Mega Sale Domains @ Rs.99

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Vision for DMIC

The vision for DMIC is to create strong economic base with globally competitive environment and state-of-the-art infrastructure to activate local commerce, enhance foreign investments and attain sustainable development.

Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor is to be conceived as a Model Industrial Corridor of international standards with emphasis on expanding the manufacturing and services base and develop DMIC as the ‘Global Manufacturing and Trading Hub’.

Delhi - Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC)

  • DMIC: a high impact industrial area within 150 km distance on both side of the DFC
  • Area under Influence- 14% & Population- 17% of the Country
  • Total Population: 173.4 Million
  • Total Workers: 68.36 Million
  • Total 82 Districts of Six States within the Influence Area (excluding MP)
  • 25 industrial nodes have been proposed along the DMIC

The Government of India is setting up a multi-modal Dedicated Freight Corridor (DFC) between Delhi and Mumbai. Out of the total 1483 kms of the length of DFC, 38% is falling in Gujarat. The area of 150 kms on the both sides of the DFC will be developed as DMIC. It will be a high impact industrial corridor.

Unlimited Opportunities

DMIC is to be developed as a Global Manufacturing and Trading Hub of India supported by world class infrastructure and enablining policy framework, It will become "the engine for economic resurgence of the coutry"

DMIC Project Goals:
  • Double the employment potential in five years (14.87% CAGR)
  • Triple industrial output in five years (24.57% CAGR)
  • Quadruple exports from the region in five years(31.95% CAGR)

DMIC in Guajrat:Dholera SIR to be the most prime location...

Out of the total twenty four industrial nodes planned along the DMIC, six nodes (two investment regions and four industrial areas) have been proposed for the State of Gujarat.

Dholera SIR is the first such node, taken up for developement by the Government of Gujarat.
  • 62% of the total area of Guajrat covered
  • 18 out of 26 District within the influence Area
  • Major cities on DMIC:Ahmedabad, Vadodara, Surat
  • 1/3rd of total investment will be in Guajrat
  • Estimated employment: 8 lacs
  • Gujarat's ports to cater to foreign & hinterland markets
  • World class connectivity between the Ports, nodes & DFC
  • Six logistics parks being developed along the DFC

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Narendra Modi invites Tamil Nadu investors to Gujarat


A high-level delegation from the Government of Gujarat led by Chief Minister of Gujarat, Shri Narendra Modi, today addressed Chennai-based business groups, institutions and organizations seeking their participation in the Vibrant Gujarat 2011 Summit. Organized by the Government of Gujarat in Partnership with CII, the interactive meet showcased opportunities for investment, discussed trade partnerships and extended an invitation to investors for the much-awaited Vibrant Gujarat Summit scheduled on January 12 and 13, 2011 at the new, purpose-built Mahatma Mandir in Gandhinagar.

The Chief Minister was extended a warm welcome by over 400 industrialists at the event in Chennai. During the Industry Interaction Meet, the Chief Minister held one on one meeting with leading companies.
Speaking on the occasion, The Chief Minister of Gujarat, Shri Narendra Modi said, “The people of Tamil Nadu and of Gujarat have a common bond drawing our people together: we are keen to pursue knowledge-driven activities, which are then transformed into business successes.

“The business success of people of Gujarat could largely be attributed to the peaceful environment in the state. In Gujarat, in spite of a very high degree of industrialization, peace in general and industrial peace in particular prevails. The people of the state have always supported the industry-friendly policies of the Government. We are very clear in our approach and development strategies, which are formulated in an integrated manner leading to all-inclusive growth.
“As Chief Minister, I extend to the business community of Tamil Nadu a hearty invitation to participate in the 2011 Vibrant Gujarat Summit, to see for yourselves the growth environment in Gujarat and to consider implementing your investment plans there.
Inviting the spinning mills in Tamil Nadu to expand their capacity by setting up new units in Gujarat, Modi said: “For the textiles industry we have a five F policy – farm (cotton) to fibre (yarn) to fabric (cloth) to fashion (garments) to foreign (garment exports). Gujarat guarantees assured quality power for 24 hours a day.”
Addressing businessmen, he said Gujarat was expanding its industrial infrastructure by promoting 13 special investment regions in addition to having around 60 special economic zones.

Modi invited them to invest in Gujarat with the offer of continuous supply of quality power, transparent governance and good infrastructure.

“This year Gujarat has completed 50 years of its formation as a separate state and is celebrating its Golden Jubilee. Ever since the state was formed in 1960, the people have collectively made efforts to achieve rapid growth in all spheres of activities. As a result, today Gujarat has been able to reach the pinnacle of the success ladder. The time is ripe to work with more even dedication to accomplish a vision for a better tomorrow: a Gujarat which is green, enlightened, healthy, prosperous and even more vibrant – to provide the best place to live in to all the citizens of the world. Jai Jai Garvi Gujarat!”

