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A senior official said on Monday said the Chinese government was "confident" that the new government that takes charge in New Delhi following the Lok Sabha elections - no matter which party was in power - would ensure friendly ties with Beijing, as both sides held strategic talks aimed at laying the groundwork for a series of high-level engagements in coming months.

"We are confident that to promote China-India friendship is a shared consensus of all political parties in India. So I am confident that whichever party comes into power in India it will stay committed to friendship and cooperation between the two countries", Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin, who is also the Foreign Ministry's main interlocutor on India, told reporters, speaking ahead of the sixth round of the annual strategic dialogue, which took place in Beijing at the Diaoyutai State guesthouse on Monday.

He told Foreign Secretary Sujatha Singh at the start of the talks that China "highly appreciates" that the strategic dialogue was being held despite the fact that India was occupied with the ongoing elections.

"I wish to mention in particular that India is undergoing a very important election. Therefore you have chosen to come to China at this very special time to have this strategic dialogue with us. This shows the tremendous importance that the Indian government and you yourself attach to this bilateral relationship and we highly appreciate that," he said.

Ms. Singh said the aim of her visit was "to reiterate to the government of China that the government of India attaches the highest priority to India's relations with China".

The message from officials of both countries is that the dialogue here will stress continuity in ties at a functional-level even as political engagements remain on hold on account of the elections.

Besides bilateral engagements, the dialogue will look at the entire breadth of the relationship as well as common regional concerns such as the situation in Afghanistan. India and China have expressed willingness to do more to coordinate their efforts there, including on joint projects.

Mr. Liu said the bilateral relationship "has already gone beyond the bilateral scope". "Naturally, besides bilateral cooperation we are also going to talk about regional and international issues. We can see three levels of India-China cooperation: on the bilateral-level, regional-level and international-level. It is a very important bilateral relationship".

"We hope in today's dialogue we will have the opportunity to have an in-depth exchange of views on bilateral relations and those efforts to implement the consensus achieved by leaders of both countries, discuss important arrangements for bilateral exchanges this year, discuss cooperation between the two counties in various areas and exchange views on issues regional and internationally [where we have] shared interests," he added.

The talks will also firm up what officials described as "a packed calendar" of bilateral visits in the coming year, which is being marked as "a year of friendly exchanges".

A highlight could be the first visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping to India. Mr. Xi has expressed his desire to visit India later this year on what would be his first trip to the country after taking over as President in March 2013, asThe Hindufirst reported last month.

Monday's strategic dialogue will be followed by a high-level military-level dialogue in New Delhi next week, when a People's Liberation Army (PLA) delegation led by the Deputy Chief of General Staff, Lieutenant General Qi Jianguo, travels to India for DGMO-level talks on the boundary issue, to be held on April 22.

The talks will also firm up plans for annual defence exercises, which will be held in India later this year. Chinese Defence Minister Chang Wanquan is also expected to visit India later this year.

Next week, the two Navies are also slated to have talks with a delegation from India set to visit Qingdao, the north-eastern headquarters of the PLA Navy's North Sea fleet, where the PLA is hosting an international fleet review to mark its 65th anniversary.

The stealth frigate INS Shivalik will participate in the review.

China had invited India's Navy chief to Qingdao, but following the resignation of Navy Chief D.K. Joshi a month ago and a successor yet to be appointed, the Navy will send a "fairly high-ranking" officer to lead the delegation, officials said.

China 'confident' that good ties 'consensus of all Indian parties' - The Hindu
 
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A senior official said on Monday said the Chinese government was "confident" that the new government that takes charge in New Delhi following the Lok Sabha elections - no matter which party was in power - would ensure friendly ties with Beijing, as both sides held strategic talks aimed at laying the groundwork for a series of high-level engagements in coming months.

"We are confident that to promote China-India friendship is a shared consensus of all political parties in India. So I am confident that whichever party comes into power in India it will stay committed to friendship and cooperation between the two countries", Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin, who is also the Foreign Ministry's main interlocutor on India, told reporters, speaking ahead of the sixth round of the annual strategic dialogue, which took place in Beijing at the Diaoyutai State guesthouse on Monday.

He told Foreign Secretary Sujatha Singh at the start of the talks that China "highly appreciates" that the strategic dialogue was being held despite the fact that India was occupied with the ongoing elections.

"I wish to mention in particular that India is undergoing a very important election. Therefore you have chosen to come to China at this very special time to have this strategic dialogue with us. This shows the tremendous importance that the Indian government and you yourself attach to this bilateral relationship and we highly appreciate that," he said.

