PM Narendra Modi told Donald Trump not to interfere in Kashmir: Amit Shah


PM Narendra Modi told Donald Trump not to interfere in Kashmir: Amit Shah

Home Minister Amit Shah said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi told US President Donald Trump not to interfere in Kashmir issue as it is an internal matter of India.
BJP president Amit Shah on Friday revealed that Prime Minister Narendra Modi told US President Donald Trump that Kashmir is an internal matter of India and he need not interfere in it.

"This has been our consistent stand for years that we will not tolerate any kind of interference in Kashmir. If any country tried to speak on Kashmir, we said that it is our internal matter, be it American President or anyone else. Prime Minister Narendra Modi said clearly that Kashmir is our internal matter and you need not interfere," said Amit Shah at an election rally in Buldhana, Maharashtra.

Amit Shah said the Congress and the NCP have opposed the abrogation of Article 370 in Jammu and Kashmir and in Maharashtra Assembly polls, the voters should ask them about their stand on Kashmir issue.

"In the integration of Kashmir with India, Article 370 was the biggest hurdle. In 70 years, no other Prime Minister showed the courage to abrogate Article 370 but Narendra Modi did it," he said.

"Congress Ghulam Nabi Azad said in Parliament that river of blood would flow in Kashmir if Article 370 is repealed. But I would like to share with you that not even a drop of blood was flown after Article 370 was revoked," added Amit Shah.

"The Congress and the NCP opposed the abrogation of Article 370. When they come to you asking for votes, you should ask what is their stand on it," said Amit Shah.

Article 370 was abrogated on August 5, divesting Jammu and Kashmir of its special status and bifurcating it into two UTs -- Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh.


Xi coming to India with a bagful of messages for Modi


Xi coming to India with a bagful of messages for Modi

If the strategic calculus of the two neighbours, where the U.S. is the elephant in the room, does not align, then Beijing also has a plan-B.
Chinese President Xi Jinping is heading to Chennai on Friday with a clear message — Beijing wants to develop a 360-degree relationship with India.

But if the strategic calculus of the two neighbours, where the U.S. is the elephant in the room, does not align, then Beijing also has a plan-B.


Analysts say that if India continues to develop a security dimension to its Indo-Pacific strategy, through the weaponisation of the India-U.S.-Japan-Australia Quad, then Beijing’s strategic ties with Pakistan, a common neighbour to both countries, are likely to further consolidate.

Ahead of Mr. Xi’s departure, China, which views the formation of the Quad as an instrument to contain Beijing, has taken umbrage at the decision of the four countries to raise the level of their consultations to the Foreign Minister level in New York, on the sidelines of last month’s UN General Assembly session, official sources said.

Indian red line
Despite China’s discomfort, an official said India had legitimate reasons to change tack. China had crossed the Indian red line of internationalising the Kashmir issue, in support of Pakistan, at the UN Security Council, following India’s August 5 decision to end Jammu and Kashmir’s special status. In a thinly veiled protest, India had also “postponed” border talks between Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi and National Security Adviser (NSA) Ajit Doval that were scheduled last month.

Analysis: Modi-Xi Summit: what to expect

President Xi’s bagful of pre-departure messages can be traced to the Bishkek summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) in June. The Hindu has learnt that the Chinese side had offered its good offices to resolve the Kashmir issue between India and Pakistan, which New Delhi politely declined. Earlier in March, Foreign Minister Wang had publicly offered to mediate to resolve Indo-Pak differences.

The intensity of China’s intent to help resolve the Indo-Pak row may have diminished, but not extinguished. The reasons for China’s persistence to see peace break out between New Delhi and Islamabad is fairly obvious. With a breakthrough in Kashmir, India will no longer have an argument to reject the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), the flagship of President Xi’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

A quadrilateral cooperative relationship among India, China and Pakistan, with the likely participation of Russia, will also significantly boost the global profile of the SCO, which is at the heart of the revival of Eurasia as a salient geopolitical and geo-economic construct.