Addressing investors at the meet, Mr. Maheswar Sahu, IAS, Principal Secretary, Industries and Mines Department, Government of Gujarat, said, “We are delighted to kick-start our national campaign for the Vibrant Gujarat 2011 Summit from Chennai by addressing investors here. Many Tamil Nadu-based companies have a strong presence in the State of Gujarat. We welcome more investments from across South India and we can promise Gujarat provides a world-class infrastructure and cutting-edge investment facilitation services.”

The Government of Gujarat will also be holding Industry Interaction Meets in Mumbai, Bangalore, Delhi, Kolkata and Hyderabad over the next few weeks. 

Modi quotes from Chennai

“In Gujarat education is in spirit of social service. Education is not a business in Gujarat or for Gujaratis. There will be a problem for those who want to set up an educational institution as business proposition therefore.” 

“Gujarat has set up an institute for training teachers where campus recruitment will take place by 2015. We will export teachers to other nations as there is a demand for good teachers worldwide.”
“One should map the human resources based on their inherent strength and potential. In order to enhance their skill sets, training institutes should be established near them so that they can get jobs. Around 2,000 training institutes have been started in Gujarat till date.”


“As a chief minister I get several articles as gifts which I have handed over to the government. Around 8,000 articles received by me were auctioned off to realise Rs.20 crore to be used of improving girl child education.”

Dhari Panchamda makes world record, Modi felicitate her

Ahmedabad based classical vocal artist Ms.Dharini Pandya today completed her record-breaking classical music endeavor near the tomb of Tana-Riri. Ms.Dharini, also known as Swaradhika Dhari Panchamda sang about 109 ragas for 99 hours 99 minutes and 99 seconds, to pay tribute to Gujarat’s classical music duo Tana and Riri.
After her 2008 record of singing continuously for 62 hours, on October 14 this year Dharini Pandya sang for a marathon 82 hours to set a new one. However today, she broke her own previous records.
After her record breaking performance ended at 14.23.49 hrs, Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi honoured her in presence of noted singer Usha Mangeshkar in Vadnagar.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Osama Giving Orders And Modi Questioned For 2002 Communal Carnage

'Osama healthy, giving orders'

The world's most wanted terrorist Osama bin Laden is 'healthy' and 'giving orders' to deputies in al-Qaeda, according to a Pakistani-origin taxi driver arrested by FBI here on charges of providing funds to the terror outfit. A 35-page complaint affidavit against Raja Lahrasib Khan, arrested yesterday for allegedly providing material support to terrorism and funds to al-Qaeda, gives details of conversations recorded between him and an undercover law enforcement agent about his association with al-Qaeda operative Ilyas Kashmiri, also the chief of HuJI.

In conversations taped on February 23 between Khan and the undercover agent, the 56-year-old taxi driver claims that Kashmiri, whom he addresses as "Lala" told him that bin Laden is "healthy...perfect". "... I asked the Lala about him (Osama). And he (Kashmiri) says he's (Osama) healthy, he's leading," according to the affidavit against Khan submitted in a court here.

Khan goes on to say that he thought bin Laden was "sick" or "shaheed" but Kashmiri "says no... He's perfect, healthy, and he's leading and he's giving the orders ... he's OK, he's in safe hands. That's what; Lala said to me, you know..." Later in a conversation around March 17, the undercover agent met Khan and an 'Individual B' at a restaurant here.

During this meeting, Khan told the agent that he knew Kashmiri worked for al-Qaeda because he had asked him about "the big Lala. Osama..." Khan asked Kashmiri if Osama was "alive or is he shaheed". "He (Kashmiri) said no, he's OK. Alhamdulillah (praise to God) he's healthy and...he is commanding everything," according to the conversation.

Khan also told the undercover agent that though he had never met bin Laden "personally", he wanted to meet him. "... Osama bin Laden. I never met... I want (to) meet him ... I wanna see him. Before the, even the war start, I was going to Pakistan. But then 9/11 happens, and I didn't go". Khan said bin Laden gives orders to Kashmiri, "then Kashmiri gives the order to 'mujahideen'... al-Qaeda and Taliban".

In another conversation, Khan said, "I love that Osama bin Laden, he says the last 50 years we have been, tasting... now America will taste that," and Americans will feel the pain they have been feeling. Claiming that he has known Kashmiri for 15 years and has met him "face-to-face" several times, Khan said "I, I, I pray help our brother Kashmiri all the time, you know... he be alive, you know, because... he's the main key... he's the main key. After Osama bin Laden".

The affidavit against Khan also provides details about plans to send funds to Kashmiri for purchasing weapons and his links with al-Qaeda. Kashmiri has been named along with Pakistan-American LeT operative David Coleman Headley and co-accused Tahawwur Hussain in an FBI indictment that charges them with supporting terrorism.