Ms. Singh said the aim of her visit was "to reiterate to the government of China that the government of India attaches the highest priority to India's relations with China".

The message from officials of both countries is that the dialogue here will stress continuity in ties at a functional-level even as political engagements remain on hold on account of the elections.

Besides bilateral engagements, the dialogue will look at the entire breadth of the relationship as well as common regional concerns such as the situation in Afghanistan. India and China have expressed willingness to do more to coordinate their efforts there, including on joint projects.

Mr. Liu said the bilateral relationship "has already gone beyond the bilateral scope". "Naturally, besides bilateral cooperation we are also going to talk about regional and international issues. We can see three levels of India-China cooperation: on the bilateral-level, regional-level and international-level. It is a very important bilateral relationship".

"We hope in today's dialogue we will have the opportunity to have an in-depth exchange of views on bilateral relations and those efforts to implement the consensus achieved by leaders of both countries, discuss important arrangements for bilateral exchanges this year, discuss cooperation between the two counties in various areas and exchange views on issues regional and internationally [where we have] shared interests," he added.

The talks will also firm up what officials described as "a packed calendar" of bilateral visits in the coming year, which is being marked as "a year of friendly exchanges".

A highlight could be the first visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping to India. Mr. Xi has expressed his desire to visit India later this year on what would be his first trip to the country after taking over as President in March 2013, asThe Hindufirst reported last month.

Monday's strategic dialogue will be followed by a high-level military-level dialogue in New Delhi next week, when a People's Liberation Army (PLA) delegation led by the Deputy Chief of General Staff, Lieutenant General Qi Jianguo, travels to India for DGMO-level talks on the boundary issue, to be held on April 22.

The talks will also firm up plans for annual defence exercises, which will be held in India later this year. Chinese Defence Minister Chang Wanquan is also expected to visit India later this year.

Next week, the two Navies are also slated to have talks with a delegation from India set to visit Qingdao, the north-eastern headquarters of the PLA Navy's North Sea fleet, where the PLA is hosting an international fleet review to mark its 65th anniversary.

The stealth frigate INS Shivalik will participate in the review.

China had invited India's Navy chief to Qingdao, but following the resignation of Navy Chief D.K. Joshi a month ago and a successor yet to be appointed, the Navy will send a "fairly high-ranking" officer to lead the delegation, officials said.

China 'confident' that good ties 'consensus of all Indian parties' - The Hindu
 
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As the BJP remains the front-runner in India’s election with prime ministerial candidateNarendra Modirecast as an economic reformer, neighbouring Pakistan is waiting in the wings. For more than a decade since it first gained power, the BJP has shared a chilly relationship with Pakistan, followed by periods of rapprochement.

Pakistan is now curious about Modi’s ambiguity over lingering issues — terrorism, trade, the nuclear doctrine, Afghanistan and Kashmir. In a sense, the outcome of the election will be crucial in shaping bilateral ties after the composite dialogue took a beating.


Revising the ‘no-first-use’ policy introduced in 1999 is posturing in the run-up to the vote, pointedly warning nuclear neighbours that India has enough muscles to flex, if in a pre-emptive mood. With the unresolved Kashmir conflict and the existence of militant sanctuaries on the Af-Pak border, shifts in India’s nuclear doctrine could signal further provocation towards Pakistan and China.

If elected, Modi will be tough on terrorism and national security, but shares his interest in exploiting global economic openings with his Pakistani counterpart, Nawaz Sharif. Fixing the economy could draw agreement on liberalising trade and visa policies, permitting viable regional trade opportunities to ease political tensions.

Pakistan’s recent backtracking on granting India the status of most favoured nation (MFN) is not a conciliatory signal, having irked Indian investors and businesses. When the Pakistani military’s strategic paradigm went through small changes last year, for the first time General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani acknowledged the main threat facing the country was internal extremism, and not India.

Self-assured hawks must note warring democracies in South Asia will fail. China and India have the world’s largest trade relationship, with trade between the two countries reaching $49.5 billion last year. This makes India hardly reliant on Pakistani exports. But what India wants will count and Modi will have little choice but to pursue confidence-building measures, if pressured by his constituents trading with Pakistan.

Not only is Modi’s leadership and bellicose personality unlike that of AB Vajpayee — a poet who travelled twice to Pakistan in his six-year prime ministerial tenure; initiated the India-Pak bus diplomacy and signed a 1999 peace declaration in Lahore — but his political trajectory has Muslims uneasy.

