MK hardens stand, warns of quitting UPA over Lanka

March 18, 2013

MK_hardens

Chennai/ New Delhi, Mar 18: Hardening his stance against the Centre over the Sri Lankan Tamils issue, DMK president M Karunanidhi on Sunday went a step ahead, warning that the party will pull out altogether from the ruling UPA if the government failed to move amendments to the US-sponsored resolution on the issue at the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC).

The US?is likely to table the draft resolution on Tuesday and voting may take place on Thursday or Friday.

Karunanidhi said India should indict Sri Lanka for the “genocide against the Tamil people there”. Dashing off an urgent letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, copies of which were released at a press conference, he said with just a few more days left before the US resolution against Sri Lanka came up for discussion at the ongoing UNHRC meeting in Geneva, India should take the lead to incorporate key changes in it.

New Delhi, however, is unlikely to lend its voice to the clamour for an “international” probe at the UNHRC next week, though it may support the call for “credible” and “independent” investigation into the alleged war crimes in the island nation. It is likely to support the US-sponsored resolution on Sri Lanka, but is understood to be keen to ensure that it remains “non-intrusive”. Notwithstanding pressure from ally DMK, the government is unlikely to support any move that infringes on the sovereignty of Sri Lanka.

External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid on Sunday said the government would consult the DMK before deciding on its stand.

Karunanidhi said he had written to the prime minister “with immense mental agony and feeling of having been let down by the Government of India” and urged the Centre to take immediate steps to make critical changes to the US?draft resolution before the UNHRC.

The changes should include the citing that the Sri Lankan Army had “committed genocide and war crimes” against the Tamils there, and the need for a “credible, independent, International Commission of Investigation in a time-bound manner” to enable to punish the guilty.

Significantly, Union Finance Minister P Chidambaram had hoped at a rally in Karaikudi on Saturday evening that India would vote against the island nation at the UNHRC, which possibly included a demand for an independent and international probe into the human rights violation by Sri Lanka. The senior Congress leader from Tamil Nadu had also counselled patience to one and all, including political parties and agitating students in the state till March 22.

Karunanidhi, however, did not seem convinced. “ We want the Centre to get more serious about this issue and hence our repeated reminders to them seeking those changes in the US?resolution,” he contended. Even if the US did not agree to the amendments, India’s failure to even propose such changes will amount to inflicting “severe injustice on the Sri Lankan Tamils,” the DMK chief reasoned.

“We are repeatedly knocking at the Centre’s doors, emphasising these modifications in the resolution; if no response is forthcoming, we have no option but to conclude that they (Centre) are not coming forward to secure justice for the suffering Tamils in Sri Lanka,” Karunanidhi told reporters.

“If they (Centre) do not accept our demand for the above changes in the US resolution, then it is certain that we (DMK) will not continue in the Congress-led UPA alliance,” Karunanidhi asserted. He hinted that his party was not wavering on the issue now, as it did in the past after having given similar ultimatums since 2008.

Meanwhile, students’ protests and fasts continued for the seventh day in different parts of Tamil Nadu on Sunday. A joint struggle committee of students fighting for the “cause of the Eelam Tamils” have also planned to picket Raj Bhavan in Chennai on Monday.

In Theni district down south, hundreds of plantation workers also joined the protest-fasts on Sunday. The World Thamil Organisation registered in the US, also hailed the stir in Tamil Nadu.

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Agencies
June 2,2020

Lucknow, Jun 2: Bahujan Samaj Party chief Mayawati on Tuesday said protests in the US after the death of George Floyd, an African-American man, is a clear message to the world that a common man's life has value.

She said this is also guaranteed by the India Constitution, but the governments don't follow it, resulting in the current plight of migrants workers.

Floyd, a 46-year-old restaurant worker from Houston, died in Minneapolis on Monday after a white police officer pinned him to the ground. Video footage showed the officer kneeling on Floyd's neck as he gasped for breath, sparking widespread protests across the US.

"Floyd's killing by police and the 'Black lives matter' agitation in the US have given a clear message to the world that a common man's life has value and it should not be taken for granted," Mayawati said in a tweet in Hindi.

"India's constitution guarantees independence, security, self-respect and pride and governments should give special attention to it. If it was followed, crores of migrants labourers would not have to witness such bad days," she added.

She also demanded better coordination between states to check the spread of coronavirus and said Centre should intervene.

"While coronavirus patients are rising, there is lack of coordination between states and with the Centre, and allegation and counter-allegations are going on and sealing of state borders is unjustified and it is weakening the fight against the virus.  The Centre should intervene," she said in a separate tweet.

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Agencies
August 6,2020

Mumbai, Aug 6: Former Reserve Bank of India governor Raghuram Rajan said on Thursday that overly focusing on what sovereign rating agencies think can take one's eyes off what needs to be done for the economy.

"It is also important to convince both domestic and international investors that after the crisis associated with the pandemic is over, we will return to fiscal responsibility over the medium term, and the government should do more to convince them of that," Rajan told the Global Markets Forum.

India was placed under one of the strictest lockdowns in the world in late March for more than two months to stem the spread of the coronavirus, but cases have continued to rise steadily since the government eased restrictions in June, stymieing hopes of an economic recovery.

The government has announced several initiatives to help the poor and small- and medium-size businesses, but actual cash outgo from the government's measures has been estimated at just about 1% of GDP.

Several attribute the fiscal prudence to fear of a downgrade after Moody's cut India's rating and outlook in early June followed closely by a change in outlook from Fitch.

The central bank on its part too has reduced the key lending rate by 115 basis points on top of the 135 bps last year and is widely expected to cut rates by another 25 bps later on Thursday.

"The RBI and government have certainly been cooperating, but it seems like it is elsewhere, the ball is in the government's court to do more," Rajan said.

He said the RBI needs to focus on whether credit is reaching the stressed areas of the economy and also if the viable firms were able to access credit and not the unviable ones.

"And I think that's where it has to focus its attentions, because resources, as you well know, are limited in India today."

Recently analysts, however, have cited the growing possibility the RBI may prefer to pause and cut rates only at its October meeting.

Government officials too have suggested the possibility of any more fiscal stimulus being announced, would only come in the second half of the fiscal year, once a recovery has taken root and coronavirus cases have peaked.

"What India should focus on at this point is protecting its economic capabilities, so that when it has dealt with the virus it can go resume activity in a reasonable way. That should be the focus," Rajan said.

"And if it does that, there is no reason why the rating agencies will not see that as an appropriate policy".

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News Network
March 12,2020

Bengaluru, Mar 12: Imarti Devi, who recently resigned as Congress MLA from Madhya Pradesh, on Wednesday said that she was happy with Jyotiraditya Scindia's decision to join the BJP.

Imarti said: "All 22 MLAs are here (in Bengaluru) on their own. We're happy that Scindiaji has taken this decision. I'll always stay with him even if I had to jump in a well."

"When we were in the Congress, Kamal Nathji never heard us," she said.

Another rebel leader and former minister Mahendra Singh Sisodia said: "Betrayal is not done by Jyotiraditya Scindia. Instead, betrayal was done by the Congress and Kamal Nathji."

"Congress betrayed the people of Madhya Pradesh. We are with Jyotiraditya Scindia," he said.

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