WORLD INTHAVAARAM, 2023-46

About: the world this week, 12 November to 18 November 2023; Israel searching for the hostages; Ukraine-Russia stalemate; British Politics; a Dictator; Trapped in a Tunnel; World Cup Cricket.

Everywhere

Where Are The Hostages?

It’s over 40 days, and 240 Hostages-Men, Women, Children, Babies- of Israel and various other countries are being held by the terrorist Hamas following the barbaric invasion of Israel’s civilian territory on 7th October. And there is no safe word on the hostages, as yet. The number might have even gone up with a hostage who was heavily pregnant probably delivering her baby! The humanitarian cry simply isn’t loud enough. ‘

Israel’s Defence Forces are out on foot in North Gaza in the second phase of Operation Iron Swords-the all out war to eliminate Hamas.

This week, Israeli soldiers surrounded and stormed the Dar Al-Shifa (House of Healing) Hospital in Gaza City and are carrying out a precise, targeted operation to uncover Hamas and its infrastructure. Tanks have entered the premises and troops are inside Hospital rooms. Israel maintains the action is a must, as Hamas has made the hospital facility their base and has a command centre in tunnels underneath it, used to conceal military operations and possibly the hostages.

The Al-Shifa hospital is the leading medical centre in the Gaza Strip. The hospital comprises a group of six-storey buildings. It had between 600 and 900 beds and thousands of staff, and before the war, provided a range of services such as MRI scans, and dialysis that almost no other hospital in Gaza offered.

This Monday, Israel’s chief military spokesman showed footage of a Hamas weapons cache found in the basement of Gaza’s Rantisi Hospital for Children, another hospital in the enclave.

The United States (US) also reiterated Israel’s findings, saying that Hamas was storing weapons and operating a command node from the Al-Shifa hospital.

Under the laws of war, mandated by the Geneva Conventions, hospitals get special protections during war. However, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), they lose protection if combatants are using the premises to hide fighters or store weapons – exactly what Israel is accusing Hamas of doing at Al-Shifa.

International Law experts say that Israel carries the burden to produce evidence and prove its claim that the hospital has been used by Hamas as a base. ‘The object of the attack is a civilian object. Until such time that the Israelis provide proof that it has been converted into a military object, the civilian nature of the object does not change’.

Meanwhile, Israel is struggling to keep its side of the law allowing medical supplies, and food and essentials inside Gaza and the Hospital – in a controlled manner. The biggest challenge is keeping civilians out of the way.

What next? When will the hostages return home? People in Israel are on the streets demanding they be brought home.

Ukraine-Russia Stalemate?

Did Israel steal Ukraine’s thunder? Ukraine’s fight-back against the invasion of Russia seems to be entering a stalemate with both sides apparently not knowing which direction to take. Russia will benefit from a protracted war while Ukraine fights to keep its tail up.

The Commander in Chief of the Ukrainian Armed Forces said this week that “there will most likely be no deep and beautiful breakthrough” and each day that passes gives the Russians an advantage. This sombre assessment of the battlefield is not a surprise. It’s what Ukrainians have been hearing in conversations with friends, seeing on social media, and experiencing personally on the front lines, as Russia’s mindless war against their country drags on.

The Ukrainian counteroffensive against Russia is stalled as a hard winter looms. Russia still occupies nearly a fifth of Ukraine and front lines are static for the most part while both sides continue to churn through soldiers. Russia will have superiority in weapons, equipment, missiles and ammunition for a considerable time and Ukraine needs new, innovative approaches.

Ukraine launched a counteroffensive against Russia’s invasion in June this year, but it has so far failed to gain the momentum needed to turn the tide of the war in its favour.

British Politics: Like the British Weather

Britain’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak carried out a dramatic Cabinet Reshuffle early this week, firing his Home Secretary and bringing back former Prime Minister, David Cameron, to the heart of government after a seven-year absence from politics. David Cameron’s own premiership set the course of 13 years of Conservative rule, but the self-inflicted chaos of the Brexit referendum and its aftermath threw his party into years of instability from which it is still struggling to emerge.

The hardline Home Secretary, Suella Braverman was fired after making inflammatory comments about the policing of pro-Palestinian protests in central London over the weekend. She had accused London’s police force of applying ‘double standards’ in the way they manage protests in an Op-Ed in the Times of London newspaper condemning a pro-Palestinian march. The Government said the Op-Ed was not cleared by the PM’s Office.

Her tenure was wrought with scandals and divisive remarks, which had long caused fractures in the government. Braverman has served as Sunak’s interior minister throughout his tenure, but her confrontational rhetoric towards migrants, protesters, the police, and even the homeless had caused rifts in the government and sparked speculation that she was plotting a future leadership bid.

On the homeless, Braverman said, “The British people are compassionate. We will always support those who are genuinely homeless. But we cannot allow our streets to be taken over by rows of tents occupied by people, many of them from abroad, living on the streets as a ‘lifestyle choice’. Unless we step in now to stop this, British cities will go the way of places in the US like San Francisco and Los Angeles where weak policies have led to an explosion of crime, drug taking, and squalor. Nobody in Britain should be living in a tent on our streets”.

In the Braverman rain, Sunak put out an umbrella – then announced he was bringing David Cameron back to frontline politics as Foreign Secretary, in a stunning move that has few parallels in recent British political history. Cameron served as Prime Minister from 2010 to 2016, resigning after Britain voted to leave the European Union in a referendum that he had called.

It was later confirmed that James Cleverly, formerly the Foreign Secretary, will take over from Braverman, a ‘clever shift’ that made space for Cameron’s remarkable return to the Cabinet.

The Dictator

This week US President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping meet for a summit meeting in Filoli Estate, San Francisco, USA – their first in a year – primarily to restore military communications, which had gone cold, between the two countries. They agreed, among other things, that China would crack down on the production of ingredients for fentanyl- responsible for a deadly epidemic of opioid abuse in the United States. Last year alone more than 72,000 people in the US died from overdoses involving synthetic opioids like fentanyl.

Jinping on his part, warned Biden to stop arming Taiwan, adding that China’s reunification with the island nation was ‘unstoppable’.

After his meeting with Jinping, Biden told journalists he still considers the Chinese President a ‘Dictator’. “Well look he is, I mean he’s a Dictator in the sense that he’s a guy who’s running a country, a Communist country, that’s based on a form of government totally different than ours,” Biden said.

Biden’s post-summit ‘Dictator’ comment, expectedly sparked outrage and drew ‘dragon fire and fury’ from China.

Trapped in a Tunnel

The Char Dham Highway is an ambitious project of the National Highways Authority of India, aiming to connect four ancient Hindu Pilgrimage Sites through 890 kilometres (km) of two-lane roads. The project will connect the pilgrim towns of Badrinath, Kedarnath, Gangotri, and Yamunotri, in India’s northern State of Uttarakhand.

This week, 40 workers found themselves trapped in the 4.5 km stretch between Silkyara and Barkot on the Yamunotri-Gangotri highway of the Char Dham, following a collapse of a section of the under-construction tunnel, on 12th November.

The reasons for the tunnel caving-in, is not know as yet, but the region is prone to landslides, earthquakes, and floods. The project has faced criticism from environmental experts and some work was halted in January after hundreds of houses along the routes were damaged by subsidence. The Government on its part has said it is employing environmentally friendly techniques, in the design, to make geologically unstable stretches safer.

Since the tunnel collapsed, the trapped men have been supplied with food, water and oxygen via a pipe, and they are in contact with rescuers through walkie-talkies.

A six-bed medical facility has been put in place near the tunnel and hospitals nearby are on standby.

The rescue plan consists of using an ‘American auger’ machine to drill through the rubble of the tunnel’s collapsed portion and insert 800 mm and 900mm diameter sections of mild steel pipes — one after the other. Once this happens, the workers trapped on the other side of the rubble can crawl out to safety.

An auger is a spiral-shaped tool used for boring holes in different surfaces such as soil rock, stone, etc.

Rescue efforts are ongoing at a frenetic pace with experts from Norway and Thailand roped-in for consultation.

Cricket Tons

The Cricket World Cup – One Day International (ODI) – being played in India is coming to a close and its raining tons of centuries.

Last week, India’s Virat Kohli hit his 49th ODI century equalling the great Sachin Tendulkar’s record feat of most ODI centuries. And give the roaring form he was in, Sachin must have given-up any dreams of holding on to that record, which he achieved in 452 innings. And Virat Kohli did not disappoint, or keep us waiting any longer.

This week he slammed one more century in the semi- final match against New Zealand to climb to 50 centuries (in 279 innings) -the highest in the history of the ODI game. In the match, India made 397 runs for the loss of four wickets in 50 overs and beat New Zealand by 70 runs to march into the finals. Kohli made 117 runs and team-mate Shreyas Iyer made 105 of just 70 balls to give India a solid winning chance. Fast bowler Mohammad Shami took a magnificent seven wicket haul to send the Kiwis packing despite a brilliant fighting innings of 134 by Daryl Mitchell.

India look invincible thus far in the Tournament, having won all nine of the round-robin matches.

In the other semi-finals, Australia beat South Africa by three wickets, at Kolkata’s Eden Gardens, to set-up a final clash with India, to be held on Sunday at Ahmedabad.

South Africa won the toss and elected to bat first. But they could only set a modest target of 213. While David Miller scored a century and Heinrich Klaasen scored 47, others failed to cross a score of 20. The second innings turned into a nail-biting affair after Australia lost three wickets between the 22nd and 34th overs, still 49 runs short of the target. But they achieved the target within 48 overs, losing seven wickets.

This is the eighth time that Australia will play a World Cup final match. Of the seven played so far, they won five – the highest in the world.

This is the fourth time India qualified for the World Cup final. Of the three played so far, India won two.

On Sunday, 19th November, the Giants of Cricket will face each other again for the final match of a World Cup, after 20 years.

More battling stories coming-up in the weeks ahead. Tunnel-out with World Inthavaaram.

WORLD INTHAVAARAM, 2023-45

About: the world this week, 5 November to 11 November 2023; Israel hunting for the hostages; Nepal’s earthquake; Air pollution in India; Elections in India; and the Cricket World Cup.

Everywhere

Israel, Fighting to Bring Back Hostages

Israeli troops are on the ground in North Gaza taking measured steps to identify Hamas terrorists and surgically eliminate them. Israel has divided the Gaza Strip into two parts – North & South – and has completely encircled the North, encouraging civilians to migrate to the South through a corridor.

Israel agreed to implement daily, four-hour pauses in fighting in selected areas of northern Gaza. Each pause will be announced at least three hours in advance and will give civilians more time to evacuate.

It has become clearer than ever before that weapons and rockets lie beneath schools, hospitals, and homes in the maze of tunnels. And that Palestinian civilians are the human shields besides the hostages. Over 10,000 Palestinians have been killed in the ongoing war.

There has been no improvement in the hostage situation – about 240 are still held by Hamas for over a month now. Their whereabouts are still unknown and if there is anything the World needs to cry about it is, ‘Release of the Hostages’.

The Pro-Palestine front groups across the world called for an immediate cease-fire given the dire situation of civilians in Gaza. But Israel and its supporting counties, especially the United States (US) brushed it aside arguing that any pause will allow Hamas to re-coup.

US diplomacy efforts are on display with Secretary of State Anthony Blinken making his third visit to the Middle East since the start of the latest Israel-Hamas war. The US is trying to keep the conflict from spreading and is also talking about plans for Gaza’s future. Lebanon’s Hezbollah – the next worst thing to Hamas – is firing rockets into Israel and that is becoming a serious provocation.

Nepal’s Earthquake

Late last week a 5.6 magnitude earthquake struck the remote western region of Nepal. It was a shallow earthquake, meaning it happened closer to the earth’s surface.

More than 150 people have been killed and about 375 people injured. Rescue efforts are underway in the rugged districts of Jajarkot and West Rukum, 500km west of Kathmandu. Strong tremors were felt far away in the Nepalese capital and in cities in neighbouring India, including New Delhi. Jajarkot’s hospital is packed with the wounded.

Nepal is situated along the Himalayas, prone to seismic activity. Last month, a 6.3 magnitude earthquake was registered in the western district of Bajhang, resulting in injuries. In 2015, the country suffered two devastating earthquakes in which 9,000 people were killed and 22,309 injured. The first, on 25 April 2015, was a 7.8-magnitude quake which caused most of the damage and loss of life. A large number of aftershocks followed, including one that measured 7.3 in May of that year.

The Air We Breathe

Over the years, India’s Capital New Delhi has been having a severe air quality problem, with the air becoming unbreathable during festival season of Diwali. And the yet-to-smoke crackers get the blame, though crop stubble-burning in the nearby states of Punjab and Haryana is a major factor.

This week, the air quality of New Delhi remained in the ‘severe’ category for five consecutive days, with an Air Quality Index (AQI) of 423 this Monday.

The share of stubble burning on Monday was estimated at 26.30%. Though visibility improved during the day, relief from toxic air is unlikely till at least 9th November with AQI predicted to stay in the ‘severe’ zone.

An AQI between 0 and 50 is considered ‘Good’; 51 to 100 is ‘Satisfactory’; 101 to 200 is ‘Moderate’; 201 to 300 ‘Poor’; 301 to 400 ‘Very Poor’; and 401 to 500 ‘Severe’.

To fight air pollution, the Government of New Delhi has announced the odd-even scheme for vehicles on the road, from 13 November to 20 November, with a restriction on the movement of private vehicles. Electric and CNG-powered cars, and two-wheelers will remain exempted. Having been in force twice in 2016 and once in 2019, experts have questioned the efficacy of the odd-even scheme, saying the current lot of private cars are technologically advanced and don’t contribute much to vehicular pollution. Old two-wheelers, a major contributor to vehicular emissions, have always remained out of the odd-even rule ambit.

