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Shocking News from Alumni Group

September 6th, 2011
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This is a shocking piece of news one friend posted in our Alumni group. These are exact words with names removed for privacy:  
http://datastore.rediff.com/h5000-w5000/thumb/6858606E665A6A667263/1knjadp5p8kllzu4.D.0.Durgapur_Alumni.JPG


(…) (2000-2004) beaten and injured by some Pakistanis in Edison, NJ 


Hi Friends, 


I heard a shocking news yesterday and thought would share the same with you. 


Our beloved mate of NIT Durgapur Alumni ‘(…)’ was in trouble yesterday with some of the Pakistanis in Edison, New Jersey. 


While he was returning from a Pakistani shop after office in Edison a Pakistani crook punched in his leg on his way. 


He fell down with the heavy baggage he was carrying and got a fracture in one of the hand. He did not indulge himself with any confrontation with them. 


Somehow he managed to get admission in hospital and got released in late night. 


Today his health condition is good. 


Also posted at [Link]

Multiculturalism is Not a Failure in General!

February 11th, 2011
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In the recent times, a lot many National Leaders in the West have expressed concern over non-integration of immigrants with their societies. The oft repeated statement is: “Multiculturalism has failed”. I think Nicolas Sarkozy of France was the most recent one to say this to the world. You can news about his statements at: 


http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jR1m5BpdMrDES3u4Cso1v3FwQRUg?docId=CNG.6b096ac0cdcfce7a0f599fbbb1c85c27.911  


Or  


http://www.sify.com/news/multiculturalism-has-failed-nicolas-sarkozy-news-international-lclmafaahgd.html  


Among the other World Leaders who have said exactly the same about “failure of multiculturalism” include:  


·         British Prime Minister David Cameron


·         German Chancellor Angela Merkel


·         Australia’s ex-prime minister John Howard and


·         Spanish ex-premier Jose Maria Aznar 


These leaders have said that their respective nations have not been able to effectively integrate the immigrants and hence “Multiculturalism has failed”. While reading through all their statements and all the news about them, I want to correct what should be the tag. They should have said: “Multiculturalism with Muslims has failed”. 


In each of these nations, the Muslims no matter from where they migrated from have lived a life in reclusive pockets. We see the same thing in India. Muslims world over have shown the tendency to start taking part in terrorist activities, as all the biggest terror attacks have involved participants from many nationalities and colors but with a common religion. And if we read all these news, we realize that all these leaders are indeed speaking about non-integration of Muslims in the Western societies, and not about others!  


Being an Indian, I would like these world leaders to know that even India, a country which celebrates “multiculturalism”, has by and large failed to make”integration” with Muslims. In India, there are two separate penal codes - one for the Hindus and one for the Muslims. Due to different penal codes, Muslims are legally allowed to have so many “privileges” in personal lives, which would be called criminal for Hindus.  


In fact while reading a summary of the book “Tea with Terrorists”, I realized that such “failures” are neither failures of multiculturalism as a concept, nor failure of these world nations, but these failures are failures of the Islamic world to keep up with the times…

Michelle Obama proves Women as Eye-candy

January 22nd, 2011
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I was reading the news about Chinese President Hu Jintao’s recent US visit. The newspaper had come out with a colored snap of Obama couple along with Hu Jintao. I was shocked to see the dressing sense and choice of appearance of Mrs. Obama.  


Have searched the pictures from net and posting here:



http://datastore.rediff.com/h5000-w5000/thumb/6858606E665A6A667263/3dff7b7fsxdo9ird.D.0.Michelle_ObamaBarack_Hu_Chinese1.jpg
While searching for the pictures, I also read the media discussing her dress, its color, and its designers. 
 
http://datastore.rediff.com/h5000-w5000/thumb/6858606E665A6A667263/odv2lwo0o9wjgp54.D.0.Michelle_ObamaBarack_Hu_Chinese2.jpg


When Barack Obama became the US president, Michelle Obama had quit her job and chosen to almost become a fashion model and a host. Since then, all the news she makes are about her designer clothes. At that time I had criticized her for choosing to become a “President’s Wife” rather than maintaining her own identity. Her gesture made other male-chauvinists justified - as soon as they start earning well, they make their wives quit their jobs. How was Michelle different, other than her choosing it instead of her hubby forcing her into it?   


