Tuesday, June 08, 2010

In a new light

As opposition to the move subsides, the bankrupt Punjab State Electricity Board is bifurcated, setting in motion a long-overdue process of power sector reforms, reports Jagtar Singh

“Which is the place where people feel happy for 15 minutes every four hours?” This was the question in an SMS circulated widely some time ago. The answer, of course, was: “Punjab”! This has been the state of power for the common man in the state and the ruling party used power subsidies as a pawn for gathering votes. Thus there was grave resistance for a long time to the unbundling of the Punjab State Electricity Board (PSEB). But now the state is finally moving towards progressive reform in the power sector.

Though the high tension wires emitted danger signals for months, sparks did not fly as the Punjab government finally went ahead to unplug the six-decade-old PSEB to set in motion the process of power reforms. It has set up two news bodies under the Electricity Act, 2003 replacing the monolith which was considered overstaffed, corrupt, inefficient and financially bankrupt.

The state had virtually turned into a garrison with the army on standby and central forces and police out in strength to maintain law and order. They kept the system running in the wake of the two-day strike call given by various PSEB employees' unions who had the support from 22 other organisations representing the farmers, landless labourers and other toiling sections.

Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal, after 17 extensions from the Centre since the Electricity Act became effective, finally decided to go ahead with the much-needed power sector reforms and brought it on the agenda of the state cabinet, which met on April 15 morning to bifurcate the PSEB into Punjab State Power Corporation Limited (Powercom) and Punjab State Transmission Corporation Limited (Transco). Badal said after the meeting, “The bifurcation would make the power system more efficient, accountable and responsive to the consumer needs”.

Interestingly, only last month, power engineers had urged Badal to bail out the PSEB from the financial mess it was caught in. It was virtually on the verge of a collapse. Due to the financial crisis, ongoing works had been affected as payments to contractors and suppliers had been stopped.

Even the reimbursement of medical and other bills of the employees had been stopped and payments from the provident fund account too were not being made to those on the rolls. PSEB had been running up losses that amounted to Rs 1800 crore during 2006-07, Rs. 1611 crore in the succeeding year and the like. The losses were estimated to be Rs. 2300 crore during the last financial year.

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Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Monday, June 07, 2010

A bureaucrat doctor…

That’s what Faisal Shah, the topper of this year’s civil services examinations wants to be. A qualified doctor, he wants to put soothing balm on the wounds of the Kashmiri people, albeit in the garb of a bureaucrat. So he tells Haroon Reshi

Eight years after his father was assassinated by militants, Faisal Shah, 26, has succeeded in transforming his traumatic past into a glittering achievement. His harrowing past experiences could not wane his passion and dedication to attain his objective.

Shah, a government school pass-out from a remote village of the border district of Kupwara, became the first Kashmiri and the third Indian Muslim to have topped the Union Public Service Commission examination in the 63-year history of independent India.

The Kashmir valley erupted in spontaneous celebration as soon as the news of Faisal’s success spread out. Soon, his Srinagar house was teeming with overjoyed relatives and friends. Neighbours and well-wishers made it a point to convey their happiness and best regards to the future IAS officer. Youngsters burst crackers, raised slogans and beat drums outside, though it was raining hard. Kashmiri traditional chefs were brought in to make the wazwan (customary feast) for the guests. That was on May 7.

A cheerful atmosphere still prevails at Faisal’s residence in the Hyderpora area of Srinagar.

“My son has made me proud. It was his father’s dream to make him an IAS officer,” says Mubeena Begum, Faisal’s mother, as she serves Kashmiri kehwa.

Mubeena, a school teacher, is obviously the happiest soul on earth these days. “I am grateful to Allah that He has shown me this day,” she adds, with tears of joy sparkling in her eyes. A total number of 875 candidates (680 men and 195 women) were recommended for Indian Administrative Service (IAS), Indian Foreign Service (IFS), Indian Police Service (IPS) and other central services. Faisal is among the 21 Muslims (including three other Kashmiris) on the list of 875 successful candidates. “I have shattered the myth that Kashmiris cannot crack this prestigious examination,” says Faisal, who will be turning 27 on the 17th of this month.