If his trademark anti-Muslim rhetoric and non-apologetic stance over the 2002Gujaratriots was not enough for anti-BJP sceptics (for which he was denied a visa to the US), Modi’s aggressive accusations againstArvind Kejriwal,reprimanding him and the Congress’ AK Antony for taking a pro-Pakistan approach, remind one of his trademark inflammatory rhetoric.

With a tumultuous history, the BJP-Pakistan relationship (March 1998 to May 2004) has renewable ability for war. The increased spectre of regional terror could destabilise ties with the slightest noise.

The Pakistani Taliban are not interested in talking peace with Sharif’s chosen few and should they feel the need to derail dialogue with a hard-line nationalist Indian partner, it would put the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) in the doghouse.

What could become worrying for Sharif is that Modi might have little accommodation and patience for playing soft ball, with “zero tolerance towards terrorism” and Pakistan-backed terror groups.

Will he demand that Pakistan revisit the Mumbai attacks and apprehend the planners as a prerequisite to trade ties and peace talks? Sharif wants a third-party mediator on Kashmir: Would Modi agree?

For Modi, war-mongering might not be an option as the leader of the world’s largest democracy.

The election narrative does not sum up Modi’s action plan entirely because geopolitical shifts require the BJP to change tack as it finds renewing bilateral relations testing (with new Indian nationalism) yet mandatory for economic security and global approval.

Rajmohan Gandhi used the words “healing”, “reconciliation”, and “understanding” when asked about India-Pakistan relations in Karachi this year. “For tomorrow’s sake, can we learn from yesterday?” the grandson of Mahatma Gandhi writes. Would Modi listen?

Narendra Modi should be flexible towards Pakistan - Hindustan Times
 
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#‎RubberStampPM‬ Ex coal secy PC Parakh's tell all book has sparked off another political battle over Manmohan Singh's tenure as the Prime Minister. Parakh while speaking to the reporters during his book launch admitted that the PM had little political authority and could not control his ministers.

1002670_10154036424200311_6708347739473314026_n.jpg
 
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@HariPrasad @JanjaWeed @jha @

HERE is the Part II

The Heartland Analysis(Please contribute to 5forty3.in so that we can get future data too)

Posted : 1:48 pm, April 14, 2014 by admin
places-to-visit_header.jpg

Western Uttar Pradesh
10 seats went to polls on 10th April in this highly polarized region. We tracked almost 60% of those seats closely to get a sample size of a whopping 1893 responses. This was a totally random exercise wherein we did not target any particular caste/religion or economic background during data collection. We used our revolutionary new methodology of RSSI and VWISM to collect data of different ethnic sub groups with the following percentage representation;


We then adjusted these percentages by adding weightage as per our own formula of caste-vote matrix for western UP. For instance, classically, Dalit voters were under represented in our sample size so we added weightage to the same based on our western UP demographic formula which projects Dalits at 17% in this region. Thus, eventually we arrived at the overall vote-share projections for different parties based on superimposing sample-size data on to our caste-vote matrix of west-UP.



Based on our vote-share projections and by analysing the data parity in terms of different assembly segments and polling stations we arrived at the seat-share projections for the first phase of polling in western Uttar Pradesh. We have used a dynamic new methodology of SVV (Segmental Vote-Share Variation) to convert vote-shares to seats wherein we give weightage to difference in vote-share projections of different segments of caste and region to arrive at seat projections. For instance, although BJP emerged as the number one in terms of vote-share, BSP was the first choice of Dalit segment of voters, so we extrapolate this data to different sub-regions and arrive at a mathematical model that projects seats accordingly.



One of the new theories that has been floated in the last few days is that there was Muslim vote consolidation in western UP from seat to seat in order to defeat Modi which was said to be invisible in the overall numbers because Muslim voters had voted for different parties in different parliamentary seats. Based on our number crunching, we can safely say that this is a bogus theory being floated by people who lack even basic understanding of electoral dynamics.

Ghaziabad: Let us look at Ghaziabad as an example to understand the Muslim voting patterns. We had done our ground activities in 3 assembly segments of Ghaziabad parliamentary constituency and had polled 61 Muslim voters. Although BSP had polled a lion’s share of the Muslim vote, it was nowhere close to being termed as “total consolidation to defeat Modi”. Muslim vote in the past has seen to be a near 100% consolidated vote mostly to defeat BJP, but this time somehow there seems to be a lot of confusion among the Muslim thought leadership (read as Mullahs and Maulvis) on which party to vote for. This confusion is reflected in the Muslim vote of west UP too. Whether such a confusion holds in the future phases remains to be seen.