The Government had to hurriedly call off the odd-even plan last time after the National Green Tribunal refused to exempt two-wheelers from the scheme. With the exception of Classes X-XII, schools have been shut until 10 November, and Classes will go online. Teachers will be present in person in schools.

With allergies due to air pollution affecting a large majority of Delhi residents, nebulisers and masks are in great demand. Burning and itching eyes, breathing problems, sore throat, and cough are common.

While New Delhi was topping the charts on AQI, India’s ‘Maximum City’, Mumbai was trying to catch up with the air pollution crisis taking a serious toll on its people. Cases of respiratory conditions like asthma, inflammation, and tuberculosis have risen across all age brackets. This has led to hospitals setting up special Intensive Respiratory Care Units.

Mumbai’s deteriorating air quality, which has been overlooked amid soaring pollution levels in Delhi, but it is equally upsetting. On Sunday, the financial capital of India was ranked among the world’s most polluted cities.

The AQI in Mumbai on Wednesday morning was in the “moderate” category, with a reading of 149. Mumbai being a coastal city, was largely free of pollution related problems like haze or smog, due to its geographical advantage of being located on the coast and being surrounded by water on three sides. The strong sea wind eliminates most of the pollutants from Mumbai’s air, saving it from severe conditions like in New Delhi or Kolkata.

The Indelible Ink on our Finger

This week the Election bandwagon got rolling in India with the central State of Chhattisgarh and the north-eastern State of Mizoram heading to the polls for electing legislators to the respective five-year term State Assemblies.

Voting for all 40 Assembly seats of Mizoram- in a single phase, and the first phase of 20 constituencies of the 90 Assembly seats of Chhattisgarh began. The second and final phase for Chhattisgarh will be on 17th November.

In Chhattisgarh, the Indian National Congress (INC) is the incumbent, headed by its Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel having won the previous elections, in 2018, with an absolute majority of 68 seats and about 43.9% of votes. In that election the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) went into the Opposition with 15 seats and 33.6% votes. INC’s Bhupesh Baghel took over from BJP’s Raman Singh who was Chief Minister for an uninterrupted period of 15 years, from 2003 to 2018.

Presently, Mizoram is ruled by the Mizo National Front (MNF) with 27 seats; the main Opposition party is the Zoram People’s Movement (ZPM) with 6 seats; the INC has 5 seats and the BJP has 1 seat. The Chief Minister is Zoramthanga of the MNF.

This phase of voting ended with Mizoram seeing an impressive voter turnout of 78.04% and Chhattisgarh showing up at 71%.

Other States coming up will be, single-phase elections in Madhya Pradesh on 17th November, Rajasthan on 25th November, and Telangana on 30th November.

Votes for all the five States will be counted on 3rd December.

Re-making Cricket Records

The ongoing ICC Cricket One Day International (ODI) World Cup, hosted by India produced some memorable outcomes.

Glenn Maxwell’s sensational double century in the match against Afghanistan is being hailed as the greatest One Day Innings of all time. He scored an unbeaten 201 runs of 128 balls leading Australia to a three-wicket victory and securing a spot in the Semi Finals. It was a breath taking display of skill and determination. He broke many records on the way including becoming the first player in the world to score a double century on an ODI chase. The match was played in Mumbai’s Wankhede Stadium and Afghanistan set a score of 291/5 for Australia to hunt-down. Australia won, thanks to Glenn Maxwell’s blitzkrieg, putting up a score of 293/7 in 46.5 overs

Meanwhile India’s Virat Kohli smashed his 49th ODI Century equalling the great Sachin Tendulkar’s record feat of most ODI Centuries. He hit the 119 ball century against South Africa on his 35th Birthday. In this match India went on to win by 243 runs after skittling South Africa for just 83 runs. That’s King Kohli at his royal best.

At this stage of the tournament, India, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand have entered the semi-finals. And Pakistan is looking to sneak in through some magic.

More stories coming-up in the weeks ahead. Stay with World Inthavaaram. Happy Deepavali.

WORLD INTHAVAARAM, 2023-44

About: the world this week, 29 October to 4 November 2023; Israel goes all out on terror; a bomb blast in India’s Kerala State; and the popular American TV series ‘Friends’ loses a friend.

Everywhere

Israel’s War on Terror

Israel got cracking with the second phase of its war on the terrorist Hamas. The ground attack began slowly unfolding keeping in mind the safety of the hostages and the treacherous network of Hamas’ underground Tunnels. And the land attack was supported with force from the Air and the Sea.

The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) also made their first successful rescue of one hostage, freeing a female Israeli soldier, Ori Megidish. Recall that Hamas has released four hostages since the horrific attack on 7th October.

Meanwhile, Israel confirmed the death of Shani Louk, a 23 years old German-Israeli citizen who was captured from the music festival during the 7th October attack on Israel. Her lifeless body was paraded, in a gruesome manner, on the back of a pick-up truck, in Gaza.

Every day, a new revelation on the chilling savagery of Hamas’ 7th October attack is being put-out by Israel, based on facts gathered and bodies of the dead identified and accounted for. And what crosses one’s mind is, ‘can a human being go to this extent of heinous cruelty. Why this blood-curling hatred for jews?’

The US Secretary of State shared this during a testimony:

“A family of four. A young boy and girl, 6 and 8 years old, and their parents around the breakfast table. The father’s eye gouged out in front of his kids. The mother’s breast cut off, the girl’s foot amputated, the boy’s fingers cut off – before they were executed. And then their executioners sat down and had a meal. That is what this society is dealing with.”

Head of Israel’s National Center of Forensic Medicine, said: “In 28 years, I can’t recall such infernal damage. Babies, young children, without heads, without legs. I can’t understand how the entire world doesn’t grasp the sheer cruelty of this situation”. His department is faced with the arduous, heart-wrenching task of identifying the dead. And each body-bag tells a story of unfathomable barbarism by Hamas.

Key to Israel’s goal of comprehensively defeating and disarming Hamas is destroying the extensive tunnel network, which Hamas has been secretly developing for decades. And allows it to smuggle goods, people, and weapons, and plan attacks on Israel. All at the cost of development of the civilians living above, on the land. By its own account, Hamas boasts more than 480 kilometres of tunnels, dozens of feet or more below the ground, snaking under the small strip of Gaza and invariably running under civilian residences, hospitals, and schools.

On another front, humanitarian aid is being allowed into Gaza, and since 21st October a total of over 300 trucks have entered loaded with water, food, and medical supplies. There is always the fear that Hamas ‘may tunnel these resources’ for making yet another attack on Israel.

Hamas still holds 242 Israeli and foreign hostages – including at least 30 babies and children – in Gaza, and their safe release is of paramount importance. And there seems to be ‘no light’ at the end of the tunnel-of their release.

Trouble in God’s Own Country

The Indian state of Kerala became known as ‘God’s Own Country’ taking-off from the tagline coined by a Creative Director, Walter Mendez, of the Advertisement Agency, Mudra Communications Limited (now known as DDB Mudra Group). This was in 1989, when the Kerala Tourism Department tasked it to spread the word on the natural beauty of Kerala, across the world. This is one of the longest, sustained iconic campaigns in the world, and promoted tourism in Kerala like none other.

The term turned out to be a natural fit for Kerala, blessed with lush green landscapes, crystal clear beaches, natural beauty, and ecological diversity. In another dimension, Kerala was actually created by the Gods, as per mythology.

Sage Parashurama, who was an incarnation of Lord Vishnu (creator of the World) – one of the holy Trinity of Hinduism’s Gods – created Kerala, with his axe. He threw his axe in the water, which receded as far as it reached to make the place of land, which is modern Kerala. The land which rose from the sea was filled with salt and unsuitable for habitation, hence Parasurama invoked the Snake King Vasuki, who spat out the holy poison and converted the soil into fertile land. Out of respect, Vasuki and all snakes were appointed as protectors and guardians of the land.

According to another mythological account, King Mahabali once ruled Kerala. He was a benevolent and generous king who ruled without discrimination, and people were honest, healthy, and happy under his rule. Even the Gods were jealous of the prosperity and wealth in the kingdom of those days.

Mahabali came to temporarily possess Amrita -nectar of eternal life- which allowed his subjects to bring him back to life after his death in one of the may wars he waged. Thus, Mahabali was immune from death and became invincible, eventually conquering heaven and earth. The Devas (celestial beings) approached Lord Vishnu to save them from complete obliteration. Though reluctant in the beginning – Mahabali being his ardent devotee – Lord Vishnu eventually relented, to re-establish the natural order of things. Mahabali was tricked and sent to the underworld through an incarnation of Lord Vishnu, called Vamana. However, Lord Vishnu granted Bali a boon whereby he could return to his homeland once every year. The harvest festivals of Balipratipada and Onam are celebrated to mark and commemorate the memories of King Mahabali’s yearly homecoming. It is the state festival of Kerala and is celebrated every year with joy and zeal.

Kerala also leads the country in various aspects like literacy rate-the highest in India at about 99%, sex ratio, lowest population growth, and travel & tourism. Kerala is the only Indian State ruled by a majority Communist Party, The Left Democratic Front (LDF), also known as Left Front (Kerala) which is an alliance of left-wing political parties in the state. It is the current ruling political alliance of Kerala, since 2016.

Now, there is trouble brewing in God’s Own Country. And I wish King Mahabali was around.

Early this week, on Sunday, two women and a child were killed and over fifty injured after multiple explosions took place at a prayer meeting of Jehovah’s Witnesses in the Kalamassery area of Kerala’s Kochi. It was confirmed that an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) caused the explosion. The blast took place in the central part of the hall, at Zamra International Convention and Exhibition Centre.

Surprisingly, the case was quickly resolved, when a few hours after the incident, a man named Dominic Martin who claimed to be a member of Jehovah’s Witnesses said that he was responsible for the blast. And that he belonged to the same group, which held the prayer meeting. He then voluntarily surrendered to the Police.

Dominic Martin published a video message on a social media platform claiming responsibility for the blasts and giving reasons for the same. He provided evidence to support his claims and the police are examining everything in detail-to confirm that it indeed is him. The man alleged that he took the decision as the teachings of the organisation were ‘seditious’. Martin further alleged that the organisation and its ideology were dangerous for the country and therefore, it had to be put to an end, in Kerala. He claimed that he had told the organisation several times to correct its teachings, but it was not ready to do so. And he took this extreme step.

Who are the Jehovah’s Witnesses?

Jehovah’s Witnesses hold a number of traditional Christian views, but also many that are unique to them. The Witnesses’ teachings stress strict separation from the Government. Although they are generally law-abiding, they refuse, on biblical grounds, to observe certain laws. They do not salute the flag of any nation, believing it an act of false worship; they refuse to perform military service; and they do not participate in public elections. They are known for door-to-door evangelism.

The Jehovah’s Witnesses have significant presence in Kerala. In 1986, India’s Supreme Court backed its followers, ruling that their children could not be compelled to sing the national anthem in schools.

Learn more about Jehovah’s Witnesses at:

https://kumargovindan.com/2023/03/11/world-inthavaaram-2023-10/

Please Yourself

Friends

Late last week, Matthew Perry, the 54 years old star who played ‘Chandler Bing’ in the famous TV sitcom series, Friends died in his home in California, United States.

The news of Perry’s death came almost one year after he published his memoir, opening up about his experience in Hollywood and his decades-long struggle with addiction. Investigators said there was no sign of foul play after Perry was found dead in a hot tub at his home.

Friends is an American television series created by David Crane and Marta Kauffman, which aired on NBC from, 1994 to 2004, lasting ten Seasons. It starred Jennifer Aniston(Rachel), Courteney Cox (Monica), Lisa Kudrow(Phoebe), Matt LeBlanc(Joey), Matthew Perry, and David Schwimmer( Ross): six unique friends in their 20s and early 30s who live in Manhattan, New York City. The series follows the eventful day-to-day lives of the group of Friends as they live, work, and love in the city. The show’s timeless humour allows people of any age demographic to relate to the characters and laugh at their jokes. Though it explores issues of friendships, family, love, and heartbreaks, the soul of the show lies in the superb comedy.

Friends, won six Emmy Awards, including outstanding comedy series, and from its second season until the end of its run maintained a top five or better Nielsen rating, hitting number one in its eighth season.

Chandler Bing is a fictional character portrayed by Matthew Perry. Chandler is notoriously sarcastic and has a terrific sense of humour, developed as a defence mechanism to overcome the trauma of his parents announcing their divorce to him, over Thanksgiving Dinner, when he was only nine years old. He was an only child born to an ‘erotic romance novelist’ and a ‘gay female impersonator’ and star of a Las Vegas drag show.

He works in ‘statistical analysis and data reconfiguration’, but loathes it, although it pays well. He is the highest earning member of his friends’ circle on account of responsible income management, having learned the value of money from a young age. Chandler suffers from commitment issues, but later marries Monica at the end of Season 7. In Season 10, Chandler and Monica go on to adopt twins.

The Friends theme song, ‘I’ll Be There for You,’ performed by the Rembrandts, was a minor pop hit in its own right.

Here are some memorable ‘Friends one-liners’:

Look at me, I am Chandler, could I be wearing any more clothes?

Well, the fridge broke, so I had to eat everything.

That’s a great story, can I eat it?

They don’t know that we know they know we know.

She’s your Lobster. It’s a known fact that Lobsters fall in love and mate for life. You can actually see Lobster couples walking around their tank, holding claws’.

Lips moving still talking.

More moving, words talking, stories coming-up in the weeks ahead. Be friends with World Inthavaaram.

WORLD INTHAVAARAM, 2023-43

About: the world this week, 22 October to 28 October 2023; Israel hammers Hamas in the Gaza; America’s shooting; Spying in Qatar; Paralympic Games; and a still burning, runaway fire.

Everywhere

Taken

Israel’s War on the terrorist Hamas continues, with Israel wrecking havoc on Northern Gaza with relentless bombing of terrorist hideouts. Israel said 229 hostages are still being held by Hamas. This week, two elderly Israeli hostages were released in addition to two American hostages released last week – on ‘humanitarian grounds’ they said!

