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Antony to visit Oman next week - India - The Times of India

NEW DELHI: In keeping with the policy to bolster strategic ties with the Gulf countries, defence minister A K Antony will be visiting Oman early next week to promote bilateral defence cooperation.

Antony, accompanied by a high-level delegation, will hold talks with his Omani counterpart Sayyid Badr bin Saud bin Harib Al Busaidi during his two-day visit to Muscat.

This comes at a time when Oman has shown interest in procuring the 5.56mm INSAS (Indian small arms system) assault rifle manufactured by the Ordnance Factory Board.

"India and Oman have vibrant military ties. In October last year, IAF Jaguar fighters had flown to Oman to participate in the first-ever joint air exercise with the Royal Air Force of Oman,'' said a defence ministry official.

"Following the signing of a protocol agreement on military relations between India and Oman in 1972, the last decade has seen strengthening of military relations between the two countries,'' he added.

At present, there exists a two-tier arrangement for defence cooperation between the two countries in the shape of a joint military cooperation commission and air force-to-air force staff talks.
 
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how old r u ... five? don't u now how Tibetans are treated in Tibet by China which has annexed their land........! WE can stay Hungry for em.......!

But not like canadians........ we all know that geographically ALASKA belongs to whom and still US has Annexed it but still u cant say nething.......

No need to get know about age as long you are getting some thing very true.
 
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The Hindu : News : India to discuss security ties with Seychelles


India will discuss greater security and economic cooperation with Seychelles during discussions with its President James Alex Michel who arrived here on Tuesday.

India has been implementing a more intimate security grid with island nations such as the Maldives, Mauritius and Seychelles as they have been feeling vulnerable in the absence of maritime domain awareness and adequate firepower.

During talks with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Wednesday, the Seychelles President will discuss greater collaboration with the Indian Navy to overcome the threat of piracy which has badly impacted its economy, Foreign Office spokesperson Vishnu Prakash told journalists.

Seychelles recently repelled two pirate attacks and has suffered a € 8 billion (over Rs. 40,000 crore) impact due to decline in tourism. Besides military hardware, India provides high-level expertise in the form of several specialists from the armed forces doing duty in Seychelles. It also trains officers from Seychelles at its military academies.

Both sides would also look to deepen their economic engagement and India is expected to reiterate its continuing support for developing the island nation's infrastructure.

Seychelles has been facing severe threat from piracy because the concentration of the world's navies around the Gulf of Aden has pushed ship hijacking activity to a wider geographical area.
 
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The Hindu : News / National : India, South Africa sign 3 pacts


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India and South Africa signed three pacts and agreed to support each other's candidature in the elections to the rotating non-permanent seats of the United Nations Security Council.

At a summit-level meeting Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and visiting South African President Jacob Zuma on Friday also resolved to step up bilateral cooperation as well as greater coordination at multilateral fora.

However, both sides decided to continue discussing resumption of full-fledged defence ties which suffered a setback after the blacklisting of a major South African firm from defence tenders. They also agreed on the need to expand the Brazil-Russia-India-China grouping to include South Africa.

In the civil nuclear sector, talks between nuclear power operators of both countries would continue as country-level cooperation was inhibited by an African treaty that bars business with countries that have not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

They also have slightly divergent views on reforming the UNSC and agreed to continue talks to arrive at a convergence.

The three agreements signed pertain to air services, agriculture and contacts between their think tanks.

The pacts were agreed upon before Mr. Zuma's visit and with other substantial agreements eluding both sides, symbolise their desire to step up cooperation. Both sides identified areas for future cooperation and decided to take them up in detail at the next meeting of the Joint Commission.

“We will step up our efforts for the reform of global institutions of governance, including of the United Nations Security Council. We have agreed to support each other's candidatures for the non-permanent seats for the 2011-2012 term,'' said Dr. Singh in a media statement after the talks with Mr. Zuma.

Noting that India and South Africa work closely in several international forums such as the United Nations, Non-aligned Movement, Commonwealth, WTO, G-20 and the IBSA and BASIC groupings, Dr. Singh said it was decided to intensify coordination in these bodies.

While Dr. Singh conveyed India's best wishes to South Africa which is hosting the Football World Cup from next week, Mr. Zuma reciprocated the sentiment for India, which will hold the Commonwealth Games later this year.

