problem and his condition is stable.

The 77 year old BJP leader Tandon will celebrate his birthday on April 12. A veteran of BJP, he is close to former PM Atal Bihari Vajpaye. Tandon has served as MLC, MLA and minister during various BJP governments in Uttar Pradesh.

He is reported to enjoy support of a section of Muslims also in old city of Lucknow. Presently he represents Lucknow parliamentary seat and had defeated Congress leader Rita Bahuguna Joshi in 2009 Lok Sabha elections.


Book review: The Parchment of Kashmir

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By Alpana Sharma

THE PARCHMENT OF KASHMIR edited by Nyla Ali Khan. Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.

The Parchment of Kashmir gathers together a wide range of essays on the subject of Kashmir. It is a compelling and stimulating book for a number of reasons. First, it interrelates a range of disciplines from political science and sociology to history, philosophy, and English. Second, it is produced by academics, all of whom are based in Jammu and Kashmir. Third, because these essays are written by scholars who are intimate with Kashmir, yet have not had an opportunity to be read outside of local circles, the book gives them a readership that they otherwise wouldn’t have; but readers themselves also benefit because the essays provide them with a view that is genuine and local and that otherwise would have been obscured.

The book comprises an introduction and nine chapters, each authored by different scholars. Therefore, it seems appropriate to structure this review according to their separate contributions. As with any such collection of essays, there is, of course, an element of repetition. But, broadly speaking, the essays follow a chronological trajectory, passing from the personal, through the spiritual, to the practical, and then back to the personal. The book is demarcated by sections which group the essays under such subjects as identity and Kashmiriyat, cultural syncretism, sovereignty and democratic governance, conflict, and knowledge production.

Nyla Ali Khan, the editor, who currently teaches at the University of Oklahoma and has written extensively on Kashmir (most recently, Islam, Women, and Violence in Kashmir: Between India and Pakistan, Tulika Books, 2009; Palgrave Macmillan, 2010; Gulshan Books, 2011), begins her Introduction with a general look at Kashmir, focusing next upon issues of history, nation, culture, and misfortune. Noteworthy is Khan’s insistence on the heterogeneity of Kashmiri identity and history, her refusal to sentimentalize aspects of cultural loss (such as the loss of Kashmiriyat), and her emphasis on ‘analyses of subjectivity’, which makes possible her own emphasis on women’s roles and identity in the context of cultural and political upheaval. In Khan’s words: ‘Narrative structures in this work are constituted by the variables of race, gender, education, marital status, social class, and nationality, which generate complex conventions and relations of power’ (p. 7). The result of this diversity of personal and ideological backgrounds is a richness that cannot be reduced to a monolithic truth about Kashmir.
The first chapter, ‘Evolution of my identity vis-à-vis Islam and Kashmir’, by Mohammad Ishaq Khan, provides an effective opening by examining personal identity and opinions in the historical environment of Kashmir. Most important, key terms are introduced, including Kashmiriyat, jihad, rishis, Sufis, and azadi. All are examined from the personal viewpoint so that, for example, jihad is thought of as the war against one’s baser self. The essay concludes with an appeal to the higher, unifying logic of spiritual nonviolence.

Continuing the discussion of Kashmiriyat, the second essay, ‘Kashmiriyat: The Voice of the Past Misconstrued’, by Rattan Lal Hangloo, historicizes this ethos of Kashmiriness, viewing it not merely as a concept but as a many-layered, syncretic cultural and secular institution. This essay is, in many ways, the most fundamental contribution in that it examines Kashmiriyat in detail, its development and change over time. Hangloo views Kashmiriyat as unique to Kashmir as a result of geography, ecology, religion, and culture, although it has imbibed influences from neighbours. He concludes with a useful discussion of the partial erosion of Kashmiriyat in terms of diaspora and the geopolitics of the Cold War.

