News, Views and Information about NRIs.

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April 30, 2012

Bollywood actress Achala Sachdev passes away


Yesteryear actress Achala Sachdev, who featured in the popular song 'Ae Meri Zohra Jabeen' from the film " Waqt", has died following a prolonged illness. She was 88.
For the last seven months, the actress was bed-ridden at the Poona Hospital and Research Centre (PHRC), Pune.
"She passed away due to respiratory failure at 5.30pm yesterday. She was bed-ridden for about six months after she suffered a cerebrovascular (brain attack)," said Sachdev's physician Vinod Shah, who tended to her for more than seven months, told PTI.
Sachdev is survived by son Jytoin, who is in the US and would be going to Pune for the last rites, Shah said.
Sachdev, who was staying in Pune for several years, had broken her leg after she fell down in her house about six months ago.
She was treated but four days later she suffered a brain infarction in which she lost her vision and movements of upper and lower limbs. Since then, she was being treated at the Poona Hospital and Research Centre, Shah said.
Born in Peshawar, Sachdev, who acted in around 150 films, made her film debut with "Fashionable Wife" (1938). Her most memorable role was as Balraj Sahani's wife in the 1965 blockbuster "Waqt", where she was part of the legendary song " Ae Meri Zohra Jabeen".
She was also a part of films like "Prem Pujari", "Mera Naam Joker", "Hare Rama Hare Krishna" and "Andaz".
More recently, she played Kajol's grandmother in "Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge" and Amitabh Bachchan's mother in " Kabhi Khushi Kabhi Gham". She was last seen in Hrithik Roshan starrer " Na Tum Jaano Na Hum" (2002).

4 burnt alive, several hurt in Indo-Swift factory fire in Lalru


LALRU(SAS NAGAR) - Four people were burnt alive and several others injured in a major fire caused by a boiler blast in a chemical factory near Lalru in this subdivision of Mohali district today.
Police said the fire started in the Dashmesh Medicare factory this morning after a boiler exploded in a reacter on the first floor of the building. Several fire tenders, which were pressed into service, battled for many hours to extiguish the blaze.
The bodies of four people, who were burnt alive in the fire were taken out of the debris. The deceased were yet to be identified. Two persons were still stated to be missing from the factory premises. Several people who sustained burn injuries in the fire were taken to local civil hospital, various private hospitals in the town and Government Medical College hospital in Sector 32 in Chandigarh.

Shimla DC summons principal on turban row

A missionary school, St Edwards School, has been caught in a religious row for allegedly banning Sikh students from wearing turban during school hours.
Parents of a Class XII student, Gurleen Singh, complained to the district administration that their son was not allowed to wear turban within the school premises. Instead, the school authorities asked him to put on a patka- a small headgear. The alleged incident as per the family occurred on March 2.
Deputy Commissioner Shimla, Onkar Singh, has summoned the school principal, John Bosco, and members of Gurdwara Singh Sabha (GSS) on Saturday to sort out the issue. Besides, Singh said necessary action would be taken against any one found guilty for hurting religious sentiments of a particular community.
Chief Minister Prem Kumar Dhumal also condemned the alleged order and said no one was allowed to hurt the religious sentiments of any particular community.
He said that district administration will look into the matter. The school’s move led the parents of the Sikh students of the school to approach the district administration demanding action against school authorities.
The student’s father, Jaspal Singh, said, “My son came home crying and told us he was not allowed to wear a turban in the school.”
However, Bosco, denied the charges. He claimed that he never ordered a ban but just asked the boy to wear patka instead of turban like other Sikh school boys were doing.
“Sikh students in the school wear patka and not turban, so the boy in question was asked why he was doing so. There is no blanket ban on turban,” Bosco said.
On the first day of session the boy was asked about the turban but the matter ended on March 5. His parents came to the school on same day and the boy was later allowed to wear whatever he wished as per the religion, he said.
The principal’s clarification had, however, failed to satisfy the people of the community. The GSS of Shimla is now up in arms over the alleged ban order on turban.
The Sabha had requested Deputy Commissioner to take suitable action against the principal. Members even threatened to launch protest if such a draconian order was not “revoked.”
GSS chief Jaswinder Singh said Sikh community would not tolerate such an order by any school. It hurts the sentiments of Sikhs and would not be tolerated at any cost, he said.

New immigration policy of Canada draws flak

Chandigarh, April 29
More than one lakh Punjabis are likely to be affected by a controversial decision of the Canadian government to close the files of candidates who had applied for immigration under the federal skilled workers (FSW) category before February 28, 2008.
A protest will be launched against the move in Chandigarh on April 30.
The Conservative government in Canada has decided to create, what it terms, a fast and flexible immigration system and which will eliminate backlog in the federal economic immigration programme. The new policy aims at recruiting skilled labour that addresses the country’s immediate labour market needs.
The proposal, which was put in the Canadian budget on March 29, will be implemented soon. The government plans to refund fees and return applications of all those who applied before February 28, 2008.
The Conservative government feels that it should not be bogged down with the backlog created by the erstwhile Labour government. The move will affect three lakh people worldwide, most of whom are Indian and Chinese. Thousands of Punjabis have been waiting for immigration for the past eight years and will now stand no chance of immigration under the new format, which will fast-track immigration of 29 categories of skilled workers.
Advocate Rakesh Garg, who is also an applicant for permanent immigration and heads the Pre-2008 Canadian Back-loggers Association, said candidates from across the state would hold a rally in Chandigarh on April 30.
Garg said the association would also take up the matter with Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal and urge him to seek Prime Minister’s intervention in the matter as more than one lakh Punjabis would be affected by the move. Other aggrieved applicants, including Lajwant Bains and Jagminder Singh, claimed the decision was a repetition of the Komagata Maru incident and against the Continuous Journey Act, 2008, as it “goes against the first come, first serve principle. They said family reunification cases would also be delayed under the new policy.
The immigration hopefuls have established a prospective Canadian immigrations Facebook page. Garg said he was also in coordination with prospective immigrants from China, Pakistan and Sri Lanka to launch a worldwide protest against the move.

Mr. B.S.Ghuman, President of the NRI Association of Canada and NRI Law Group, a Canada based law group, assured them of the full support, of any kind, to fight for their cause and press the Canadian government to give a second thought to it's decision.

B.C. Gangster Gunned Down In Nuevo Vallarta, Mexico

SURREY, B.C. - A British Columbia gangster who police say had criminal connections across Canada and the world has been shot dead in Mexico.
RCMP Chief Supt. Dan Malo said Thomas Gisby was killed in a Starbucks in Nuevo Vallarta on Friday night.
He said police are now concerned about retaliation against enemies of the 50-year-old man who was from the Fraser Valley, east of Vancouver.
"We wanted to get our message to the community that this wasn't an individual who was simply on holidays," Malo said Saturday. "This is a well-known target, a well-known organized crime figure here in British Columbia."
Gisby led what police called the Gisby Crime Group, which was well connected to other criminal organizations, although Malo declined to name them.
"He has networks internationally to be able to bring illegal commodities into Canada for distribution," Malo said, adding guns and drugs were among the goods Gisby traded.
Mounties were aware that Gisby had travelled to Mexico, said Malo, who is in charge of the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit.
"Even though Thomas Gisby, in his own right, thought that he was at a high-enough level in organized crime that he would be isolated from violence, it's clearly not the case."
THE WORLD'S 10 MOST DANGEROUS DESTINATIONS
Number of homicides per 100,000 people. Based on UNODC's Global Study of Homicide.

April 29, 2012

Human Smuggling Canada: Tamils In Limbo After Canadian Crackdown On Human Smugglers In Thailand