Mr. Zuma, accompanied by a 200-strong business delegation and half-a-dozen senior Ministers, also interacted with captains of industry here and earlier in Mumbai. Co-chaired by top business leaders Ratan Tata and Patrice Motsepe, an India-South Africa CEOs forum has been set up to give impetus to investment plans by companies from both countries.
 
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The Hindu : News / National : Menon meets Robert Gates in Singapore


National Security Adviser Shiv Shankar Menon conferred with United States Defence Secretary Robert Gates hours before the inauguration of the ninth Asia Security Summit here on Friday.

The summit is being organised by the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies.

Neither Dr. Gates nor Mr. Menon made an immediate comment on the talks. However, their meeting acquired unusual importance in the context of the just-concluded U.S.-India inaugural Strategic Dialogue in Washington.

In a series of bilateral talks, Mr. Menon met Ma Xiaotian, Deputy Chief of General Staff of China's People's Liberation Army. The two are scheduled to speak on “New dimensions of security” at a plenary session of the summit on Saturday.

Dr. Gates will address the summit on “Strengthening security partnerships in the Asia-Pacific” region.

Mr. Menon also held talks with Singapore's Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Teo Chee Hean and Foreign Minister George Yeo on Friday.
 
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Iran, AP to ink pact for restoring monuments
Hyderabad, June 4

The Iranian Government on Friday announced its decision to enter into memorandum of understanding with Andhra Pradesh for restoration of ancient monuments and manuscripts in several languages.

Some of the landmark historical monuments located near Hyderabad such as Qutub Shahi Tombs, Badshahi Ashurkhana, among others will be taken up for restoration. The joint effort will cover deployment of experts to share know-how, technical inputs and possibly material required to bring them to their old glory. Most of the glorious monuments are faced with neglect and are in bad shape due to ageing.

The Andhra Pradesh Tourism Minister, Ms J.Geetha Reddy, and Mr Mohammed Safari, Consul-General of Iran based in Hyderabad, announced that a MoU will be inked in September.

An earlier arrangement, which sought to help restore rare manuscripts, expired in March. It is proposed to sign up another MoU, which will help take up further restoration works. A lot of work has already been concluded.

Addressing a press conference at Secretariat, Ms Reddy said that the State Ministry for Tourism and Culture will conduct the Festival of AP in Iran in September. That is also when the agreements for further cooperation would be inked.

Earlier, Noor Microfilm Centre, New Delhi worked on digitisation of manuscripts during 2007 and 2010. Most of the rare manuscripts based in the Andhra Pradesh Government Oriental Manuscripts Library and Research Institute, Hyderabad, have been taken up for restoration. Thus far lakhs of pages and thousands of books have been undertaken for restoration.

This includes works in Arabic, Persian, Urdu, Sanskrit and Telugu. The restoration work includes digitisation, repairing and even oiling up of pages.

The Noor Microfilm Centre has thus far digitised 13,665 books while also digitising over 17.5 lakh pages.

Mr Safari said that all necessary support would be provided to bring these monuments and manuscripts to old glory.

The Hindu Business Line : Iran, AP to ink pact for restoring monuments
 
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Sri Lanka's president to visit India

Colombo, June 07, 2010

Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa is to begin a three-day visit to India on Tuesday and will meet with his counterpart Pratibha Patil and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

The visit comes amid growing concern in Sri Lanka over a proposed Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) between the two neighbours.

Both opposition members as well as some in the government have called on Rajapaksa not to go ahead with the agreement, which goes beyond bilateral trade and also includes providing services, the Sunday Times reported.

Protesters have claimed that CEPA would enable Indians to enter the service sector, which would be a disadvantage to Sri Lanka.

Rajapaksa's visit also comes as Sri Lanka has been looking to expedite rehabilitation and reconstruction work in the north, which was liberated from Tamil rebels last year.

India already has a contract to rebuild the damaged railway network in the north and improve runways in the northern air base. India is also working on a coal power project in the northeast of Sri Lanka.

Meanwhile, a 30-member Chinese delegation headed by Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang is due in Sri Lanka on Thursday for a three-day visit. It is expected that China will agree to loan Sri Lanka $200 million to build a second international airport in the south and an additional $100 million to upgrade the railway network.

Both India and China backed Sri Lanka in its efforts to crush the rebels of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The 26-year fight against the rebels came to an end last May after LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran was killed.