Track-2 dialogue
Chinese officials, who did not wish to named, have told The Hindu that in the backdrop of the post August 5 situation, Beijing would support a track-2 dialogue among China, India and Pakistan to address each other’s concerns.

Analysts point out that the Chinese side, which wanted to “hear out” Pakistan’s views on Kashmir and other issues, including Afghanistan and CPEC, had virtually “summoned” both the civilian and military components of the establishment in Islamabad, before Mr. Xi left for India to break bread with Prime Minister Modi. “It was his (President Xi’s) desire and ours to take each other into confidence (prior to the informal summit with Mr. Modi),” Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mahmoud Qureshi has been quoted as saying.

Apart from Prime Minister Imran Khan and Army Chief Qamar Javed Bajwa, the Director General of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Lt. Gen. Faiz Hameed, was also present in the Pakistani delegation, signalling that apart from Kashmir, the Afghanistan situation, over which the ISI maintains a tight grip, was also prominently on the agenda during talks in Beijing.

An official, who did not wish to be quoted, said, “talks with Mr. Xi prior to his India meetings have been symbolically important as they have been viewed in Islamabad as a special gesture reinforcing Beijing’s special ties with Pakistan”. He also pointed out that the high profile civil-military meetings also signal that India’s growing ties with the Indo-Pacific Quad had now firmly entered the China-Pakistan equation.


महीने भर में पाकिस्तान की अकड़ ढीली, अब भारत से मंगाएगा जीवन रक्षक दवाएं

पाकिस्तान ने जब भारत से व्यापारिक रिश्ते खत्म किए, तो वहां के व्यापारियों को मजबूरन भारत से दवाएं मंगवाना बंद करना पड़ा. कुछ ही दिनों में पाकिस्तान के अस्पताल में जीवन रक्षक दवाओं की किल्लत हो गई. दवाओं के अभाव में मरीज तड़पने लगे.

5 अगस्त के बाद पाकिस्तान ने भारत से व्यापारिक रिश्ते खत्म कर लिए. (फोटो: इमरान खान)

  • पाकिस्तान में जीवन रक्षक दवाओं की भारी किल्लत
  • भारत से दवाओं के आयात को पाकिस्तान ने दी मंजूरी
  • 5 अगस्त के बाद खत्म कर लिए थे व्यापारिक रिश्ते
जम्मू-कश्मीर से अनुच्छेद-370 हटने के बाद पाकिस्तान ने बौखलाहट में भारत से सारे व्यापारिक संबंध एक झटके में खत्म कर लिए. पाकिस्तान में भारतीय सामानों के बॉयकाट का अभियान चला. दोनों देशों के बीच चलने वाली ट्रेन सेवाएं बंद कर दी गईं. पाकिस्तान नफरत में यूं अंधा हो गया कि भारतीय फिल्मों को तो अपने यहां बैन ही कर दी. उन विज्ञापनों पर भी प्रतिबंध लगा दिया, जिसमें भारतीय कलाकार नजर आ रहे थे.
दरअसल अतंरराष्ट्रीय सीमा पर भारत की तैयारियों के सामने पस्त पाकिस्तान ट्रेड के मोर्चे पर भारत को नुकसान पहुंचाना चाहता था. लेकिन 30 दिन गुजरते-गुजरते पाकिस्तान को अपने फैसले का असर समझ में आने लगा. पाकिस्तान के इन प्रतिबंधों का कुछ खास असर भारत पर तो नहीं हुआ, लेकिन पाकिस्तान में त्राहिमाम की स्थिति पैदा हो गई.
बता दें कि पाकिस्तान की ड्रग इंडस्ट्री इस वक्त चौपट हाल में है. पाकिस्तान ने जब भारत से व्यापारिक रिश्ते खत्म किए, तो वहां के व्यापारियों को भारत से दवाएं मंगवाना बंद करने की मजबूरी थी. कुछ ही दिनों में पाकिस्तान के अस्पताल में जीवन रक्षक दवाओं की घोर किल्लत हो गई. दवाओं के अभाव में मरीज तड़पने लगे.
पाकिस्तान को अब अपनी गलती का एहसास हुआ. लाचार पाकिस्तान ने अब भारत से दवाएं मंगाने की अनुमति दे दी है. पाकिस्तानी न्यूज चैनल जिओ टीवी के मुताबिक संघीय सरकार ने सोमवार को भारत से जीवन रक्षक दवाओं के आयात को मंजूरी दे दी है, ताकि मरीजों को राहत मिल सके.
पाकिस्तान के वाणिज्य मंत्रालय ने वैधानिक नियामक आदेश (Statutory regulatory order) जारी कर अपने यहां की दवा इंडस्ट्री को इंडिया से मेडिसिन इंपोर्ट करने की इजाजत दे दी है.
समाचार एजेंसी पीटीआई के मुताबिक 2019 में जुलाई तक पाकिस्तान ने भारतीय दवा कंपनियों से 1 अरब 36 करोड़ रुपये की दवाएं मंगाई थी. 5 अगस्त को भारत ने जब जम्मू-कश्मीर से अनुच्छेद-370 हटाने का फैसला किया तो पाकिस्तान ने भारत से व्यापारिक रिश्ते खत्म कर लिये.

