Tuesday, September 29, 2009

The Leviathan of Libido - IIPM News

The sexual scandals of Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi are bordering on bizarre, say Sutanu Guru & Saurabh Kumar Shahi

During an electoral rally in 2006:

“I will try to meet your expectations and I promise from now on, two and half months of absolute sexual abstinence until Election Day on April 9”

During a meeting with New York Stock Exchange officials and investors in 2003:

“Italy is now a great country to invest in…today we have fewer communists and those who are still there deny having been one…Another reason to invest in Italy is that we have beautiful secretaries…superb girls”

While denying in June, 2009 that he paid an ‘escort’ money to spend the night with him:

“I have never paid a woman…I have never understood what satisfaction there is if the pleasure of conquest is absent”

You have guessed wrong. These outrageous statements have not been made by a Hollywood star or a punk brat who has made waves in the world of rap music. Nor is he a Richard Branson style flamboyant entrepreneur who loves to flaunt ‘beautiful’ women even as he makes billions. Nor is he the promoter of a soft porn Empire a la Hugh Heffner.

He happens to be Silvio Berlusconi, the democratically elected Prime Minister of Italy, arguably the most economically prosperous and successful country of Europe in recent times. And yes, God knows how many males across the world who seek salvation and resurrection of a different kind through Viagra will be flaming red with envy when they get to know that Berlusconi is almost 75-years-old.

As life expectancy grows around the world, Berlusconi is living proof that carnal expectations seem to be inextricably linked. This media tycoon turned right-wing politician has a knack of getting away with virtually anything. He flirts flagrantly with the German Chancellor Angela Merkel. He casually and contemptuously insults leaders of other countries and claims he was just joking. And he wins elections. It seems that voters in Italy have consistently chosen to overlook the vaudeville escapades of their leader; perhaps just as American citizens rewarded Bill Clinton with unprecedented approval ratings after he was almost impeached for his White House dalliances with the intern Monica Lewinsky.

But this theatre of the absurd might just be beginning to unravel for Berlusconi. In May, 2009, his long suffering second wife Veronica Lario publicly announced that she was filing for divorce. The last straw apparently was Berlusconi attending the birthday party of 18-year-old Noemi Letizia, a ‘bombshell’ who loves to call him papa and loves even more to spend time with him. Letizia is sure that ‘Papa’ will sponsor her career either as a showgirl or a politician (Berlusconi created a storm this year when he nominated young and attractive girls to contest elections for the European Parliament. He has gone on record to say that right-wing women politicians are “more beautiful and that the Left has no taste even when it comes to women”).

Berlusconi's wife lamented that the Prime Minister of Italy had not even bothered to attend the 18th birthday bash of his own son and claimed she “cannot remain with a man who consorts with minors… and is not well”. Since then, newspapers and other media outlets have unleashed a frenzy of stories of the escapades of Berlusconi. The Man has retaliated by suing many of them but has failed to stop the growing tide of titillating stories about his adventures. And finally, it does appear that voters in Italy might just be getting tired of all this theatre.

For us in India, this might appear comic, hilarious and even ethereally unreal (After all, can you imagine even a state level leader – forget the Prime Minister – of India getting embroiled in such deliciously juicy and salacious scandals that are reported by India’s 24 hour news channels with relish?). But there are serious issues that lie buried below the brouhaha over Berlusconi. And the most important one is about the conduct and behaviour of a public representative and a leader. It is about the role of Caesar’s wife and the old tale about her need to be above suspicion. Should a leader be “infallible” when it comes to his or her personal life/ Should a leader set an example for all other citizens by consistently displaying “family values”?

Traditionally, there has been a deep divide between continental Europe and the Anglo-Saxon countries – particularly United Kingdom and the United States of America. In the latter, it has always been the kiss of death for a political career if a married politician is ‘found’ to be cavorting with the ‘other woman’. Not many of you will perhaps recall, but there was a promising Democrat politician called Gary Hart whose Presidential ambitions died in the late 1980s when the ‘paparazzi caught him in the act’. Back in the 1960s, many a career in Britain was doomed to infamy and exile when it was discovered that the Soviet spy agency KGB was using the ‘other woman’ to ‘compromise’ public leaders. (India, of course, is firmly in the Anglo-Saxon alliance of morality).

In continental Europe, both the media and the voters seem to be far more relaxed. It is only long after he finished his Presidency that the French media revealed that Francois Mitterand had fathered a love child. And the French didn’t really bother when their President Nicolas Sarkozy divorced his wife and married the Italian model Carla Bruni. Nor have the Italians been very upset with the calisthenics of their leader Berlusconi. But the tide seems to be turning now and the ageing Berlusconi might just realise that too much of a good thing can be bad for your career. Incidentally, it was about 20 years ago that Berlusconi divorced his first wife and married Veronica Lario. Interestingly, his first glimpse of Veronica was as a topless artiste on stage.