Sri Lanka's president to visit India- Hindustan Times
 
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Rajapaksa visit to pave way for stronger Indo-Sri Lanka relations

From R. Vasudevan - Reporting from New Delhi

New Delhi, 08 June (Asiantribune.com): Fresh from his triumph in Presidential and Parliamentary elections in Sri Lanka, President Mahinda Rajapaksa arrives in New Delhi on Tuesday for important talks with the Indian leadership, in a major thrust to bilateral relations.

Many issues pertaining to political, economical and defence fields are likely to figure in the President’s discussions with the President, Prime Minister besides a host of senior cabinet ministers and officials.

Of particular interest to India is how the Sri Lankan President proposes to resolve the issue of ethnic Tamils, the internally displaced people and victims of LTTE terrorism in relief camps and the election promise of more say for the religious minorities in governance.

The resettlement of Tamils is a major issue for the different political groups in Tamil Nadu going to polls next year. The ruling DMK, a key ally of the Congress in the Manmohan Singh government, is already exerting pressure on New Delhi to take up the matter with Rajapaksa. With the opposition AIADMK and other pro-Tamil groups watching the talks with Sri Lanka keenly, DMK chief Karunanidhi has already taken a lead in deputing a team of MPs to have a meeting with the visiting President.

The Congress is well aware of the sentiments of the Tamil groups in the South. Parties like the MDMK of Vaiko have already called for protests in parts of the State to highlight the condition of displaced Tamils in Sri Lanka.

Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao’s earlier stint in Colombo as an envoy will come in handy to take up the issue of speedy resettlement of displaced people. New Delhi is reportedly not too impressed with the pace of work being done in this direction and there is talk of direct talks with disgruntled Tamil groups in Sri Lanka. But this has the inherent risk of inviting charges of India’s interference in the neighbouring country, besides possibly provoking fresh ire of the Sinhala majority in the island nation.

The New Delhi talks thus assume major importance as they could impinge on the bilateral ties. Rajapaksa, to his credit, has spoken of his desire to accommodate the Tamils’ point of view in an effort to clear misunderstandings and misconceptions floated by vested interests.

New Delhi apparently wants some reciprocal gestures for its unqualified support for the Rajapaksa government’s successful fight to eliminate the LTTE even at the cost of antagonizing the pro-Eelam elements in Tamil Nadu. The recent extension of ban on LTTE in India is a message to Colombo that India stands firmly behind any attempt to root out terrorism. While announcing the ban on LTTE, the government had said it had evidence of attempts by the former LTTE elements to regroup using the hospitality provided by the Tamil Nadu government to refugees on humanitarian grounds.

Sri Lanka is also likely to present its first draft of proposed solutions to New Delhi. Among the key suggestions are the implementation of the 13th Amendment and increase of Provincial Council powers, increasing minority involvement through a newly created 'Senate Chamber' and new measures to ensure equality among all Sri Lankans.

On the economic front, the controversial Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) will be prominent in the bilateral talks. Sri Lanka’s Minister of Mass Media and Communication Keheliya Rambukwella has disclosed that the issue would figure during official talks in New Delhi before the agreement could be signed by the end of this year.

There have been protests in Colombo recently over not allowing India to act as a ‘Big Brother’ to force Sri Lanka to merge northern and eastern areas or act under pressure on bilateral trade pacts giving an advantage to the megasize Indian companies without wider consultations.

New Delhi will be careful to avoid any embarrassing demonstrations against the visiting President dominating media headlines. Security has been beefed up in the Capital to avoid any untoward incidents during the Rajapaksa visit.

Rajapaksa visit to pave way for stronger Indo-Sri Lanka relations | Asian Tribune
 
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Little Sister, not big brother

Tuesday, 08 June 2010 00:34

By N Sathiya Moorthy

President Mahinda Rajapaksa could not have put it better. On earlier occasions, he had repeated ad infinitum that India was Sri Lanka’s relative. Now, he has defined it in clearer terms by declaring that it was not a ‘Big Brother’ relationship and that Sri Lanka was a ‘Little Sister’ to India. Read in the context of his earlier description of all other nations that had helped Sri Lanka defeat LTTE terrorism as ‘friends’, President’s Rajapaksa’s latest pronouncements is as sublime as it is succinct.

Unacknowledged by many, President Rajapaksa’s State visit to India this week will be a ‘defining moment’ of sorts in bilateral relationship. It is the first substantive bilateral at the conclusion of the ethnic war, which for decades had become a part thereof. Issues that had remained unaddressed substantially and adequately will now have to be taken up, and solutions found. The presidential visit is expected to set the tone for the same, if not find instant solutions to individual issues, here and now.