BANGKOK - All wars cause collateral damage. Vashni is collateral damage in Canada's war on human smugglers.
The soft-spoken Tamil woman in her 30s lives one step ahead of the law in Thailand and longs to be reunited with her elderly parents in Toronto. But she would never consider resorting to using one of the notorious smugglers who operate out of Bangkok to make that happen.
"I don't want to take that risk to myself," she explains. "Why? It's too dangerous and not safe."
Vashni, whose identity is not being revealed to protect her safety, exists in stateless limbo. She and hundreds of other Sri Lankan Tamils are languishing in a shadowy netherworld within this teeming south Asian metropolis.
For the last two years, she's struggled to stay one step ahead of a Thai government that considers her an illegal migrant. If she's sent back to her native Sri Lanka, she faces torture, imprisonment and perhaps death.
Vashni has been swept up by the bitter aftermath of her homeland's 26-year-civil war that ended three years ago with the Singhalese majority crushing Tamil separatists. In the 1990s, she was conscripted — against her will she maintains —into the rebel Tamil Tigers, a group Canada considers a terrorist group.
She and hundreds of her fellow Sri Lankan Tamil migrants here in Thailand have also been swept up in another Canadian-led battle: the major international law enforcement offensive targeting Thailand-based human trafficking crime rings.
Canada launched the ambitious international effort to prevent smugglers from reaching our shores. In 2009, the MV Ocean Lady brought 76 Tamil migrants to British Columbia, and the MV Sun Sea brought 492 a year later. Prime Minister Stephen Harper gave Thailand another $12 million to combat the smugglers during a visit here last month and his government introduced a tough new immigration bill that targets the gangs.
The much-touted legislation passed in the House of Commons on Friday and now goes to the Senate for quick, final approval.
The co-ordinated policing and political effort involving Canadians, Thais, Australians and others across the globe appears to have prevented another Ocean Lady or Sun Sea from reaching Canada's west coast. Earlier this month, a Sri Lankan ringleader of the Bangkok smuggling network was arrested in France.
But there is a human cost associated with these law enforcement successes. Thailand doesn't recognize international refugee law — it considers people like Vashni to be illegal migrants.
So they must apply to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) for refugee status. If they are successful, then they wait for a third country to grant them residency — a process that can take years. If they are like Vashni, and have had their claims rejected by UNHCR, the waiting becomes interminable.
"Every month we go to the UNHCR to see the consultant. They say, you wait, you wait. How long do we have to wait without an answer?"
The latest UNHCR figures from March, obtained through a third party by The Canadian Press, show that 275 Sri Lankan Tamils have been granted refugee status, while another 142 have not. Aid agencies say more Tamils — nobody knows how many — haven't bothered approaching UNHCR.
Phil Robertson, the Bangkok-based deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch, says many Tamils are being sent back to Sri Lanka where they face grave harm from the predominantly Singhalese government.
"That's what we're seeing now in Sri Lanka. People have been sent back from the U.K. and have been detained, interrogated and tortured," says Robertson, whose organization issued a public plea to Britain late last year to stop sending Tamils back to Sri Lanka.
"It's not as simple as: stop the boats from coming and that's that. There are consequences on the ground here in Thailand."
Alan Keenan, Sri Lanka analyst with the International Crisis Group, has documented abuses towards Tamils in the post-civil war period.
"There's some sufficient evidence that people who are failed asylum seekers are at significant risk of detention and torture."
Sri Lanka has been a politically charged issue for the Harper government. An estimated 300,000 Tamils in Canada represent their largest diaspora. They took to the streets in massive numbers in major cities to protest the government silence at what they saw as the slaughter of their people by Sri Lankan government forces in 2009.
The Conservatives recently changed course with a much harder stance towards the Sri Lankan government, criticizing the slow pace of reconciliation and the reluctance to address allegations of war crimes.
The Conservatives also moved to prevent more boatloads of Tamils from arriving on Canada's western shores, dispatching RCMP officers to Thailand. The RCMP declined interview requests in Bangkok.
Harper pressed his then ambassador to Thailand Ron Hoffman to tackle the smuggling problem. Thai officials say Hoffman worked tirelessly in the last year-and-a-half on the issue. Harper also appointed Ward Elcock, the former CSIS spy master, to be his special adviser on human smuggling. Elcock, who has travelled widely throughout South Asia, declined to be interviewed.
Thai officials are effusive about their deepened co-operation with Canada.
Gen. Wichean Potephosree, now the Secretary General of Thailand's National Security Council, headed the Thai national police last year at the height of the crackdown.
"Sharing information and intelligence is the key," Wichean says. "We have discussed about, first, how to prevent Sri Lankans (from leaving) the country."
A Western diplomat, broadly experienced with the issue, says Canadians have been providing good training to their Thai counterparts in policing, border control and immigration.
That has created an inhospitable environment for the leaders of the human trafficking rings, making Thailand "a less attractive departure point" for their operations.
"The fact that there hasn't been another boat is evidence that something worked," the diplomat said.
Others see inadvertent damage to human rights.
Robertson, of Human Rights Watch, says Canada complained loudly to the Thais after the Sun Sea incident, and "marching orders went out from the prime minister" to locate and prevent the smugglers' from launching another ship.
"Within a week or so, you had major arrests of Sri Lankans. The problem has been that when you have that kind of order that comes from the top in Thailand, the police and the immigration snap-to," says Robertson.
Vashni, who shares a small apartment in Bangkok, has avoided arrest.
"In the last year, they arrested a lot of people because we don't have a visa. Last year, this government is very tough."
Vashni's parents arrived in Canada as refugees about a decade ago and settled in the Toronto area after gaining their citizenship. They live on social assistance and are not eligible to sponsor her.
Vashni has another big strike against her — she was once a member of the Tamil Tigers, the Sri Lankan rebel group that Canada considers a terrorist organization.
Vashni says she was forced to join the Tigers as a teenager because her older brother fled the country; in northern Sri Lanka, the Tigers had a rule that each family had to supply at least one member.
She says she was never trained as a fighter, and worked as a runner and intelligence gatherer. She managed to flee Sri Lanka in the 1990s. She returned a few years ago, hoping for a fresh start in the capital of Colombo.
But the army eventually caught up with her in the months following their May 2009 rout of the Tigers. She fled, eventually reaching Thailand 25 months ago.
She is certain she will be killed if she returns to Sri Lanka.
"Definitely when I reach the airport, they're going to arrest me. The first question they're going to ask me is: how you went out of this country? I have no answer."
Keenan says judging the validity of each Tamil refugee claimant is tricky.
It is true that the Tigers, also known as the LTTE, have "a long history of forced conscription. There was a requirement that one member of every family join the LTTE."
But Keenan says that can also be a story that an asylum seeker tells to win freedom in another country.
"I don't envy the job of immigration tribunals or departments around the world."
In the future, Thailand wants Canada to focus more on the root causes of migrant woes within Sri Lanka itself.
"The best way to solve this problem is to help the origin country to take care of their people," says Boinchart Bunnang, director of international strategy at the Thai National Security Council.
Wichean wants Canada to "assist Sri Lanka in social and economic development to lift up the standard of living of the people… Cracking down on the smuggling network is necessary. However, Canada should consider solving the problem at the root cause as well."
Keenan applauds the Canadian government's hard line towards Sri Lanka to clean up its rights record and resolve long-standing ethnic differences.
"Governments with lots of diasporas need to really be doing all they can to pressure Colombo to clean up its act."

Fight Against Breast Cancer


UK based NGO to provide special gloves to doctors, nurses
Moga,(India) April 29
Roko Cancer, a UK-based social organisation, has announced to launch an awareness drive among women in Punjab in the second week of May to help them detect breast cancer at an early stage.
Talking to The Tribune from Manchester (UK) on the phone, Kulwant Singh Dhaliwal, global ambassador of the organisation, said the growing number of breast cancer cases in the state was a matter of concern. The issue needed to be addressed by roping in the support of the Centre, the state government and social organisations.
Maintaining that early detection of breast cancer could help cure the disease, he said Roko Cancer had decided to distribute 10,000 specially designed gloves among women doctors and nurses for detecting breast lumps. “The glove costs around Rs 800 a pair but we will provide these free of cost to help save women in Punjab from this deadly disease,” he said.
“The gloves provide a safe and effective way for every woman to carry out breast self-examination.The gloves magnify the sense of human fingers allowing lumps of the size of a grain to be detected, which is not possible with bare hands,” Dhaliwal explained.
He said clinical trials of these gloves in several countries in Europe had proved its efficacy and these were widely used by women in the UK at home for self-examination.
He said Roko Cancer, which had been conducting mammography tests free of cost in collaboration with NRIs and the state Health Department for the past few years, had performed over 20,000 such tests in the state. “More than 1,000 cases of breast cancer have been confirmed. in the state and the results of another 2,000 are awaited”.
He said in the past couple of years, 200 women had been found suffering from breast cancer in Moga and Muktsar districts, 175 in Ferozepur district and 135 in Faridkot. There were hundreds of suspected cases in the Malwa belt.Stressing the need to make concerted efforts to spread awareness about breast cancer in Punjab, Dhaliwal said breast cancer was one of the leading causes of cancer deaths among women.
Roko (Stop) Cancer says...

200 women found suffering from breast cancer in Moga amd Muktsar districts
  • 175 in Ferozepur district
  • 135 in Faridkot district

Morinda bypass: Work on rail overbridge resumed


Chandigarh, April 29
A bypass started in the late 90s to facilitate smooth movement of traffic on the high-volume Chandigarh-Ludhiana road, that saw various obstacles, will at last be completed in a month or so.
Though the incomplete Morinda bypass, with only one of two rail over-bridges(ROBs) completed, was thrown open to traffic on August 1, 2006, work on the second ROB saw various hurdles.
A dispute between the Indian Railway and the civil contractor and delay in lowering the high-tension overhead power cable are the “official” causes for the delay in the completion of the second ROB. Some misunderstanding between the Punjab Government and the Railways rendered the approach ramps, completed in 2006, useless, wasting an investment of crores of rupees. So much so that columns on which the joining slab is now being laid were completed in 2008.
Section Engineer BK Narang admits delay in the completion of the second ROB. He cites many reasons. He says since the Chandigarh-Morinda rail track is electrified, lowering of the high-tension power cable proved to be a highly technical job.
“We tried constructing speed barriers and putting up steel barricades to prevent the movement of commercial vehicles, including trucks and buses, but without any success. Road users would dismantle all such structure, forcing us to delay the cable work.
“Finally we had to take police help. Now the police have put up check barriers on either side of the bypass 1.5 ft below the proposed joining slab. We brought down the high-tension (HT) cable in early April. Under safety rules, the HT cable has to be 1.5 ft below an overhead bridge and from the roof of the rail coach.
“We had a dispute with the earlier contractor. Now we have a new contractor. All the scaffoldings are new. Till the joining slab is laid, we are observing all safety norms, allowing trains to move at a speed of 20 km an hour,” says Narang, quoting from a survey conducted by the Railways that says 44,232 vehicles use the bypasss everyday.
Though work on laying the joining slab is in full swing, the Public Works Department and Infrastructure Development Board are yet to start work on joining the approach ramps with the Chandigarh-Ludhiana road.
Says PS Aujla, Principal Secretary, PWD, Punjab: “ Soon after taking over, I wanted this long-pending project to be taken up on a war footing. I have fixed May 30 as the deadline for the completion of the second ROB.”
Senior Railways and PWD officials have been visiting the site regularly to oversee the progress of work. The approach ramps, too, will need a fresh strip of premix. Even the stormwater drainage channels, now chocked, need to be cleared before the onset of the South-West Monsoon.