Just viewing these pictures makes me feel bad. What is Michelle Obama trying to prove? If all she wants is for people to praise her ‘beauty’, in my view she looks ugly and inappropriate in her pictures. Her choice of dress for the occasion is pathetic and Chinese president and Barack Obama are looking awkward in her dominating but abject presence.  


I wish Michelle Obama could have inspired women across the world, by not choosing to be an ‘eye-candy’ for men.  


- Rahul

Pictures taken from here:
http://www.zimbio.com/pictures/_gcXrTLsMqa/Obama+Hosts+Chinese+President+Hu+Jintao+State/_sG1xeuM7mY/Michelle+Obama

Indian IT to Pay for 9/11 Healthcare

January 15th, 2011
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Ever since I started to understand him, I have kept an opinion that Obama is a man with a big mouth and a small vision – big mouth because he promises everyone a moon (each) and small vision because he thinks like he were administering a class of 20 students (who would always obey him). In his recent move to make me think about him the same way, he has made India and Indian IT companies pay for the healthcare of 9/11 Islamic terrorist attack victims!  


Obama signs 9/11 health bill, sticks India with paying for it 


http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report_obama-signs-9-11-health-bill-sticks-india-with-paying-for-it_1490018 


Indian techies slam US visa hike to pay 9/11 healthcare bill 


http://www.ndtv.com/article/india/indian-techies-slam-us-visa-hike-to-pay-9-11-healthcare-bill-74675 


I am sure Obama won’t have looked at India to pay for these medical expenses without being infatuated by and envying India’s success story. I wonder how far he is going to take his anti-India policies. Will he make Indian auto companies pay for toilet paper expenses in the White House? Or Indian biotech companies pay for yoga expenses borne by unemployed Americans? I wish he loses his next elections – and India and this world get rid of his low-vision populist decisions. I believe a partnership between India and the US is the need for both, and the partnership has to be on equal terms. And I think Obama doesn’t believe in such equality. At least his actions prove this.  

How Narendra Modi is Much Better than Barack Obama

January 15th, 2011
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http://datastore.rediff.com/h5000-w5000/thumb/6858606E665A6A667263/asybd0rvhlw2d7wh.D.0.Ratan_Tata_and_Narendra_Modi.jpg

After Obama’s 2010 India visit, no one had a doubt about the primary purpose of his trip. It was by and large a business trip with purpose to make business deals and job creations in the US. 
 


Thanks to Obama Visit, the US made deals worth 10 Billion USDs, and generated 50,000 jobs in the US.  


http://www.newstrackindia.com/newsdetails/189058 


Now let us see the figures from the recent Vibrant Gujarat meet.  


Vibrant Gujarat Global Investors Summit 2011 resulted in investment promises of 462 Billion USDs and that amounts to job creation for 52 lakh people!  


http://www.sify.com/finance/Record-breaking-Vibrant-Gujarat-a-resounding-success-imagegallery-others-lbomkvadgfe.html 


Agreed that these are only promises and not confirmed orders, but even if Gujarat makes through 30 or 20% of these in the worst estimates, these are much higher than the Obama figure! 


:) 


- Rahul

Loss of making ‘Desh’

December 16th, 2010

In a very positive note, government of Bangladesh has decided to honor 226 Indians for their crucial support to the country during 1971 Liberation War. As this TOI news tells:  


Bangladesh to honour 226 Indians for role in 1971 ‘Liberation War’ 


Bangladesh will honour some 500 foreigners, including 226 Indians, for their crucial support to the country’s 1971 ‘Liberation War’, as it marks the 40th Victory Day anniversary next year.  


Former Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi would be conferred with a special honour for her “immense” support for Bangladesh’s independence, officials earlier said. 


Apart from the late Indian Prime Minister, then Indian army chief, Field Marshal S.H.F.J. Manekshaw and the army commander in India’s eastern theatre, Lt. Gen. Jagjit Singh Aurora, figure in a list of eminent people to be honoured by Bangladesh. 


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/south-asia/Bangladesh-to-honour-226-Indians-for-role-in-1971-Liberation-War/articleshow/7100272.cms#ixzz18GcilMme 


At the same time, I am horrified to read the concluding part of the article:  


On March 26, 1971, Bangladesh - then East Pakistan - declared its independence from West Pakistan.  


According to official figures, Pakistani troops, aided by local collaborators, killed an estimated 3 million people, raped about 200,000 women and forced millions more to leave their homes during the bloody nine-month guerrilla war. 