Biography of Mridul Pandey

Mridul Pandey




https://about.me/mridulpandey


There aren’t many real estate marketers like him, not in entirety. Dynamic, successful and high profile, Mridul Pandey, Founder of Prayag Real Estate is set in a different mould, for a real estate marketer. Sharp in conducting business, unassuming while dealing with colleagues and associates, and flamboyant enough to be written about on page three of colourful newspaper supplements, Mridul Pandey has a way with people and impresses easily.One of the youngest entrepreneurs in the real estate sector, he is also one of the very first and few who realised the need for providing professional real estate services to its customers.
There are many dimensions to the 36 year old from Prayagraj who covered the distance from an aspiring youngster to the top slot of the real estate sector in a fairly short span. An avid gymmer, a cricketing and Formula One enthusiast, socially full of zip and just as well while hobnobbing with stars from the cricketing world and Bollywood, Mridul Pandey loves to live life on the high side. Yet it’s his work that drives him as is evident from the many awards and accolades he has assimilated in the last few years. Mridul Pandey practically transformed the face of real estate industry in India by bringing in professionalism in this sector. It helped immensely that he understood the pulse of the market and prospective buyers. Pandey believed in acting as a strategic adviser to both, real estate developers and buyers, a step that may have contributed significantly to the way real estate consultants were looked at.Under his leadership, Prayag Real Estate emerged as one of North India’s leading real estate advisory and portfolio management firms.