About the bridge
  • Morinda bypass was inaugurated on August 1, 2006, by the then Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh with only one of two proposed rail over-bridges (ROBs) completed
  • Work on the second ROB and approach roads, which was to be completed in May 2008, was held up for several reasons
  • The completed Morinda bypass will now be commissioned by May-end or early June

Two-day Sarab Bharti Punjabi meet from today

Patiala, April 29
A two-day Sarab Bharti Punjabi Conference, dedicated to the golden jubilee year of Punjabi University, will get underway here tomorrow. Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal will be the chief guest, whereas delegates from various parts of the country will also attend the conference.

University Vice Chancellor Dr Jaspal Singh said with an aim to instill linguistic and cultural awareness among Punjabis living in states other than Punjab, the conference was started in 2008.

U.S. Special Forces Assist In Hunt For Joseph Kony

Joseph Kony
Joseph Kony, leader of the Lord's Resistance Army during a meeting with a delegation of 160 officials and lawmakers from northern Uganda and representatives of non-governmental organizations in this Monday, July 31, 2006 file picture in the Democratic Republic of Congo near the Sudan border.
Central African Republic -- Deep in the jungle, this small, remote Central African village is farther from the coast than any point on the continent. It's also where three international armies have zeroed in on Joseph Kony, one of the world's most wanted warlords.
Obo was the first place in the Central African Republic that Kony's Lord's Resistance Army attacked in 2008; today, it's one of four forward operating locations where U.S. special forces have paired up with local troops and Ugandan soldiers to seek out Kony, who is believed likely to be hiding out in the rugged terrain northwest of the town. For seven years he has been wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity after his forces cut a wide and bloody swath across several central African nations with rapes, abductions and killings.
Part of the LRA's success in eluding government forces has been its ability to slip back and forth over the porous borders of the Central African Republic, South Sudan and Congo. But since late last year, U.S. forces have been providing intelligence, looking at patterns of movement, and setting up better communications to link the countries' forces together so that they can better track the guerrilla force.
Sent by President Barack Obama at the end of 2011, the 100 U.S. soldiers are split up about 15 to 30 per base, bringing in American technology and experience to assist local forces.
Exact details on specific improvements that the American forces have brought to the table, however, are classified, to avoid giving Kony the ability to take countermeasures.
"We don't necessarily go and track into the bush but what we do is we incorporate our experiences with the partner nation's experiences to come up with the right solution to go out and hopefully solve this LRA problem," said Gregory, a 29-year-old captain from Texas, who would only give his first name in accordance with security guidelines.
The U.S. troops also receive reports from local hunters and others that they help analyze together with surveillance information.
"It's very easy to blame everything on the LRA but there are other players in the region – there are poachers, there are bandits, and we have to sift that to filter what is LRA," he said.
Central African Republic soldiers largely conduct security operations in and around the town, while Ugandan soldiers, who have been in the country since 2010, conduct longer-range patrols looking for Kony and his men.
Since January, they have killed seven LRA fighters in the area and captured one, while rescuing 15 people abducted by the group including five children, said their local commander, Col. Joseph Balikuddembe.
There has been no contact with the LRA since March, however, according to Ugandan Army spokesman Col. Felix Kulayigye, who said the LRA now is in survival mode. The LRA is thought to today number only around 150 to 300 die-hard fighters.
"They're hiding," he said. "They are not capable of doing."
But with Kony still around, there are wide ranging-fears that the LRA will be able to rebuild.
"There's periods of time when the LRA will lie low when the military pressure is too high or where there's a threat that they don't understand such as the American intervention," said Matthew Brubacher, a political affairs officer with the U.N.'s mission in Congo, who was also an International Criminal Court investigator on the Kony case for five years.
"But then after a while after they figure it out, if they have the opportunity they'll try to come back, so it's just a matter of time they'll try to come back. Kony always said `if I have only 10 men, I can always rebuild the force."
Right now, expectations are high of the Americans serving in Obo and Djema in the Central African Republic, as well as those in Dungu in Congo and Nzara in South Sudan.
"For all the communities, the U.S. bases in Obo and Djema means one, Kony will be arrested, and two, there will be a lot of money for programs, humanitarian programs," said Sabine Jiekak of the Italian humanitarian aid agency Coopi.
Central African Republic Deputy Defense Minister Jean Francis Bozize said it's been difficult for the poor country's small military to deal with Kony in the southeast as well as several other militant groups in the north.
An African Union mission expected to begin later this year should help expedite the cross-border pursuit of the LRA.
In the meantime, Bozize said the American forces could make a big difference.
"The involvement of U.S. forces with their assistance in providing information and intelligence will allow for all forces to operate from the same base-level of intelligence ... (giving) better coordination with better results," he told reporters in the capital, Bangui.
But the military mission is not a simple one.
How do you find small groups of seasoned fighters hidden deep in the jungle, who have eluded authorities for decades? How do you prevent brutal reprisal attacks on civilians? How can you bring together several countries' troops to cooperate on cross-border pursuits?
The LRA usually attacks late at night, then melts back away into the jungle. Seasoned bush fighters, they employ many techniques to elude pursuit – walking along rocks or along streams to avoid leaving tracks, for example, and sometimes even marching backward to fool trackers.
Kony has reportedly stopped using radios and satellite phones for communications, instead relying on an elaborate system involving runners and multiple rendezvous points.
Key to his capture is good information from local residents – which they will only give when they can be sure of their own safety, according to American commanders.
"The population have to believe that they are secure and once they believe they are secure from the LRA, you start to deny the LRA the opportunity to attack villages to get people, to get food, to get medicine," Gen. Carter Ham, the head of U.S. Africa Command, told reporters in Stuttgart.
That may take some time in Obo, a town of some 15,000 where around 3,500 people have sought refuge to escape LRA violence in the area.
Rural farmers and others stick to within 5 kilometers (3 miles) of the village for safety – originally the area that Central African Republic soldiers were able to patrol but now more a rule of thumb followed by the locals.
They've started recently to venture out farther, emboldened by the presence of the Ugandans and Americans to help the government forces, but are too nervous to stray too wide from the safety of the village.
"They're still scared, they're still wary because Joseph Kony is still out there," said Mayor Joseph Kpioyssrani, looking at the jungle behind him.
Kony's LRA sprung up in 1986 as a rebel movement among the Acholi people in northern Uganda to fight against the Kampala government, but has for decades been leading its violent campaign without any clear political ideology.
Emmanuel Daba, 33, was one of 76 people abducted in the first LRA raid on Obo in 2008 and forced to fight for the guerrillas for two years before managing to escape.
"We were trained to kill – forced to kill – otherwise we'd be killed ourselves," he said outside the tiny radio station where he now works broadcasting messages to try and encourage others with the LRA to defect or escape. "I still have dreams – nightmares."
This year, the U.S. Defense Department is committing $35 million to efforts to find and fight Kony.
Since 2008, the U.S. State Department has sent some $50 million in funds to support the Ugandan military's logistics and non-lethal operations against the LRA, including contracting two transport helicopters to ferry troops and supplies. Another $500 million has been given over that time for the broader northern Uganda recovery effort in the aftermath of Kony's presence there.
In Stuttgart, Ham keeps a "Kony 2012" poster hanging on his office door.
Though he isn't committing to the goal of the viral YouTube campaign to see Kony neutralized by the end of the year, he does define success as either capturing or killing the LRA leader eventually.
"I'm confident that the mission will be successful, but I can't give you a timeline when that's going to occur..." Ham said. "It is one of those organizations that if you remove the senior leader and the small number of those who surround him, I believe this is one of those organizations that will not be able to regenerate."