Gandhinagar, March 27 (IANS) Eight years after communal riots left over 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, dead in Gujarat, Chief Minister Narendra Modi was Saturday questioned by a Supreme Court-appointed probe panel for the first time over his alleged complicity in not doing enough to stop the carnage. Modi chose to appear before the Special Investigation Team (SIT) without a lawyer but took a four-hour long break in between to consult Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Arun Jaitley, a Supreme Court advocate, who is also leader of opposition in the Rajya Sabha, party sources told IANS. Jaitley had flown here especially for the day.

As he emerged after a five-hour questioning, Modi said he was abiding by the Indian constitution and law which are 'supreme'. 'The Indian law and constitution are supreme. As a citizen and as the chief minister, I am bound by the constitution and the law. Nobody is above the law,' Modi, wearing his trademark crisp white kurta and pyjama, told reporters. The chief minister was probed following a complaint by Zakia Jaffri, widow of former Congress MP Ehsan Jaffri killed in the riots, that the chief minister was party to the 2002 widespread violence that swept Gujarat following a train burning in Godhra that killed 59 people in 2002.

The SIT is believed to have based most of its questions on some of the issues raised by Zakia in her 100-page petition to the Supreme Court. According to sources, privy to the SIT questioning, some of the questions asked were:

- Did you give a Gujarat shutdown call following the Godhra incident?

- Who sent ministers to police control rooms during the riots? (Some ministers were alleged to have taken over the control rooms in Gujarat stopping police from taking any action)

- What happened at the Feb 27, 2002 meeting held by the chief minister and other senior officers for review of the situation following the Godhra train burning?

- Do you know about calls made by Ehsan Jaffri to your office? (The Congress leader had reportedly called up the chief minister's office several times for help after his house was surrounded by rioters)

Zakia has alleged that Modi and his administration aided and abetted the rioters in Ahmedabad's Gulberg Society where over 60 people were burnt to death. The victims included Jaffri.

The first phase of the questioning went on for over five hours. SIT's A.K. Malhotra, an additional director general of police, led the questioning. Probe panel chief R.K. Raghavan was not present. The questioning was to resume after 9 p.m. and Modi said he wanted the process to end Saturday.

The chief minister said the SIT was made up of officers from outside Gujarat. 'They are clearly working under the direction of the Supreme Court.' Modi, one of the top leaders of the BJP, appeared unperturbed though he had been evading being questioned over the riots. 'I have spoken at length with the SIT. My conduct should be a fitting reply to my critics.'

Law Minister M. Veerappa Moily said it was 'unfortunate' for a chief minister to be in a situation like that. 'It is most unfortunate that Modi landed himself in that kind of a situation. It is not desirable but unfortunately it has happened,' Moily said. The Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) and the Communist Party of India (CPI) asked Modi to step down on moral grounds.

'There is no justification for him to continue as the chief minister. He should resign on moral grounds,' CPI-M leader M.K. Pandhe said. Social activist Teesta Setalvald, who has been fighting for the riot victims, said: 'It was an important day for democracy and rule of law when a sitting chief minister has been forced to appear before an inquiry team after various attempts to block justice.'

Monday, April 19, 2010

Modi, Terrorism Key Poll Points for Bjp

New Delhi: The Bharatiya Janata Party seems to have finalised its poll agenda and the leaders that it is planning to project as its face. Among the issues, everything including price rise has given way to terrorism as the topmost election agenda of the party for the preparation of next Lok Sabha polls in mid 2009. And, Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi has emerged as the leading second generation leader within the party.

Sources close to BJP confirmed that Narendra Modi will be playing a far greater and a far bigger role in the 2009-general elections. A senior leader in the party, who was a minister during NDA regime said, "The stature of Narendra Modi has increased in past couple years," and added that he will be an asset for central politics of BJP. The party, now, has become more serious about his services at the centre.

Modi's increased frequency to Delhi is just another indication towards this changing trend in BJP politics. Modi, himself, seems to have launched the preparation for a stint at the centre, lest BJP/NDA is voted to power in next Lok Sabha elections. He has been voicing concerns at almost every interstate platform and in every meeting with Prime Minister about problems like internal security, terrorism, revenue sharing, federal policing, anti-terror laws and a host of other issues.

But, for the matter of record, none of the BJP leaders including its first man, L K Advani is ready to admit that Modi would be joining central politics. However, Advani himself, just after the National Executive meeting last year, suggested that Modi would be the 'next generation leader for BJP'. But, today when Modi shared a press dais with Advani, the prime ministerial candidate of the party said that there was nothing much to read between the lines.