The #MeToo shockwave: how the movement has reverberated around the world

#MeToo twitter shockwave across the globe

In Naomi Alderman’s novel The Power, girls around the world suddenly and mysteriously gain the ability to electrocute people. At first governments think they can contain it, but soon the relationship between men and women begins to shift rapidly. A global revolution follows in which women, now physically dominant, topple patriarchal institutions like dominoes.
Five days before Alderman’s book was published in the USA, the New York Times reported allegations of sexual harassment and assault against film producer Harvey Weinstein. Five days after it was published, the hashtag #MeToo went viral. And two months after that, Time magazine named “the silence breakers”, women who spoke out about abuse, assault and rape, as its “person of the year”. A global revolution has indeed begun - though where it is going nobody yet knows.
From its origins in the US, the impact of the movement spread rapidly, with millions of women around the world sharing their own stories of rape, assault and harassment in the workplace. Most cases will never meet the public eye in the way the Weinstein scandal did, with its rota of famous faces coming forward day after day to deliver lurid and disturbing details of the director’s alleged predatory behaviour. But a glance at local media reports reveals that almost every country in the world has had its own #MeToo moment: From Britain’s Westminster scandal to “Australia’s Weinstein” Don Burke and journalist Shiori Ito’s unprecedented public discussion about her alleged rapist in Japan.
The phrase “Me Too” was first used by activist Tarana Burke 10 years ago in a grassroots campaign to reach underprivileged girls dealing with sexual abuse. But it became an overnight phenomenon after actress Alyssa Milano encouraged victims of sexual abuse to tweet #MeToo as a way to show the world a “sense of the magnitude of the problem” following the Weinstein scandal. By the time she woke up the next day, thousands had responded. Within weeks it was more than a million.
As a viral campaign, part of the success of #MeToo was to do with how deeply personal it felt. Within days our social media feeds were flooded with friends and family members adding their stories. “Of course, me too,” a friend added simply on Facebook, neatly summarising the depressing inevitability that she too had experienced sexual harassment. The women mostly exchanged familiar stories and knowing looks. Surprise was the domain of men: “I knew it happened, but I had no idea it was this bad” was a common sentiment.
In Spain it became #YoTambien, in France it became #BalanceTonPorc, roughly translated as “expose your pig”; in Italy #quellavoltache (“That Time When”). In Israel, a Hebrew phrase translated as “Us Too”. In China, where Facebook is blocked, posts appeared briefly on local social media channels before being ripped down by censors.
In Japan, journalist Shiori Ito did “the unthinkable” when she appeared before television cameras in May 2017 to publicly accuse a prominent correspondent of rape. At the time she only used her first name, but in late October, amid the explosion of #MeToo confessions, she revealed her full identity and published a book about her experience. In an article for Politico she wrote that it is taboo to even use the word “rape” in Japan and it is often changed to “violated” or “tricked”. “My coming forward made national news and shocked the public,” she wrote. “The backlash hit me hard. I was vilified on social media and received hate messages and emails and calls from unknown numbers. I was called a “slut” and “prostitute” and told I should ‘be dead’.” But Ito believed she had no other choice. She said #MeToo has provided an opening in the Japanese media to discuss sexual harassment and assault.
Meanwhile in Australia, television personality Don Burke, a household name from his long-running gardening programme Burke’s Backyard, was about to be exposed by allegations of bullying and harassment of women who worked with him over two decades. Among them was eight-time Olympic gold medallist Susie O’Neill, who claimed Burke compared her genitals to a painting of a flower by her husband. “Is your c**t as big as that?”, she said he asked her during a visit to her Brisbane home ahead of the 2000 Olympics.
Burke has denied all allegations of sexual harassment, but admitted he “might have terrified a few people” because he was a tough taskmaster.
Allegations against Burke came to light after journalist Tracey Spicer, inspired by #MeToo, put a call out on social media for women who had experienced sexual harassment in the Australian media. The response was so great (she terms it “a tsunami of injustice”) that she worked with the country’s media union to set up a kind of triage service for the hundreds of replies she received, directing people towards counselling, legal and police support, before hearing their stories. Before the dust could settle on the Burke allegations, Neighbours actor Craig McLachlan was also accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women who worked with him on the Australian Rocky Horror show (allegations he denies and plans to fight).
“Globalisation, connectivity and the women's rights movement have created the perfect storm,” Spicer told the Telegraph. “Women are able to share their experiences, from Sydney to Suffolk. “Suddenly, we realise we're not alone. And our experiences are being believed. For the first time, men are understanding what women have suffered for centuries.”
The Australian cases have been highly organised, with senior journalists and several media organisations directing investigations and filtering and verifying the information. But they highlight a common theme emerging around the world - the way in which women are now using social media to network and share information about sexual harassment, usually under the radar, before coming forward as a united front against repeat offenders.
Spicer said online networks had “changed everything. “Almost all of the whistleblowers who've approached me do so via Twitter (direct message) or Facebook (private message) before a phone or email conversation,” she said. “Our personal devices are such an intimate part of our lives, these women feel comfortable using social mediums - at any time of the day or night - to share details about these experiences. And it's easy to connect with other alleged victims. For example, in the Don Burke case, the first whistleblower was able to easily connect me with two women in the US.”