Ronald Smith: Canadian On Death Row Expected To Plead For His Life In Montana

CALGARY - The lone Canadian on death row in the United States is expected to make a plea for his life at his clemency hearing in Montana this week.
Ronald Smith, 54, has been on death row since 1982 after he and an accomplice, both high on drugs, marched Thomas Running Rabbit and Harvey Mad Man Jr. into the woods near East Glacier, Mont., and shot both of them in the head.
It was a cold-blooded crime. They wanted to steal the men's car, but Smith also said he wanted to know what it was like to kill someone.
His is the final name on the list of 16 witnesses put forward by his attorneys for the two-day clemency hearing before the Montana Board of Pardons and Parole beginning Wednesday in Deer Lodge, Mont.
The hearing is being held near the federal penitentiary where Smith, originally from Red Deer, Alta., has spent the last three decades locked up.
"I've always wanted an opportunity to step outside of all of this and to be able to apologize to the family and explain to them just everything about me at that point in time. I was a completely different person," Smith said in an interview last month with The Canadian Press. "It's who I am, who I've become and what I've got going into the future."
The decision to speak at the hearing before the three-member panel was entirely up to Smith, said Don Vernay, co-counsel for Smith who works out of Albuquerque, N.M.
"What we want to do is wait until everything is done and then have the last word," he said. "He's got to speak to the board. These are the people who are going to decide if he lives or dies. He's going to express his remorse and his desire to live."
A flood of support has been flowing into the office of the Board of Pardons and Parole asking it to spare Smith's life.
"Our office has received and continues to receive a colossal amount of support for the commutation from around the world based on individuals' moral beliefs against the death penalty rather than a personal investment or opinion with this particular case," writes a board staffer in a leaked report obtained by The Canadian Press last month.
That report angered Smith's lawyers. It recommended that the panel deny the request clemency, leading his legal team to suggest that the decision might already be made.
One of the letters is from the Secretary-General of The Council of Europe, a 47-country organization that focuses on human rights and the protection of individuals. The letter argues Smith has expressed regret for his "deplorable" actions, has reformed his life and developed strong relationships with family members.
There is also a letter from the Canadian government, but it has been criticized for publicly lacking determination on the Smith file.
The Harper government initially refused to back Smith's calls for clemency, saying he was convicted in a democratic country. But the Federal Court ruled it must follow the long-standing practice of lobbying on behalf of Canadians sentenced to death in other countries and the letter was sent.
"The government of Canada does not sympathize with violent crime and this letter should not be construed as reflecting a judgment on Mr. Smith's conduct,'' says the Dec. 5 letter from Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird. "The government of Canada ... requests that you grant clemency to Mr. Smith on humanitarian grounds.''
Interim Liberal Leader Bob Rae has sent his own letter to the board and Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer requesting clemency.
"It's well known that the Government of Canada right now is enormously ambivalent about this," Rae said in a telephone interview. "It's a case that calls out for clemency.
"There's no question he's accepted his responsibility for what happened and has shown a great deal of contrition and remorse about it."
Smith's daughter, who is now 35, will appear in person at the hearing.
"He did something bad. He screwed plenty of stuff up. But he didn't sit in there and let himself waste away, continue with the drugs and all that stuff," Carmen Blackburn told The Canadian Press. "He's a good man."
"How do you tell someone how much you love them and how much they mean to your family? It's a hard thing to describe because it's your heart and that's what he is — he's my heart," she added softly.
Jessica Crawford, Running Rabbit's daughter and Mad Man's cousin, could not be reached for comment.
But last December she told The Canadian Press that while her late grandparents wanted to see Smith put to death, she would rather see Smith spend the rest of his days behind bars.
Mark Warren, a spokesman for Amnesty International and a legal researcher specializing in the cases of foreign nationals sentenced to death in the United States, is also requesting clemency.
"I think at the very least this flood of letters tells the board that people worldwide are watching and waiting for a fair decision in Mr. Smith's case," Warren said.
"Montana is not exactly Texas when it comes to the death penalty. They've only carried out three executions in the past 40 years and they commuted one death sentence. There are only two prisoners on death row in Montana."
Once the parole board delivers its recommendation, Smith's fate will ultimately end up in the hands of Schweitzer, a Democrat whose term in office will run out in November.
Schweitzer won't comment during the clemency process, but talked about death penalty cases in an interview last year.
"You're not talking to a governor who is jubilant about these things,'' he said from his office in Helena. "It feels like you're carrying more than the weight of an Angus bull on your shoulders.''

Montreal Cab Hit-And-Run

Montreal Hit And Run Video
A 23-year-old man was hospitalized after a cab struck him on Montreal's
on St. Laurent Blvd. early Sunday morning, the Montreal Gazette
reported.
      MONTREAL - Disturbing images are circulating on the Internet, showing a man apparently being run over by a taxi cab in Montreal.
A 23-year-old man was rushed to hospital pre-dawn Sunday with serious but non life-threatening injuries.
A 47-year-old taxi driver and some of his clients were being investigated, police said, with the possibility of criminal charges being laid. The incident occurred in a lively downtown district, filled with night stops and restaurants.
Const. Yannick Ouimet said it appeared the taxi driver was having an argument with three clients when he told them to get out. Things quickly degenerated at that point, Ouimet said.
"People were actually kicking the vehicle, causing some (damage) on the vehicle."
Images circulating on the Internet showed a taxi nearly hitting one man and then, moments later, rolling over him. Ouimet said police are aware of several videos circulating online and he said they are being used in the investigation.
"All those videos were looked at by investigators and should help them lay down accusations," he said.
One video posted to YouTube shows the conflict escalating, with a group of men kicking at a car and one man jumping on its roof. Moments later, the vehicle drives right over one of the men. The car then darts away, down the street.
"I told you guys to get out of there!" a man is heard in the video, yelling at the pedestrians involved in the altercation.

Sarabjit case: Indian advocates file mercy plea with Zardari

Amritsar, April 29
A delegation of Indian advocates has filed a mercy petition for Sarabjit Singh, lodged in Kot Lakhpat Rai jail, before Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari.
Talking to The Tribune, BM Vinayak, a member of the delegation, here today said they also met Sarabjit Singh and Interior Minister Rehman Malik.
Vinayak, a member of the Punjab and Haryana Bar Council, said Sarabjit was lodged in a solitary confinement cell number E-7. Sarabjit had grown his beard and was wearing a skullcap, he said. "He was happy to see us and expressed his desire to meet his daughters," said Vinayak.
He said, "We took up Sarabjit's case with Interior Minister Malik during a lunch hosted by him. He informed us that Presidential pardon is the only way now. We requested him to arrange a meeting with Sarabjit and he happily obliged us."
He said they wrote the mercy petition citing humanitarian grounds. "Sarabjit has served 22 years in jail. His family too has suffered a lot. Further, his confinement will serve no purpose. But the President can grant him a pardon as a good will gesture to built cordial relations," said Vinayak adding that Malik had promised to follow up the matter with President Zardari.
Vinayak claimed that 33 Indians, including three women, were lodged in Kot Lakhpat Jail. "Two more Indians, excluding Sarabjit, have been sentenced to death. We have confirmed that 17 more Indians are in other district jails," said Vinayak.
The Interior Minister has extended visa for a year to all the 15 members of the delegation.
A resident of Bhikhiwind in Tarn Taran district, Sarabjit was convicted for the 1990 serial bomb blasts in Lahore and Multan in which 14 people were killed. Sarabjit was to be hanged in 2008. His execution was put off indefinitely following intervention of Pakistan Prime Minster Yousuf Raza Gilani.
However, his family members, especially his sister Dalbir Kaur, said that Sarabjit was wrongly convicted and the case was that of a "mistaken identity".

Edmonton City Bus service now links airport to LRT



This is one of the buses used on the new ETS route to Edmonton International Airport (EIA) at the Century Park Transit Centre in Edmonton on April 27, 2012.

This is one of the buses used on the new ETS route to Edmonton International Airport (EIA) at the Century Park Transit Centre in Edmonton on April 27, 2012.

EDMONTON -  Edmonton finally has a direct bus route to the airport.
The aptly named Route 747 will begin running on Sunday, offering service seven days a week between the Edmonton International Airport and the Century Park LRT station.
“Its time has come,” Mayor Stephen Mandel said of the route. 
The plan to start a three-year trial run of the route was recommended for funding by city council last fall. Sunday’s ferrying of the first passengers on the route will be a victory for the city, Mandel said.
Edmonton was the only city in Canada with a major airport that wasn’t served by public transit.
“It’s important for the future, to how our city’s perceived and the movement of people,” said Mandel.
Passengers can board at Century Park every half-hour during peak flying times from 5 a.m. to 9 a.m. and from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Service will run every hour during the rest of the day. 
A one-way trip on the bus will cost $5 and take about 17 minutes. The fare is non-transferable, and those looking to take the LRT to Century Park to catch the bus or go elsewhere in the city will have to pay a regular ETS fare of $2.75 on top of it.
The majority of the route’s passengers are expected to be some of the nearly 5,000 people who work at the airport. ETS has partnered with the airport to offer employees a $100-monthly bus pass, said Myron Keehn of EIA.
“It’s a critical link for us,” Keehn said.
Tiffany Fuhr, who drives herself and two other airport workers to the airport every day, won’t be using the new service. Though the 5 a.m. start time is earlier than other city routes, it’s not early enough for her and her co-workers. “To be here by 4:30 a.m. to open, it doesn’t really work,” Fuhr said.
There are no plans to make the service start earlier, says Coun. Bill Henderson, but that is exactly the kind of information the three-year trial is intended to collect.
“If our system was running a little bit earlier, they could go earlier, but we’ll see, we’ve got to get this going,” Henderson said.
The same data could help extend the LRT further south, bypassing the need for a connecting bus.
“When we finish with the LRT to the west end and the north, I think we have to look at moving it south and then out to the airport,” Mandel said.
This is one of the buses used on the new ETS route to Edmonton International Airport (EIA) at the Century Park Transit Centre in Edmonton on April 27, 2012.
“Cities need to have transit out to the airport and this is the first step in the long term of getting real transit out there.”
ETS has allocated five buses to the route. The buses, which are postered with images of travel destinations such as Cancun and Houston, have added luggage racks.

The North Face | Ruchir Sharma

The northern states are pulling away as growth stutters in the once arrogant south. In this exclusive extract, the author posits the fresh challenges facing India in its bid to be a breakout nation


The North Face | Ruchir Sharma

Dalai Lama thanks Stephen Harper for meeting


 
The Dalai Lama on Saturday commended Prime Minister Stephen Harper for holding a private meeting with him one day earlier despite regular pressure from China on world leaders not to associate with the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader.
"He had the courage to meet me, so I very much appreciate that," the Dalai Lama said at a news conference following a speaking engagement in Ottawa attended by a reported 7,000 people.
Relations with the Dalai Lama is a touchy subject with China, a country the Harper government is eager to expand economic relationships with and which sees the Dalai Lama as a threat by encouraging the independence of Tibet from China.
The Dalai Lama has said before he is simply calling for enough au-tonomy for Tibet to allow its culture to survive, rather than outright independence.
At Saturday's news conference, he encouraged Canada to maintain its relationship with China.
The Dalai Lama hearkened back to the honorary Canadian citizenship given to him by Parliament in 2006, and he referred to Harper as "my prime minister."
The Dalai Lama said one of the things he did during the meeting with Harper was thank him for an agreement more than a year ago to accept 1,000 Tibetans into Canada from India over a five-year period.