After intense negotiations, The Rafah Border Crossing between Egypt and South Gaza opened late last week to let a trickle of aid into Gaza for the first time since Israel sealed it off. Just 20 trucks, of the 200 trucks carrying 3,000 tons that have been waiting for days, were allowed inside.

On another front, Iran and its proxy terrorist groups in Lebanon and Syria are beginning to make noises. In Lebanon, the Hezbollah group has continued to exchange fire with Israeli forces in the north, leading Israel to evacuate tens of thousands of its residents. In Syria, Israel fired missiles at the Damascus and Aleppo international airports-apparently taking them out of service. And Iran continues to rave and rant at Israel directly, saying, ‘anything is possible at any given moment.’ Through all of this, the delicate peace between Israel and neighbouring Arab states, like Egypt and Jordon is on a knife-edge.

Though it has piled up its Armed Forces on the Gaza Border, Israel is holding back its ground attack, which could be due to the hostage situation and perhaps for more detailed planning given the maze of underground tunnels from which Hamas operates. A trial excursion inside Gaza was made, when rocket launch and ammunition facilities were wiped out. And we can expect a sudden invasion.

This week, a major media publication, the New York Times came out with an apology on wrongly blaming Israel for last week’s Hospital attack, when it indeed was a selfie by Hamas. The United Kingdom’s BBC too came close to an apology about it needing to be verified, and it still calls Hamas, ’militants’ and ‘fighters’ instead of plain ‘Terrorist. At worst, the car parking was destroyed, and about 10 people were killed in the Hospital misadventure.

Meanwhile, Hamas continues to shoot rockets into Israel even as the situation of people in Gaza is miserable – without food, water, and strained medical facilities.

In the middle of the week, United Nations (UN) General Secretary Antonio Guterres complicated the situation by saying that the act of Hamas did not happen ‘in a vacuum’ and appeared to be rationalising the savage brutality of Hamas with the Palestine cause-noting that Palestinians had suffered more than five decades of occupation and oppression by Israel. He also condemned the Hamas attack on Israel of 7th October that started the war, and demanded that all hostages taken that day be released. The ‘rationalising’ prompted Israel to demand his resignation.

Turkiye’s President Tayyip Erdogan has cancelled his Israel trip saying Hamas, “is not a terrorist organisation, it is a liberation group”. He has his head in the desert sand, for sure!

It’s obvious that a solution to the present crisis can be found, starting only with release of all Hostages taken. And Israel has set itself the goal of eliminating Hamas in a ‘do or die’ effort for the sake of its future generations.

Shooting

If there is one country which always has a well-oiled gun shooting itself at regular intervals, it is America. And the shooting madness is forever making news.

A mass shooting in Maine, the Northeastern State of the United States (US) has left at least 18 dead and dozens injured. The shooting in Lewiston occurred this Wednesday night at Sparetime Recreation Bowling Alley and Schemengees Bar & Grille Restaurant around 7 pm. This is possibly the deadliest mass shooting out of 565 in the US, this year alone. The death toll was staggering for a state that in 2022 had 29 homicides during the entire year.

According to the Gun Violence Archive, a mass shooting is defined as an incident in which four or more people are injured or killed.

Police have launched a massive manhunt to nab the gunman, identified as Robert Card. And the city is under lockdown given that he has military experience.

Robert Card, 40, is a twice-divorced father of three children. A resident of Maine’s Bowdoin, he is a firearms instructor believed to be in the Army Reserve. Card was previously committed to a mental health facility for two weeks after ‘hearing voices and threats’ to shoot up a military base.

Maine doesn’t require permits to carry guns, and the state has a longstanding culture of gun ownership that is tied to its traditions of hunting and sport shooting.

Some recent attempts by gun control advocates to tighten the state’s gun laws have failed with State’s residents voting them down. Proposals to require background checks for private gun sales and create a 72-hour waiting period for gun purchases failed earlier this year. Proposals that focused on school security and banning bump stocks failed in 2019. A proposal to require background checks for gun sales failed in a 2016 public vote. That’s the looking down the barrel, on the background.

Spying?

This week, a court in Qatar handed down the death sentence to eight former Indian navy personnel after an in-camera trial: a shocking and a huge foreign policy challenge for India.

The eight ex-officers are: Captain Navtej Singh Gill, Captain Saurabh Vasisht, Commander Purenendu Tiwari, Captain Birendra Kumar Verma, Commander Sugunakar Pakala, Commander Sanjeev Gupta, Commander Amit Nagpal, and Sailor Rajesh. They worked at Qatar’s Al Dahra Global Technologies and Consultancy Services, a private company that offers ‘complete support solutions’ to the aerospace, security, and defence sectors in Qatar. The Company was advising the Qatari government on acquiring submarines. It was shut down in May 2023.

The former Navy men were first picked up by Qatar’s State Security Bureau – the state intelligence agency- on 30 August 2022, under the cover of darkness. The Indian Embassy was not informed about the arrests and it was only on 30th September that the veterans were allowed a brief phone call to their families. And on 3rd October, an Indian diplomat finally visited them, more than a month after their arrest. After being arrested on unspecified charges they were kept in solitary confinement for a long period.

The trial began this year, with the first hearing on 29th March and the most recent one on 3rd October. A verdict was anticipated this month.

The precise nature of the charges remains unknown: reports suggest that the Indian Navy men were arrested for leaking classified information related to a high-value Qatari submarine project. And that the receiver of the classified information was Israel. The whole trial was held in secrecy, which makes the death sentence appear very dubious. India’s Ambassador to Qatar and the Deputy Chief of Mission met them in prison and they were provided legal representation in court.

Qatar punches well above its weight in regional stakes, as was exemplified by its resilience during the Saudi Arabia-led blockade against it between 2017-21. Qatar also hosts a plethora of opposition and militant movement leaders from the Islamic world, including from Palestinian Hamas, Muslim Brotherhood, and Taliban. It houses American and Turkish military bases and simultaneously has a working relationship with Iran. In government-owned Al Jazeera broadcaster, Qatar has an opinion-influencer in the region. Behind all this is, of course, is Qatar’s gas-fuelled financial muscle. India is one of the largest importers of Qatari gas. About 800,000 Indians live and work in Qatar.

Disability Counts

The Asian Para Games is a multi-sport event regulated by the Asian Paralympic Committee and held every four years after every Asian Games, for athletes with physical disabilities. It is held in the same city as the Asian Games of the year.

The 4th Asian Para Games 2023 is being held in Hangzhou, China from 22nd October to 28th October, and India ‘capitalising on the handicaps’ is performing beyond expectations. At the last count, India’s medal tally stood at 99 medals, 25-Gold, 29-Silver, and 45-Bronze.

In the previous edition of the Games in 2018, India had won 72 medals including 15 Gold.

One of India’s remarkable and outstanding star performers was 16 year old Sheetal Devi from Loidhar Village in Kishtwar, Jammu, who was born without arms due to Phocomelia – a rare congenital deformity in which the hands or feet are underdeveloped or absent. She is the first female archer without arms to compete internationally – the only current female international archer in the world, to shoot with the feet. She started training with the bow-and-arrow just two years ago. Sheetal Devi won two gold, one silver in the Asian Paralympic Games.

Please Yourself

I came across this burning story and thought I should let out the smoke about it.

Burning Borough

Centralia is a Borough – a self-administered unit- and a ghost town in Columbia County, Pennsylvania, United States; part of the Bloomsburg–Berwick metropolitan area. It is the least-populated municipality in Pennsylvania and completely surrounded by Conyngham Township, which itself has a population of 689, as per the 2020 census.

All real estate in the Centralia Borough was claimed under Eminent Domain in 1992 and its ZIP Code was discontinued by the Postal Service in 2002. In October 2013 an agreement was reached with the then seven remaining residents allowing them to remain in Centralia until their deaths, after which the rights to their houses will be taken over by Eminent Domain. As of 2021, only 4 residents remain.

Eminent Domain means a Government can deprive someone of ownership or right of ownership on a right private property of public use with payment of compensation.

What happened in Centralia?

Centralia is a former coal mining town that has been experiencing a relentless underground fire for nearly six decades! The origins of this ongoing blaze trace back to 1962 when the town council made the fateful decision to incinerate a landfill. At the time, they were unaware that the landfill was interconnected with subterranean coal mine shafts. This inadvertent act ignited a coal seam, and the fire has been burning ever since becoming unstoppable.

The Borough council’s ‘minutes of meeting’ of 4 June 1962, referred to two fires at the dump and that five firefighters had submitted bills for fighting the fire at the landfill area. The Borough, by law, was responsible for installing a fire-resistant clay barrier between each layer of the landfill, but the work fell behind schedule, leaving the barrier incomplete. This allowed the hot coals to penetrate the coal seam underneath the pit and start the subsequent subterranean fire.

After making all efforts to extinguish the fire, Pennsylvania eventually abandoned further attempts, having spent USD 7 million in the 1990s. Remarkably, despite the well-known hazards, a few residents still inhabit Centralia.

In 1979, locals became aware of the scale of the problem when a gas-station owner, inserted a dipstick into one of his underground tanks to check the fuel level. When he withdrew it, it felt awfully hot. He lowered a thermometer into the tank on a string and was shocked to discover that the temperature of the gasoline in the tank was 77.8 °C.

Due to the presence of coal deposits beneath the town, experts believe that the fire could potentially continue burning for another 250 years!Slowburn.

More burning stories coming-up in the weeks ahead. Handle the fire with World Inthavaaram.

WORLD INTHAVAARAM, 2023-42

About: the world this week, 15 October to 21 October 2023; Israel’s War; Australia’s Voice; Poland’s Vote; India – Space, Trains, a Murder, and same-sex marriage.

Everywhere

Israel Strikes Back

The Israel strike back -Operation Iron Swords-on the terrorist Hamas, following the savage barbarism of 7th October in Israel, is in a ‘pregnant next stage of attack’ phase. And this week there was a hullabaloo over a rocket striking a Gaza Hospital -Al-Ahli-al Arabi Baptist Hospital -and claimed to have killed over 500 people. Hamas- and the general media-quickly blamed it on Israel, but evidence shows that it was a failed Palestine Islamic Jihad rocket launched towards Israel that fell back on Gaza. And only the parking lot of the Hospital was damaged with the Hospital buildings itself standing tall without significant damage. And the number of people killed is nowhere near as claimed.

United States (US) President Joe Biden made a dash to Israel to stand with them. And then based on convincing evidence shown by Israel that ‘we did not do it’, declared that Israel is not to blame, and the other side did it. Later, the US National Security Council (NSC) released a statement publicly, which it said is based on all available data, currently: “The IDF is NOT responsible for the explosion at the hospital in Gaza yesterday.” The assessment is based on the following, according to the NSC: Overhead imagery; Intercept; and Open Source information. (IDF – Israel Defense Forces).

Meanwhile, Hamas continues using people as human shields and galvanising the Islamic world against Israel in the name of religion-right or wrong, apart. And still keeps pumping rockets into Israel. Many counties across the World saw mostly pro-Hamas rallies (despicable) and some pro-Israeli rallies of support. Countries bordering Israel, such as Egypt and Jordan refused to allow Palestinian refugees from the Gaza Strip into their counties. Israel has been continuously announcing the those in the Northern part of Gaza must move towards the South of the Gaza River as it plans to attack Hamas hideouts in the Northern Gaza. And it went about surgically eliminating the leadership of Hamas, one by one.

Towards the end of the week, Britain’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak also made a dash to Israel with a plane load of supplies, to show solidarity.

Hamas still holds 200 plus Israeli hostages in the Gaza and their release is key to starting the process of ending the War. On another front Hamas’ partner in crime, the Lebanese based Hezbollah – a political party and militant group, began shooting rockets into Northern Israel, and Israel is busy fending them off as well.

Meanwhile, Israel closed down its Embassies in the Middle East: Egypt, Turkey, Jordon, Bahrain, and Morocco, and has recalled its diplomatic staff citing deteriorating security in the region.

Humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip is deadlocked at the Egyptian Border-Rafah- and a frenzy of negotiations are underway to allow them to pass. United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres appeared at the Border and made an emotional appeal for aid trucks to move into the besieged enclave.

Tensions in the region at their highest level ever.

The Voice of Australia

Australia has overwhelmingly rejected a plan to give greater political rights to indigenous people in a Referendum, dubbed ‘The Voice’, held on 14 October 2023.

All six states voted ‘No’ to a proposal to amend the constitution to recognise First Nations People and create a body for them to advise the government. The referendum was Australia’s first in almost a quarter of a century. With the ballots counted, the ‘No’ vote led ‘Yes’, by 60% to 40%. This is the first attempt at constitutional change in 24 years.

The Voice was held with the questions for a Proposed Law: (1). To alter the Constitution to recognise the First Peoples of Australia by establishing an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice. (2). Do you approve this proposed alteration? Yes or No.

Supporters of the losing ‘Yes’ said that entrenching the indigenous peoples into the constitution would unite Australia and usher in a new era. Supporters of the winning ‘No’ said that the idea was divisive, would create special ‘classes’ of citizens where some were more equal than others, and the new advisory body would slow government decision-making.

Who are the ‘First Peoples and Torres Strait Islanders’ of Australia’?

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are the first peoples of Australia, meaning they were here for thousands of years prior to conquest and colonisation. ‘Aboriginal’, refers to the indigenous inhabitants of the continent-people who lived on the Australian mainland and surrounding islands for tens of thousands of years before the first Europeans arrived in the early 17th century. Aboriginal people may choose to identify with their language groups and traditional lands, for example, Gunditjamara people are the traditional custodians of Western Victoria, the Gadigal people of the Eora nation are from Sydney, and the Yawuru people are the traditional custodians of Broome in Western Australia.