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Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Friday, June 04, 2010

One year after LTTE

One year after the Tigers were silenced, the victorious Mahinda Rajapakse is stronger than ever. But as the Tamil Diaspora nurtures the dream of a Tamil Eelam, N. Asokan finds that only a meaningful political solution can bring permanent peace

The Fourth Eelam War in Sri Lanka finally came to an end on May 17, 2009, with the LTTE international relations head, K.P. alias Selvarajha Padmanathan, announcing that “The LTTE have decided to silence the guns.” Over 25,000 Tamils died in the final three months of the Fourth Eelam War which started in 2006. LTTE had waged armed struggle against marginalisation of minority Tamils in the island nation for almost three decades. From a position of controlling over 15000 square kilometer, they were pushed to 2 square kilometer at the end of the War, with scores of Tamil civilians moving along with them. The end of LTTE came when its supremo Veluppilai Prabhakaran’s body was identified from the Nandhikadal lagoon. Selevaraja Padmanathan, who was trying to revive the struggle with support from the Tamil Diaspora, was also arrested in Malaysia and brought to Colombo. As the first anniversary of the end of the war passes, the island nation has witnessed a series of important events in the last one year. In the political front, riding over the euphoria of triumph, Mahinda Rajapakse secured a massive victory in the presidential elections, he arrested war hero-turned political opponent Sarath Fonseka. Rajapakse’s party also secured a massive victory in the parliamentary elections. Rajapakse and his brothers have brilliantly strengthened their individual positions in no time.

But what has happened to the Tamils battered by the war? As the war progressed, LTTE was continuously on the run in the northern areas. It had already withdrawn from the east as their renegade ‘Col Karuna’ teamed up with Colombo. As a strategic move, it took three lakh Tamils along with it when it withdrew from its operational headquarters at Kilinochi. For three months, all these men, women and children were continuously on the run. These civilians became sitting ducks for the Lankan forces’ heavy artillery and planes. Everyday, scores of people died. When it was all but obvious that the LTTE would be defeated, they escaped the clutches of the Tigers and came to the side of the Lankan army. The strategy of the Tigers had been to get international involvement to force a ceasefire and simultaneously trying to bring about a possible turnaround in the fate of the war. It did not follow the script. Even the emotions whipped up in the state of Tamil Nadu in the run-up to the parliamentary elections did not yield the desired results. The octogenerian leader, M. Karunanidhi, addressed Tamil sentiments by taking part in a three-hour fast.

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Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Thursday, June 03, 2010

Two – or more – in the bush?

It takes a lot of guts for celebrities to come out in the open about their relationships. But what must have taken the 40-year-old Gerard Butler to reveal not only about his secret dates but about their parallel existence in his life? Seemingly, these dates haven’t been with Jennifer Aniston or Kate Hudson, who have reportedly jeopardised their friendship for him, but were apparently with women nobody knew about. In fact, he was also recently spotted kissing a mysterious blonde in Serbia, where he is shooting for his upcoming flick. Well, if this is surprising, consider what the actor has been heard saying – “I get laid less now than I used to because I'm more paranoid now. I'm nowhere near as naughty as I used to be"!

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Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Wednesday, June 02, 2010

Dream turns sour

Cops bust human trafficking racket running in Kollam

Intelligence officials in Kerala and Tamil Nadu are homing in on Sri Lankan Tamils who don’t have proper travel documents and papers to reside in the states. Recently, Kerala police arrested 38 Sri Lankan Tamils, including five women and five children, from a lodge in Kollam after a tip-off from TN police.

Doubting their links with terrorist outfit LTTE, they were quizzed by sleuths from the Intelligence Bureau, Tamil Nadu’s Q Branch police and Kerala police. While the women and children were allowed to remain in the lodge, the men were taken to Kollam East Police station. Kollam SP Harshita Attalluri says that we try to make sure that no pro-LTTE activities are taking place in refugee camps.

During interrogation, the arrested men told the police that they were Indian citizens. Unconvinced with their arguments, the cops kept on questioning them. It was then that the real story came out. It’s understood that they had migrated to TN two years back. Of late they came to Kerala. Since then they have been there and looking for opportunities to go abroad. They told their interrogators that they had paid something between Rs 2 lakh and 5 lakh to agents who had promised them a trip to Australia.