Chapter three builds upon the previous contribution in that it examines both Muslim and Hindu approaches to Kashmiriyat. But M.H. Zaffar’s inspirational essay on the spiritual nature of Kashmir prioritizes ‘an un-indoctrinated folk approach’ (p. 71) as it looks in turn at Buddhism, Saivism, and Sufism. The whole is further enlightened by wonderful selections from the poetry of Lal-Ded and Nund Rishi.
Neerja Mattoo’s essay complements Zaffar’s in bringing the Sufi and Saiva traditions together as a symbiotic entity. Mattoo discusses the poetry of Lal-Ded, Nund Rishi, Shah Ghafoor, and Rupa Bhavani to show how the Muslim and Hindu mystical traditions fuse to form a common worship of the Divine.
The following four chapters take a pragmatic turn, beginning with Noor Ahmad Baba’s ‘Democracy and Governance in Kashmir’, which introduces the more practical elements in an examination of democracy and government. In the conflict between two states over governance, the Kashmir Valley in particular has suffered, leaving a politically bereft community and laying waste to the potential of a true democracy, defined here as ‘the empowerment of people, ensuring rule of law and guaranteeing rights and securities fundamental for living a good life’ (p. 106). Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah’s re-election in 1975 paved the way for decentralization through local governance with the adoption of the Panchayati Raj Act of 1989; unfortunately, these sound initiatives were squandered as the Jammu and Kashmir region grew increasingly militant and divisive. The key point made by Baba is that there are not simply two states that are involved; this simplistic view completely disregards the will of the people and produces politico-institutional distortions.

Gull Mohammad Wani’s essay, ‘Political Assertion of Kashmiri Identity, follows naturally from Baba’s while taking up the thread begun by Hangloo on the subject of identity politics. Wani clarifies that the issues lie essentially between people, not in people. The idea of community is traced through history, from 1585 onward, and illustrates the gradual elimination of the Kashmiri self. Particular attention is paid to the spirit of nationalism and the drive for self-determination in the face of foreign aggression and oppression, and the secular ideology of Kashmiriyat is understood as the core element of Kashmiris, such as was embodied in the 1950s political mobilization led by Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah. Wani argues that the distinct identity of the Kashmiris is rooted in history and culture, but it also includes variables such as geography, economic viability, and iconography. While such a view has been inhibited by the differing thought processes of India and Pakistan and held back by global geopolitics, the essay remains optimistic about the prospects for regional governance.

Chapter seven investigates in more detail the historical links between Kashmiri and Indian nationalisms. These were not inimical in their aims – agrarian reform being one of the binding factors, secular democracy being another. However, over time and, in particular, with the ousting of Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah in 1953, the two came into conflict; Kashmir then became India’s ‘national interest’ and thus the two nationalisms became antagonistic. Of note in the essay is Rekha Chowdhary’s urging readers to consider what is left out of forms of nationalism that are univocal and monolithic: the will of the people themselves in all of their cultural diversity and genuine heterogeneity.

Bashir Ahmed Dabla’s essay, ‘Sociological Dimensions and Implications of the Kashmir Problem’, develops many of these ideas from the sociological viewpoint. Commendable is Dabla’s inclusion of his own personal experiences of the trauma and ravages wrought by the state of militarization and militancy in Kashmir. His premise is that Kashmiri identity is distinctive, affected by a wide range of factors including religion, ideology, politics, economics, sociology, culture, and psychology. With the active participation of academics, the distinctive Kashmiri perspective has been highlighted and reinforced by the growth of militancy. The author recognizes four phases over recent history: one, Kashmiri national fervour and progressive reforms; two, ambiguous democracy; three, mass election rigging; four, the insurrection of Kashmiri youth. Following this is a discussion on a range of broadly sociological problems, including demographic manipulation, economic backwardness, educational backwardness, violence against women, deviance and crime, and the effects of all of these, including discrimination against Kashmiris, cultural deprivation, mental and physical deterioration, corruption and militancy. Dabla concludes that there is a desperate need for social programmes and, in fact, complete social rehabilitation.

The book closes with a moving personal account of the politics of exclusion enforced by the Indian hegemonic state. From an early age, writes Hameeda Naeem, ‘I got passionately involved in thinking about the fate of my homeland, which paradoxically seemed to be my own, and yet very alien’ (p. 214). An education in postcolonial theory exposed Naeem to the politics of knowledge construction and the ideological functioning of the state, the manner in which the state coerced or manufactured consent to its regulation of every aspect of human life. Gross brutalities carried out by the Indian Army against people for demanding basic civic rights, several of whom included the author’s own family, galvanized Naeem into political activism. Not only the repressive forces of the government but the public media – ‘analyses of television debates; the invited panelists; write-ups in the national English and vernacular papers, magazines, and reports from the government agencies; and …reporting on the conflict by the national media’ (p. 220) – too bear responsibility for distorting facts and silencing minority voices. As a result, the history of Kashmir, both past and present, stands severely diminished, and children are brought up ‘almost rootless’ (p. 221).