Torres Strait Islanders are the indigenous Melanesian people of the Torres Strait Islands, which are part of the state of Queensland, Australia. Ethnically distinct from the Aboriginal peoples of the rest of Australia, they are often grouped with them as Indigenous Australians. The Torres Strait region is located between the tip of Cape York and Papua New Guinea and is made up of over two hundred islands. Seventeen of these islands are inhabited. There are also two Torres Strait Islander communities, Bamaga and Seisia, on the northern peninsula area of mainland of Australia. The Torres Strait is also home to the Aboriginal Kaurareg Nation who are the traditional inhabitants of Muralag (Prince of Wales Island), Kirriri (Hammond Island), Ngurupai (Horn Island) and Waiben (Thursday Island).

In 2016, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples made up just 3.3% of the Australian population. Of that group, the majority were under the age of 25. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples live in urban, regional and remote areas and are present in all communities, not necessarily on their traditional lands.

There are varying estimates for how long Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have lived on the Australian continent. However, upwards of 60,000 years is what current research reveals. They find no specific mention in Australia’s 122 years old Constitution.

The Vote of Poland

The Parliament of Poland, like the legislature of most democracies around the world, is bicameral. It is composed of an upper house -the Senate- and a lower house -the Sejm. Both houses are accommodated in the Sejm complex in Poland’s capital, Warsaw.

Members of the Sejm and the Senate are directly elected by the people, usually every four years. The Sejm has 460 members, while the Senate has 100. To become law, a bill must first be approved by the Sejm and then the Senate, but the Sejm can override a Senate refusal to pass a bill.

Since 1990, the President has been elected by the people. However, the President is still sworn in before the National Assembly, which is also the only organ which can declare the President’s permanent incapacity to perform his duties, or bring an indictment against him. From 1992 to 1997, the National Assembly drafted and passed a new Constitution, which was approved by a national referendum on 25 May 1997. The Government of Poland is a unitary parliamentary representative democratic republic, with the President as the head of state and the Prime Minister as the head of government.

Poland went to the polls this Sunday, 15th October, between 7am and 9pm for electing members of the Sejm and the Senate, with 231 seats in the Sejm needed for a party to clinch power outright. The turnout was an impressive 74% and the highest since the collapse of communism in 1989. Parties was successful in galvanising a large number, especially the younger votes, for the first time. The campaign was marred by harsh, divisive rhetoric, reflecting deep polarisation with Polish society.

With the counting of votes, Poland’s opposition is on course to remove the populist ruling party from power, however with no absolute majority for a single party-setting the stage for weeks of high-stakes negotiations to form Poland’s next government.

The incumbent Law and Justice party, known by its Polish acronym PiS, won the biggest share of the vote with 35.38%, which translates into 194 seats in the Sejm. However, it lost parliamentary majority, according to official results released by the National Electoral Commission.

PiS, led by Jarosław Kaczynski, finished ahead of opposition party Civic Coalition (KO), led by former Polish Prime Minister and European Council President Donald Tusk, on 30.7%, which is 157 seats. The close result made the centrist Third Way and left-wing Lewica parties kingmakers; both groups are opposed to the hardline PiS and have indicated they will seek to form a new coalition government with Donald Tusk.

The combination of KO – 157 seats, the Third Way – 65 seats, and the New Left- 26 seats, have won over 54% of the votes and 248 seats, enough for them to form a stable government in a coalition.

In the Senate, KO won 41 seats to PiS’s 34 seats, and along with the Third Way’s 11 and Lewica’s 9 seats, commands a majority here too.

The situation points to an end to PiS’ divisive eight-year rule, which saw a drastic overhaul of Poland’s democratic institutions and grave warnings that the country was lurching towards populist authoritarianism. Tusk had promised to restore democratic norms in Poland and cooperate with Western European allies, among whom Poland was fast becoming a pariah.

According to the Polish Constitution, the President must call a new parliamentary session within 30 days of the election. Then, he has 14 days to nominate a candidate for Prime Minister, after which the nominee has 14 days to win a vote of confidence in parliament.

If Donald Tusk does eventually take charge of Poland, he will face a monumental task in reversing PiS’ illiberal reforms of the country’s judiciary, public media, and cultural bodies. He will also seek to re-establish Poland as a major player in the European Union (EU), and likely look to smooth over tensions that emerged between Poland and Ukraine over the imports of Ukrainian grain.

PiS, which has been mired in bitter spats with the EU during its eight years in power, was seeking a third consecutive electoral success- an unprecedented feat since Poland regained its independence from the Soviet Union.

Some voices said, “Poland is back. By far the most important election in Europe this year is the Polish national election. It ended tonight with a victory for democracy.”

India Potpourri

Flying on the success of Chandrayaan 3, this week India set itself two ambitious Space Goals: one to send a Man to the Moon by 2040; and two, to set-up and Indian Space Station by 2035. And even before these two goals, India will send three astronauts into space in 2025 to get the hang of things.

In a first move towards this end, this week the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) will be launching Gaganyaan spacecraft to demonstrate that the capsule carrying humans can safely return home. Called, Flight Test Vehicle Abort Mission-1 (or TV-D1) ISRO would be testing the spacecraft’s ‘crew escape system (CES)’ to see whether the crew can safely escape the craft in the event of a malfunction.

Watch this space.

This week, RapidX, India’s first Rapid Rail Train Service (RRTS) was inaugurated in Uttar Pradesh State’s Ghaziabad in the National Capital Region (NCR) in the stretch from Sahibabad to Duhai Depot. A RRTS corridor of 82km is expected to be operational by June 2025. The trains this section, which are capable of running at speeds up to 180 km per hour, will eventually cut the journey time between Delhi and Meerut to less than an hour. Authorities said it is a ‘transformational’ regional development initiative, which is designed to provide high-speed trains for intercity commuting every 15 minutes, which can go up to a frequency of every 5 minutes, according to requirement.

Sowmya Vishwanathan was a 25 years TV Journalist working with Headlines Today (now, India Today) in New Delhi as a News Producer. She has stayed back late to help with a breaking news event. And in the early hours, 3.05 am, on 30 September 2008 she left her Office at Jhandewalan to drive to her home in Vasanth Kunj. She, phoned home to say, “I’m reaching home in five minutes. Keep my breakfast ready”. That would be her last call. Later her body was found in her car, on the stretch of Vasanth Vihar’s, Nelson Mandela Road. She had died from a headshot wound.

This week, after 15 years, a Court in Saket, New Delhi, convicted four accused for the murder of Sowmya. The investigations revealed that one of the accused, Ravi Kapoor, first shot at her to stop the car in an attempted robbery, but when she did not stop, he shot her fatally. When Sowmya had overtaken him, he followed her noticing she that was alone in the car. He tried to intercept her, but she did not stop, leading to the shooting and her murder.

Ravi Kapoor was a brutal Killer who donned various attires: Policeman, Judge, Doctor, etc., to dupe and rob people on Vasanth Vihar’s Nelson Mandela Road. He also ‘acted ‘ as a Police Informer, which perhaps kept him off the Police radar. His many other crimes of killing an Information Technology Executive Jigisha Gosh, and a Cab Driver, caught up with him, providing vital clues that helped the Police piece together the crime.

This week, one of India’s Spiritual Gurus, Godman Bangaru Adigalar, 82, passed away due to a heart attack at Melmaruvathur – a Temple Town, 90 km from Chennai, Tamilnadu. He is the founder of the Melmaruvathur Aadhiparasakthi Siddhar Peetam, which runs the Melmaruvathur Aadhi Parasakthi temple. He was called ‘Amma’ meaning mother in Tamil, by his followers and devotees. Adigalar was believed to be the Poorna Avatar (holding all 16 qualities of an Avatar of God) as well as the incarnation of the supreme power Aadhi Parasakthi. He treated his followers equally, regardless of gender, caste, or religion. He brought in revolutionary reforms such as paving the way for women to enter the sanctum sanctorum of Shakti temples.

Bangaru Adigalar leaves behind his wife, two sons and two daughters, who manage several educational institutions owned by the family. He was conferred the Padma Shri award, one of the country’s highest civilian awards, in 2019. He also experienced an Income-Tax raid in his House and Businesses in the year 2010.

Aadhi Parasakthi or Mahadevi or Aadhi Sakthi is the supreme Goddess in Shaktism sect of Hinduism. This sect believes that all Hindu Gods and Goddesses are manifestations of this single great Goddess. Durga is one of the forms of Mahadevi.

Same-Same, But Different

This week, India’s Supreme Court (SC) declined to legally recognise same-sex unions, in a landmark ruling that also emphasised the rights of the LGBTQ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer) community to be free of prejudice and discrimination.

Handing down the verdict, the SC struck-down legalising same-sex marriage saying it’s the job of Parliament to decide the validity of same-sex marriage. It went on to say that the Constitution does not grant a fundamental right to marry, and the institution cannot be elevated to the status of a fundamental right. Courts to steer clear of policy matters.

Stating that queerness is a natural phenomenon, the SC suggested that the government forms a committee on marriage rights and presents a bouquet of gay rights to the LGBTQ community. It also observed that gender cannot be the same as sexuality.

In summary, the SC ruled that the Same-Sex has: No right to marriage; no right to civil union-it can be only through laws; no right to adopt children; have the right to choose their own partner; transgender persons have the right to marry. Same-sex couples cannot claim a fundamental right to marry.

Queer persons are not prohibited from celebrating their love for each other, but have no right to claim recognition of such union. They have the right to choose their own partner and must be protected – by the Government- to enjoy such rights.

Striking down the Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA) regulation, the SC said the law cannot assume that only heterosexual couples can be good parents and that doing so would amount to discrimination. Unmarried couples, Queer can jointly adopt a child, and proceeds to say that CARA violates the Constitution.

More voice stories coming-up in the weeks ahead. Adopt World Inthavaaram.

WORLD INTHAVAARAM, 2023-41

About: the world this week, 8 October to 14 October 2023; Unfathomable terror unleashed on Israel; Afghanistan’s Earthquake; Nobel Prizes; Asian Games close and Cricket World Cup begins.

Everywhere

Israel Under Attack

Last Saturday, 7th October it was the Jewish Sabbah in Israel and also a holy festival day-the Sukkot. Families usually gather to spend time together, at home or in a synagogue, and friends just meet over for a chat. This year, excited music-lovers were looking forward to the Supernova Music Festival, held in the desert, in Southern Israel to coincide with the Sukkot. It was billed as ‘a journey of unity and love’ with ‘mind-blowing and breath-taking content’ in a place of stunning beauty. Thousands of young people signed up for the party but were not told of the exact location until a few hours before. It was Kibbutz Re’im, about 5 kilometres (km) from the Israel-Gaza border.

But out of the dawn sky, a hail of rockets signalled the start of an attack that, as it unfolded, was unprecedented in its scale and coordination. Shortly thereafter a steady stream of rockets began to rain on Israel. For years, Israel has fortified the border between itself and the small Palestinian enclave of Gaza, which is controlled by Hamas-the Islamist militant organisation. But within hours, its impenetrability was exposed as flawed.

As the rockets rained, about 5000 of them, Hamas- designated as a terrorist group by the United States (US), United Kingdom (UK), European Union, among others – was gathering terrorists where they had planned to penetrate the heavily fortified Gaza-Israel barrier. And within hours, the barrier had been breached again and again in several coordinated, direct assaults on barrier crossing points. And Hamas tried to bypass the barrier completely, including by flying over it on paragliders in the air, and also by boat in the sea.

Hamas terrorists swept out of Gaza in all directions into Israel, assaulted 27 different locations, apparently with orders to kill on sight. The furthest Hamas penetrated was to the town of Ofakim, which lies about 22 km east of Gaza.

Hamas posted the first images from the ground, taken at Kerem Shalom – the most southern of Gaza’s crossings: Terrorists overrunning a check point and the bloodied bodies of two Israeli soldiers on the ground; at least five motorbikes, each carrying two Terrorists armed with rifles, passing through a hole which had been cut in the wire fence section of the barrier; Israeli soldiers being pulled-out of a destroyed tank; one very disturbing video of a woman, whose lifeless and undressed body, face-down – later identified as German citizen Shani Louk- dumped on the back of a pick-up truck and human savages sprawled around her; another of a blood-soaked woman being dragged and pushed into a car.

At the music festival near Re’im, gunmen were firing at will at the large group of young people who had gathered to party and dance. The terrorists had a van loaded with weapons and spent hours searching the area for other Israelis. Hostages were taken from the festival and other locations and transported back into Gaza. Israel says more than 150 Israelis have been abducted and are being kept as hostages. Within just a few hours of the attack, hundreds of Israelis were dead. And it happened in a way no one thought was even possible.

Help was beginning to arrive to the stricken southern region of Israel within a few hours, but Hamas was in effective control of a large swathe of territory.

The speed and deadliness of the surprise attack stunned Israel. Questions over how it was able to happen will be asked for years.

It is completely unprecedented that a terrorist organisation would have the capacity or the wherewithal to mount coordinated, simultaneous assaults from the air, sea, and land. In addition, Hamas possessing the ability to keep its preparations unknown from a country like Israel that has among the most sophisticated intelligence services in the world strongly suggests that it had external state support, advice, and guidance in the planning and execution of the attack on Israel. Iran, accordingly, will be strongly suspected of being behind this.

Israel acknowledged it was ‘surprised’, but quickly got into the act of defending itself and began ferociously attacking the Gaza Strip. It declared it was at War with Hamas and called up an unprecedented 300,000 reservists. And vowed a deadly retaliation under ‘Operation Iron Swords’. Hamas in turn threatened to execute an Israeli captive for every Israeli bombing of a civilian house without warning.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu promised a military operation that will be both massive and decisive, with the intention of permanently destroying and disabling Hamas’ ability to attack Israel again.

By the end of the week, after Israel regained control of areas invaded by Hamas, the horrors of Hamas’ attack on border communities and Kibbutz Beeri began emerging. And they are beyond human comprehension.