Now this is shocking and completes the story of Division of India in 1947. I don’t know how many men and women would have died if there was no division of India, but certainly ‘a lot’ suffered due to it; be it in 1947, or 1971. All those who died or suffered, were sons and daughters of the same soil. 


While sons and daughters of soil suffered in all three artificially created nations of India, Bangladesh and Pakistan, interestingly, three dynasties grabbed power in the three respective nations, for decades. Nehru/Gandhi in India, Sheikh Hasina (daughter of BD’s founding father Sheikh Mujibur Rahman) and Bhuttos in Pakistan, these are strong dynasties which have survived and thrived. Their tales are full of ups and downs, with some members of dynasties paying price by their lives. In any case, I think situations with less separate “Desh”s would have been better and bigger.

Anuradha Koirala Wins

December 7th, 2010
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It is like a personal dream come true. I had written about Anuradha Koirala and asked you to vote for her.

http://blogs.rediff.com/rahulwrites/2010/10/22/please-vote-for-anuradha-koirala/

Now I hear that she has won the 2010 CNN Hero of the Year Award!

Anuradha Koirala wins 2010 CNN Hero of the Year Award

Anuradha Koirala of Maiti Nepal received a CNN Hero award for her work in “protecting the powerless” and advancing the cause of human and equal rights at an awards ceremony at Los Angeles’ Shrine Auditorium. Koirala and her group, Maiti Nepal, have worked to rescue more than 12,000 Nepalese girls and women from human trafficking and sexual exploitation, according to CNN.

http://www.indiatribune.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4503:anuradha-koirala-wins-2010-cnn-hero-of-the-year-award&catid=121:general-news&Itemid=410

I had got to know about her when I read about other contestants in the list. Learning about her and her NGO, I wished to help her win. I sent emails to hundreds of colleagues, posted many blog posts and also in public forums and social networking sites, asking everyone to vote for her. My sister also got into my campaign and we wanted particularly Indians to vote for her, even though there was another Indian listed in the contestants. Most of the Nepali girls, who are sent all across the world as part of human trafficking, are made to pass through India. What a shame for Indians. And I am sure that in this internet based contest where most people vote for their own nationalities, Anuradha would never have won without the support of Indians.

The news of Anuradha’s victory delights me to extent I can’t express. And more important than her is her initiative – to free this earth from female trafficking. Let us support anyone who has courage to fight that; in whatever means we can.

- Rahul

Making Mess of the Great American Dream

November 4th, 2010
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There are some fundamental principles which managers and economists follow for better effectiveness. One of them is: “Cure the cause, not the symptoms.” After reading Barack Obama’s recent comment, I wonder when he would understand it.  


I have to protect American jobs: Obama on outsourcing 


President Barack Obama indicated that he was unlikely to accommodate India’s concerns about his policy of discouraging outsourcing of US jobs, saying it was his responsibility to support jobs and opportunity for the American people. Obama has recently spoken against outsourcing of American jobs to countries like India and offered tax breaks for those creating jobs in the US. 


http://www.ndtv.com/article/india/i-have-to-protect-american-jobs-obama-on-outsourcing-64306 (Nov 3, 2010) 


I strongly believe that a dearth of jobs in an economy is a symptom rather than a cause. It is a symptom indicating towards some rot beneath a decently looking economy. It should ideally make one re-look at one’s economic model and at some fundamental review of policies; rather than trying some popular gimmicks like tax-breaks or subsidies. After following Obama’s speeches and policies from before his election, I have always felt he is more bent towards taking popular decisions rather than the right but difficult ones. Whenever Obama compares American education system with India’s, I think about our basic literacy rate and brain-drain and shrug off his worries. When he talks about concerns for American companies and Indian IT, I just compare the size of IBM ($103.6 billion in 2009) with that of India’s biggest TCS ($6.5 billion in 2010) and laugh at his contention. India has more number of jobs because Indians do jobs on the lower value chain, at cheapest rates; which not many Americans would choose to do. And if you force such jobs back to the US at those high salaries, American companies would become uncompetitive. So why should there be all this hype? I think Obama has his priorities wrong. Instead of saying, “I have to protect American Jobs”, he should think, “I have to prosper American Economy.” And he should remember the basics: free movement of human resources is key to achieve that economic development in today’s knowledge based economy. Just imagine one Indian-born PhD making a Patent for one American company – it would sustain so many other jobs both in the US and in other parts of the world – for years.  