In all, this collection of essays is a compelling tribute to the need for genuine democracy for Kashmir, one that will account for all of its voices, religions, languages, histories, and traditions. One must believe that the sharing of such views with other scholars, particularly in the Indian subcontinent, will produce some movement, if barely perceptible, towards a fuller understanding and a possible settlement of the Kashmir issue. Furthermore, the book provides an instructive framework for both theoreticians and practitioners who work on global minority issues which bears some resemblance to that of Kashmir. An obvious example which springs to mind and is located in at least four states is that of the Kurds. In Iraq, there is a clear Kurdish history, identity, and perspective and at the present time efforts are being made to delimit a boundary to the Kurdish area which takes into account the variables discussed in this book. The Parchment of Kashmir is a step in the direction toward a broader, yet deeper, knowledge of Kashmir as told by Kashmiris. More than this: to read its parchment is an invitation to extend our social and ethical thinking.

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Alpana Sharma is at Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio. This review was first published in Seminar journal.

Reports of inquiry commissions of riots should be made public: Muslim forum

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By TCN News,

Aligarh: “Not only the Gujarat government but the Congress governments at the Centre and states have failed to punish the guilty of riots that took place since independence and that indicate the working of Congress,” Said Prof. Razaullah Khan while addressing a riots review meeting held by the Forum for Muslim Studies & Analysis (FMSA). Aligarh Prof Khan pointed out that the Congress Party failed to even put up the reports of inquiry commissions on the parliament pedestal.

Secretary General of FMSA, Jasim Mohammad said, large number of riots took place since 1947. He recalled riots of Jamshedpur (1964), Ranchi (1967), Ahmedabad (1969), Neilli Assam (1983), Aligarh (1990) etc. for which inquiry commissions were constituted but their reports never saw the light of day and guilty were never punished.

FMSA vice president N. Jamal Ansari pointed out that the case of Gujarat (2002) is different where a state sponsored genocide had taken place and the central government should have declared acted.

Recent spate of communal riots in Uttar Pradesh too has been a reason of concern.

In the meeting, FMSA passed a resolution demanding the central government should put the reports of all the Inquiry Commissions in Parliament and the guilty must punished.

Six new special OPDs started at AMU’s hospital

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By TCN News,

Aligarh: Lt. Gen. (Retd.) Zameer Uddin Shah, Vice Chancellor of Aligarh Muslim University inaugurated 6 Special OPD’s and Post Operative Recovery Room at the JN Medical College, Aligarh Muslim University.

Addressing the inaugural Function, Gen. Shah said that J. N. Medical College was on his top priority as the college was a show window of this Institution, providing health services to the deprived sections of the society. He assured that the University administration will provide all possible facilities for the upgradation of this college. Gen. Shah congratulated Prof. Habib Raza for starting six special OPD’s to expand the service area for common people.



AMU VC Gen. Shah inaugurating the New Special OPD at JNMC

Pro-Vice Chancellor, Brigadier S. Ahmad Ali, congratulated the Department on this achievement and hoped the college will become equipped with all medical facilities soon. He said that University administration will provide all kind of support to improve infrastructure facility in the hospital.

Prof. MH Beg, Dean, Faculty of Medicine said that the Medical College will achieve new heights with the starting of the six special OPD’s. Prof. M. Ashraf Malik, Principal and CMS said that the Medical College will get all necessary equipment by the end of this year. He said he was continuously trying for the upgradation of the Hospital so that poor patients get all the facilities.

Department of Surgery was established in 1964 and in 1971 MCI gave permission to start course in General Surgery. 34369 patients were examined at the Surgery OPD and 2920 patients were operated during the last financial year.

Prof. Mohd. Habib Raza, Chairman, Department of Surgery, said that the six new special OPD’s will function once in a week and patients may visit the OPDs according to the schedule as per their ailment area.

Chief Justice of India to visit Jamia

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By TCN News,

The Faculty of Law, Jamia Millia Islamia is going to organize the 4th National Moot Court Competition from April 12-14, 2013.

The Inaugural Function of the National Moot Court Competition is scheduled to be held on April 12, 2013 at 5 PM in the Dr. M.A. Ansari Auditorium of the university.

Justice Altamas Kabir, Chief Justice of India will be the Chief Guest in the inaugural programme and will address the audience. Asha Menon, Member-Secretary, National Legal Services Authority will be the Guest of Honour on this occasion. Najeeb Jung, Hon’ble Vice-Chancellor, Jamia Millia Islamia will preside over the function.

AASU demands updating of NRC

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By TwoCircles.net Staff Reporter,

Guwahati: All Assam Students’ Union (AASU), the apex students’ body of the region took a rally out in Guwahati on Thursday in demand of the immediate update of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) in the state.



NRC was given in the year 1951, as document of proof of citizenship of this country.

AASU has been leading campaign against alleged illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

AASU demanded that the process should be finished before the 2014 Lok Sabha elections.

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