April 28, 2012

ਉਪ-ਰਾਸ਼ਟਰਪਤੀ ਪਦ ਦੀ ਦੌੜ ਵਿਚ ਨਹੀਂ-ਬੌਬੀ ਜਿੰਦਲ

ਹਿਊਸਟਨ, 28 ਅਪ੍ਰੈਲ (ਏਜੰਸੀਆਂ)-ਨਿੱਕੀ ਹੈਲੇ ਤੋਂ ਬਾਅਦ ਬੌਬੀ ਜਿੰਦਲ ਦੂਜੇ ਭਾਰਤੀ ਅਮਰੀਕੀ ਗਵਰਨਰ ਹਨ ਜਿਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਨੇ ਕਿਹਾ ਹੈ ਕਿ ਉਹ ਰਿਪਬਲਿਕਨ ਪਾਰਟੀ ਦੀ ਤਰਫੋਂ ਰਾਸ਼ਟਰਪਤੀ ਪਦ ਦੇ ਸੰਭਾਵੀ ਦਾਅਵੇਦਾਰ ਮਿਟ ਰੋਮਨੀ ਦੇ ਨਾਲ ਉੱਪ ਰਾਸ਼ਟਰਪਤੀ ਪਦ ਦੀ ਦੌੜ ਵਿਚ ਨਹੀਂ ਹਨ। ਜਿੰਦਲ ਨੂੰ ਹਾਲ ਵਿਚ ਹੀ ਲੁਸੀਆਨਾ ਦੇ ਗਵਰਨਰ ਪਦ ਦੇ ਦੂਜੇ ਕਾਰਜਕਾਲ ਲਈ ਫਿਰ ਤੋਂ ਚੁਣਿਆ ਗਿਆ ਹੈ। ਉਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਨੇ ਕਿਹਾ ਕਿ ਉਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਨੂੰ ਮਿਟ ਰੋਮਨੀ ਦੇ ਉਪਰਾਸ਼ਟਰਪਤੀ ਉਮੀਦਵਾਰ ਦੇ ਤੌਰ 'ਤੇ ਖੜੇ ਹੋਣ ਵਿਚ ਕੋਈ ਦਿਲਚਸਪੀ ਨਹੀਂ ਹੈ।

ਬੀ. ਸੀ. ਦੀਆਂ ਸਿੱਖ ਸੰਸਥਾਵਾਂ ਨੇ ਸਰਕਾਰ ਕੋਲ ਨਿਯਮਾਂ 'ਚ ਸੋਧਾਂ ਲਈ ਆਵਾਜ਼ ਉਠਾਈ



ਬੀ. ਸੀ. ਦੇ ਵਿਧਾਇਕ ਲਿਬਰਲ ਕੈਸ਼ ਹੀਡ ਅਤੇ ਕਾਕਸ ਚੇਅਰ ਗੋਰਡਨ ਹੋਗ ਵਿਸ਼ਵ ਸਿੱਖ
ਸੰਸਥਾ ਦੇ ਸਮਾਗਮ 'ਚ ਹਾਜ਼ਰੀ ਲਵਾਉਂਦੇ ਹੋਏ।
ਵੈਨਕੂਵਰ, 28 ਅਪ੍ਰੈਲ - ਬ੍ਰਿਟਿਸ਼ ਕੋਲੰਬੀਆ 'ਚ ਦਸਤਾਰਧਾਰੀ ਸਿੱਖ ਮੋਟਰਸਾਈਕਲ ਸਵਾਰਾਂ ਲਈ, ਲੋਹਟੋਪ ਤੋਂ ਛੋਟ ਲਈ 'ਮੋਟਰ ਵਹੀਕਲ ਐਕਟ' 'ਚ ਸੋਧਾਂ ਦੇ ਇਤਿਹਾਸਕ ਫ਼ੈਸਲੇ ਤੋਂ ਬਾਅਦ ਹੁਣ ਕਈ ਕੰਮਾਂਕਾਰਾਂ 'ਤੇ ਹੈਲਮਟ ਲਾਜ਼ਮੀ ਪਹਿਨਣ ਦੇ ਨਿਯਮਾਂ 'ਚ ਤਬਦੀਲੀ ਲਈ, ਸਿੱਖ ਸੰਸਥਾਵਾਂ ਨੇ ਸੂਬਾਈ ਸਰਕਾਰ ਕੋਲ ਆਵਾਜ਼ ਉਠਾਈ ਹੈ। ਇਸ ਸਬੰਧੀ ਪਹਿਲ-ਕਦਮੀ ਕਰਦਿਆਂ ਵਿਸ਼ਵ ਸਿੱਖ ਸੰਸਥਾ, ਕੈਨੇਡਾ ਨੇ ਕਲੋਨਾ 'ਚ ਆਪਣੀ 27ਵੀਂ ਸਾਲਾਨਾ ਕਨਵੈਨਸ਼ਨ 'ਚ, ਸਰਕਾਰੀ ਧਿਰ ਦੇ ਲਿਬਰਲ ਵਿਧਾਇਕ ਕਸ਼ਮੀਰ ਸਿੰਘ ਕੈਸ਼ ਹੀਡ ਅਤੇ ਲਿਬਰਲ ਕਾਕਸ ਦੇ ਚੇਅਰ ਗੋਰਡਨ ਹੋਗ ਨੂੰ, ਇਸ ਸਬੰਧ 'ਚ ਅਹਿਮ ਦਸਤਾਵੇਜ਼ ਵੀ ਸੌਂਪੇ। ਸਾਬਕਾ ਸਾਲਿਸਟਰ ਜਨਰਲ ਅਤੇ ਪੱਛਮੀ ਵੈਨਕੂਵਰ ਦੇ ਸਾਬਕਾ ਪੁਲਿਸ ਮੁਖੀ ਐਮ. ਐਲ. ਏ. ਕੈਸ਼ ਹੀਡ ਨੇ ਜ਼ੋਰਦਾਰ ਸ਼ਬਦਾਂ 'ਚ, ਦਸਤਾਰਧਾਰੀ ਸਿੱਖਾਂ ਨੂੰ ਕੰਮਾਂ ਤੋਂ ਲੋਹਟੋਪ ਪਹਿਨਣ ਤੋਂ ਛੋਟ ਨੂੰ ਜਾਇਜ਼ ਠਹਿਰਾਉਂਦਿਆਂ, ਹੋਰਨਾਂ ਵਿਧਾਇਕਾਂ ਵੱਲੋਂ ਵੀ ਹਾਂ-ਪੱਖੀ ਹੁੰਗਾਰਾ ਦਰਸਾਇਆ ਗਿਆ ਹੈ। ਵਿਸ਼ਵ ਸਿੱਖ ਸੰਸਥਾ ਦੇ ਪ੍ਰਧਾਨ ਪ੍ਰੇਮ ਸਿੰਘ ਬਿਨਿੰਗ ਨੇ ਕੈਸ਼ ਹੀਡ ਅਤੇ ਗੋਰਡਨ ਹੋਗ ਦੀ ਸ਼ਲਾਘਾ ਕਰਦਿਆਂ, ਇਨ੍ਹਾਂ ਯਤਨਾਂ ਨੂੰ ਇਤਿਹਾਸਕ ਕਦਮ ਕਰਾਰ ਦਿੱਤਾ ਹੈ। ਸਾਬਕਾ ਲਿਬਰਲ ਸਾਂਸਦ ਸੁਖਮਿੰਦਰ ਸਿੰਘ ਸੁੱਖ ਧਾਲੀਵਾਲ ਨੇ ਦਸਤਾਰ ਨੂੰ ਸਿੱਖਾਂ ਲਈ 'ਆਰਟੀਕਲ ਆਫ ਫੇਥ' ਦੱਸਦਿਆਂ ਲੰਮੇ ਸਮੇਂ ਤੋਂ ਹੋ ਰਹੇ ਉਪਰਾਲਿਆਂ ਨੂੰ ਸਿਰੇ ਚਾੜ੍ਹਨ ਲਈ ਦ੍ਰਿੜ੍ਹਤਾ ਦਿਖਾਈ ਹੈ। ਸਿੱਖ ਸੰਸਥਾਵਾਂ ਖ਼ਾਲਸਾ ਦੀਵਾਨ ਸੁਸਾਇਟੀ, ਸੁੱਖ ਸਾਗਰ ਨਿਊਵੈਸਟ ਮਨਿਸਟਰ ਦੇ ਪ੍ਰਧਾਨ ਹਰਭਜਨ ਸਿੰਘ ਅਠਵਾਲ, ਗੁਰਦੁਆਰਾ ਦਸਮੇਸ਼ ਦਰਬਾਰ ਸਰੀ ਦੇ ਪ੍ਰਧਾਨ ਗਿਆਨ ਸਿੰਘ ਗਿੱਲ, ਸ਼ਹੀਦ ਬਾਬਾ ਬੰਦਾ ਸਿੰਘ ਬਹਾਦਰ ਸਿੱਖ ਸੁਸਾਇਟੀ ਐਬਟਸਫੋਰਡ ਦੇ ਜਨਰਲ ਸਕੱਤਰ ਰਣਜੀਤ ਸਿੰਘ ਖ਼ਾਲਸਾ, ਗੁਰਦੁਆਰਾ ਸਿੰਘ ਸਭਾ ਸਰੀ ਦੇ ਪ੍ਰਧਾਨ ਜੋਗਿੰਦਰ ਸਿੰਘ ਸਿੱਧੂ, ਕੈਨੇਡਾ 'ਚ ਬ੍ਰਿਟਿਸ਼ ਕੋਲੰਬੀਆ ਸੂਬੇ ਅੰਦਰ ਮੋਟਰਸਾਈਕਲ ਸਵਾਰ ਦਸਤਾਰਧਾਰੀ ਸਿੱਖ ਵਜੋਂ ਸੰਘਰਸ਼ ਜਿੱਤਣ ਵਾਲੇ ਪਹਿਲੇ ਸਿੱਖ ਅਵਤਾਰ ਸਿੰਘ ਢਿੱਲੋਂ, ਡਾ: ਰਘਬੀਰ ਸਿੰਘ ਬੈਂਸ, ਮੋਤਾ ਸਿੰਘ ਝੀਤਾ, ਇੰਦਰਜੀਤ ਕੌਰ ਸਿੱਧੂ ਅਤੇ ਕਸ਼ਮੀਰ ਸਿੰਘ ਸਮੇਤ ਅਨੇਕਾਂ ਹੋਰਨਾਂ ਨੇ ਲੋਹਟੋਪ ਦੀ ਛੋਟ ਲਈ ਜ਼ਰੂਰੀ ਤਰਮੀਮਾਂ ਲਈ ਵਿਧਾਇਕਾਂ ਨੂੰ ਤੁਰੰਤ ਕਦਮ ਉਠਾਉਣ ਲਈ ਅਪੀਲ ਕੀਤੀ ਹੈ।