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008

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


Read these article :-
Delhi/ NCR B- Schools get better
IIPM fights meltdown

Friday, September 25, 2009

The Leviathan of Libido

The sexual scandals of Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi are bordering on bizarre, say Sutanu Guru & Saurabh Kumar Shahi

During an electoral rally in 2006:

“I will try to meet your expectations and I promise from now on, two and half months of absolute sexual abstinence until Election Day on April 9”

During a meeting with New York Stock Exchange officials and investors in 2003:

“Italy is now a great country to invest in…today we have fewer communists and those who are still there deny having been one…Another reason to invest in Italy is that we have beautiful secretaries…superb girls”

While denying in June, 2009 that he paid an ‘escort’ money to spend the night with him:

“I have never paid a woman…I have never understood what satisfaction there is if the pleasure of conquest is absent”

You have guessed wrong. These outrageous statements have not been made by a Hollywood star or a punk brat who has made waves in the world of rap music. Nor is he a Richard Branson style flamboyant entrepreneur who loves to flaunt ‘beautiful’ women even as he makes billions. Nor is he the promoter of a soft porn Empire a la Hugh Heffner.

He happens to be Silvio Berlusconi, the democratically elected Prime Minister of Italy, arguably the most economically prosperous and successful country of Europe in recent times. And yes, God knows how many males across the world who seek salvation and resurrection of a different kind through Viagra will be flaming red with envy when they get to know that Berlusconi is almost 75-years-old.

As life expectancy grows around the world, Berlusconi is living proof that carnal expectations seem to be inextricably linked. This media tycoon turned right-wing politician has a knack of getting away with virtually anything. He flirts flagrantly with the German Chancellor Angela Merkel. He casually and contemptuously insults leaders of other countries and claims he was just joking. And he wins elections. It seems that voters in Italy have consistently chosen to overlook the vaudeville escapades of their leader; perhaps just as American citizens rewarded Bill Clinton with unprecedented approval ratings after he was almost impeached for his White House dalliances with the intern Monica Lewinsky.

But this theatre of the absurd might just be beginning to unravel for Berlusconi. In May, 2009, his long suffering second wife Veronica Lario publicly announced that she was filing for divorce. The last straw apparently was Berlusconi attending the birthday party of 18-year-old Noemi Letizia, a ‘bombshell’ who loves to call him papa and loves even more to spend time with him. Letizia is sure that ‘Papa’ will sponsor her career either as a showgirl or a politician (Berlusconi created a storm this year when he nominated young and attractive girls to contest elections for the European Parliament. He has gone on record to say that right-wing women politicians are “more beautiful and that the Left has no taste even when it comes to women”).

Berlusconi's wife lamented that the Prime Minister of Italy had not even bothered to attend the 18th birthday bash of his own son and claimed she “cannot remain with a man who consorts with minors… and is not well”. Since then, newspapers and other media outlets have unleashed a frenzy of stories of the escapades of Berlusconi. The Man has retaliated by suing many of them but has failed to stop the growing tide of titillating stories about his adventures. And finally, it does appear that voters in Italy might just be getting tired of all this theatre.

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Thursday, September 24, 2009

The alumni re'union

Unions can mark the beginning of a new social renaissance

Recently it has been observed in the sub-continent that their most prized possession or much touted about demographic dividend are actually adopting a wrong path. Students (a big part of this demographic dividend) are considered as one of the most important agents of change. In numerous incidences, these students and students' unions have helped in toppling governments and bringing about positive changes. For example, Nepal’s restoration of democracy in 2006. But lately, in most parts of these third world countries, students' unions seem to have adopted the path of violence, crime and power-politics.

Some of the universities are heavily affected by criminal activities and there are times when dangerous arms and ammunitions reach the students. Hence, many nations like Pakistan, Bangladesh (in some parts of India) have started banning these unions. Take for instance India, where recently a group of students from a powerful union killed a professor and finally were left unpunished due to lack of evidence (again due to power-politics, as no one dared to testify against them). Likewise in Pakistan, student unions are banned (since late 1980s) as most of them are more like gangsters and rogues, instead of noble students working for the welfare and grooming of the fellow students. Unions like National Students Federation (NSF), Muslim Students Federation (MSF), Peoples Students Federation (PSF), All Pakistan Mohajir Students Federation (APMSO) and others are more involved in blood activity and nasty disputes. Last year, students' union literally burnt Bangladesh as they caused violence in University of Dhaka, thus killing nearly 300 people and leading to a long period of curfew. But then, it doesn’t mean that these unions were always bad. Be it Education Not for Sale (ENS) campaign in the UK, student movement for free Tibet, Tuition Reform Action Coalition in New York University, Kyoto Now! a student-led movement… the list seems endless.