Four or five issues seem to have been thrown up and around. CEPA seems to be on the top of the Sri Lankan mind – at least of a few on the streets of Colombo, if not at the Government-level. However, it is a political solution to the ‘ethnic issue’ that seems to be bothering many others, including India. Attached to this are issues of rehabilitation of the war victims and reconstruction of the war-affected areas.

There are other interlinked and/or independent concerns, as well. They include rehabilitation of refugees and the reconstruction of the war-affected areas, India’s participation in Sri Lanka’s development, with or without the war, and strategic security concerns of both nations. The fishing issue is another sensitive concern to both nations, particularly in the post-war scenario.

For the sibling ties to be strengthened further, these issues need to be addressed squarely. Side-stepping the issues or not standing by past commitments is not on. Likewise, addressing Indian or Sri Lankan concerns on one or more of the nagging issues, and seeking to dis-engage others of mutual or individual concerns from the bilateral sphere is fraught with doubts and mistrust of the kind that this one relationship can do without, post-war.

The ethnic issue, for instance, was, and continues to be a political issue. It needs a political solution. Reopening a discourse, decades after decisions were made – but implementation delayed – will only open old wounds and cause newer ones. The ‘healing touch’ that contemporary Sri Lanka needs badly and has been promised repeatedly, would then have to wait. .

If at the end of the past discourse, provincial devolution was accepted as the way out, it was not for administrative convenience. Instead, it sought to address the legitimate concerns and aspirations of the ethnic minorities. With democratised checks-and-balances in the post-colonial era, districts still do not have law-making or decision-making powers. The Provincial Councils were given those powers. Conferring those powers on the districts would mean 25 Provinces in the place of nine. Anything else would be a farce.

The case for a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) with India is no different. Unless the intention is to ‘kill’ CEPA on the streets of Colombo, differences could be sorted out at the implementation-level, where more of the kind could show up. That is how much of the differences over, and difficulties in the implementation of the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) came to be sorted out. That is where also the seeds for CEPA were sown.

To the extent that the Sri Lankan Government has declared that it will address the concerns of the domestic industry and trade, labour and consumers, the effort should be welcome. To the extent, it is dragging its feet on summit-level attestation ,to the draft two years after it was cleared for signature ,ahead of the 2008 SAARC summit in Colombo, the processes have remained slow.

On the security front, there is a clear understanding that the fates of these two nations are linked together by geography and geo-political developments and events over which neither may have much control but cannot escape the consequences, all the same. Yet, if Sri Lankan apprehensions are still rooted in the interpretations from the past, there is need for addressing those concerns – and also the grounds for those concerns.

Otherwise, for someone in Colombo, or elsewhere, to throw the ‘China bogey’ now and again, and expect New Delhi to react as the respective sides may want to, that may not happen. To begin with, China did not react the way the anti-India forces wanted it to react, first, at the height of the ‘Bangladesh War’ (1971) and more recently, during the ‘Kargil War’ (1999). Iraq and North Korea should show where global adversity too ended, and ‘Big Brother’ bonhomie of the P-5 began.

India-Sri Lanka relations is on the threshold of a great new beginning. The way the leaders of the two nations guide them to greater heights will define not only bilateral relations in the years to come, but also the course that the emergence of a ‘Great, New South Asia’ takes. Sri Lanka needs to be a partner in the process than being a partner in any extra-regional arrangements, where it anyway does not belong.

Individuals do not often hold nations’ history at stake – but they do design it in ways, which at times become irreversible, for a long time to come. LTTE’s Prabhakaran did it all the wrong way. In President Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka has an elected leader with endorsement to put it all on the right track. Not just Sri Lanka, and/or India, South Asia as a whole beckons. The world may need to wait!

Little Sister, not big brother
 
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India Steadily Increases Its Lead in Road Fatalities

By HEATHER TIMMONS and HARI KUMAR
Published: June 7, 2010

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A car cut through traffic to cross lanes on a highway in New Delhi, India, in Aug. 2009.

NEW DELHI — India lives in its villages, Gandhi said. But increasingly, the people of India are dying on its roads.

India overtook China to top the world in road fatalities in 2006 and has continued to pull steadily ahead, despite a heavily agrarian population, fewer people than China and far fewer cars than many Western countries.