Children were found butchered, decapitated in a kibbutz, people were mercilessly burnt alive in cars, or hounded into bomb shelters and just blasted with grenades thrown-in. Our eyes see but our hearts refuse to believe that human beings can be capable of such savage cruelty – an inconceivable slaughter of hundreds of civilians in their own homes and at the scene of a party, the abduction of civilians, children, and the elderly, and sadistic psychological abuse of families.

Israel said, and at least 1300 civilians and soldiers were killed during the heinous terrorist attack. A further 3000 people were injured. This was the most harrowing murder of jews since the Holocaust – genocide of 6 million jews during World War-II by Hitler’s Nazi’s.

Then began the strike-back on Hamas in the Gaza Strip, with Israel vowing to eliminate every Hamas terrorist. Israel pounded the Gaza with precision air-strikes taking down known Hamas hideouts, buildings and facilities. Israel cut-off water, power, and fuel supplies to Gaza, and its only power plant ran out of fuel plunging Gaza City into darkness. Israel has amassed its troops on the border with Gaza and is preparing for, possibly the deadliest assault on a terrorist group. And this Friday it issued a warning to civilians of Gaza City to evacuate – within 24 hours- to the southern part of the Gaza, south of Wadi Gaza, beyond the Gaza river so that civilians are not trapped in the War. That’s about 1.1 million people to move out.

Gaza has a population of about 2.3 million living in five areas called: North Gaza, Gaza City, Deir el-Balah, Khan Younis, and Rafah. The Gaza Strip is an area of 365 sq.km – about 41km long and 10km wide. There are actually two layers of Gaza, one- on the surface is the civilian community and two- below the surface in a maze of tunnels, forbidden to civilians where live the Hamas from where they carry our their nefarious activities and launch attacks on Israel. Hamas has deliberately embedded itself in every aspect of civilian life in homes with the tunnels running below mosques, schools, and markets, making them vulnerable military targets. They use civilians as shield and pawns in their fight against Israel – as a standard practice.

The US was quick to announce support sending arms and ammunition – especially refills for for Israel’s famous Iron Dome, which destroys incoming Hamas Rockets. The USS Gerald Ford Carrier Strike Group, which is the largest warship in the world was despatched to the Mediterranean Sea. The UK is also sending two Royal Navy ships and surveillance aircraft to the eastern Mediterranean in plans to bolster security. Support for Israel poured in from many countries, including India, unequivocally condemning the ravenous killing by Hamas as an inadmissible act of terror. Even Afghanistan’s ‘deadly and unforgiving’ Taliban has condemned the terrorist act of Hamas.

Hamas too got its share of ‘uncivilised’ support, around the world-more on that next week.

What and who are Hamas, how did they come to be? But first, a bit about Islam to understand the fundamentals.

After the death of Prophet Muhammad, the founder of Islam, in the year 632, a group of Muslims, who would come to be known as Sunnis, believed that Muhammad’s successor as Caliph of the Islamic community should be Abu Bakr, whereas a second group of Muslims, who would come to be known as the Shias, believed that his successor should be Ali.

Abu Bakr is the father-in-law of the Prophet through his daughter Aisha. He is known as the first Caliph – Al-Siddiq – of the Rashidun (rightly guided, perfect) Caliphate (an institution), which is the successor state to the Prophet’s domains. Ali ibn Abi Talib, the son-in-law of the Prophet, was the last Caliph of the Caliphate. He was also a senior companion of the Prophet and considered to be the first Imam, the rightful political and religious successor to Muhammed. The Rashidun Caliphate was successively ruled by Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman, and Ali – the last.

The vast majority of Muslims in various counties are Sunni Muslims with the Shia’s being about 10% of the Muslim community. Typical Shia majority countries are Azerbaijan, Iraq, and Bharain. All others are predominantly Sunni.

The Quran is the central religious text of Islam. Muslims believed it represents the words of God revealed by archangel Gabriel to Muhammad. Angel is a supernatural spiritual being who serves God. Archangels are the second level angels in the hierarchy of Angels. Gabriel is an archangel with the power to announced God’s will to men. That’s the religious background.

Now, about Hamas.

Hamas, officially the Islamic Resistance Movement was founded in 1987 by Palestinian politician, Ahmed Yassin. Its name is an acronym for Harakat al-Muqawama al-Islamiya and is primarily a Sunni Islamist political and militant organization. It emerged out of the Mujama al-Islamiya (also founded by Yassin), which had been established in Gaza in 1973 as a religious charity involved with the Egypt-based Muslim Brotherhood. This was shortly after the first intifada – uprising, rebellion- against Israel. Yassin also created the Islamic University of Gaza, which is considered a hotbed of radicalism. This has since been destroyed and raised to the ground in the Israeli air-strikes, early this week.

The Hamas Covenant or Hamas Charter was originally issued in August 1988 and outlines the founding identity, stand, and aims of Hamas. A new charter was issued by Hamas leader Khaled Mashal in May 2017.

The original Charter identified Hamas as the Muslim Brotherhood in Palestine and declares its members to be Muslims who ‘fear God and raise the banner of Jihad in the face of the oppressors’. The charter states, among other extremist things, the following: ‘our struggle against the Jews is very great and very serious’ and calls for the eventual creation of an Islamic state in Palestine in place of Israel and the Palestinian Territories, and the obliteration or dissolution of Israel; there is no solution for the Palestinian question except through Jihad; Initiatives, proposals and international conferences are all a waste of time and vain endeavours; Hamas is humanistic, and tolerant of other religions as long as they ‘stop disputing the sovereignty of Islam in this region’. The Charter adds that, ‘renouncing any part of Palestine means renouncing part of the religion of Islam’. The original charter was criticised for its violent language against all Jews, and an incitement to genocide.

Mahmoud Zahar, co-founder of Hamas, said in 2006 that Hamas “will not change a single word in its covenant.” In 2010, he reaffirmed a major commitment of the covenant saying, “Our ultimate plan is to have Palestine in its entirety. I say this loud and clear so that nobody will accuse me of employing political tactics. We will not recognise the Israeli enemy.” In summary, Hamas rejects Israel’s right to exist.

Hamas became increasingly involved in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict by the late 1990s; it opposed the Israel–Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), Letters of Mutual Recognition as well as the Oslo Accords, which saw Hamas’ secular rival Fatah renounce ‘the use of terrorism and other acts of violence’ and recognise Israel in pursuit of a two-state solution. Hamas continued to advocate Palestinian armed resistance to end what it calls ‘Israeli occupation’. Hamas won the 2006 Palestinian legislative election, gaining a majority in the Palestinian Legislative Council, and subsequently took control of Gaza Strip from Fatah in 2007.

Since 2007, Hamas has fought several wars with Israel. The Hamas government has pushed through changes that gave greater influence to Islamic law in the Gaza Strip. It has a social service wing, Dawah, and a military wing, the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades. It has spent its entire time and money in building an arsenal to fight Israel.

Many Western countries and their allies have designated Hamas as a terrorist organisation, citing their usage of human shields; methods of hostage-taking of civilians; and history of violence against non-combatants, including massacres of civilian populations, suicide bombings, and indiscriminate rocket attacks on Israeli population centres. However, a 2018 attempt to condemn Hamas for ‘acts of terror’ at the United Nations failed.

Hamas is currently governing the Gaza Strip of the Palestinian territories. While it is headquartered in Gaza City, it also has a presence in the West Bank (the larger of the two Palestinian territories), in which Fatah exercises control. It is widely considered to be the ‘dominant political force’ within the Palestinian territories. Its main political rivals are Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Fatah.

On 7 October 2023, Hamas launched a major armed campaign dubbed ‘Operation al-Aqsa Flood’ against Israel, which resulted in the present barbaric terrorist outrage on Israel.

Going back into history.

The region of Palestine or the land of Israel was among the earliest civilisations in the world. During the Iron Age, 1200 BCE to 600 BCE, two related Kingdoms ruled much of Palestine-the Kingdom of Israel and the Kingdom of Judah. A third called the Philistines occupied its southern coast. For a deeper understanding and the genesis of Israel-Palestine Conflict read:

https://kumargovindan.com/2021/05/15/world-inthavaaram-2021-20/

The inhumane, merciless killings of Jews by Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists is akin to the mobile killing units of the Nazi Einsatzgruppen, which also went into villages to exterminate Jews during the Holocaust, and the ‘pogroms’ waged against Jews in the Russian Empire. Israel appears to be in no mood to be magnanimous about the murderers of innocents, including children and the elderly. And has vowed to finish the War on its terms. Israel have even right to defend itself living in close proximity to Hamas whose sole objective is Israel’s destruction.

Afghanistan’s Earthquake

Last Saturday was deadly in other ways.

A 6.3 magnitude earthquake struck on Saturday 40 km west of the oasis City of Herat – the third largest in Afghanistan, and the capital of the western Herat Province.

More than 2,000 people have died as the nation reels from another quake at a time of deep economic crisis. The number killed is about 2400 people, with more 1300 hurt and 1,320 houses completely or partially destroyed. The toll could rise further.

The initial quake was also felt in neighbouring provinces of Badghis and Farah and was followed by multiple aftershocks.

Afghanistan has suffered significant damage from a series of recent earthquakes amid an ongoing dire economic and hunger crises, killing and displacing tens of thousands. The country has long been one of Asia’s poorest and has been ravaged by conflict for decades. But its ability to respond to natural disasters has been further hampered since the Taliban seized power in 2021 following the chaotic US withdrawal, an event that saw many international aid groups pull out.

It also led to Washington and its allies freezing about USD seven billion of the country’s foreign reserves and cutting off international funding. The situation has crippled an economy already heavily dependent on aid.

Noble Prizes

Last week the winners of Nobel Prize in Medicine, Physics, Chemistry, and Peace were announced.

This week, the Nobel Prize in Literature 2023 was awarded to Norwegian author Jon Fosse, ‘for his innovative plays and prose, which give voice to the unsayable’. His immense oeuvre written in the language Norwegian Nynorsk and spanning a variety of genres consists of a wealth of plays, novels, poetry collections, essays, children’s books and translations. While he is today one of the most widely performed playwrights in the world, he has also become increasingly recognised for his prose.

The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2023 was awarded to America’s Claudia Goldin ‘for having advanced our understanding of women’s labour market outcomes’.

Claudia Goldin, provided the first comprehensive account of women’s earnings and labour market participation through the centuries, presenting new and often surprising facts. Women’s choices have often been, and remain, limited by marriage and responsibility for the home and family is at the heart of her analyses and explanatory models. She uncovered key drivers of gender differences in the labour market.

Over the past century, the proportion of women in paid work has tripled in many high-income countries. This is one of the biggest societal and economic changes in the labour market in modern times, but significant gender differences remain. It was first in the 1980s that a researcher adopted a comprehensive approach to explaining the source of these differences.

Sports

Asian Games

The Asian Games came to a close this Sunday and India finished fourth in the overall medals tally with its best ever performance of 107 medals Gold-28; Silver-38; Bronze-41. Indian athletes were honoured and warmly received all over the country in various moments of celebrations.

China won 383 medals, Japan-188, and South Korea -190. Uzbekistan finished fifth, after India, with 71 medals.

ICC Cricket World Cup 2023

The 13th edition of the Men’s Cricket World Cup, a quadrennial One Day International (ODI) cricket tournament contested by national teams and organised by the International Cricket Council (ICC) is underway in India. It is the first men’s Cricket World Cup, which India is hosting solely. The tournament started on 5th October and is scheduled to conclude on 19th November. England are the defending champions.

Ten national teams are participating: Afghanistan, Australia, Bangladesh, England, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, Netherlands, Sri Lanka, and Zimbabwe. West Indies missing out on qualification for the first time in its history.

The tournament is taking place in ten different stadiums, in ten cities across India. The first and second semi-finals will be held at Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai and Eden Gardens in Kolkata respectively, while the final will take place at the Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad.

More good and bad stories coming-up in the weeks ahead. Heal with World Inthavaaram.

WORLD INTHAVAARAM, 2023-40

About: the world this week, 1 October to 7 October 2023; Trouble in the US; Bedbug attack in Paris; Father of India’s Green Revolution; The Noble Prizes; and the Asian Games.

Everywhere

The United States Speaks

In a shocking event, for the first time in the history of The United States (US) of America, Republican leader Kevin McCarthy earned the dubious distinction of ‘the first ever House Speaker to be removed from office’.

Came the comment, “It took 15 rounds of voting for McCarthy to become the House Speaker in January, but only one to get ousted from the job”.

McCarthy lost a no-confidence vote, 216-210, with eight Republicans voting with 208 Democrats to end his tumultuous nine-month-long leadership of the Republican majority in the lower chamber of Congress.

The Republicans criticised McCarthy for mishandling government spending and budget fights since the Republicans took over the House in January. And accused him of cutting a ‘secret side deal’ with US President Joe Biden on providing additional funding to Ukraine, which has become a source of outrage. McCarthy denied the existence of any such deal.

The Democrats unanimously voted to oust McCarthy as he shares a close relationship with former US President Donald Trump. And he had recently launched an impeachment inquiry into Biden for benefiting from his son Hunter Biden’s business dealings, among other issues.

The House was then adjourned for the week and might reconvene on 10 October to discuss McCarthy’s successors. Given the deep polarisation within not only the House but also the Republican Party, the path to electing a new Speaker remains uncertain.

Meanwhile, the US is grappling with an outbreak of ‘migrant infiltration’ into the country from across the Mexican Border and authorities are overwhelmed. Thousands have crossed into the US from Mexico, in recent weeks, and border cities are bulging with people.

Increases in violence in certain regions of Mexico has fuelled the migration. People arriving at the US border have the right to request asylum without being criminalized, turned back, used for political stunts or separated from their children. Asylum -under US Law-is a form of protection granted to individuals who can demonstrate that they are unable or unwilling to return to their country because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.

Paris: Bug Attack

France’s Paris is under attack – by bedbugs, with a widespread outbreak occurring across public spaces.