Sometimes I feel Indians have a better choice of their leader. Dr. Manmohan Singh may be modest in his oratory skills, but he is an economist who understands things much better. Mr. Obama is a great orator, but he is a politician having a degree in law. As we know, economies run neither by oratory nor by myopic populist decisions. These turbulent years would decide the fate of both the US and India and I only wish the US would be in the right hands.

True Spirits of Gandhism

September 15th, 2010
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The US president Barack Obama is a declared fan of Mahatma Gandhi and practitioner of non-violence. But I was surprised to read this piece of news where a teen-age has been banned from entering the USA, as a punishment for sending an abusive email to the President!  


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-beds-bucks-herts-11296303  (14 Sep 2010) 


In the true spirits of Gandhism he should have remembered that “Hatred can’t be won by hatred.” Or in the spirits of what we popularly call Gandhigiri now a day thanks to the Munnabhai series of Bollywood movies, he should have called the boy to the White House and give him a warm hug (jadu ki jhapki). That is what would have healed the boy and would have made Obama great in the eyes of the masses. That would have been a far better message to the humanity too, sending ‘hope’ to the world that we can win over hatred by love. I wish he would have done something as peaceful and non-violent as that.  


- Rahul

Indian IT – Boon or Bane for the US?

September 15th, 2010
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Here is a very interesting statistic. So far the US president has been victimizing Indian IT industry for job losses for the Americans. And he has gone far enough to support outsourcing bans or to tax the American companies which outsource to India. But as Indian Commerce Minister reveals now, the fact is that Indian IT industry has created about 2.5 lakh (two hundred fifty thousand) jobs in the last three years! In August 2010 alone, Indian IT firms created 7000 jobs in the US!  


http://news.oneindia.in/2010/09/15/indian-it-creates-2-5-lakh-jobs-in-us.html  


I hope this clears a lot of air.  


- Rahul


 

The Hype of Outsourcing Ban in the US

September 11th, 2010
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Very recently there is a heated debate going on in the USA and in India Inc too about the proposed ‘IT Outsourcing Ban’. This week only, Ohio in the US has banned outsourcing of jobs to countries like India for government departments. There is much hype being generated in the US, accusing Indian IT companies of ‘stealing’ jobs out of the hands of the Americans. I remember the current US president Barack Obama promising the ban during his political campaign and even after his election he has constantly spoken against outsourcing. In his recent move, he increased the visa fee immensely, affecting the profitability of Indian IT companies which send a lot of professionals to the US for onshore jobs. Now almost whole lot of Indian IT companies are opposing this ‘protectionism’ by the American government. (We also remember that at one time the US stood against protectionism in the business world and promoted developing economies to open-up!)  


Here, I have done a quick analysis. Let us see if Indian IT companies really come anywhere nearby the US behemoths: 


Revenue: 


IBM                 $103.630 billion (2009)


Microsoft        $62.484 billion (2010)


Oracle Corp    $26.82 billion (2010)


TCS                  $6.52 billion (2010)


Wipro              $6.03 billion (March 2010)


Infosys             $4.59 billion (2010)


Data taken from Wikipedia articles of the respective companies.  


As is clear from the above tabling that the top three Indian IT companies don’t even make a mere 9% of the revenue of their top US counterparts!  


May be comparing the employment data would throw some relevant light; as the US political sphere is more concerned about the job losses than the revenues.  


Employees:  


IBM                 399,409 (2009)


Microsoft        89,000 (2010)


Oracle Corp    105,000


TCS                  160,429


Wipro              112,925 (June 2010)


Infosys             114,822 (2010)


Data taken from Wikipedia articles of the respective companies.  


The data tells that the top 3 Indian IT companies employ about 65% of the employee base of their US counterparts; though the data doesn’t discriminate between employment in home countries and employment in BUs abroad. Let us see the populations of the two countries:  


Population:  


USA                  310,216,000 (2010 estimate)


India                1,185,863,000 (2010 estimate)


Data taken from Wikipedia articles of the respective countries.  


We see that the population of India is 3.8 times the population of the US! That makes it so evident that the responsibility and urgency of new job creations in India is not at all less important than in the US!  


The analysis makes it clear that while top-3 Indian IT firms make only less than 9% in revenue and employ only 65% of people resources as compared to the US; India’s population which is about 4 times that of the US tilts the case of ‘protectionism’ in India’s favor. It comes that it should be India which should be doing ‘protectionism’ not the US! Though I believe ‘protectionism’ is a matter of political ethics and no country should indulge in it unfairly.  