While road deaths in many other big emerging markets have declined or stabilized in recent years, even as vehicle sales jumped, in India, fatalities are skyrocketing — up 40 percent in five years to more than 118,000 in 2008, the last figure available.

A lethal brew of poor road planning, inadequate law enforcement, a surge in trucks and cars, and a flood of untrained drivers have made India the world’s road death capital. As the country’s fast-growing economy and huge population raise its importance on the world stage, the rising toll is a reminder that the government still struggles to keep its more than a billion people safe.

In China, by contrast, which has undergone an auto boom of its own, official figures for road deaths have been falling for much of the past decade, to 73,500 in 2008, as new highways segregate cars from pedestrians, tractors and other slow-moving traffic, and the government cracks down on drunken driving and other violations.

Evidence of road accidents seems to be everywhere in urban India.

Highways and city intersections often glitter with smears of broken windshield and are scattered with unmatched shoes, shorn-off bicycle seats and bits of motorcycle helmet. Tales of rolled-over trucks and speeding buses are a newspaper staple, and it is rare to meet someone in urban India who has not lost a family member, friend or colleague on the road.

The dangerous state of the roads represents a “total failure on the part of the government of India,” said Rakesh Singh, whose 16-year-old son, Akshay, was killed last year by an out-of-control truck in Bijnor, in the state of Uttar Pradesh, as he walked along a highway to a wedding.

The truck crushed Akshay so completely that his father could identify his son only by his shirt. The truck also ran over a second man and drove away.

Reckless driving and the juxtaposition of pedestrians and fast-moving heavy vehicles is common. The expressway that runs southeast from Delhi to Greater Noida, a fast-growing satellite city, cuts through farmland interspersed with new industrial parks and shopping malls. Small settlements of huts piled with cow-dung patties fringe the road.

During a 40-minute ride on that highway, a tractor hauling gravel was seen driving the wrong way, a milk truck stopped in the road so its driver could urinate and motorists swerved to avoid a bicycle cart full of wooden tables in the fast lane. Drivers chatted on mobile phones as they steered stick-shift cars and wove across lanes. Side mirrors were often turned in or were nonexistent.

A cluster of women in saris holding small children waited anxiously for a gap in traffic so they could race across the highway. Opposite them, a group of young men in office attire waited to cross in the other direction.

The breakdown in road safety has many causes, experts say. Often, the police are too stretched to enforce existing traffic laws or take bribes to ignore them; heavy vehicles, pedestrians, bullock carts and bicycles share roadways; punishment for violators is lenient, delayed or nonexistent; and driver’s licenses are easy to get with a bribe.

Kamal Nath, India’s minister of road transport and highways, said in an interview that highway safety was a “priority” for the national government. “Road safety is one of the major issues” the ministry is addressing, he said. The ministry is reviewing the Motor Vehicles Act and, three years after a government-backed committee recommended that a national road safety board be established, it has introduced legislation to that effect in Parliament.

International safety experts say the Indian government has been slow to act. Bringing down road deaths “requires political commitment at the highest level,” said Dr. Etienne Krug, director of the department of violence and injury prevention at the World Health Organization. India’s government is “just waking up to the issue,” he said.

Rest of story, read link below.
India Steadily Increases Its Lead in Road Fatalities - NYTimes.com
 
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India, Czech Republic sign three agreements during Hamid Ansari's visit - dnaindia.com

Prague: India today signed three agreements with Czech Republic including one on social security that will protect the interests of around 700 Indians working in the European nation.

An agreement on Social Security and Administrative Arrangement for the implementation of the Agreement on Social Security was signed by minister of state for communication and information technology Sachin Pilot and Czech minister of Labour and Social Affairs in the presence of vice-president Hamid Ansari during the first leg of his two-nation tour.

"Under the Social Security Agreement with Czech Republic, citizens working in either country in less than five years would be exempted from social security contributions," secretary (West) in the ministry of external affairs Vivek Katju told reporters here.

Besides, contributions towards pension funds of those who return after five years will also be protected through the proposed pact.

Around 600 to 700 Indians are working in Czech Republic whose interests will be protected through this agreement.

Two other agreements were signed by the two countries - on Economic Cooperation and one on a Protocol on Amendment
of the Agreement between India and Czech Republic for the
Promotion and Protection of Investments signed on October 11,
1996.

Katju described the visit as a "great success" as both the nations emphasised on greater cooperation on diverse sectors like trade and commerce, engineering technology, nano-technology, agriculture etc.