He just said, "Modi is the best person to speak on terrorism because he has attained great success by solving Ahmedabad blasts." From the same dais, Advani also tried to put it across that anti-terror laws or actions (read Modi's action) was not against muslim community. To make it more emphatic, he claimed that many muslim groups called on him and said that the UPA linked the whole community with terrorism by scrapping POTA calling it against muslims. This was a clear effort by a leader of Advani's stature to cover up Modi's anti-muslim face. The coming months are likely to unfold similar things and put them under proper light.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Jyotipunj – Narendra Modi

”Only those who keep walking get sweet returns...look at the sun's perseverance - dynamic & always on the move, never dormant... hence keep moving”, says Narendra Modi, CM of Gujarat. A man of courage and values, Modi is a strong supporter of Hindutava and follower of RSS.

Continuing his penmanship, Narendra Modi has authored a new book offering glimpses of his journey from an ordinary worker of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) to a full-time functionary as “pracharak”. In JyotiPunj, Narendra Modi has attempted to communicate his persona, thinking and principles - and attribute them to the years he spent in the Sangh. “Jyotipunj” debunks many myths about the Sangh. The book reflects extraordinary works of ordinary people.

However Narendra Modi’s new book is more focused on several known and unknown RSS leaders, who have shaped the Gujarat Chief Minister’s thinking. Modi wants to use the book to convey his commitment as strong Sangh man to the cadres. On the day of release of the book, Modi expressed his gratitude towards the RSS saying that he has learnt a lot from the leaders. Modi said during emergency when all the well known writers of the RSS were locked in jails, he was asked to publish a booklet, Abhay. It was during that time that he learnt the art of writing and he has compiled all his feelings about the leaders in the book. He said that his first book was released more than 30 years ago by Babubhai Jashbhai Patel, the then CM of Gujarat.

"Jyotipunj" highlights the lives of 16 leaders of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS). In the book, Modi has written about the things he has learnt from these 16 leaders during his interactions with them. They include RSS founder K B Hedgewar and his successor M S Golwalkar, Nathalal Jhagda, K K Shastri, Laxmanrao Inamdar, Keshvrao Deshmukh, Madhukarrao Bhagwat, Shri Vasant Chiplunkar, Dr Vanikar, Anantrao Kade, Vasudevrao Talwalkar, Babubhai Oza and Dr P V Doshi.

Passionate and progressive, a poet at heart and an author of a few books and tech-savvy, Mr. Narendra Modi is one of the most responsive political leaders in India. Modi’s model of good governance is being applauded within the country and beyond. The way he has won the hearts of people of Gujarat and his popularity at the national level show that ‘Good governance is also good politics’.

This book has also been translated in Marathi by Ravindra Dani is a publication of Ameya Prakashan.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Narendra Modi as Man Muslims Love to Hate Wins Billionaire Vote