Based on the information, the cops arrested one agent Dennis. He revealed that the refugees were due to be ferried in ships bound for Australia. Also, he told the police that earlier around 50 people were trafficked to Australia. Sources say such fake agents are active in the camps. In the name of sending them overseas, they fleece these Sri Lankan Tamils who think that landing in these countries will change their fortune. However, in this case no action was taken against the Sri Lankans. They were allowed to go back to a refugee camp in Rameswaram. Many Lankan Tamil refugees cross the border from TN to Kerala to find work as payment is better compared to other states.

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Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Tuesday, June 01, 2010

Your life, our rules

A free-for-all scenario emerges in India with socio-religious bodies instructing individuals on how to live their lives, where to work, whom to marry, etc. Vikas Kumar, T. Satisan and Khurram Raza talk to those who issue these decrees and find them utterly unapologetic

In the Indian democratic framework, freedom of expression is slowly becoming the prerogative of organised, and often self-appointed, groups and organisations to issue draconian decrees which invariably infringe upon the principles of civil liberty and individual rights. And what is interesting and dangerous is that all of these groups have a quasi-socio-religious sanction. So if a Hindu Khap Panchayat decides the marital life of a young Haryanvi, the Darul Uloom Deoband puts paid to an educated Muslim woman’s dream of making it big in the corporate world. The Church in Kerala, on election eve, even instructs people whom to vote for. Its stand on drinking and sale of alcohol is also draconian. Recent incidents suggest that in spite of India sending out a lunar mission and becoming an IT powerhouse, these retrograde faces continue to challenge the principles of rights and liberty enshrined in the Constitution. The role of Khaps has become synonymous with ‘Honour Killing’ in the name of protecting caste and gotra (ancestral linkage) traditions. Khaps, representative bodies of a cluster of villages unified by the same caste, gotra or geography, have some roles in settling community disputes but, of late, they are in news for all the wrong reasons. They are constantly dishing out Taliban-like verdicts. The irony is that the entire establishment seems to be petrified when it comes to tackling these errant Khap leaders. Manoj and Babli dared to challenge the Khap’s decision. Both were brutally murdered. However, a trial court in Karnal district of Haryana dared to take the murderers on, sentencing the killers to death.

However, instead of learning from the judgment, Khap leaders openly opposed the verdict and even demanded amendment in the Hindu Marriage Act, seeking ban on same gotra marriage. Baljit Singh, a self-styled Khap leader, rubbishes all charges levelled against Khaps. He says, “It is unfortunate that words like ‘Tughlaqi Farman’ are being used for Khap verdicts.” Media persons in a presser in Delhi were stunned when he said, “We urged our members to help the victims of court judgment in the Manoj-Babli case on humanitarian grounds.”

The political establishment in Haryana has turned a blind eye, fearing loss of votes. Khaps exercise immense political clout and this can be gauged from the fact that INLD’s Om Prakash Chautala and the Congress’ Navin Jindal support them. Sompal Shastri, former Union agriculture minister, is evasive. He tells TSI, “To my knowledge none of the Khaps ordered honour killings. However, they can be criticised for not condemning these deaths.”

Prem Chaudhari, researcher on Khaps, says, “Khaps are medieval establishments and their primary task was to provide security. Earlier, villages were small and people knew each other well. In the last two to three decades, small villages have become bigger and numbers of gotra in these villages have increased from 4 or 5 to 20 or 25. People are getting educated and they often come out of their village in the pursuit of education or for jobs. This means increased interaction between boys and girls who often fall in love without knowing their caste or gotra. It is difficult for them to follow old customs and traditions as situations have completely changed.”

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Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Monday, May 03, 2010

Lahore’s Hollywood calling

It has become way too common to see Indian films copying or getting ‘inspired’ from films from the West, but it’s definitely exciting when Hollywood comes looking to remake an Indian film. Sanjay Puran Singh Chauhan's film “Lahore” has become the talk of the town for exactly this reason, for a major studio – Hollywood Gang – has approached Chauhan for the rights to remake the film. There are talks that Chauhan might be directing the film in English too. This, of course, is our cue to raise a toast to Chauhan and his film “Lahore”, for becoming the first Indian movie to be approached for a remake by a Hollywood studio!

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Read these article :-