From hotel rooms to trains to movie theatres, Paris seems to be crawling with bedbugs. Reports of the bugs plaguing hotels and rental apartments first flared up over the summer, and now Paris is coping with an infestation just 10 months before it is set to host the 2024 Summer Olympics.

Full-grown bedbugs are brown or reddish-brown with an oval-shaped body about the size of an apple seed, while their young are much smaller, translucent or whitish-yellow, and can be very hard to see. Bedbugs come out at night to feed on human blood.

Mosquitoes and Bedbugs are after our blood. Watch out!

Father of India’s Green Revolution: India Grows

Towards the end of last week, probably one of the greatest Indians in the history of India passed away in Chennai, Tamilnadu, India, at the ripe old age of 98, on age-related issues. And maybe many did not notice his greatness at all.

He is agronomist, agricultural scientist, plant geneticist, Mankombu Sambasivan (M S) Swaminathan, who led India’s dynamic push, in the 1960s, to become self-reliant and food grain surplus, promoting the use of hybrid varieties and chemical fertilisers as the need of the hour. He prevented India from ‘certain starvation’ and is deservingly called the Father of India’s Green Revolution.

He could achieve this stupendous outcome due to two other visionary Leaders- who have passed to the legions above: then Prime Minister (PM), Lal Bahadur Shastri and then Minister for Agriculture and Food, Chidambaram Subramaniam – called the architect of the Green Revolution.

On another track, the PM-Minister duo were also responsible for bringing in Dr Verghese Kurien who founded the National Dairy Development Board, which ushered the Indian White Revolution or Operation Flood, making India self-sufficient in milk and milk products.

First, a grain of history.

India’s struggle to meet its food grain demand first began in the year 1937 when Burma (now Myanmar) separated from British India. The problem got accentuated when India lost West Punjab and East Pakistan – to Pakistan / Bangaldesh – during Independence and Partition in 1947. Burma was a crucial region for growing pulses, East Pakistan was a rice bowl and West Punjab, which had a well-networked canal system, was a wheat granary.

Before Independence, under British Rule, in the year 1943, Britain’s Prime Minister Winston Churchill ordered food grains meant for eastern parts of India to be diverted to the British troops in World War II. This resulted in a deadly man-made famine in Bengal causing deaths of millions of people, besides aggravating and extending India’s food shortage problem until the early 1950s.

Indian agriculture sector’s struggle after Independence was also due to the farm sector being neglected in favour of industries. Imports of food grains affected agriculture as farmers did not have any incentive to produce more.

A few in the Government believed that it was cheaper to import food grains than to incentivise domestic agricultural production. As a result, wheat prices dropped sharply until 1963, preventing any private investment in wheat-growing regions, which held promise in the 1950s. During the period 1961-65, food grain production growth halved from nearly 3% in 1955-60 as India depended on rain-fed agriculture.

The ‘young’ Government of India then signed a long-term agreement with the United States under the Agricultural Trade Development and Assistance Act, also called Public Law (PL) 480, to get food aid, in 1954.

Under the program India got little rice. And the wheat supplied was so bad that critics called it ‘unfit for pigs’. Gradually the US began pulling political strings over food supply, making it contingent to India’s support of US action in Vietnam. India became entirely depended on the US for food – not imports that India paid for.

(The agreement was signed a few more times before the US ended it in the late 1960s. This was because PM Lal Bahadur Shastri and then PM Indira Gandhi were unwilling to make policy changes, especially to allow privatisation of the industrial sector, in return for food aid).

The food situation in India in the 1960s was pathetic, with food production dropping continuously and reaching a nadir in 1966. In the background was a burgeoning population – more mouths to feed every year. Until 1965, when the population was more than 500 million, wheat output in India was barely 12 million tonnes. India was a country infamously living ‘ship-to-mouth’ on imported US grain. The situation was so bad that the US Scientists predicted deaths of millions due to starvation in the 1970s. However, that prediction did not happen, as in the decades since annual wheat production has multiplied almost 10 times to 112 million tonnes.

In the year 1964, Lal Bahadur Shastri took over the prime ministership of India following the death of Jawaharlal Nehru. And soon after, India was attacked by Pakistan, leading to War. At the same time, there was an awful scarcity of food grain in the country.

In a radio address to the nation PM Shastri reminded people that dependence on food imports undermined the country’s self-confidence and self-respect. This is when he gave the nation an inspiring, unforgettable slogan: ‘Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan (Hail the soldier, hail the farmer). “Sacrifice one meal at least a week”. This was his plea to Indians in 1965 when India was at war with Pakistan. He urged people to manage the situation: for the farmer to produce more, the trader to market supplies at fair prices, and the consumer to exercise greater restraint on consumption.

Chidambaram Subramaniam who was the Food and Agriculture Minister in Shastri’s Cabinet favoured the introduction of science and technology in farming and began a process of engaging agricultural scientists, which marked the advent of agricultural science in India.

Now, enter M S Swaminathan. But, first a quick flash back on his roots and how he arrived on the field, when India needed someone like him, the most.

Swaminathan was born in Kumbakonam, Tamil Nadu, in 1925 to a General Surgeon father and home-maker mother. He began his studies at the local school and later at the Catholic Little Flower School, Kumbakonam for where he passed his Matriculation Exams, at age 15. He was deeply influenced by his father who was also a social reformer. His parents wanted him to study medicine. With that in mind, he started his higher education, with zoology. But when he witnessed the brutal impact of the Bengal famine of 1943, during World War-II and shortages of rice throughout the sub-continent, he decided to devote his life to ensuring India had enough food. Despite his family background, and belonging to an era where medicine and engineering were considered prestigious career options, he chose agriculture.

From childhood, he was close to farming and farmers; his extended family grew rice, mangoes, and coconut, and later expanded into other areas such as coffee. He saw the impact that fluctuations in the price of crops had on his family, including the devastation that weather and pests could cause to crops as well as incomes.

He went on to finish his undergraduate degree in zoology at Maharaja’s College in Trivandrum, Kerala (now known as University College, Thiruvananthapuram, University of Kerala). After graduating in zoology, he joined the Madras Agricultural College (University of Madras, now the Tamil Nadu Agricultural University) and graduated with a Bachelor Science degree in Agricultural Science, from 1940 to 1944.

‘Devastated’ by the Bengal famine of 1943, Swaminathan chose a career in genetics to find ways and means of improving the livelihood of Indian farmers by increasing food production. In 1947 he moved to the Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI) in New Delhi to study genetics and plant breeding. He obtained a post-graduate degree with high distinction in cytogenetics in 1949.

Social pressures resulted in him competing in the examinations for civil services, through which he was selected to the Indian Police Service (IPS). At the same time, an opportunity appeared in the form of a UNESCO fellowship in genetics in the Netherlands. Yet again, he chose genetics.

Swaminathan became a UNESCO fellow at the Wageningen University & Research, Netherlands’, Institute of Genetics, for eight months. The demand for potatoes during World War II resulted in deviations in age-old crop rotations. Swaminathan worked on adapting genes to provide resilience against parasites, as well as a cold and frost-resistance. To this effect, the research succeeded. Ideologically the university influenced his later scientific pursuits in India with respect to food production. During this time he also visited the Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research in war-torn Germany; this would later be another deep influence on him, as during his next visit, a decade later, he saw that the Germans had transformed Germany in so many aspects.

In 1950, he moved to study at the Plant Breeding Institute of the University of Cambridge, School of Agriculture, United Kingdom. He earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree in 1952.

Swaminathan then spent 15 months in the United States. He accepted a post-doctoral research associateship at the University of Wisconsin’s Laboratory of Genetics to help set up a United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) potato research station. The laboratory at the time had Nobel laureate Joshua Lederberg on its faculty. His associateship ended in December 1953 and in the same year he met the legendary American Agronomist, Dr Norman Borlaug, when the latter gave a speech on controlling rust disease in wheat. It was the beginning of an association that continued after Swaminathan returned to India. Swaminathan turned down a faculty position in order to work on achieving his goal of improving India’s food production, by taking up a Government job.

Swaminathan returned to India in early 1954. There were no jobs in his specialisation. And it was only after three months that he received an opportunity, through a former professor, to work temporarily as an assistant botanist at the Central Rice Research Institute in Cuttack in the ‘indica-japonica’ rice hybridisation program. This stint would prove to be a solid stepping stone to his future work with wheat. Half a year later, he joined Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI) in New Delhi in October 1954 as an assistant cytogeneticist.

Swaminathan was critical of India importing food grains when 70% of India was dependent on agriculture. Further drought and famine-like situations were developing in the country.

By the year 1959, Norman Borlaug had reported impressive results in growing a high-yielding wheat in Mexico, which used a dwarfing gene from Japan known as Norin10. His young Indian counterpart was the only plant geneticist in Asia who took notice. Back then, the finest varieties of wheat and rice in India, under the best conditions and with adequate doses of fertilizer, could give only 20% to 30% more than the average yield. They could not stand high doses of chemical fertilizers, nor would their slim stems bear the weight of ears of grain.

Swaminathan who helmed the wheat programme at IARI convinced the government that the high-yielding dwarf wheat which US scientist Norman Borlaug introduced in Mexico was the answer to India’s grain shortage. He wrote to his Director in April 1962 on the implications of Borlaug’s success with semi-dwarf wheat that held more grain; he wanted his boss to invite the American scientist to India and request for material used during spring trials in Mexico.

With the political leadership scouting for ways to combat food shortage, the government soon wrote to the Rockefeller Foundation (which funded the Mexican programme) asking for Borlaug’s services and the seeds at his disposal. Borlaug visited India in March 1963 and later sent 100 kilograms of seeds of dwarf and semi-dwarf varieties. These were used widely on ‘demonstration plots’ to persuade farmers in Punjab to try it out. Swaminathan adapted the seeds to suit Indian conditions and trained farmers in their cultivation. And because the Borlaug grain was red in colour, the Indian scientists cross-bred them with local varieties to give it its characteristic golden colour. Today, almost all the wheat grown in India has the signature of the original material that came from Mexico.

In Punjab alone, the wheat yield increased nearly three-fold in five years – from 1.9 million tonnes in 1965-66 to 5.2 million tonnes in 1970-71.

In the 1968, Rabi harvest, India produced 16.5 million tonnes of wheat, over 30% more than the highest before that. In two years’ time, wheat production was double the average output during 1960-65. The Green Revolution had got going.

India needed a huge quantity of fertilisers, estimated to cost USD 250 million then. It needed foreign financial aid and India managed to get it from then US President Lydon B Johnson. The rest is history.

Swaminathan knew even then that intensive use of fertiliser was a short-term measure to tide over near-famine conditions. In later years, he batted for what he called an ‘Evergreen Revolution’ through organic farming. Swaminathan was also instrumental in bridging scientific know-how and farmers’ do-how by the effective use of the radio and television. He contributed to the concept for ‘Krishi Darshan’-one of India’s longest-running TV programmes- aimed at disseminating agricultural information to rural farmers.

India’s food production in 1967 was 11.3 million tonnes. By 1970 it went up to 20 million tonnes and then there was no looking back, ever.

Today India’s food grain production is a whopping 315 million tonnes!

Swaminathan’s collaborative scientific efforts with Norman Borlaug, spearheading a mass movement with farmers and other scientists and backed by public policies, saved India from certain famine-like conditions. His leadership as director general of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in the Philippines was instrumental in his being awarded the first World Food Prize in 1987, recognized as one of the highest honours in the field of agriculture. The United Nations Environment Programme has called him ‘the Father of Economic Ecology’.

MS Swaminathan met his wife Mina while studying in Cambridge and the couple had three daughters, all of whom went on to become established figures in the academia and global development: Nithya Rao is professor of Gender & Development at the University of East Anglia, United Kingdom; Madhura Swamination is Professor in Economic Analysis Unit, Indian Statistical Institute, Bengaluru; and Soumya Swaminathan is a former Chief Scientist at the World Health Organization. His wife Mina Swaminathan died in 2022. She worked as a Teacher in St. Thomas’ School, New Delhi.

He left behind enough food for us, in India.

Monsoons: Not Benefitting India, this Time

Breaking the four-year trend of good rainfall in either ‘normal’ or ‘above normal’ category during 2019-2022, India recorded ‘below normal’ monsoon rainfall at 94.4% of the long-period average. This according to data for the June-September period released by the India Meteorological Department (IMD) late last week. The Met department, however, forecast ‘normal’ rainfall for winter monsoon in Peninsular India during October-December.

Nobel Prizes: Benefitting Mankind

This week, The Nobel Foundation tasked with the ultimate responsibility of fulfilling Alfred Nobel’s Will continued doing so and blasted-off its annual announcements in quick succession.

Recall the excerpt of his will, where Alfred Nobel dictates that his entire remaining estate should be used to endow “prizes to those who, during the preceding year, have conferred the greatest benefit to humankind”.

The 2023 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was jointly awarded to Katalin Kariko and Drew Weissman, ‘for their discoveries concerning nucleoside base modifications that enabled the development of effective mRNA vaccines against COVID-19’. I had hoped this would happen. Read more about that story on

https://kumargovindan.com/2021/01/02/world-inthavaaram-2021-01/

The Nobel Prize in Physics went to Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz and Anne L’Huillier ‘for experimental methods that generate attosecond pulses of light for the study of electron dynamics in matter’.

‘Atto’ is the scientific notation prefix that represents 10 to the power of (-)18, which is a decimal point followed by 17 zeroes and a 1. So a flash of light lasting an attosecond, or 0.000000000000000001 of a second, is an extremely short pulse of light.

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to Moungi G. Bawendi, Louis E. Brus and Alexei I. Ekimov , ‘for the discovery and synthesis of quantum dots’.

Quantum dots (QDs), also called semiconductor nanocrystals, are semiconductor particles a few nanometres in size, having optical and electronic properties that differ from those of larger particles as a result of quantum mechanical effects.