In my opinion, outsourcing ban or outsourcing job-losses has been made a debate in the US for political reasons. An example of the same was made evident in the Ohio ban; since Indian IT companies do very little work for the government departments anyway which the ban was intended to curb! The financial crisis which spread in 2008 was more due to some fundamental flaws in the US economic model than any ‘outside’ threat like India or China. And until the Americans address these core and real issues, the financial and economic crisis can’t be fixed by an outsourcing ban! 


- Rahul

The Irani Model

July 29th, 2010
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Iran has now presented a new challenge to the civilised world:  


Iran offers cash incentive for new babies 


July 28, 2010 | 12:01 PM ET The Associated Press  


Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has inaugurated a policy to encourage population growth, dismissing decades of internationally acclaimed family planning as ungodly and a Western import. 


The new government initiative will pay families about $980 Cdn for every new child and deposit another $98 or so annually into his or her bank account until age 18.  


“Those who raise idea of family planning, they are thinking in the realm of the secular world,” Ahmadinejad said during the inauguration ceremony on Tuesday. 


The initiative is expected to undo years of efforts to boost the economy by reducing population growth. 


Ahmadinejad has stated previously that he wants to boost Iran’s population, estimated to be 75 million, to 150 million. 


Iran waged a successful family planning campaign across the country in the early 1970s that included banners in public health care centres reading, “Two children are enough.” It was reversed after the 1979 Islamic revolution, only to be brought back 10 years later when the population ballooned and the economy faltered. Iran reduced population growth throughout the 1990s by encouraging men to get vasectomies and both sexes to use free or inexpensive contraceptives. Perhaps as a result, the country’s population growth rate dropped from its 1986 height of 3.9 per cent to just 1.6 per cent in 2006. 


Ahmadinejad caused public outcry, however, when shortly after he was elected in 2005, he said two children per family were not enough and urged Iranians to have more. 


Under the initiative’s rules, children can withdraw the money at age 20 and use it for education, marriage, health or housing. 


News Link [CBC]  


I think this can have disastrous effects on this world if Iran’s other neighbouring Islamic nations take a cue. The purpose of such a govt initiative is not clear, though president’s comment that family-planning supporters think about a secular world, points towards his disturbing long term vision. There are people who think humans’ breeding like animals doesn’t help anyone. May be Iran is planning for some war-losses. Or may be it is to divert attention from Atomic bomb, by presenting such a baby boom.

Will God stop this?

April 24th, 2010
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In my opinion, human rights violations in the name of religion in general and Islam in particular is the biggest threat to human civilisation.  


This is the latest sample of our environment:  


Hindu girl abducted, forced to convert to Islam in Pakistan 


http://www.expressindia.com/latest-news/Hindu-girl-forced-to-convert-to-Islam/610492/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+expressindia%2FiKgY+(Expressindia)


 

China Calling

February 25th, 2010
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We have already heard enough about what Chinese are up to courtesy Barack Hussain Obama in his regular addresses to motivate American students. Often, he clubs China with India and labels them as threat to the US and Europe in areas related to science and mathematics. The whole world, to some extent, shares the same views. But there is more to the world if we start looking without an American Eye.   


For years, China has been developing ports in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar. China is also planning to build a rail network in Nepal, apart from already built roads and bridges to connect Chinese occupied Tibet via Nepal route. Now I read China is developing a small fishing town in Srilanka into a new port, investing millions!  


It would be naïve to think that all these projects are to help these small and poor South Asian countries. There is going to be a huge impact on long term political climate of the region if China continues in this way and at this speed. No doubt, the threat to India is now both on security and economy front.  


These projects show a resolute attempt by China and Chinese companies to invade these smaller markets and make long-lasting relationships. This would serve many purposes. One, it would help China gain political might in the South Asian region, including coming in nearer to India and counterbalancing the Indian might. It would also help remove dependence of Chinese companies on European or American  markets to some extent and in the same time help develop new market for same or outdated (may be outdated at other places; as we know quality constraints in Chinese products) or even for newer products and services. In the short term this is a win-win situation for both China and the other small South Asian countries. But in the long term it is the Chinese who would eat the cake.  


Despite all this, I don’t see much effort from government of India to do something proactively. Last time I heard the Maoists in Nepal had stopped Indian firms (most recently GMR Energy) from work at a hydroelectric power project. The future of the whole South Asian region popularly called Indian subcontinent is at the brink of a change in course.