Instead of entering politics and protesting for petty issues and power gaining exercise, it would be very fruitful if the same group of influential people stood for a change and entered politics – of course, for a positive change. Students should rather exploit these unions as an avenue to participate in elections, represent fellow students’ concerns, negotiate with the concerned authorities for the greater good and motivate students in contemporary civic and political life. This will eventually inculcate democratic practices amongst students, some of whom are likely to be statesmen and leaders of tomorrow. Students’ union also can act as a platform for the youth to demand better educational services from the universities and prepare vibrant denizens for democratic practices.

It is the youth that can bring peace in the subcontinent and also unite them- socially, culturally, politically (if not geographically) - and bring about a new social renaissance. And the most important point is that this uprising should not be for anyone else but for students themselves. As this will not only create a better world for others but also for themselves. After all, the oxford dictionary defines students union as ‘a building on a college campus dedicated to social and organisational activities of the student body.’


For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008

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

Read these article :-
Delhi/ NCR B- Schools get better
IIPM fights meltdown

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Reality shows - Vulgar confessions

It is highly immoral to divulge the darker side of life simply to make money

Dr Aruna Broota

Consulting clinical psychologist


I get very upset when I watch this new TV serial Sach Ka Saamna. It should have been titled Apne Ko Bechna! This serial has had a most deleterious impact on our society and family relations. India has always been celebrated for its social integrity, moral values and strong family bonding. Many things happen in life. But it is wrong to divulge the darker side of it simply to make money. It was painful to hear the anchor asking the participant whether he would sleep with another woman if he was sure his wife would not come to know of it. And it was just as painful to hear the participant responding in the affirmative and the “yes” being followed by frenzied clapping from the audience. Then the anchor wanted to know whether he had had physical relations with a girl younger than his own daughter! Yes, said the man, to more loud clapping.

All this should shame the serial’s producers to their feet. I ask, is this anything to rejoice about? It is quite possible that the man’s daughter is mature enough to listen to such stuff — but what about children from conservative and close knit families? Don’t you think they would feel traumatised?

My work is with children, mainly adolescent girls. I know their psychology well — know that they watch this programme very keenly. Not because they enjoy its contents, but because they like seeing the participants making money from their confessions. For these children too want to make easy money — the means be damned.

It is being said that the serial has been adapted from an internationally acclaimed show called Moment of Truth, which has a huge fan following in the United States. Well it may suit the American mindset which holds private space to be sacred. I can understand that. Nor for that matter am I averse to having a relationship myself. There is nothing in the least wrong with that and it is good to be pragmatic. Also, many of our young boys and girls spend 8 to 12 hours working in liberal workplaces. But then all of us, including them, have been brought up in a culture that is poles apart from that of the Americans.

It is quite obvious that the worst sufferers are the programme’s adolescent viewers. Just imagine what it must be doing to their minds! To think that such puerile confessions earn them Rs 1 crore — the bait the programmers dangle before their audiences, all of whom are dying to become crorepatis overnight!

No one will dispute that these stage managed shows grossly violate the sanctity of conjugal life; or that they pollute young and vulnerable minds. Yes, what are we teaching our children through such vulgar tamashas? Remember that in children and adolescents hormonal changes occur at a much faster rate than in adults; and more particularly in girls, who these days become physically active at age nine. All the more reason why these shows should be banned, seeing how deeply they damage child-parent ties. Such recklessness is a sure recipe for destroying familial ties.

Sex can be very beautiful when it is controlled and there is no vulgarity in it. And well, if in these fast-paced times we can’t stop such shows, we can at least do them in a way so that the damage is minimal. But then that calls for sensitive monitoring, which is completely absent here. We all know how little the censor board does about such content. And after the advent of internet, there is absolutely no control over content, which circulates freely in cyberspace. Go to Google and see it for yourself. My question is simply this: if one can’t watch a show with our families, why allow them to be made at all? Of course, as I said, adults are hurt much less than children whose ability to discriminate between good and evil is extremely limited. One day the father of a girl came to my clinic and started talking about the DPS MMS scandal. His daughter was sitting right in front of me, and there he was asking me whether I had seen the offensive MMS clipping. I said hadn’t and felt no desire to see it either. But just imagine what must have been going on inside the mind of this little girl.
For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

This is the house that jack...

Karunanidhi wouldn't have expected such a ruckus

When MLAs in Tamil Nadu went to Chief Minister Karunanidhi seeking allotment of 2,400 sq feet of prime land near Chennai (for housing purposes), he predictably agreed. Reason: The DMK is a minority government run with Congress support. Gnanasekaran – the Congress MLA who led the move – had no trouble getting the signatures of 105 MLAs. But some sections of people in the state are at odds with the decision. The question some are asking is – if each legislator is allotted a spacious flat in the MLA hostel, why this new requirement?