Narendra Modi as Man Muslims Love to Hate Wins Billionaire Vote



Narendra Modi, the chief minister, state of Gujarat

Ratan Tata stands with a Tata Nano
March 30 (Bloomberg) -- As Narendra Modi, chief minister of the state of Gujarat, walks into a cavernous tent filled with 20,000 investors and business leaders in western India, he’s greeted like a Bollywood movie star. Conference goers surround the politician to shake hands, snap photos and touch his shoes -- a show of reverence in India.
After the January conference gets under way in the city of Ahmedabad, billionaire Anil Ambani, whose empire ranges from telecommunications to financial services, steps to the lectern. He praises Modi, 58, for turning Gujarat into India’s top destination for investors before paying the Hindu nationalist the ultimate compliment: He should be prime minister.
Since Modi became head of Gujarat in 2001, he’s lured investors with a rapid approval process for developments, a network of roads and ports and uninterrupted power supply -- a rarity in India.
“If Narendra Modi can do so much for Gujarat, imagine the possibility for India by having him as the next leader of India,” Ambani says.
Some 40 kilometers (25 miles) from the conference, in a Muslim ghetto called Juhapura on the outskirts of Ahmedabad, Modi’s name isn’t celebrated. He’s a top official in the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), or Indian People’s Party, which opposes special treatment from the government of any one religious group, including Muslims.
Contaminated Food
For the 700,000 residents of Juhapura, the water runs only 15 minutes a day, potholed asphalt roads are lined with rubble and government-subsidized shops sell contaminated flour and rice that make people sick, says Mohammad Ishaq Sayed, a tailor who lives with his family of six in a one-room, 100- square-foot (9.3-square-meter) apartment.
“We live in Gujarat and still we get nothing,” says Sayed, 53, sitting in a plastic chair outside his apartment, where naked electrical wires snake along the walls. “Why is there no development for us? What enmity do they have with us? We are Muslims, that’s why.”
As India continues to tally the economic costs from the terror attacks by Islamic militants that killed 164 people in Mumbai in November, Modi stands out as a symbol of a nation that, 62 years after independence, has yet to come to grips with a sectarian divide that’s fueled decades of violent riots and the marginalization of Muslims.
Shut Out
The 158.6 million Muslims, which account for 13.4 percent of India’s population of about 1.2 billion, are among the poorest people in the country. They are shut out of jobs and unable to get equal access to education, according to a 2006 government-sponsored report. At state-run companies such as banks and railways, Muslims make up only 4.9 percent of the workforce.
Thirty-eight percent of them live in such deprivation that they consume less than 2,100 calories of food a day, the report says. By comparison, 20 percent of Hindus living in cities don’t receive proper nutrition.
Alakh Sharma, director of the Institute for Human Development, a New Delhi-based group that studies labor markets, development policy and education, says India’s exclusion of Muslims from the mainstream hampers its economic growth.
“If 13 percent of the population is alienated and doesn’t become part of the economic process, how will the country continue to grow?” Sharma says. “It’ll affect demand for goods and become a source of conflict and strife.”
‘Scary Prospect’
In more than two decades in the BJP, during which time he’s ascended to the position of general secretary, the third- highest rank, Modi has been in the middle of the sectarian conflict whose origins go back centuries.
Modi helped organize a campaign in 1990 for the BJP leader to drum up support for building a Hindu temple at the site of a Muslim mosque in the state of Uttar Pradesh, according to his Web site, narendramodi.in. In Gujarat alone, the BJP campaign spurred 1,520 violent incidents between Hindus and Muslims from April 1990 through April ‘91, according to a report by the New Delhi-based Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies.
“Modi’s rise is a very scary prospect for India,” says Shabnam Hashmi, an atheist who runs Act Now for Harmony and Democracy, a group started to counter sectarian politics in India. “He polarizes people by promoting the ideology of hate.” Jagdish Thakkar, Modi’s public relations officer, didn’t respond to several requests for an interview.
Rampaging Mobs
In February 2002, four months after Modi took control of Gujarat, Hindu mobs went on a rampage against Muslims after a fire on a train claimed 58 lives, among them Hindu pilgrims. In the riots that followed, more than 1,000 people were killed, mostly Muslims, while Modi allegedly instructed police to stand down and allow the violence to continue, according to an investigation by the eight-member Concerned Citizens Tribunal. The group, with no legal standing, was made up of former judges, professors and a retired police officer.
“If you are a minority you are pushed to the brink and treated like dirt in this state,” says Cedric Prakash, a Jesuit priest who runs a human rights center in Ahmedabad.
Modi has denied the allegations from the citizens group and critics.
“My future will be determined by the people of Gujarat,” Modi said at a conference sponsored by the Hindustan Times newspaper in October 2007. “In a democracy, criticism is welcome, but I am against the allegations.” The Supreme Court of India is still investigating the riots.
Holy War
The killings in Gujarat partly inspired Lashkar-e-Taiba, an Islamic militant group based in Pakistan, to launch its holy war against India, according to a study on the Web site of the Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, a U.S. Department of Defense institute in Honolulu.
In November, 10 members of Lashkar-e-Taiba attacked two luxury hotels, a Jewish center, a cafe and railway station in Mumbai, according to Indian officials. In a massacre that shook India, the terrorists killed 164 people, including 26 foreigners. Earlier in 2008, the Muslim group Indian Mujahideen claimed responsibility for a series of bombings in three Indian cities.
The spate of violence weighs heavily on Indians as they elect a new prime minister starting in mid-April. The BJP is attacking the ruling Indian National Congress party for being soft on terrorism. The government of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, 76, has delayed the hanging of a convicted Muslim terrorist sentenced to death in 2002 -- a fact that the BJP’s candidate, Lal Krishna Advani, 81, rails against on the campaign trail.
Slowing Economy
The BJP is trying to return to power after a six-year term from 1998 to 2004, during which time it stiffened prison penalties for terrorists and lengthened the maximum detention period for suspects who hadn’t been charged to 180 days.
“People lived under six years of a BJP government, but the end of terrorism was not one of its achievements,” says Mahesh Rangarajan, a professor of modern Indian history at Delhi University. “The terrorism card that the BJP could cash in on is gone.”
