India to push for action against terror at G-20

November 15, 2015

New Delhi, Nov 15: After a series of deadly terror attacks in Paris, India is set to raise its pitch to seek stronger global actions against the menace, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi likely to call upon G-20 leaders assembling in Turkey to push for early adoption of the long-pending Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism by the United Nations.

namoThe G-20 summit at Antalya in Turkey on Sunday and Monday seems set to be overshadowed by Paris attacks and Modi is likely to stress that the fight against terrorism and sponsors of terrorism will require greater and more effective international cooperation. He will argue that the global consensus against terrorism should not be allowed to be held back by a few and the world must unequivocally reject “selective approaches” in combating terrorism.

The prime minister will join other G-20 leaders for a dinner in Antalaya on Sunday to discuss global terrorism and refugee crisis. He is likely to call for international efforts to counter ideology that underpins extremism and draws youths to terrorism, officials told Deccan Herald in New Delhi.

Modi will also refer to anti-India terrorism emanating from Pakistan. He is likely to recall the November 26-29, 2008 terror strikes in Mumbai and call upon world leaders to nudge the Pakistan government to bring to justice the masterminds of the attacks, which had left over 170 killed and countless others injured. The similarity between 26/11 attacks in Mumbai and the string of terror strikes in Paris late on Friday already caught the attention of the international community.

Though the G-20 generally focuses on international economy, Turkey, which currently holds the presidency of the bloc, also included in the agenda issues related terrorism, with particular emphasis in the situation in Iraq and Syria, where Islamic State still controls large territories.

Modi, who was on a visit to London till Saturday, and British Prime Minister David Cameron on Saturday agreed to continue to work together to disrupt all financial and tactical support for terrorist networks to prevent terror strikes and to counter violent extremism, including through exchanges of best practices and technologies.

New Delhi has of late sharpened its criticism against the United Nations Security Council for its “less than robust” response to the threat of terrorism, especially in Asia and Africa.

“The increasing number and brutality of terrorist acts meanwhile vividly illustrates the ineffectiveness of the (UN Security) Council to counter terrorism,” Ashoke Mukherjee, Permanent Representative of India to the UN, told the General Assembly of the international organisation on Thursday.

India is likely to redouble efforts to end impasse in the negotiations over the UN Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism, which New Delhi has been pushing for since 1996.

Though a draft text of the CCIT is pending before the General Assembly since 2008, negotiations are currently deadlocked, primarily due to disagreements over the definition of terrorism.

“I would like the UN that is celebrating its 70th anniversary to not waste anytime in defining terrorism,” Modi said in London on Saturday.

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Agencies
February 10,2020

New Delhi, Feb 10: After an hour-long standoff between the security forces and the students on Monday, the police resorted to a lathi-charge on the protesters near Holy Family hospital which is within walking distance of Jamia Millia Islamia.

A scuffle ensued when police confronted the protesters who tried to push forward towards Parliament. The lathi-charge was made to push back the protesters.

In the melee that ensued, many from both sides fainted.

Some security forces personnel resorted to the lathi-charge while others pushed back the protesters when they threw water pouches at the security forces and abused them.

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News Network
May 24,2020

New Delhi, May 24: Overwhelmed by the donations that poured in from the society for his help, Phool Mia, the fruit seller in north Delhi's Jagatpuri area whose mangoes were looted by the ordinary people, said that those who helped him have made his "Eid" and have shown that "humanity is still alive".

Video footage that went viral on social media, shows that scores of passers-by looted the unattended crates of mangoes of a fruit seller after a fight broke out in the neighbourhood. The incident took place on Wednesday.

"My stock of mangoes worth Rs 30,000 was kept there. Some persons were fighting with each other fearing which I left the place to avoid any sort of altercation. When I returned, I saw that they were looting the mangoes kept there. There were 50-100 people who were involved in this act," Phool Mia, narrated the ordeal.

"A video got viral about the incident after which people donated to me on a portal. They empathised with me when I was ruined. I thank the media and all those people who have donated from the bottom of my heart as they made my Eid. Now, I would be able to celebrate Eid with my children. This shows humanity is still alive," he added.

However, four people have been arrested on the basis of video footage, Delhi Police said.

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News Network
June 13,2020

New Delhi, Jun 13: Veteran Urdu poet Anand Mohan Zutshi 'Gulzar' Dehlvi passed away on Friday afternoon, five days after he recovered from COVID-19.

He died at his Noida home, and was a month shy of turning 94.

"His corona test came negative on June 7 and we brought him home. Today he had lunch and at around 2.30pm he passed away," his son Anoop Zutshi told PTI.

"He was quite old, and the infection had left him very weak. So doctors are thinking it was possible a cardiac arrest," he added.

A freedom fighter and a premier 'inquilabi' poet, Dehlvi was admitted to a private hospital on June 1 after testing positive for coronavirus.

Born in old Delhi's Gali Kashmeerian in 1926, he was also the editor of 'Science ki Duniya', the first Urdu science magazine published by the Government of India in 1975.

Remembering her fond memories of Dehlvi, historian-writer Rana Safvi recalled seeing the poet at most 'mushairas' in Delhi.

"I cannot express how big a loss it is. We used to see him at every 'mushaira' in Delhi. It's a big loss to Delhi and the world of poetry," Safvi said.

She also took to Twitter to express her condolences.

"Sad to hear about Gulzar Dehlvi saheb's demise. He was the quintessential Dilli waala. May he rest in peace," she tweeted.

According to Delhi-based poet and lawyer Saif Mahmood, Dehlvi was "the presiding bard of Delhi", following in the footsteps of iconic poets like Mirza Ghalib, and Mir Taqi Mir.

His death is the "end of an era", he said.

"No one knew the nooks and crannies of Mir and Ghalib's Delhi like him. Gulzar saheb claimed that his father, Allama Pandit Tribhuvan Nath Zutshi 'Zaar Dehlvi', was a disciple of the renowned poet Daagh Dehlvi," he said, while reminiscing his meeting with Dehlvi three years back.

The poet had recited a still unpublished 'sher' (couplet) then, Mahmood said, which seems more relevant now in the aftermath of his demise.

"Mere baad aane waalon, meri baat yaad rakhna/ mere naqsh-e-pa se behtar, koi raasta nahin hai". (Those who come after, remember what I say/ there’s no better way than to follow my footprints).

"He was a true exemplar of not just the Urdu language but also of the Urdu culture. In fact he was a living and breathing form of Urdu tehzeeb," Mahmood said.

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