Earlier, speaking at the working lunch hosted by Czech prime minister Jan Fischer, vice-president Ansari said the two countries' economic engagement has intensified to the mutual benefit of the people.

"Czech engineers have contributed to India's industrialisation and BATA, Yezdi and Skoda are well known brand names in India. Many Indian companies are present in the Czech Republic in diverse sectors such as software, trucks, pharmaceuticals and textiles," he said.

Ansari said India has attempted inclusive economic growth within the framework of a Parliamentary democracy so that all sections and groups have a stake in the growing prosperity of the nation.

"We believe that there is an ideal synergy between Czech technology and India's growing market. There is also scope for cooperation between our universities and cultural institutions," he said.
 
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From rail to power, sops ready for Sri Lanka

Shubhajit Roy

Posted: Wed Jun 09 2010, 00:23 hrs

A bouquet of pacts, including one on deep-sea power cables and another on a rehabilitation centre for Tamil widows, between India and Sri Lanka is likely to be announced when President Mahinda Rajapaksa meets Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at Hyderabad House on Wednesday.

Among the other important announcements likely are rebuilding of rail network in northern Sri Lanka, an academic centre for Indian studies, and consulates in Jaffna and Hambantota.

Agreements on mutual legal assistance and transfer of convicted persons are also expected to be signed between the two countries on Wednesday, after the delegation-level talks between the two leaders. Sources said the agreement on convicts is aimed at prisoners who want to spend the remaining term in their homeland, and the legal cooperation treaty is an umbrella agreement aimed at helping each other with legal issues.

Sources said that the agreements and announcements by New Delhi is an effort to balance the Indian as well as Lankan interests.

While India is interested in showering sops for the Tamil minority in the island nation, New Delhi wants to make sure that Rajapaksa’s Sinhala base is also taken care of. So, even as the Tamil groups protested down South on Tuesday against Rajapaksa’s visit, South Block was working hard to balance the interests of the two countries.

The expected MoU on power grid connectivity will look at conducting feasibility studies to ensure power supply to the Sri Lanka’s war-ravaged electricity situation. Once found feasible, deep-sea power cables will integrate the grids of the two countries and will ensure power supply, up to 1,000 MW, for Lanka. Incidentally, China is building a coal-based power plant to be readied later this year which will supply 300 MW initially and will be expanded to 900 MW.

Another MoU will be for setting up centres or institutes for rehabilitation of Tamil widows — whose husbands have died during the Lankan war against the LTTE — to be built by Ahmedabad-based NGO SEWA.

There will be two pacts to rebuild and construct rail links in Lanka, especially in the northern areas where majority of Tamil minorities live. India, which has been keen on opening a consulate in the Tamil-dominated Jaffna town, will also be opening another consulate in Hambantota.

Hambantota is key for two reasons: first, it is a Sinhala-majority area and is a stronghold of the Rajapaksa. And second, it is the place where the Chinese are building a port and is seen by New Delhi as a strategic base for Beijing.

From rail to power, sops ready for Sri Lanka
 
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He is a stalwart of Indian cinema who once played Gandhi on the small screen, while she is a former Miss India best known for her romantic comedy roles. Together, Anupam Kher and Neha Dhupia are to play Adolf Hitler and his mistress Eva Braun in a new Bollywood film set in the last days of the Third Reich.

According to reports, the curiously titled Dear Friend Hitler will centre on the relationships between the Nazi dictator and those who were close to him, including Braun, his long-term lover who he married in his final days in the Berlin bunker. "It aims to take the viewer into close quarters with the enigmatic personality that Hitler was and give a glimpse into his insecurities, his charisma, his paranoia and his sheer genius," a source told the Mumbai Mirror newspaper.

Kher, who was chosen by the film's director, Rakesh Ranjan Kumar, for his apparent resemblance to Hitler, told reporters on Sunday that he was looking forward to the challenge. "I already have an image, I am a known actor, so it will be doubly hard work for me to take away that image," he said. "He's one of the most interesting characters of our times."...

History News Network
 
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Well i think Anupam Kher can do a good job but i seriously doubt that Bollywood could make such a movie. Hope they don't reduce it to a comedy of sorts with huge gawky sets and weird dailogues.

Just got a thought :devil: how would Hitler look running around trees and singing Bollywood songs with the heroine :argh: can't bear the thought myself. :lol::lol::lol:
 
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