India’s economic downturn may be an even bigger election issue in a country where voters have regularly rejected incumbents, Rangarajan says. The economy grew 5.3 percent from October through December, the weakest pace since the last quarter of 2003. The recessions in the U.S. and Europe, combined with the terrorist strikes in 2008, are taking a toll on India’s tourist industry.
Partition
The number of visitors to the country plunged 12 percent in February compared with a year earlier. A February poll by an Indian affiliate of CNN showed that neither party would gain 50 percent of the vote, forcing the winner to cobble together a coalition government.
The divide between Hindus, who make up 80.5 percent of the population, and Muslims runs deep. In the 16th century, the Mughals, an Islamic dynasty, took over and ruled the land until the British made the subcontinent a part of its empire three centuries later. Before Britain relinquished control of India in 1947, it partitioned the nation into Muslim Pakistan and Hindu-majority India to buffer historical conflicts.
Eleven million Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs were uprooted, seeking refuge in one of the two countries and clashing along the way. The violence took 500,000 lives. Since the 1960s, there have been at least four major sectarian battles each decade in India, spurred by everything from a Muslim’s cow entering a Hindu’s house to conflicts over religious sites.
‘This is Not Our Country’
Muslims, fearing violence, tend to live together in small clusters in places like the Byculla area in Mumbai and the neighborhood of Nizamuddin in New Delhi, according to the 2006 report sponsored by the Singh government, “Social, Economic and Educational Status of the Muslim Community in India.” In Ahmedabad, Gujarat’s largest city, where investors have backed new malls with big grocery and electronics stores and movie multiplexes, some apartment complexes are off-limits to Muslims, according to the rules of occupancy set by building owners.
Activist Hashmi says her family, because of its Muslim name, has felt unwelcome in parts of New Delhi. In 2003, her daughter, then 7 years old, came home from school after being verbally attacked.
“Another girl told her that we should go live in Afghanistan, this is not our country,” Hashmi says.
Finding Jobs
Muslims also face obstacles in finding employment at state-run companies, which provide 70 percent of the full-time jobs with benefits in India, the report says. At Indian Railways, one of the country’s largest employers, with 1.4 million workers, Muslims make up only 4.5 percent of the total. Among civil service officers -- bureaucrats, diplomats and police -- 3.2 percent are Muslim. At banks such as State Bank of India, the No. 1 lender, the figure drops to just 2.2 percent. Of the 30 companies in the Bombay Stock Exchange’s benchmark Sensitive Index, only one -- software services provider Wipro Ltd. -- is led by a Muslim, billionaire Azim Premji.
The report recommends that employers include Muslims in hiring to increase their numbers.
“A very small proportion of government employees are Muslims, and on average, they are concentrated in lower-level positions,” the report says. “While no discrimination is being alleged, it may be desirable to have minority persons on relevant interview panels.”
Drop Outs
Dev Desai, an economics undergraduate student at GLS College in Ahmedabad, encountered discrimination recently when trying to get a Muslim friend and fellow student a job.
“I spoke to some people and told them she was from my college and studies with me,” says Desai, a Hindu. “On hearing her name, they asked if she is Muslim. When I said yes, they told me to let it be.”
The minority group lags behind in education as well, partly because of a shortage of schools that teach in Urdu, a language used by Muslims. As many as 25 percent of Muslim children ages 6-14 never attend school or drop out. Muslim kids in the Juhapura ghetto face another issue: Their school is in a Hindu area.
“Some children are afraid and don’t go,” says Niaz Bibi, a resident and mother. “Their thinking is, we’ll never get a job so why study? Might as well learn a vocation like fixing cars.”
Bollywood
In top colleges offering science, arts, commerce and medical courses, only 1 in 25 undergraduate students is Muslim.
“This has serious long-term implications for the economic empowerment of the community and consequently for economic development of the country,” the report says.
India has put aside its sectarian differences in a few areas, such as its movie industry. Muslim film celebrities Shah Rukh Khan, a romantic leading man also known as “King Khan,” and Aamir Khan often top the box office. Aamir Khan starred in Bollywood’s biggest hit of 2008, Ghajini. While Indians have never elected a Muslim prime minister, lawmakers have selected three Muslim presidents, the titular head of government, including A.P.J. Abdul Kalam from ‘02 to ‘07.
Modi mocked the government report, which was chaired by retired judge Rajindar Sachar, at a conference sponsored by India Today magazine in March 2008.
Spiraling Investments
“Mr. Sachar came to see me and asked, ‘Mr. Modi, what has your government done for Muslims?’ I said, ‘I’ve done nothing,’” Modi said. “Then I said, ‘Please also note that I’ve done nothing for Hindus either. I work for the people of Gujarat.’”
As head of the state, Modi has spurred a construction boom by attracting a slew of investors, including Sabeer Bhatia, co-founder of e-mail service Hotmail. Investors pledged $243 billion to Gujarat at the 2009 Vibrant Gujarat Global Investors’ Summit in January, a 60 percent jump from the previous event in 2007. In a country infamous for bureaucratic red tape, Gujarat lures investors with a streamlined process requiring developers to get approval for major projects at only one agency, the Gujarat Infrastructure Development Board.
Tata Group, the $62.5 billion conglomerate that owns everything from salt to software companies, got permission from the state to build a plant to produce the $2,500 Nano, the cheapest car in the world, in three days.
Hindu Nationalist
“Most of us in India have come to regard a time frame of six months or three months as an average time to get clearances,” Ratan Tata, chairman of Tata Group, said from the stage at the January conference in Ahmedabad. “In this particular case, that tradition was shattered, and we had our land and most of our approvals in three days. That, in my experience, has never happened before.”
After Tata’s speech, Modi walked toward the lectern and gave the executive a hug before addressing the crowd himself.
“Even in a recession, companies aren’t going to stop manufacturing,” he said. “They will prefer a destination where low-cost manufacturing is possible. This is a chance for a country like India, if we can provide a low-cost manufacturing environment, to grab this opportunity.”
Modi joined the burgeoning Hindu nationalist movement as a teenager after growing up in a family of modest means; his father ran a tea stall at Vadnagar railway station in Gujarat, according to a 2007 article in the Times of India.
Ideological Fraternity