The Nobel Price for Peace went to Iran’s Narges Mohammadi for her fight against the oppression of women in Iran and her fight to promote human rights and freedom for all. Narges is the deputy head of the Defenders of Human Rights Center, which was founded by fellow Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi. The 51-year-old is currently being held in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison for ‘spreading propaganda’. She has been arrested 13 times, convicted five times, and sentenced to a total of 31 years in prison and 154 lashes. He brave struggle has come with tremendous personal costs.

Asian Games: Medal Haul by India

India continued its terrific performance at the Asian Games 2023 in Hangzhou, China sending home a ton of medals. Its total medal tally eclipsed the previous high of 70 in the Jakarta Asian games, Indonesia in 2018.

At the time of this publication, India had won a total of 95 Medals (expected to reach 100): Gold-22; Silver-34; Bronze – 39, occupying the fourth place after China-350, Japan-166, and South Korea – 164.

The Asian Games close on 8 October 2023 and India has a story to tell with inspirational performances by various athletes from amazing backgrounds.

More medal stories coming-up in the weeks ahead. Work with World Inthavaaram.

WORLD INTHAVAARAM, 2023-39

About: the world this week, 24 September to 30 September 2023; Canada’s mess; Nagorna-Karabakh’s exodus; Balochistan’s blasts; Asteriod Bennu-parts- come to Earth; and India medals the Asiad.

Everywhere

Canada

Last week Canada was caught on the wrong foot in blaming India for the killing of a Khalistani Separatist and Wanted-In-India Terrorist, in Canada, without a shred of evidence to back-up its claim.

Then it continued its poor form, when following a joint address to Parliament by visiting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons, Anthony Rota lauded Yaroslav Hunka, 98, as a Ukrainian-Canadian war hero. The Speaker said he, “fought for Ukrainian independence against the Russian aggressors then, and continues to support the troops today.”

But in the days since, human rights and Jewish organizations have condemned Rota’s recognition, saying Hunka served in a Nazi military unit known as the 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (Schutzstaffe – elite guard) during World War II. It is also known as the Galicia Division that was formed in 1943 and was part of the Nazi SS organization. This was declared as a criminal organization by the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg in 1946, which determined the Nazi group had committed war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Jewish groups have long argued that soldiers in the Galicia Division swore allegiance to Adolf Hitler, and were either complicit in Nazi Germany’s crimes or had committed crimes themselves.

This week, Anthony Rota discovering that he had chosen to ‘honour the wrong person’ resigned the Speaker’s Post, taking responsibility. And Prime Minister Justin Trudeau followed suit with an apology.

The confusion in Canada continues with various kinds of War Criminals, Separatists, and Terrorists tumbling out of the proverbial closet.

Nagorno-Karabakh

Like a boiling volcano erupting when the pressure inside gets too hot to handle, the decades old Nagorno-Karabakh conflict erupted last week. And a growing stream of ethnic Armenian refugees began fleeing Nagorno-Karabakh following Azerbaijan’s seizure of the disputed region. Nagorno-Karabakh is home to about 120,000 ethnic Armenians.

A quick flashback on the problem.

Ever since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the former Soviet Union Republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been at each other’s throats over who fully owns Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding districts – an enclave internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan but controlled by ethnic Armenians for over three decades.

Originally, Nagorno-Karabakh was established, by the Soviets, as an Armenian-majority autonomous administrative region of Azerbaijan. It lies in the mountainous South Caucasus region of Eastern Europe and Asia between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea.

During the collapse of the Soviet Union, in 1988 and then in 1991 Nagorno-Karabakh, first wanted to be part of Armenia, and second, declared its independence as the ‘Republic of Artsakh’, based on a referendum it held. However, this was not recognised by the United Nations or any other country, including Armenia. This started a bloody war between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 1988, until Russia intervened to broker a cease-fire in 1994. Then in 2020, fighting again broke-out over the issue, until Russia stepped-in once more, to bring about a truce.

This year, fresh hostilities started when Azerbaijan, in December 2022, began mounting a blockade on the vital Lachin Corridor going into the enclave. This is the only road that connects the Republic of Armenia to the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan accused Armenia of using the road to bring in military supplies, which Armenia denies, leading to the strangulation of essential supplies – causing severe food and medical shortages. Russia’s peace-keeping force, stationed in the region could not ‘douse the fire’ when it first started, preoccupied as it was with the war in Ukraine.

Azerbaijan forces made rapid advances, in 24 hours of fighting, since fighting erupted on 19th September. They seized control of the enclave and Azerbaijan quickly declared victory. Then Nagorna-Karaback and Azerbaijan agreed to a cease-fire, once again mediated by Russia.

The agreement said that Karabakh’s military forces would be completed disarmed and disbanded. And talks will begin for the complete integration of the enclave into Azerbaijan.

What is Azerbaijan and Armenia made-up of?

Azerbaijan is a secular muslim-majority country with 97% of the population being Muslims. But the constitution does not declare an official religion and all major political forces in the country are secularist. The Azerbaijan Democratic Republic proclaimed its independence from the Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic in 1918 and became the first secular democratic Muslim-majority state. In 1920, the country was incorporated into the Soviet Union as the Azerbaijan SSR. The modern Republic of Azerbaijan proclaimed its independence on 30 August 1991. Now, Azerbaijan is a developing country and ranks 91st on the Human Development Index. It has a high rate of economic development, literacy, and a low rate of unemployment.

Armenia is predominately Christian majority and the first country to adopt Christianity as a state religion. This was way back in the year 301. Armenia still recognises the Armenian Apostolic Church, as the country’s primary religious establishment. Over 93% of Christians in Armenia belong to the Armenian Apostolic Church, which is part of Oriental Orthodoxy – one of the most ancient Christian institutions. The Armenian Apostolic Church believes in apostolic succession through the apostles Bartholomew and Thaddeus (Jude/Judas) – two of the twelve apostles of Jesus Christ.

Now, the back lash.

This week, early on, more than 6,500 people crossed into Armenia from the enclave. They left after Armenia announced plans to move those made homeless by the fighting. By the end of the week Armenia said over 88,780 of the territory’s ethnic Armenians have fled so far.

Armenia’s Prime Minister has warned that ethnic cleansing is under way in the region. Azerbaijan has said it wants to re-integrate the ethnic Armenians as ‘equal citizens’.

And in a final, Samvel Shahramanyan, the leader of the self-declared Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh has said it will cease to exist in the new year. He made the announcement this Thursday and said that he had signed an order dissolving all state institutions from 1 January 2024.

Early in the week, on Monday, about 170 people are now known to have died in a huge explosion at a fuel depot in Nagorno-Karabakh. It is not yet clear what caused the explosion on the evening of 25 September near the main city of Khankendi, known as Stepanakert by Armenians. This was during the rush to get out the enclave, and onwards to Armenia.

Balochistan

A powerful bomb, triggered by a suicide bomber, exploded this Friday near the Madina Mosque in Mastung district of Pakistan’s Balochistan province killing at least 52 people and injuring more than 130. This happened during a ‘Eid ‘Milad-un-Nabi’ procession, to celebrate the birthday of Prophet Muhammad.

No terrorist group immediately claimed responsibility, and the usual suspect, Tehrik-e-Taliban, the Pakistani Taliban, an umbrella group of Sunni Islamic extremist groups, denied any role. The Pakistani Taliban, which is believed to be close to Al-Qaeda, has been blamed for several deadly attacks across Pakistan, including an attack on army headquarters in 2009, assaults on military bases, and the 2008 bombing of the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad.

The regional chapter of the ISIS terror group, known as ISIS-Khorasan or ISIS-K, has also carried out attacks in the area in the past.

This is the second major bomb blast that has terrorised Mastung over the last 15 days: the first occurring earlier this month in which about 11 people were injured. Mastung has remained a target of terror attacks for the past several years with that in July 2018 being one of the deadliest in Mastung’s history during which at least 128 people were killed.

In January, a Taliban suicide bomber blew himself up in a mosque packed with worshippers during afternoon prayers in Pakistan’s restive northwestern Peshawar city, killing over 100 people.

The mayhem in this part of the World is often in the headlines.

Bennu

In the year 2016, on 8th September, America’s NASA had launched the Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, and Security-Regolith Explorer, or OSIRIS-REx, spacecraft to travel to a near-Earth Asteroid named Bennu, grab a sample of rocks and dust from the surface and return safely to Earth. Scientists believe the material collected from Bennu – the Solar System’s most dangerous asteroid – could help explain how life on Earth began. It is regarded as ‘most dangerous’ because its path gives it the highest probability of hitting Earth, of any known asteroid.

This Sunday, after having travelled billions of kilometres, to Bennu and back, Osiris-Rex spacecraft returned. And the capsule – containing material collected – was released, landing in the targeted area of the Department of Defense’s Utah Test and Training Range near Salt Lake City, USA.

The re-entry vehicle entered Earth’s atmosphere at about 43,452 kilometres per hour, withstood temperatures of 2,700 Degree Centigrade and then deployed parachutes to slow its descent. After landing in the desert, the capsule was transported to the nearby Dugway military base where its contents was inspected under sterile conditions.

It is estimated the return capsule has about 250g of dust onboard, which Researchers from around the world will be able to ask for examination.

Within an hour and a half of landing, the capsule was transported by helicopter to a temporary clean room set up in a hangar on the training range, where it was connected to a continuous flow of nitrogen. Getting the sample under a ‘nitrogen purge,’ as scientists call it, is a critical task. Nitrogen is a gas that doesn’t interact with most other chemicals, and a continuous flow of it into the sample container inside the capsule will keep out earthly contaminants to leave the sample pure for scientific analyses.

The Bennu sample was then transported in its unopened canister to NASA’s Johnson Space Centre in Houston where curation scientists began the process of disassembling the canister: extract and weigh the sample, create an inventory of the rocks and dust, and, over time, distribute pieces of Bennu to scientists worldwide. Johnson houses the world’s largest collection of astro-materials.

Scientists predict that Bennu formed from pieces of a larger asteroid in the asteroid belt after a catastrophic collision between 1 and 2 billion years ago. Considered a ‘rubble-pile’ asteroid, Bennu is an amalgamation of rocks that are loosely packed and barely held together by gravity or other forces. The asteroid is relatively rich in organic molecules. Its materials also appear to have been chemically altered by liquid water in the distant past, likely when it was still part of the larger asteroid it came from. A major question in science is: how did Earth come to have an abundance of organic molecules and liquid water, two key ingredients for life as we know it? Scientists say that asteroids like Bennu could have delivered these ingredients through collisions with Earth billions of years ago.

Later in the week, when NASA scientists began opening the capsule, they found black dust and debris on the avionics deck when the initial lid was removed. Curation experts there will perform the intricate disassembly of the Touch and Go Sample Acquisition Mechanism (TAGSAM) to get down to the bulk sample within. These operations are happening in a new laboratory designed specifically for the OSIRIS-REx mission.

When the TAGSAM is separated from the canister, it will be inserted in a sealed transfer container to preserve a nitrogen environment for up to about two hours. This container allows enough time for the team to insert the TAGSAM into another unique glovebox. Ultimately, this speeds-up the disassembly process. The sample will be revealed with an amazing amount of precision to accommodate delicate hardware removal so as not to come into contact with the sample inside.

With an array of team members on deck, scientists and engineers at Johnson will work together to complete the disassembly process and reveal the sample to the world in a special live broadcast event on 11 October 2023.

Meanwhile, men are back to Earth from Space. United States Astronaut Frank Rubio and his fellow Russian cosmonauts, Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitry Petelin, landed safely in Kazakhstan this Wednesday after spending about 373 days in space aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Their mission was scheduled to last six months, but a leak in their capsule forced them to wait for a replacement spacecraft, extending their stay.

Asian Games

The Asian Games, also called the Asiad, is held once every four years among the athletes in Asia. It is now regulated by the Olympic Council of Asia and recognised by the International Olympic Committee. The first ever Asian Games was held in 1951 in New Delhi, India. This year, the 19th Asian Games, it is being held in Hangzhou, China, between 23 September and 8 October 2023.

Over the past years India has been sprinting towards better performances in every sports event and this year’s Asian Games is proving to be a mighty leap.

India won its first gold medal in Equestrian, with the dressage team securing a historic top-podium finish, beating the likes of China and Hong Kong. The quartet of Sudipti Hajela, Divyakriti Singh, Hriday Vipul Chheda, and Anush Agarwalla scored a total of 209.205 to win Gold. This is the first Asian Games Gold in this event in 41 years!

The Women’s Cricket team won Gold as did the Rudrankksh Patil, Aishwary Pratap Singh Tomar, Divyansh Singh Panwar in the men’s Men’s 10m Air Rifle event. Anant Jeet Singh Naruka won a historic Silver Medal in the Skeet Men’s Shooting event. This is the first ever medal won by India in this event in any Asian Games.

Another Gold in Shooting was won by the 10m Air Pistol Men’s team Sarabjot Singh, Arjun Singh Cheema and Shiva Narwal.

India’s total medals tally of 33 continued rising every day and it now stands as Gold-8; Silver -12; Bronze -13 – at the time of this publication. China is way ahead at 200 followed by South Korea-102, Japan-99, ahead of India.

India’s highest ever medals tally was 70 at the 2018 Jakarta Asian games held in Indonesia.

More medal-worthy stories coming-up in the weeks ahead. Stay on the podium with World Inthavaaram.

WORLD INTHAVAARAM, 2023-38

About: the world this week, 17 September to 23 September 2023; Ukraine grain grind in Poland; Designated Terrorist in Canada; Antarctica’s Ice; Women’s Reservation; and Asia Cup Cricket.

Everywhere

Ukraine Grain and Poland

Poland has been a firm supporter of Ukraine from the beginning of Russia’s invasion. It often led the way in sending military aid and equipment, and argued passionately that such support is essential to protect Poland itself from Russian aggression. Now suddenly it feels like the political knives are out for Ukraine. There’s talk of how Ukraine should be grateful for Polish support.