PM inaugurates Bathinda refinery


Phullokhari (Bathinda) - The Prime Minister, who dedicated the country's 24th oil refinery - the Rs.21,500-crore Guru Gobind Singh refinery in Punjab's Bathinda district - to the nation on Saturday, said: "We need to rationalise prices and at the same time ensure that the poor and needy are shielded from the effects of such a rationalisation."
He said with imports accounting for about 80% of India's crude oil requirements, spiralling oil prices in the international markets had put a serious strain on the country's import bill.
He said in order to insulate the common man from the impact of rising oil prices, the government has been shouldering a sizeable portion of the burden by pricing diesel, kerosene and domestic LPG below their market prices.
State-owned oil companies have not raised diesel, domestic LPG and kerosene rates for almost a year despite a steep increase in the cost of raw material - crude oil.
Even in case of petrol, where the government had in June 2010 freed prices from its control, state-owned oil companies have not been able to raise prices because of political pressure.
Petrol, priced at Rs. 65.64 a litre in Delhi, is about Rs. 9 short of its cost.

'Refinery will boost growth'
Unveiling the plaque to formally inaugurate the 9 million-metric tonne capacity Guru Gobind Singh oil refinery in Bathinda district's Phulokhari village, the prime minister said it would propel Punjab's economic growth. 
Spread across 2,400 acres, the refinery is located some 40 km from Bathdina city.
The PM said the project was a leap forward in Punjab's industrial development."Right from the beginning of the joint venture of the Rs. 21, 500 crore refinery, between Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited (HPCL) and Mittal Energy Investment Limited (MEL), the Congress-led UPA government has been closely monitoring the progress of the mega project," he said, in chaste Punjabi.
"After our government came to power at the Centre in 2004, we have been making all possible efforts to ensure the competition of the project well in time. I am happy to share that the central government kept all its promises to make the joint venture of the HPCL and MEL a success."

Dangerous - Do not drink Coka-Cola and eat MENTOS together...!!! Seeing is believing ?don't you think ?!!! Last week a little boy died in Brazil after eating MENTOS and drinking Coka-Cola together. One year before the same accident happened with another boy in Brazil .. Please check the experiment that has been done by mixing Coka-Cola (or Coka-Cola light are the same) with MENTOS........ So be careful !!



Coke and Mentos 1 Coke and Mentos 2
Coke and Mentos 3 Coke and Mentos 4
Coke and Mentos 5 Coke and Mentos 6

Chen Guangcheng 'safe' in US embassy

Blind campaigner evades about 100 guards to escape from six-year detention but fears grow for family and supporters
blind Chinese legal activist Chen Guangcheng and friend and fellow activist Hu Jia in April 2012
Blind Chinese activist Chen Guangcheng and friend and fellow activist Hu Jia taken at an undisclosed location this month. Chen, an inspirational figure in China's rights movement, slipped away from his well-guarded village this week. Photograph: AP
A blind Chinese rights activist who made a daring escape from extrajudicial detention was on Friday under the protection of the US embassy in Beijing, according to a friend, as concerns were growing about possible retribution against his family and supporters.
After more than six years of jail and house arrest, Chen Guangcheng was said to have fled under cover of darkness, evading eight checkpoints and close to 100 guards who have been watching his home in the Shandong province countryside.
A photograph released on Friday night shows him with a friend and fellow activist, Hu Jia, who said Chen was under US protection. "It is my understanding that Chen is in the safest place in China. That is the US embassy," said Hu.
If confirmed, the incident could overshadow a planned trip to Beijing next week by the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, and treasury secretary, Timothy Geithner.
It would be the second case this year of a high-profile figure seeking refuge at a US diplomatic office in China. In February, Chongqing police chief Wang Lijun fled to the US consulate in Chengdu claiming his life was threatened because of his investigation into the death of British businessman Neil Heywood.
That incident led to a 36-hour standoff during which Chinese security personnel surrounded the consulate until Wang was turned over to an official from Beijing.
The US government neither confirmed nor denied claims that Chen was seeking asylum. An embassy spokesman, Richard Buangan, told reporters that "he did not have any information at this time."The British embassy also said Chen's whereabouts were a mystery. "We have followed Chen Guangcheng's case over a long period of time and have made representations publicly and privately to Chinese authorities. We have seen today's reports and will be following events closely," said a spokesman.The mainstream Chinese media had not reported the escape, but in a video recording apparently made after his release, Chen issued an open call for the prime minister, Wen Jiabao, to investigate his case.
He said between 90 and 100 people were involved in his illegal detention, which included savage beatings that left his wife with broken bones and the harassment of his children. Those who tried to visit him – including lawyers, journalists and the actor Christian Bale – had been either roughed up or driven away.
The accusations throw a harsh light on a Chinese government already reeling from a corruption and wire-tapping scandal sparked by the death of Heywood.
Chen blamed his treatment on local officials and the Chinese state's obsession with maintaining stability at all costs. He said his greatest concern was that the authorities would carry out "insane retribution" on his family, several of whom have already been placed under arrest.
Chen confirmed reports about his maltreatment that have appeared online over the years. "The truth was even worse," he said."
Human rights campaigners expressed delight that Chen – whose case has drawn international attention – was no longer in the hands of the authorities, but concern about revenge attacks on his wife, child, brother and human rights activists who helped him gain liberty.
According to the US-based human rights group China Aid, Chen was "100% safe" in Beijing. But it said the activist He Peirong, one of the people who helped Chen flee, had been arrested at her home in Nanjing on Friday morning.
He, who is said to have been in close contact with the Chen family, had earlier told CNN that Chen's hands were trembling, but his spirits were high. She said he was injured in the escape.
It was not clear how Chen evaded the officials, police and plainclothes thugs who have been camped in and around his home in Linyi since his release from prison in 2010. But activists said it was not an individual, opportunistic bid for freedom.
"To escape from a place with so many guards must have taken a great deal of planning," said Phelim Kine, of Human Rights Watch.
Chen was believed to have used the cover of darkness, in which his blindness – he lost his sight at the age of five – gave him an advantage over his captors. He previously attempted to dig a tunnel.
"I would say the fact that he successfully escaped is a miracle," said Hu. "It's like a real Chinese version of The Shawshank Redemption. I heard he got through eight security checks."
If Chen is caught, he faces the risk of severe extra-legal punishment from his guards. Several people close to Chen have already been rounded up, prompting fears of retribution.
According to the NGO Human Rights in China, Chen's brother Chen Guangfu was taken away from Dongshigu village on Thursday. His nephew, Chen Kegui, was also in hiding after using a kitchen knife to defend his mother from intruders led by the village chief.
Local public-security bureaux were not picking up their phones.
"The wife [Yuan Weijing], children and mother are on the extreme edge of vulnerability," said Kine. "They have already been brutally victimised for merely trying to get outside the compound for food or medical attention, so it is quite likely that the plainclothes thugs will react quite brutally to his escape. It is our hope that all diplomatic missions will make strong representations for their safety."
Chen has suffered the wrath of officials in Shandong since 2005, when he exposed a programme of forced abortions to reach targets linked to China's one-child policy. Although he was released from a four-year jail term in September 2010, he and his family continued to suffer detention and beatings.
Associates say they fear for his health, which has deteriorated during his detention."I don't know if he is safe now and I am worried about him," said lawyer Teng Biao. "Chen was not given freedom after being released from prison and he was sick and did not have a chance to see a proper doctor. I am worried about him."