Bangkok shootout: Indian tourist killed, two others among five injured

One Indian tourist died after a bullet hit him while another was severely injured in the shootout.

Bangkok shooting

HIGHLIGHTS

  • The shootout was between two groups of teenagers
  • Police say they were armed with AK-47 assault rifles
  • Two Thai nationals and one from Laos were also injured
A shootout between two groups of teenagers in Bangkok proved fatal for a 42-year-old Indian tourist who was among the two people killed due to bullet injuries. Five others, including two Indians, two Thai national and one from Laos, were injured in the shootout.
The Indian tourist who died in the shootout is identified as Gakhrejr Dheeraj. The other person who was killed is Keovongsa Thonekeo, 28, a tourist from Laos. The injured are being treated at a hospital.
The Thai police said that the shootout took place on Sunday night near a parking lot of the Centara Watergate Pavilion shopping mall in the Pratunam area of the city, news agency Xinhua reported.
The metropolitan police said that the unidentified assailants were armed with AK-47 assault rifles.
According to the police, the two groups had emerged from a nearby snooker club into an alley beside the parking lot. Soon, a fight started between them and quickly escalated into a gunfight.
News agency PTI said in a report that the Indians were part of a group of tourists. They had just had dinner at an Indian restaurant and were waiting for their bus at the parking lot.

2018: A year of mystery disappearances and audacious assassinations

The past 12 months have seen mysterious disappearances and alleged assassinations, all attributed to some or the other world power

2018: A year of mystery disappearances and audacious assassinations
Journalist Jamal Khoshoggi (L) is suspected to have been killed inside a Saudi consulate in Turkey while Chinese actress Fan Bingbing (R) mysteriously disappeared for a few months (Photos: Reuters & AP)
An audacious murder carried out at a popular international airport. The 'Priyanka Chopra of China' going missing, not to be heard from for months. And, the head of an international organisation tasked with tracing missing persons disappearing himself.
These are not historical incidents from the Cold War. Nor do they form the premise of a John le Carre novel. These are events that took place in the past one year, events that made headlines across the world for their incredible and, often, fantastic nature.
The past 12 months have seen mysterious disappearances and alleged assassinations, all attributed to some or the other world power. The latest was the disappearance of Interpol president Meng Hongwei in late September.
Towards the end of September Meng travelled to China from France, where the headquarters of Interpol are located.
The last time he was heard from was on September 25, when he texted his wife: "Wait for my call." Four minutes later, Meng sent a knife emoji and was never heard from again.
Meng, a Chinese national, was officially reported missing on October 5 and this made headlines across the world. After all, even though Interpol does not have actual policing powers, it isn't everyday that a high-profile international official just goes missing.
It was a full three days before Chinese authorities said that they had detained Meng. Shortly after the announcement, Interpol said that Meng had resigned from his post as president of the organisation.
On October 8, China offered more clarity on Meng's status, saying that he was under investigation for corruption and other offences. The new statement also said that Meng had only himself to blame for the troubles he found himself in.
WHEN AN A-LIST STAR WENT MISSING
Meng Hongwei's disappearance in China may have attracted international attention but it was short and uneventful compared to what happened with Fan Binging, an A-list Chinese actress who remained missing for around three months.
First some context: Fan Bingbing has featured in films such as Iron Man 3 and X-Men: Days of Future Past. She has been associated with luxury brands such as Louis Vuitton and Mercedes-Benz and in 2017, was ranked on top of business magazine Forbes's China Celebrity List, with an annual estimated income of Rs 320 crore.
So when she went incommunicado in June this year, it made waves. As a journalist who has covered China for several years said on Twitter, Fan Bingbing going missing was like a Priyanka Chopra or a Katrina Kaif going missing back home.

PM Narendra Modi told Donald Trump not to interfere in Kashmir: Amit Shah

PM Narendra Modi told Donald Trump not to interfere in Kashmir: Amit Shah Home Minister Amit Shah said that Prime Minister Narendra M...