This week, Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki warned about scaling down or even ending weapons transfers to Ukraine. Poland’s President Andrzej Duda compared Ukraine to a drowning man who risks dragging his rescuers down with him.

The sharp downturn in relations between the neighbouring countries began with a dispute over grain imports that remains unresolved. Ukraine needs to export its grain harvest, and land routes are now critical because Russia is deliberately attacking ports on both the Black Sea and the Danube River. But in an effort to protect its own farmers, Poland does not wish to allow cheaper Ukrainian grain to hit its domestic market, only to pass through to the rest of the European Union in transit.

Later in the week, Ukraine’s Agriculture Minister said that he and his Polish counterpart have agreed to “find a solution that takes into account the interests of both countries”, after a phone conversation.

Designated Terrorist

This week, the already frosty ties between India and Canada plunged to a new low, almost reaching freezing point.

Canada’s Prime Minister (PM) Justin Trudeau accused India of being involved in the killing of a Sikh Separatist Khalistani leader, Hardeep Singh Nijjar, on his country’s soil, based on what he called ‘credible information’. PM Trudeau announced this in Parliament and said that any involvement of a foreign government in killing a Canadian citizen on Canadian soil is an “unacceptable violation of our sovereignty”. And almost immediately, Canada expelled one of India’s diplomats at the Indian Embassy in Canada.

India promptly described the Canadian PM’s allegations as absurd and motivated. That the frozen approach and inaction of the Canadian government on Sikh Separatist activity, inside Canada, aims to undermine India, is long-standing, and of continuing concern. And in a tit-for-tat move, India expelled a senior Canadian diplomat – to leave Indian soil within 5 days- citing interference of Canadian diplomats in India’s internal matters and their involvement in anti-India activities.

Later, in a deeper step, India suspended all Visa services in Canada with immediate effect and until further notice. And sought downsizing of Canada’s diplomatic presence in India.

Earlier this year, India reprimanded Canada for allowing a float in a parade depicting the assassination of former Indian PM, Indira Gandhi-by her Sikh bodyguards-perceiving this to be a glorification of Sikh separatist-Khalistani-violence. India has also been upset about frequent demonstrations and vandalism by Sikh separatists and their supporters at Indian diplomatic missions in Canada, Britain, the United States, and Australia. And has sought better security from local governments.

India counted that at least nine separatist organisations, supporting terror groups, have their bases in Canada. And despite multiple deportation requests, Canada has taken no action against those involved in heinous crimes, including the killing of popular Punjabi singer Sidhu Moosewala. India added that pro-Khalistani outfits such as the World Sikh Organization (WSO), Khalistan Tiger Force (KTF), Sikhs for Justice (SFJ), and Babbar Khalsa International (BKI), have been operating freely from Canadian soil. Multiple dossiers have been handed over to Canada, but India’s deportation requests have gone unaddressed.

The latest spat deals a fresh blow to diplomatic ties that have been fraying for years.

Who is Hardeep Singh Nijjar?

Nijjar is a prominent Khalistani leader who was trying to organize an unofficial referendum among the Sikh diaspora in Canada- for a Khalistan State in India – with the organization muscle of Sikhs for Justice.

Nijjar hailing from a village in Jalandhar, Punjab, migrated to Canada in the mid 1990s. He arrived in Canada in 1997, using a fraudulent passport making a refugee claim. Nijjar then married a woman who sponsored his immigration and became a Canadian citizen in 2007. He works as a plumber. Nijjar became president of Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara in Surrey, British Columbia in 2018, and was a leader of the Canadian branch of SFJ.

According to India, Nijjar is also the leader of the pro-Khalistan group KTF and a warrant for his arrest was issued in November 2014, accusing him of conspiring in the bombing of Shingar Cinema in Punjab’s Ludhiana, in 2007, in which 6 people were killed. India issued another Interpol warrant in 2016 claiming Nijjar was involved in a plot to transport illegal ammunition, by paragliders, into India.

In 2018 Nijjar was accused of multiple targeted killings in India. In February that year, Amarinder Singh, then Chief Minister of Punjab, handed over to PM Justin Trudeau a list of most wanted persons that included Nijjar’s name.

In July 2020, India designated Hardeep Singh Nijjar a terrorist under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act and, in September 2020, the National Investigation Agency (NIA) seized his assets in the country. The NIA has accused him of plotting the murder of a Hindu priest in Punjab and hatching a conspiracy to disturb peace and disrupt communal harmony. In 2022, the NIA offered a reward of INR 10 lakhs for any information that could help apprehend him.

What is the separatist Khalistan Movement? Get to the bottom, and history here:

https://kumargovindan.com/2023/03/25/world-inthavaaram-2023-12/

Briefly, the Khalistan Movement was started for an independent homeland for the Sikhs and dates back to India and Pakistan’s independence in 1947, preceding the partition of the Punjab region between the two new countries. Sikh separatists demand that their own homeland, Khalistan, meaning ‘the land of the pure’ be carved out of Punjab. Later, India reorganised its States mostly on linguistic basis and Punjab became a Sikh-majority State. The demand for Khalistan resurfaced many times, most prominently during a violent insurgency in the 1970s and 1980s, which paralysed Punjab for over a decade.

The Khalistan movement is considered a security threat by India. The bloodiest episode in the conflict occurred in 1984 when the then PM of India, Indira Gandhi, sent the Army into the Golden Temple – Operation Blue Star- the holiest shrine for Sikhs, to evict armed separatist leader Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and his supporters. The operation culminated with the killing of Bhindranwale, among other terrorists. This infuriated Sikhs around the world. A few months later, Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards at her home in New Delhi, in retaliation. The army launched operations in 1986 and 1988 to flush-out Sikh militants from Punjab.

But by then the Khalistan movement found roots in Canada.

Immigration of the Sikh population to Canada had begun in the early 20th Century. It started when Sikh soldiers in the British Army passing through British Columbia were attracted by its fertile land. By 1970, the Sikhs numbers in Canada rose and they became a visible face among the communities in the region.

The Khalistan-centric militancy climbed higher, when Sikh militants were found responsible for the 1985 bombing of an Air-India Boeing 747 flying from Canada to India: Air-India Flight 182, Kanishka, operating on the Montreal–London–New Delhi–Mumbai route. On 23 June 1985 it disintegrated in mid-air en route from Montreal to London, at an altitude of 9,400 metres over the Atlantic Ocean, as a result of a bomb explosion from inside the aircraft. The remnants of the aircraft fell into the ocean about 190 kilometres (km) off the coast of Ireland, killing all 329 people aboard, including 268 Canadian citizens, 27 British citizens, and 24 Indian citizens.

The bombing of Kanishka is the worst terrorist attack in Canadian history; the deadliest aviation incident in the history of Air-India; and was the world’s most outrageous act of aviation terrorism until the 11 September 2001 attacks on the Twin Towers in the United States.

According to investigators, the bombing of Kanishka was part of a larger transnational terrorist plot against India, which included a plan to bomb two Air-India planes. The first bomb was meant to explode aboard Air India Flight 301, which was scheduled to take off from Japan’s Narita International Airport, but it detonated early, before it could be loaded onto the plane, killing two baggage-handlers. The planners had failed to take into account that Japan does not observe ‘Daylight Saving Time (a practice of setting the clocks forward one hour from standard time during the summer months, and back again in the Fall).

The second bomb planted aboard Kanishka in Canada was successful. It was later revealed that both the conspiracy and the bombs, which were stashed inside luggage, originated in Canada. The Sikh militant and Khalistani separatist group BKI was implicated in the bombings.

Although a handful of people were arrested and tried for the Kanishka bombing, the only person convicted was Inderjit Singh Reyat, a dual British-Canadian national, who pleaded guilty to manslaughter in 2003. He was sentenced to fifteen years in prison for assembling the bombs that exploded on board Kanishka and at Narita.

The subsequent investigation and prosecution lasted almost twenty years. The two accused Ripudaman Singh Malik and Ajaib Singh Bagri were both acquitted, due to lack of evidence.

In 2010, a Justice John Major-led commission of inquiry submitted a report in which Canadian police and spy agencies were blamed for grave negligence and hampering the investigation. In the report, Justice Major said that the authorities should have known that the Indian aircraft was a terrorist’s target. His report concluded that a ‘cascading series of errors’ by the Government of Canada, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) had allowed the terrorist attack to take place. And their failure to prevent the bombing ‘inexcusable’.

Canada has blood on its hands.

PM Justin Trudeau’s family has a history of being warm towards Sikhs and siding with Khalistani terrorists. In 1982 his father, Pierre Trudeau, had refused the extradition request of Khalistani terrorist Talwinder Singh Parmar, wanted for the murder of police officers in India.

Pierre Trudeau’s Government refused the Indian request on the quaint grounds that India was ‘insufficiently deferential’ to the Queen of England. Canadian diplomats had to tell their Indian counterparts that the extradition protocols between Commonwealth countries would not apply because India only recognized Her Majesty as Head of the Commonwealth and not as Head of State. Case closed!

Parmar was the head of the Khalistani terrorist organization BKI, which in 1985, bombed Kanishka. And Pierre Trudeau is largely blamed for the Kanishka bombing, as it was only after his government ‘saved Parmar’ that he started preparing for the bombing. In 1984, Parmar told his fellow Khalistanis that, “Indian planes will fall from the sky”. In the same year, Ajaib Singh Bagri, a close associate of Parmar, pledged to kill Hindus. He said at the founding convention of the World Sikh Organization, “Until we kill 50,000 Hindus, we will not rest!”

Reports suggest that Canadian authorities were aware of what Parmar was planning. One of the Canadian police informers had told police that Parmar promised him to pay a suitcase full of money if he agreed to plant a bomb on the plane. Parmar and his aide Inderjit Reyat were in the radar of the secret agency officials of Canada. They witnessed them testing a bomb on Vancouver Island. However, the police and spy agencies did not take the information about the bombing seriously and considered the informers unreliable. The Canadian authorities even lost or destroyed some of the key evidence. As a result, a trial in the case of the Kanishka bombing ended in acquittal of the accused due to lack of evidence.

In 1992, Parmar was killed by the Indian police when he sneaked into Punjab from Pakistan.

Today, Justin Trudeau’s is a coalition Government, following the September 2021 snap Elections he had called, hoping to win a majority on his own. He wasn’t successful as his Liberal Party won 157 seats in the 338 member Parliament and is backed by the ‘Khalistan-Friendly’ Jagmeet Singh’s New Democratic Party with 24 seats.

In August this year Justin Trudeau and his wife Sophie Gregoire announced that they are separating after 18 years of marriage.

India’s suffering has been Himalayan on account of Khalistan related terrorism, and Canada is only rubbing salt into the wounds of many decades.

Meanwhile, the ice is melting in Antarctica.

Antarctica’s Ice

Antarctica’s huge ice expanse regulates the planet’s temperature, as the white surface reflects the Sun’s energy back into the atmosphere and also cools the water beneath and near it.

Sea-ice acts as a protective sleeve for the ice covering the land and prevents the ocean from heating up. As more sea-ice disappears, it exposes dark areas of ocean, which absorb sunlight instead of reflecting it, meaning that the heat energy is added into the water, which in turn melts more ice. Scientists call this the ice-albedo effect.

The sea-ice surrounding Antarctica is well below any previous recorded winter level a worrying new benchmark for a region that once seemed resistant to global warming. The ice that floats on the Antarctic Ocean’s surface now measures less than 17 million square km, i.e., 1.5 million square km of sea-ice less than the September average, and well below previous winter record lows.

An unstable Antarctica could have far-reaching consequences, polar experts warn. Without its ice cooling the planet, Antarctica could transform from being Earth’s Refrigerator to becoming Earth’s Radiator.

Scientists are still trying to identify all the factors that led to this year’s low sea-ice – but studying trends in Antarctica has historically been challenging.

In a year when several global heat and ocean temperature records have been broken, some scientists insist the low sea-ice is the measure to pay attention to.

Sea-ice forms in the continent’s winter (March to October) before largely melting in summer. And is part of an interconnected system that also consists of icebergs, land ice and huge ice shelves – floating extensions of land ice jutting out from the coast.

That could add a lot more heat to the planet, disrupting Antarctica’s usual role as a regulator of global temperatures.

Since the 1990s, the loss of land ice from Antarctica has contributed 7.2mm to sea-level rise.

Even modest increases in sea levels can result in dangerously high storm surges that could wipe out coastal communities. If significant amounts of land ice were to start melting, the impacts would be catastrophic for millions of people around the world.

Women’s Reservation

This week, India’s Parliament, which shifted operations from the old ‘colonial era’ Building to the spanking new ,vibrant Parliament Building passed a historic Women’s Reservation Bill -providing 33% reservation in the Lok Sabha (Member of Parliament) and State Assemblies Member of Legislative Assembly). This with a two-third’s majority in the Lok Sabha -only two voted against-and an unanimous vote-without dissent- in the Rajya Sabha. It will be made into law on the assent of the President of India, which is a mere formality. The Bill had been languishing in the corridors of Parliament for over 27 years. And this time has made it, but implementation would not be immediate.

The Reservation will come into effect after the national census and delimitation exercise is completed by the year 2029.

Asia Cup Cricket

India were crowned Asia Cup Champions for an eighth time after crushing defending Champions Sri Lanka by 10 wickets in the final in Colombo this Sunday. India literally steam-rolled Sri Lanka, to win the Cup.

Sri Lanka won the toss and opted to bat. In a fiery spell of bowling, India’s Mohammed Siraj grabbed four wickets in his second over, removing two batsmen in successive balls, to break the backbone of the Sri Lankan batting order.

Mohammed Siraj’s 6 wickets for 21 runs helped bundle Sri Lanka out for 50 runs before India’s opening batsmen chased the target down in 6.1 overs, pulling off its biggest-ever One Day International victory in terms of balls remaining.

More melting stories coming-up in the weeks ahead. Play with World Inthavaaram.