- Rahul

China and Bihar

September 27th, 2008

World

History is made, and not written. Any low position is an opportunity to aim high. And anyone down with a great past is a sleeping giant.

The sleeping giants

We have listened enough of the Chindia (China+India) debates, now here is something fresh. What is common between China and Bihar? Both are underdogs, and both are down.

China has been renowned for justifying the negative connotation attached with the word ‘cheap’. It can manufacture anything that can be manufactured and at a price which is below others' raw material costs. However, the product quality will always be broke. The recent scandal in baby milk, which made over 54000 Chinese children sick and many dead, is just the 'most recent' visible example. The tainted milk products were contaminated with a toxic chemical melamine, to disguise the protein levels of adulterated milk. Many countries including India have banned such products from China. From farm products to automobile components, Chinese quality is under serious doubt. China is down.

However, Japan was in a very similar situation at the beginning of 70s when its product qualities were not better than junk. It started from there and within years, Japan became synonym with best-in-class quality. A number of Japanese companies like Sony took it personally and in order to remove the poor quality tag from “Made in Japan“, they created a history. China has the opportunity to do the same. It is down and the whole world is watching her. It can manufacture a change.

Bihar on the other hand is also in one such situation. Despite having a past that is more glorious than any other part, it lost all its shine in the after years of independence. The land where Lord Buddha attained enlightenment, where Lord Mahaveer and Guru Gobind Singh were born, and the place where great men like Chandragupta, and Ashoka ruled, lost its touch with the happenings later on. Out of government apathy and lack of opportunities, people moved out of the state to other parts of India and the unwelcomed migrating populations were targeted in many places. Of late, there has been a general skepticism that nothing can happen in the state. Then, the most devastating flood in the history of modern India happened. For state which had lost its major sources of revenues by creation of a separate Jharkhand, and where corruption eats through any public spending, it could not have gone worse. Millions have been without homes for months and thousands were washed away by the mad water. There cannot be a tougher time. Bihar is down.

However, never before in its recent past the state has been able to generate the genuine interest and pure empathy towards its condition that has happened this time. Even the skeptics who ridiculed the state have been touched at nature’s fury at the innocent population. This is the real turning point. Never before in the last many decades, the collective India has seen Bihar with this much empathy. Already the new leadership in the state is doing well and trying hard to turn it around. The state is down and the whole India is watching her. The state can take it from here.

Picture: Glass half-full or half-empty? A manager will say, “It depends”. An engineer will say, “Not or but and“. I will say, “As you wish” :)

The Great Chinese Chronicle

March 31st, 2008

World

 

The way we think and the way we play War!

 

"The Chinese soldiers dressed like monks. So, for a layman, they will look like monks. But the swords they had, were not Tibetan, they were Chinese.": Dalai Lama. This statement came up in yesterday's HT with the daily report about Tibetan struggle.

 

This made me recall some of the many stories I read about China. Let me clarify it in the beginning that I haven't read whole of Chinese history, so at places may be I would be exaggerating. But a bit of exaggeration makes life beautiful: let there be butterflies when there are just butter and flies J

 

~*~

 

The Chinese have a phrase, "Masquerading as a swine to kill the tiger." This refers to an ancient hunting technique in which the hunter clothes himself in the hide and snout of a pig, and mimics its grunting. The mighty tiger things a pig is coming his way, and lets it get close, savouring his prospect of an easy meal. But it is the hunter who has the last laugh.

 

Message: The newest one: “Masquerading as a monk to kill the revolution”…  

 

Connection: I tend to start again by India's perception about goody-goody China in the honeymoon years of our independence. In those days, roses were so beautiful, on Sherwanies; Gandhi Topi looked beautiful, on Nehru's head; we dreamt of solving issues in the UN, so what if we mistook a hunter for a pig? Not a big deal, right? Let us get into better ones

 

~*~

 

In 473 BC, in ancient China, King Goujian of Yue suffered a horrible defeat from the ruler of Wu in the battle of Fujiao. Goujian wanted to flee, but he had an adviser who told him to surrender and to place himself in the service of the ruler of Wu, from which position he could study the man and plot his revenge. Deciding to follow this advice, Goujian gave the ruler all of his riches, and went to work in his conqueror's stables as the lowest servant. For three years he humbled himself before the ruler, who then, finally satisfied of his loyalty, allowed him to return home. Inwardly, however, Goujian had spent those three years gathering information and plotting revenge. When a terrible drought struck Wu, and the kingdom was weakened by inner turmoil, he raised an army, invaded, and won with ease.