Bihar
We had a sample size of 1623 spread across 10 assembly segments of 3 parliamentary constituencies out of the 6 that went to polls on the 10th of April in Bihar. Once again this was a wholly random sample chosen from specific polling booths using our path-breaking methodology to arrive at the right mix of polling stations in the right assembly segments.



We then added weightage to the above data based on the census data of different social profiles and also based on the weightage of different voting sub groups. Using our own mathematical modelling we then converted the actual vote-shares into seat shares. This entire exercise carries a error margin of less than 2% as our sample sizes are large and geographically spread out which allows us to extrapolate the data accordingly to different sub categories.





One interesting aspect of Bihar has been the Dalit vote which seems to have gone to the BJP in a big way. BJP’s decision to ally with Ram Vilas Paswan seems to have worked on the ground and the much feared upper caste anger for BJP’s Dalit move hasn’t really happened. There is also a section of Dalit vote which is probably voting for Modi’s brand of development politics. Surprisingly among Yadavs too BJP seems to be getting equal traction vis-à-vis RJD-Congress combine.

Madhya Pradesh
We had a sample size of 951 in Madhya Pradesh which was spread across 9 assembly segments of 4 MP seats. We ensured adequate social representation to all castes by using our unique methodology and also added weightage later on based on our mathematical modelling of census data. Following are the findings of Madhya Pradesh in phase 1.





[Note: In the next part we will analyse Maharashtra, Haryana and Delhi and also come up with full projections for April 10th polling]
 
. . .
@HariPrasad @JanjaWeed @jha @

HERE is the Part II

The Heartland Analysis

Posted : 1:48 pm, April 14, 2014 by admin
places-to-visit_header.jpg

Western Uttar Pradesh
10 seats went to polls on 10th April in this highly polarized region. We tracked almost 60% of those seats closely to get a sample size of a whopping 1893 responses. This was a totally random exercise wherein we did not target any particular caste/religion or economic background during data collection. We used our revolutionary new methodology of RSSI and VWISM to collect data of different ethnic sub groups with the following percentage representation;


We then adjusted these percentages by adding weightage as per our own formula of caste-vote matrix for western UP. For instance, classically, Dalit voters were under represented in our sample size so we added weightage to the same based on our western UP demographic formula which projects Dalits at 17% in this region. Thus, eventually we arrived at the overall vote-share projections for different parties based on superimposing sample-size data on to our caste-vote matrix of west-UP.



Based on our vote-share projections and by analysing the data parity in terms of different assembly segments and polling stations we arrived at the seat-share projections for the first phase of polling in western Uttar Pradesh. We have used a dynamic new methodology of SVV (Segmental Vote-Share Variation) to convert vote-shares to seats wherein we give weightage to difference in vote-share projections of different segments of caste and region to arrive at seat projections. For instance, although BJP emerged as the number one in terms of vote-share, BSP was the first choice of Dalit segment of voters, so we extrapolate this data to different sub-regions and arrive at a mathematical model that projects seats accordingly.



One of the new theories that has been floated in the last few days is that there was Muslim vote consolidation in western UP from seat to seat in order to defeat Modi which was said to be invisible in the overall numbers because Muslim voters had voted for different parties in different parliamentary seats. Based on our number crunching, we can safely say that this is a bogus theory being floated by people who lack even basic understanding of electoral dynamics.

Ghaziabad: Let us look at Ghaziabad as an example to understand the Muslim voting patterns. We had done our ground activities in 3 assembly segments of Ghaziabad parliamentary constituency and had polled 61 Muslim voters. Although BSP had polled a lion’s share of the Muslim vote, it was nowhere close to being termed as “total consolidation to defeat Modi”. Muslim vote in the past has seen to be a near 100% consolidated vote mostly to defeat BJP, but this time somehow there seems to be a lot of confusion among the Muslim thought leadership (read as Mullahs and Maulvis) on which party to vote for. This confusion is reflected in the Muslim vote of west UP too. Whether such a confusion holds in the future phases remains to be seen.


Bihar
We had a sample size of 1623 spread across 10 assembly segments of 3 parliamentary constituencies out of the 6 that went to polls on the 10th of April in Bihar. Once again this was a wholly random sample chosen from specific polling booths using our path-breaking methodology to arrive at the right mix of polling stations in the right assembly segments.



We then added weightage to the above data based on the census data of different social profiles and also based on the weightage of different voting sub groups. Using our own mathematical modelling we then converted the actual vote-shares into seat shares. This entire exercise carries a error margin of less than 2% as our sample sizes are large and geographically spread out which allows us to extrapolate the data accordingly to different sub categories.