After completing his master’s degree in political science at Gujarat University in the 1970s, he became a member of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, or National Volunteers Corps, his Web site says. The RSS advocates that Hinduism is central to Indian culture and life.
At the time, northern India was recovering from a famine and sectarian violence was rising: 500 people were killed in Ahmedabad in 1969. Members of the still active RSS take part in regular military-style parades, drills and exercises dressed in white shirts and khaki shorts. The RSS, which hatched political groups that would coalesce into the BJP in 1980, remains the fount of the party’s ideas.
“The RSS ideology is all about cultural nationalism,” says Prakash Javadekar, spokesman for the BJP and a member of India’s upper house of parliament. “We are an ideological fraternity.”
Babri Mosque
The BJP built itself into a national power starting in the late 1980s with a campaign to construct a temple where a mosque stood in Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh. Modi, who joined the BJP in 1987, helped organize a 10,000-kilometer journey for Advani, now the BJP’s candidate for prime minister, to rally support for the temple and the party. Advani’s trip in a truck, with the bed trussed up to resemble a chariot from Hindu mythology, was scheduled to end at the site of the mosque.
Hindus believe the site was the birthplace of the Hindu god Ram and that a temple once stood there until Muslim invaders destroyed it in the 16th century and built the Babri Mosque.
Advani’s journey was cut short when authorities arrested him in the state of Bihar in October 1990. According to Advani’s Web site, he was arrested by political foes who opposed a resurgence of nationalism in India. Two years later, Hindu mobs tore down the mosque, fomenting riots in Mumbai that claimed more than 1,000 lives, mostly Muslims.
Train Fire
The temple campaign catalyzed Hindu support across India for the BJP, which won its first national election in 1996 and its second in ‘98.
“Communal violence in the last two decades is a result of the manipulation of religious sentiments by Hindu right- wing organizations for political gains,” according to the Institute of Peace & Conflict Studies report. “The politicization of the temple-mosque issue and the subsequent demolition of the mosque gave the BJP the opportunity to consolidate its vote bank.”
Javadekar rejects that claim, saying the Congress Party’s sectarian politics and favoritism toward minorities poses the biggest danger to India. Javadekar says the BJP supports the equal treatment of all religious groups in India.
“That means you do justice to all and appeasement of none,” he says.
The 2002 riots in Gujarat began with a fire in a train coach carrying Hindu pilgrims returning from Ayodhya. A commission set up by the Gujarat government said that Muslims set the fire after an altercation at the station between some pilgrims and Muslim vendors.
Lost Everything
The report of the citizens tribunal, which was released in October ‘02 and based on about 2,000 interviews, shows the fire started within the coach and was not deliberate, says Ghanshyam Shah, a social scientist who was a member of the tribunal.
As news of the fire spread through the state, Hindu mobs surrounded Muslim neighborhoods, destroyed houses with homemade bombs, raped and killed women and butchered men, according to the three-volume report of the citizens tribunal.
“We escaped with just the clothes on our backs,” says Sayed, the tailor in Juhapura. “Everything was destroyed. Our house was torn down, and all our possessions were stolen.”
Sayed, his wife and three sons were rescued by a Muslim police officer and taken to a camp outside Juhapura.
“The Muslim officer risked himself and brought us to the camp,” Sayed says.
Police Don’t Arrive
The police didn’t respond to calls for help from many Muslims, according to the report. It details the murder of Ahsan Jafri, a former member of parliament from the Congress Party.
The attack on the neighborhood where Jafri lived in Ahmedabad began on the morning of Feb. 28, 2002. A high- ranking police official visited Jafri at 10:30 a.m. and assured him that police reinforcements were on the way to quell the riots. The police never came even after Jafri’s desperate phone calls to Modi’s office and the police. Jafri was dragged out of his home and killed in the afternoon, as were others who had taken shelter in his house, the report says.
Three years later, in 2005, the U.S. State Department denied Modi a diplomatic visa and revoked his existing one under a section of the Immigration and Nationality Act that bars entry of foreign officials who are complicit in severe violations of religious freedom.
‘Absence of Healing’
“The violence in Gujarat in 2002 was extremely serious; it went on for months,” says Delhi University’s Rangarajan. “If you travel in the hinterland of Gujarat, what is more serious is the absence of a healing process.”
In 2008, six years after the riots, the Supreme Court of India formed a special team to investigate the violence. In February, the team arrested Deputy Superintendent of Police K.G. Erda, the officer in charge of the area where Jafri lived, for dereliction of duty and abetment of murder, according to Mitesh Amin, Erda’s lawyer. Erda has been released on bail, and the Supreme Court has halted the trial, Amin says.
In March, investigators submitted their confidential report to the court, which asked the Gujarat government to file a response by April 13.
The 2002 riots shouldn’t taint Modi’s reputation as a good administrator, says Ajit Gulabchand, managing director of Mumbai-based Hindustan Construction Co. The company is building an $8 billion waterfront development in Dholera, an industrial and business hub.
Carnegie Mellon University
“What happened was terrible,” Gulabchand says. “The question is, Are we moving on? Here is somebody who welcomes people and creates an atmosphere for business and other investments to thrive.”
Yogesh Patel and his business partner, Hotmail’s Bhatia, are also bullish on Gujarat. They’re building university campuses in Dholera and have partnered with Carnegie Mellon University to open a graduate school there.
During a meeting last year, after Patel told Modi about the potential for generating solar energy in northern Gujarat, the chief minister immediately called in a bureaucrat and asked him to get working on a plan.
“It’s like dealing with a private enterprise and talking to a CEO,” Patel says.
‘Modi Has to Evolve’
While political analysts say Modi is a possible future candidate for prime minister, he would face hostility from Muslims. “God will bring Modi down one day,” Sayed says.
In states with large Muslim populations, where they comprise more than 15 percent, Modi would have to soften his anti-Muslim image.
“Modi’s problem is very real,” Rangarajan says. “Modi has to evolve.”
In Ahmedabad’s Juhapura ghetto, Hindus built a 10-foot- high wall with barbed wire at the top to separate themselves from Muslims. The wall is a reminder of the issues confronting Modi and his party as they vie to rule India again.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Lashkar planned to kill Narendra Modi: Wikileaks