 

Message: Chinese will pretend! So be aware!

 

Connection: India had her own Chanakya, a 'one man' who erased a mighty empire. But he did take a vow beforehand, in front of all: that he would bring the kingdom down! And he never pretended! How different India was!

 

~*~

 

In 1934, the communist leader Mao Tse-tung and some 75,000 poorly equipped soldiers fled into the desolate mountains of western China to escape Chiang Kai-shek's much larger army, in what has since been called the Long March.

 

Chiang was determined to eliminate every last communist, and by a few years later Mao had less than 10,000 soldiers left. By 1937, in fact, when China was invaded by Japan, Chiang calculated that the communists were no longer a threat. He chose to give up the chase and concentrate on the Japanese. Ten years later the communists had recovered enough to rout Chiang's army. Chiang was pursued until he and his entire army fled to the island of Taiwan. Nothing remains of his regime in mainland China to this day.

 

Message: Chinese communists will never leave even a single opponent! Looking at China's sour relations with Japan even today, we realise that China never forgets. And never forgives…  

 

Connection: India had one great warrior Prithvi Raj Chowhan, who defeated Muhammad Gauri so many times, and every time left him alive, all in the name of pride. Until he was captivated, mercilessly blinded and eventually murdered. How different Indians were!

 

~*~

 

When the Mongols invaded China in the 12th century, they threatened to obliterate a culture that had thrived over two thousand years. Their leader, Genghis Khan, saw nothing in China but country that lacked pasturing for his horses, and he decided to destroy the place, levelling all its cities, for "it would be better to exterminate the Chinese and let the grass grow".

 

It was not a soldier, a general, or a king who saved the Chinese from devastation, but a man named Yelu Ch's-Ts'ai. A foreigner himself, Ch'u-Ts'ai had come to appreciate the superiority of Chinese culture. He managed to make himself a trusted adviser to Genghis Khan, and persuaded him that he would reap riches out of the place if instead of destroying it, he simply taxed everyone who lived there. Khan saw the wisdom in this and did as Ch'u-Ts'ai advised.

 

When Khan took the city of Kaifeng, after a long siege, and decided to massacre its inhabitants,  Ch'u-Ts'ai told him that the finest craftsmen and engineers in China had fled to Kaifeng and it would be better to put them to use. Kaifeng was spared. Never before had Genghis Khan shown such mercy, but then it really was not mercy that saved Kaifeng. Ch'u-Ts'ai knew Khan well. He was a barbaric peasant who cared nothing for culture, or indeed for anything other than warfare and practical results. Ch'u-Ts'ai chose to appeal to the only emotion that would work on such a man: greed.

 

Message: Chinese know what to show whom! The US says, "Show me the money!" And Chinese show then exactly that! Tibet doesn't. And so it suffers

 

Connection: Alas, India didn't have a Ch'u-Ts'ai, and hence, our Nalanda was burnt for months, Somnath destroyed for times, and Delhi was looted at barbarian's dil. Many years later, when the East India Company came, Indians still didn't know their real motive. They thought greed = want for money, but greed has no limits. Ye dil mange more! No wonder, Chinese want more! Tibet!

 

Free Tibet!

Tibet, China and India

March 28th, 2008

World

 

Two stories and Three Nations

 

Once I was known for my well researched writing. Afterwards, I became known for my more frequent posts. Then two things happened. First was a New Year resolution that I won't sacrifice quality for quantity. Second, one of you told me that blog posts have to be a piece from our lives, if you wanted to read deep and dry analysis on politics for example, you would rather pick up a magazine.

 

When Tibet crisis broke this year, the usual me wanted to bring on an article after some search and research. But as an excuse, I couldn't get time at all. I always value our memory and imagination more than any book. So here I present two real-life stories, first one is a quote from a book, and second one from an article I read long time back. What I think of Tibet, China and India are very much visible in the way the stories unfold:

 

China

 

In ancient China, Duke Wu of Cheng decided it was time to take over the increasingly powerful kingdom of Hu. Telling no one of his plan, he married his daughter to Hu's ruler. He then called a council and asked his ministers, "I am considering a military campaign. Which country should we invade?" As he had expected, one of his ministers replied, "Hu should be invaded." The duke seemed angry, and said, "Hu is a sister state now. Why di you suggest invading her?" He had the minister executed for his impolite remark. The ruler of Hu heard about this, and considering  other tokens of Wu's honesty and marriage with his daughter, he took no precaution to defend himself from Cheng. A few weeks later, Cheng forces swept through Hu and took the country, never to relinquish it.