One interesting aspect of Bihar has been the Dalit vote which seems to have gone to the BJP in a big way. BJP’s decision to ally with Ram Vilas Paswan seems to have worked on the ground and the much feared upper caste anger for BJP’s Dalit move hasn’t really happened. There is also a section of Dalit vote which is probably voting for Modi’s brand of development politics. Surprisingly among Yadavs too BJP seems to be getting equal traction vis-à-vis RJD-Congress combine.

Madhya Pradesh
We had a sample size of 951 in Madhya Pradesh which was spread across 9 assembly segments of 4 MP seats. We ensured adequate social representation to all castes by using our unique methodology and also added weightage later on based on our mathematical modelling of census data. Following are the findings of Madhya Pradesh in phase 1.





[Note: In the next part we will analyse Maharashtra, Haryana and Delhi and also come up with full projections for April 10th polling]
UP & MP looking good. Expected Bihar results as it wasn't a BJP stronghold to start with!
 
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1977240_393550287451292_4590424953830286503_n.jpg




Mr J Nehru, the gem of british empire.
This is a 1950 image of him by BBC. Two years after we lost control of a third of Kashmir to Pakis.

Though we won the war and thwarted back the backstabbing Pakis, the war of 1947-'48 resulted in UN Ceasefire Line of 1949 (later became the Line of Control after the Simla Agreement of 1972).

Nehru the wimp was too busy with his frolicking ways to care about the kashmir issue.

10257170_393324334140554_1106989305639500511_n.jpg



Now criminal complaint against Rahul Gandhi soon. He and his mother failed to disclose their accounts in Pictet Bank in Zurich. Sonia Gandhi has three more bank accounts.

1609986_393294277476893_5063504018122672088_n.jpg


10169358_393357757470545_8073288486450526565_n.jpg



Are you in same mood of voting Congress even after incidents which caused the major harm to national security & economy of India. Think before you vote this time.
Think on this before you sleep tonight. Think for Nation.

#VoteForModi #VoteForBJP #AbkiBaarModiSarkar

Rahul Gandhi was in party mood soon after 26/11 Mumbai crisis.
Even before the tears of Major Sandeep Unnikrishnan’s mother could dry up, Congress general secretary and heir apparent Rahul Gandhi went partying with his pals at a farmhouse on Delhi’s outskirts.

The Prince partied hard, till 5 in the morning, on Sunday at the ‘sangeet’ for the forthcoming wedding of Samir Sharma, his childhood friend. They were at a sprawling farmhouse at Radhey Mohan Chowk, the haven of people who lead charmed lives beyond Chhatarpur.
 
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Murli Manohar Joshi left red-faced with pro-Narendra Modi slogans

A day after Murli Manohar Joshi said there was no 'Modi wave' in the country, the veteran leader was left red-faced as party workers erupted into slogans hailing BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi when he arrived for a function here today.

Joshi, who is contesting from Kanpur Lok Sabha seat, was invited as the chief guest for the function organised by the BJP unit here on B R Ambedkar's birth anniversary.

Instead of shouting slogans for Joshi, party workers chanted pro-Modi slogans such as 'Har Har Modi, Jai Jai Modi' (Hail Modi) and 'Desh ka Pradhanmantri kaisa ho, Narendra Modi jaisa ho' (Who should the country's PM be like?, He should be like Narendra Modi!) on his arrival.

Despite efforts, the organisers failed to stop the party workers, who shouted pro-Modi slogans even when Joshi was leaving the function after it got over.

Joshi refused to speak to mediapersons at the function.

However, BJP district unit chief Surendra Maithani said it cannot be denied that there is a wave of Modi in the country but at the same time victory for BJP in Kanpur is guaranteed as Joshi was contesting from here and it is a matter of prestige for the constituency.

In subtle comments aimed at the BJP PM candidate, Joshi had yesterday said there was no Modi wave in the country but only a BJP wave.

The senior BJP leader, who had to make way for Modi for the Varanasi Lok Sabha seat, also suggested that the Gujarat model of development touted by Modi cannot be made applicable for all states, observing he did not favour a "straitjacket" model of one particular state.

Joshi, however, today sought to dismiss the reports and denied there were any differences between him and Modi.

BJP too tried to downplay the remarks saying the party and Modi cannot be viewed separately and rejected suggestions of any infighting.

Murli Manohar Joshi left red-faced with pro-Narendra Modi slogans | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis

Lol
 
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