Chinese activist fears 'insane retribution' on family after escape

Blind rights activist Chen Guangcheng flees detention but expresses concern as authorities round up people who helped him
The blind Chinese rights activist, Chen Guangcheng has made a daring escape from his captors and put out a video exposing the abuse and beatings that his family suffered under house arrest.
Evading almost 90 guards who have surrounded his village home for more than a year, Chen is said to have found refuge in a "safe" location in Beijing.
His revelations about the illegal detention – which included savage beatings that left family members with broken bones and harrassment of his children – throw a harsh light on a Chinese government that is already reeling from a corruption and wire-tapping scandal sparked by the death of British businessman Neil Heywood.
Looking gaunt, Chen blamed his treatment on local officials and the Chinese state's obsession with maintaining stability at all costs. He said his greatest concern was that the authorities would carry out "insane retribution" on his family, several of whom have already been placed under arrest.
Human rights campaigners expressed delight that Chen – whose protracted, illegal detention has drawn international attention – is no longer in the hands of the authorities, but there are concerns about revenge attacks on his wife, children, brother and human rights activists who helped him gain liberty.
"I have confirmed that Chen is now in Beijing. I would say the fact that he successfully escaped is a miracle," said Hu Jia, a prominent rights activist. "It's like a real Chinese version of The Shawshank Redemption. I heard he got through eight security checks."
In a video message, Chen confirmed he was beaten and said 90 to 100 local officials were involved in his detention. He expressed "extreme concern" about retaliation against his family. Chen confirmed reports about his maltreatment that have appeared over the years. "The truth was even worse," he said. "I formally made three requests to Premier Wen Jiabao. First, severely punish criminals. Second, look into this yourself, and third, send a special investigation team to find out the truth."
Chen is believed to have used the cover of darkness in which his blindness – he lost his sight at the age of five – gave him an advantage over his captors. He previously attempted to dig a tunnel without success.
It is not yet clear how Chen evaded the officials, police and plainclothes thugs who have been permanently camped in and around his home in Linyi since his release from prison in 2010. But activists said it was not an individual, opportunistic bid for freedom.
"This wasn't a sudden thing. In order to escape from a place with so many guards must have taken a great deal of planning," said Phelim Kine of Human Rights Watch.
Chen's exact whereabouts are unknown. Several sources said he was in a place that was safe from the scrutiny of security agencies, prompting speculation that he may have taken refuge in a foreign embassy or consulate. The US embassy has declined to comment on the case.
According to the US-based group China Aid, Chen was "100% safe" in Beijing. But the group said that the activist He Peirong, one of the people who helped Chen flee, was arrested at her home in Nanjing on Friday morning.
He, who is said to have been in close contact with the Chen family, had earlier told CNN that Chen's hands were trembling, but his spirits were high. She said he was injured in the escape.
If Chen is caught, he faces the risk of severe extra-legal punishment from his guards. Several people close to Chen have already been rounded up, prompting fears of retribution.
According to Human Rights in China, Chen's brother Chen Guangfu was taken away from Dongshigu village on Thursday evening. His nephew, Chen Kegui, is also in hiding after a bloody battle with a kitchen knife when he tried to defend his mother from intruders led by the village chief.
Local public security bureaus were not picking up their phones.
"The wife [Yuan Weijing], children and mother are on the extreme edge of vulnerability. They have already been brutally victimised for merely trying to get outside the compound for food or medical attention, so it is quite likely that the plainclothes thugs will react quite brutally to his escape. It is our hope that all diplomatic missions will make strong representations for their safety," said Kine.
Chen has suffered the wrath of Shandong officials since 2005, when he exposed a programme of forced abortions to reach targets linked to China's one-child policy. Although he was released from a four-year jail term in September 2010, he and his family have continued to suffer detention and beatings.
Until his safety and liberty are confirmed, associates say they fear for his health, which deteriorated during his detention.
"I don't know if he is safe now and I am worried about him," said the lawyer Teng Biao. "Chen was not given freedom after being released from prison and he was sick and did not have a chance to see a proper doctor. I am worried about him."

Pakistan deports Osama family to Saudi Arabia


Pakistani policemen escort a minivan carrying family members of slain Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden, in Islamabad, as they leave for the airport before their departure to Saudia Arabia, on April 26, 2012.
ISLAMABAD
Pakistan early Friday deported slain Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden’s three widows and 11 other family members to Saudi Arabia.
They had been in custody since the US special forces killed the Al Qaeda chief in a raid on his hideout in Pakistan‘s Abbotabad town in May last year.
The family members, including the widows – two Saudi Arabians and a Yemeni – were handed over to Saudi officials prior to their departure, Xinhua reported.
The Yemeni widow and her five children will be later sent to Yemen from Saudi Arabia.
A large contingent of police were deployed minutes before they left for the Benazir Bhutto International Airport from a house here where they had been held.
A Pakistani court April 2 had sentenced the widows to 45 days in prison on charges of illegally entering Pakistan. They had already served a month of their sentence prior to the verdict and a judge ordered their deportation on completion of the sentence.
The government had delayed their deportation due to incomplete travel documents.

London hostage crisis over, man arrested

The police say they've arrested the suspect at the centre of a three-hour siege which shut down part a busy part of Central London.
Hostage situation in in central London, building evacuated
The capital's Metropolitan Police say the 49-year-old man is now in police custody and that building is being searched.
One eyewitness claimed on Friday that the man burst into the office of a training company saying he was ready to blow himself up.
Scotland Yard said in a statement that police were called to Tottenham Court Road, a busy central London avenue, just before noon. A negotiator was sent to the site, the statement said. Office supplies, including computer monitors, were being thrown from the building's fifth-floor window.
The area was cordoned off, nearby buildings were evacuated and a police sniper was stationed on a rooftop near the building.

"It's unclear if other people (are) in the building," police said in a statement, adding they aren't treating the incident as terror-related.
The Huffington Post, whose offices are just off Tottenham Court Road, said its building was among those evacuated. It quoted one witness as saying that a man had walked into her office 'strapped up in gasoline cylinders.'

'Basically he threatened to blow up the office,' Abby Baafi, 27, told the website. 'He said he doesn't care about his life, he doesn't care about anything, he's going to blow up everybody.'

Construction worker Martynas Vristiuk, 26, said he was out smoking a cigarette when a window above him was shattered and someone began throwing computer monitors into the street only 3 meters (yards) from where he was standing.

'He threw 10 computers,' Vristiuk told The Associated Press, adding that one was tossed onto a police car.

Fellow worker Dennis Gorsanenko, 23, said he was at a construction site adjacent the building in question when a police officer ordered everyone out. 'He said: 'There's a guy with a bomb on his belt.''

Baafi, whom The Huffington Post identified as an employee of the training company Advantage, said she recognized the man as a former customer.

'He's not quite stable, not mentally stable,' she said.

A phone message left with Advantage was not immediately returned.

Italians pay Rs.1.7mn in damages, boat owner drops case

The marines were deployed as guards on an Italian oil tanker
Kochi: 27 April, 2012 - The owner of a damaged fishing boat, on which two Indian fishermen were shot dead allegedly by two Italian Marines from a cargo vessel in February, withdrew his complaint Friday after he was paid compensation of Rs.1.7 million ($32,000) by Italian authorities.

Italian authorities earlier Tuesday handed over two demand drafts of Rs.1 crore each to the Lok Adalat as compensation to families of the two fishermen, following an out of court settlement with them.

J. Freddy, owner of the fishing boat St. Antony, had Thursday filed an application in the Kerala High Court for permission to transfer this case to the Lok Adalat so that he could settle the case out of court, and this was allowed by the high court Friday.

In his petition filed soon after the Feb 15 shooting incident, Freddy had demanded that the Italian vessel Enrica Lexie should not be allowed to leave the Kochi waters unless he was compensated.
Since the past few days, Italian authorities were in touch with Freddy's counsel for paying compensation for his damaged boat. Both sides Friday appeared before the Lok Adalat, and Freddy collected the compensation of Rs.1.7 million and signed documents that he would not pursue the case.

Earlier, the high court bench slammed Freddy and families of the killed fishermen for going back on their original petition, and said once money changed hands everyone changed their stance and this does not augur well in criminal cases.

Ajesh Binki, 25, and Gelastine, 45, were apparently mistaken as pirates and shot dead by Italian Marines from aboard the cargo vessel Enrica Lexie Feb 15, off Alappuzha. Freddy was on board his fishing boat when the shooting took place.

The Marines, Latorre Massimillano and Salvatore Girone, were picked up from the vessel and sent by a court in Kollam to jail Feb 20 on murder charges. They are now lodged in the central prison in Thiruvananthapuram.

Italy pays damages over India fishermen shooting
3 dyas ago
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, India — The Italian government has paid compensation of $190,000 each to the families of two Indian fishermen allegedly shot dead by Italian marines in February, lawyers said on Tuesday.
The two marines, who are being held in custody in the southern Indian state of Kerala, were deployed as guards on an Italian oil tanker when they were accused of shooting dead the fishermen after mistaking them for pirates.
The Italians face murder charges in the Indian courts, and the cash settlement will not affect the criminal case lodged against them by the Kerala state government.
C. Unnikrishnan, a lawyer representing the widow of one of the fishermen, said the Italian government had paid 10 million rupees ($189,500) each to the families of Selestian Valentine, 45, and Ajesh Pinky, 24.
"We have settled the compensation case and signed the agreement to withdraw the (civil) cases with the consent of the High Court of Kerala," Unnikrishnan told AFP.
"The Italian marines will have to face prosecution in the criminal case pending against them," he added.
Italy has challenged the murder charges against Massimiliano Latorre and Salvatore Girone, and it has approached India's Supreme Court saying their detention is illegal.
Italy says the marines should be prosecuted in their home country because the shootings occurred on an Italian-flagged vessel in international waters, but India says they took place in waters under its jurisdiction.
The fate of the marines has threatened to erupt into a diplomatic row, with Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti last month warning his Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh against any prosecution.
Italy has expressed its regret over the shootings off the coast of Kerala but said the Indian fishing crew behaved aggressively and were repeatedly warned before shots were fired.
The fishing boat's owner said the marines fired without provocation.
Armed guards are increasingly deployed on cargo ships and tankers in the Indian Ocean to tackle the threat from Somali pirates, who often hold ships and crews hostage for months demanding multi-million dollar ransoms.
The Indian Supreme Court hearing into Italy's petition is expected to resume next week.

Sex scandal: 3 USA Secret Service agents sacked

Three Secret Service agents involved in the allegations of misconduct involving prostitutes ahead of President Barack Obama’s visit to Colombia have left the agency.