 

You may say that such instances of treachery and war-games have happened in all countries and cultures. But, even as most of us speak lies at times, few of us are called liars! After reading this, you must have recalled India's own experience with China. The conclusion is: we just can't trust China. No one can. And no one should.

 

Tibet and India

 

I read this story as a travelogue of one lady writer.

 

She was in Tibet for visiting places. Once near a place of worship, she met a very old Tibetan lady. There was language barrier, but as soon as the old lady came to know that she was from India, she held her hand and thanked her a thousand times, with tears in her eyes, with words coming out from her heart. The writer came to know what she was saying. She said, "Oh, you are from India? We are deeply indebted to you. Because you gave shelter to our God. Thank you so much "

 

Tibetans are one of the most peace loving races in this world. Looking at our own experience with struggle for freedom, which was also mainly non-violent; it was much easier to be non-violent in 'those times', it is not any more. It is said everything is fair in love and war. And this is an issue of love and war both, for the Tibetans. I believe it is brave to shoot, but it is braver to hold one's hand if needed. Tibetans are a source of inspiration and hope to the entire peace-loving world.

 

H.H. the Dalai Lama

 

He is one of the most revered souls in this world. For what he stands for: love, peace, humanity, intellect, brotherhood, strength, passion, forgiveness, and goodness in life. Do you know face reading? You don't need to. You can easily see through his, what is the most prominent reflection when we see him: love and kindness.

 

Tibet will be free!

Malaysia ' truly Asia???

January 23rd, 2008

World

 

Malaysia ' truly Asia???

 

The recent turmoil in Malaysia w.r.t. the condition of ethnic Indians and related protests has a history. As I told you that I have been there and have many friends, I had my view on the matter. But before I could write, I came across this brilliant piece. And I will buy each and every point made here:

 

Malaysia’s Biggest Liability Is Racial Discord: Andy Mukherjee

 

After having read it, I sent this small note to the author:

 

Dear Sir,

 

I read your article: “Malaysia’s Biggest Liability: Racial Discord” in the Mint. It was a great read.

 

I have been to Malaysia and have many friends there who are of Indian origin. It is sad that despite them living there for 3-4 generations, the government still treats them as second grade citizens and there is discrimination. It is high time the whole world addresses such issues. Your article definitely served its purpose in highlighting it. Thanks a lot.

 

With best wishes,

Kumar Rahul

 

Please go through the article.

 

Join Rediff Iland community at Orkut. [Link]

Peace at the time of Suicide Bombers

December 28th, 2007

Assassination of Banazir Bhutto proves again:

Terrorists know no religion,

Hatred knows no caste

and

Bombers know no nationality.

Now comes the tainted Chinese ginger

November 25th, 2007

World

Now comes the tainted Chinese ginger

 

Very recently there was a controversy when dangerous levels of lead and small magnets were found in toys manufactured in China and sold in the US by Mattle. The US firm had to recall more than 10 million China made toys. Now, another controversy had been generated when ginger imported from China has been found to contain harmful level of pesticides. I have been following up the issue and have come to the following conclusions:

 

o       Major reason for sourcing from China is low costs. Ginger was being sourced from China at the rate of $7 per 30-pound box. The second best option was to source it from Brazil at $35 a box!

o       Global sourcing is fine and the way to be followed in the future, but not at the cost of quality and safety. Of course this is easier said than done.

o       Global procuring firms must ensure the right quality even by following unconventional methods. After the ginger controversy, experts have demanded that the US companies should keep their own people posted in China to ensure proper quality.

o       As has happened after this controversy, many US buyers have discontinued sourcing ginger from China and have gone to Brazil. After China's toy controversy, huge orders came to Indian firms. It is high time Chinese government and industry bodies should step in and try to put quality consciousness among the manufacturers.

 

As globalisation becomes invisible enough, global sourcing will be the way of life for all firms. So far, companies have not done enough to ensure quality and safety in the supply chain coming out of low cost nations. Therefore, issues like this indicate that this is the right time that things should change for a better now

 

Ref: Tainted ginger's long trip from China to US, Mint, Nov 23, 2007