Lashkar planned to kill Narendra Modi: Wikileaks

http://www.rediff.com/news/2002/aug/27inter1.jpg
NEW DELHI: Pakistan-based terror group Lashkar-e-Taiba had made elaborate plans in June last year to assassinate Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi , according to one of the American diplomatic cables made public by whistleblower website WikiLeaks .

The cable identifies a Pakistani Lashkar member, Shafiq, as the mastermind of the plot that was to be executed by a module led by an Indian Lashkar operative, Hussein.

The hit job was to be carried out by one Sameer, an India-based Lashkar terrorist.

The timing of the plot is significant. It was hatched seven months after Lashkar's attack on Mumbai in November 2008. The cable underlines that the pressure on Pakistan post-26/11 did not deter Lashkar from planning fresh terror attacks.

Modi has been on the hit list of jihadi terror groups who have cited the Gujarat riots during his tenure to find recruits and to radicalise sections of Indian Muslims.

The module, possibly led by Hussein in India, was tasked with two other jobs -- including establishment of a training camp and an "unspecified work" involving a car. Details were, however, not mentioned in the leaked US embassy cable which claimed to derive these information from "multiple sources".

The leaked cable, part of the `Diplomatic Security Daily' sent to Washington from different US missions, was despatched on June 19 last year. "LeT member Shafiq Khafa, possibly preparing for operation, and Hussein -- an India-based Lashkar-e-Taiba member -- continued operational planning on three tasks in early June. The tasks were associated with a possible operation against Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi, the establishment of a training camp and unspecified work involving a car. Hussein would coordinate his activities with an India-based colleague identified as Sameer," the cable said.

The cable on the plot against Modi is part of the category called "key concerns" of the US embassy messages. Another leaked cable on India has mentioned about hindrance posed by disagreements within various agencies over Indian cyber security programmes.

It says, "The government of India continues efforts to advance its computer security programmes -- particularly in the light of increased concerns over Chinese computer network exploitation efforts -- but the progress is hampered by significant disagreements within its departments."

Referring to key Indian organisations like department of telecommunication (DoT) and Research & Analysis Wing (RAW), which are involved in developing and implementing security policies, the US cable said, "Although the Indian Army is primarily responsible for the security of military networks, Indian officials acknowledge Army representatives have been largely left out of the discussion."

It also mentioned that some other key organisations like National Technical Research Organisation (NTRO) and Defence Intelligence Agency have reportedly failed to offer significant contributions.

The leaked cable also referred to the concerns expressed by private security companies. It said, "Private security companies are concerned that the lack of input from the private sector may lead to unfair regulations regarding telecommunications monitoring."