Two were supervisors, according to the Associated Press — one who was allowed to retire, and another who was "removed for cause". He has 30 days to appeal, and CNN reported on Wednesday that he plans to sue. The third agent, who who was not a surpervisor, resigned.

Eight agents remain under investigation, as do at least 10 US military personnel who were staying at the same hotel.

In an interview with the New York Times, the 24-year-old single mother who works as a high priced escort, said the men who approached her were “very discreet”. “They never told me they were with Obama.”

She told the newspaper that she and a girlfriend had been approached by a group of men in a club. After she and her friend had been bought two bottles of vodka, she agreed to return to the hotel room of one of the men. But in the morning, he failed to pay her $800—the amount upon which they agreed. Instead, she said, he offered her $30.

When she objected, he ordered her out of the room. Eventually, a Colombian policeman helped to argue her case with two other Americans from the club. When the escort lowered her demand to $250, they gave her the money. She said she learned the man had been a secret service agent when it made the news.

Egypt’s ‘Farewell Intercourse’ law allowing sex with dead wives sparks fury

Egypt’s new Islamist-dominated parliament is preparing to introduce a controversial law that would allow husbands to have sex with their deceased wives up to six hours after death. Known as the "farewell Intercourse" law, the measure is being championed as part of a raft of reforms introduced by the parliament that will also see the minimum age of marriage lowered to 14 for girls.


Egypt’s National Council for Women is campaigning against the changes, saying that ‘marginalising and undermining the status of women would negatively affect the country’s human development'.

Dr Mervat al-Talawi, head of the NCW, wrote to the Egyptian People’s assembly speaker Dr Saad al-Katatni addressing her concerns.

Egyptian journalist Amro Abdul Samea reported in the al Ahram newspaper that Talawi complained about the legislations, which are being introduced under ‘alleged religious interpretations’.

The subject of a husband having sex with his dead wife arose in May 2011 when Moroccan cleric Zamzami Abdul Bari said marriage remains valid even after death.

He also said that women have the right to have sex with her dead husband, alarabiya.net reported.

It seems the topic, which has sparked outrage, has now been picked up on by Egypt’s politicians.

TV anchor Jaber al Qarmouty slammed the notion of letting a husband have sex with his wife after her death under the so-called ‘Farewell Intercourse’ draft law.

“This is very serious. Could the panel that will draft the Egyptian constitution possibly discuss such issues? Did Abdul Samea see by his own eyes the text of the message sent by Talawi to Katatni?,” the Daily Mail quoted him as telling the website.

“This is unbelievable. It is a catastrophe to give the husband such a right! Has the Islamic trend reached that far? Is there really a draft law in this regard? Are there people thinking in this manner?” he added.

April 27, 2012

PM Manmohan Singh inaugurates Rs. 21,500-cr refinery

Phulokhari (Bathinda), April 28, 2012
This village, located 40km from Bathinda town, witnessed history on Saturday. The Rs. 21,500-crore Guru Gobind Singh oil refinery, Punjab's biggest-ever project in terms of investment, is dedicated to the nation by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. The project is a joint venture of the government-owned Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited (HPCL) and steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal's investment firm Mittal Energy Limited.
Besides the PM, the inauguration is attended by Punjab chief minister Parkash Singh Badal, union oil minister S Jaipal Reddy, HPCL chairman-cum-managing director S Roy Choudhury and Lakshmi Mittal.

Back in 1963, India's first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, had dedicated Punjab's maiden mega project, the Bhakra Dam, to the nation. The dam has been the state's lifeline all these decades.
The refinery project was announced in 1995; then Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee laid its foundation stone in 1998. The HPCL acquired 2,400 acres in Bathinda district in September 1998 for the project, which remained on the drawing board for several years after 1999.
In 2007, the Shiromani Akali Dal-BJP government put the project back on track by signing a deed of assurance with the HPCL. The project was to be completed by November 2010, but the refinery finally became fully operational on February 24 this year. It stands seventh in the country in terms of capacity (9 million metric tonnes per annum).
It is India's 22nd refinery and the third in the northern region after the ones at Panipat (Haryana) and Mathura (Uttar Pradesh). In terms of annual turnover, Rs. 30,000 crore, it stands fifth in the country.
Punjab deputy chief minister Sukhbir Singh Badal said, "It is the biggest-ever investment in Punjab. It will transform the state's economy. It will have a multiplying effect in establishing ancillary units and subsidiary industries."
The refinery will produce 1.8 lakh barrels of fuel everyday. The total crude oil processed and refined will include 3.7 million metric tonnes (MMT) diesel (nearly 41%), 1 MMT petrol (11%) and 0.7 MMT LPG (8%).
Everyday, about 400 truckloads of various fuels would roll out of the refinery for different destinations in north India. Railway wagons - for which five dedicated tracks have been laid - and a 260km pipeline will be the other modes to carry the refined fuel.
Mittal Energy Limited, a Luxembourg-incorporated company, is wholly owned by Lakshmi N Mittal and his family. It holds a substantial share holding in its flagship company, ArcelorMittal, the world's largest steel producer.

NRI Sabha chief brought on production warrant

Chandigarh, April 27
The police today brought the NRI Sabha chief, Amarjeet Singh Virk, on production warrant from Patiala jail. He was arrested on the statements of a woman who had alleged that Virk had pressurised her to lodge a complaint of rape against three persons. In November last year, the woman had alleged that she was abducted and raped by three youths in a car. However, subsequent police investigations found that the three accused as alleged were abroad at the time the woman was alleging rape.
As the police confronted the woman, she told the police that she made the allegations as part of a conspiracy by Virk who has been lodged in Patiala jail in a rape case. Thus, Virk was arrested today. The statements of the woman were recorded in the court.

PM Harper plays Hitler card against NDP, Twitterverse mocks Harper's Hitler gaffe


Prime Minister Stephen Harper's erroneous statement this week that the "leader of the NDP, in 1939, did not even want to support war against Hitler" has triggered a torrent of Twitter messages mocking the mistake — all identified with the hashtag "#HarperHistory" — and prompted New Democrat MP Dan Harris to gleefully recite several examples in the House of Commons on Friday.
The effort to ridicule Harper's misplaced dig at the NDP — founded in 1961 after the eclipse of forerunner CCF, the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation — had Twitter users blaming the NDP for everything from the fall of Rome to the Boston Tea Party to the betrayal of Jesus Christ.
On Thursday, in a heated exchange about when Canadian troops would be leaving Afghanistan, Harper responded to pointed questions from NDP leader Thomas Mulcair by stating: "Unlike the NDP, we are not going to ideologically have a position regardless of circumstances," he said. "The leader of the NDP, in 1939, did not even want to support war against Hitler."
Harper was referring to pacifist CCF leader J.S. Woodsworth, well known for voicing lonely opposition in 1939 to Canada's participation in the Second World War.
After howls from the opposition benches about Harper's misstatement, he tried to laugh it off by blurring the distinction between the NDP and CCF.
"OK, CCF, same difference," Harper said. "Parties do change their names from time to time."
Harper's casual rewrite of history gave creative Twitter users all the inspiration they needed: "It is a fact that, at the time, the #ndp refused to support our troops during the War of 1812," read a typical example from the flood of tweets unleashed by the Harper-NDP flap.
"Yesterday, the Prime Minister accused the NDP of not doing enough to stop Hitler," Harris, a Toronto-area MP, noted in a member's statement on Friday. "I am sure the NDP's founding members would have found this pretty strange when they first gathered in 1961."
Harris then highlighted the rising tide of hilarity in the Twitterverse and how Harper's anachronism had become the model for "tens of thousands" of messages linking the NDP to various historical and fictional events.
"Comedian Dan Speering led things off last night by tweeting, 'Damn you NDP for not standing up to Genghis Khan.' Another wrote, 'It was really the NDP that helped organized the stampede that killed Mufasa in The Lion King,' " said Harris. "I hope the Conservatives take this humour in stride and do not respond with more of their humourless anger."
The Conservatives responded, however, with further references to Woodsworth.
Nova Scotia MP Scott Armstrong, echoing Harper's comments, said in his own member's statement: "The NDP leader stated this week it does not support this mission. This is not surprising from the left. In 1939, the leader of the CCF even said: 'I would ask whether we are to risk the lives of our Canadian sons to prevent the action of Hitler.' "
Shortly after, in response to further questions from the NDP about Canada's withdrawal plans in Afghanistan, Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird again equated the CCF and NDP and repeated the Woodsworth statement from 1939.
"The NDP do not support sending troops abroad for anything," said Baird, referencing "the former leader of the NDP-CCF."
At the time of the debate prior to Canada's entry into the Second World War, Liberal prime minister Mackenzie King praised the CCF leader for his principled stance on Canada's military involvement in the conflict — despite the considerable political costs he knew Woodsworth would suffer.
"There are few men in this Parliament for whom I have greater respect than the leader of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation," King said at the time. "I admire him in my heart, because time and again he has had the courage to say what lays on his conscience, regardless of what the world might think of him. A man of that calibre is an ornament to any Parliament."
Woodsworth died in 1942.
The CCF and the newly formed Canadian Labour Congress combined forces to launch the NDP in 1961. Tommy Douglas, who had served as CCF premier of Saskatchewan since 1944, became the NDP's new leader.
Here's a list of some of the choicest tweets in response to the prime minister's Hitler crack:
- The leader of the NDP couldn't even be bothered to stop the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs.
- The NDP was the second shooter on the grassy knoll.
- The NDP traded Wayne Gretzky.
- It is well known that the #ndp supported the assassination of Julius Caesar.
- The NDP kidnapped the Lindbergh baby.
- The NDP stole Christmas, not the Grinch.
- The NDP refused to come to the aid of men when Mordor invaded Gondor.