Gnanasekaran gives his defence saying his demand is justified. After all, he says, there are several states where MLAs get houses in colonies just as journalists do, "All sections of people are given houses; so why make an exception of MLAs?”

CPM MLA Balabharathy disagrees, “This is a selfish demand. In Chennai city alone, one lakh people live without patta land. Considering there is such huge land scarcity, how can the government give away the land to MLAs?” Agrees Thamazharuvimanian, senior political activist and writer: “Every five years, 234 MLAs get elected. If this practice becomes the norm, a time will come when the rest of us will need to go to the Bay of Bengal to find shelter! There are leaders like Jeeva in this state who lived in huts all their lives." A convoluted logic, surely; but the writer makes a better point when he says, "Most MLAs own crores of rupees. All of them should seek housing loans like ordinary people.”

Gyanasekaran makes his relevant point by commenting, “It is not as though we are asking the land for free... We will pay at the rate fixed by the Housing Board." Sensing opportunity, the Communist parties have been joined by the Bharatiya Janata Party in opposing the move. The vice-president of BJP’s state unit says this is setting a dangerous precedent. “Other things apart, it will also push up real estate prices in the locality,” he fears. Some critics point out that many of the flats in the MLA hostel are occupied by their relatives.

It is true that MLAs recently got their salary raised to Rs 50,000 per month after putting in a request through the relevant chambers. Coming at close heels of this raise, the 'housing' request was surely expected to raise a few hackles. But the noise level the issue has reached has surprised even the CM.

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008

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

Read these article :-
Delhi/ NCR B- Schools get better
IIPM fights meltdown



Friday, September 18, 2009

Let the music play

It is time for the world to ‘hear’ in between the lines!

When recently (July, 2009) United Airlines denied to pay compensation to Canadian singer Dave Carroll (after his guitar got broken), Dave composed a song titled United Breaks Guitars and uploaded the same on YouTube. The song became instant hit, alluring four million users in just 10 days, resulting in drop of the airline’s share price by whopping 10 per cent or $180 million! Welcome to the world of Resistance by Music. This incident is not a recent phenomenon, but has a long history attached to it.

During early 1940s, rock-n-roll raised voice against the growing British Invasion and through its soundtrack gave voice to youth rebellions. In 1950s, Brazil’s bossa nova used its music to raise many local issues as well. During the Vietnam war songs like, Edwin Starr's War, Jimi Hendrix's All Along the Watchtower, Wars of Armageddon, Jimmy Cliff's Vietnam - to name a few, talked about peace and melancholic mood of society. In the US, during late 1960s, Black Power Movement fuelled the popularity of rap and hip-hop music. The members and supporters of this movement used rap and hip-hop music to highlight issues like racial dignity, self-reliance and economic empowerment of Black Africans. Similarly, artists raised their voice against Bush Sr. (when he sent troops to Kuwait in 1991) through their songs like "I Wanna Kill Sam" and "Bush Killa". A number of south-African pop artists after being exiled, were able to bring issues pertaining to apartheid to the world’s attention.

Music has the capability to revolutionise people who listen to it. Hip-hop has affected many different cultures and societies in affirmative ways. In Sweden, NGOs incorporate graffiti and dance to engage disaffected immigrant and working class youths. Indigenous youths in Bolivia, Chile, Indonesia, New Zealand and Norway use hip-hop to advance new forms of identity. Numerous African and French artists use hip-hop and other modern (youth appealing) form of music to address environmental justice, policing and prisons, media justice and education, per se.

Seun Kuti created the famous Afrobeat to give a voice to Nigeria's disenfranchised and spread awareness on endemic corruption and the abuse of youth through his music. Asian Dub Foundation (a British electronica band) since last 15 years, has been singing messages of social change while Nuno Santos of Portugal is trying to redress injustice against migrants through his music. Many institutes are delivering messages on Green revolution, against the ongoing demonstrations opposing the Iranian regime, Mexico drug abuse, Brazil's social unrest through their music.

As music galvanises with almost any type of culture ­— its size, scope and reach can not be confined to any geography. Even today musicians, singers and artists — from Elvis Presley to Michael Jackson, the list seems endless — use art, music and soundtracks to raise latent issues about cultural, environment and politics. Along with reaping huge monetary returns, music is equally an astonishing source of youth's expression. Before this peaceful medium of resistance takes the shape of violence, it would be better for the world to de-encrypt the message hidden in the lyrics. United Airlines finally learnt its lesson as it had to offer Dave $3,000 ­— so if United Airlines can learn, then why not the whole world? Until then, let the beats of this 'sacred drums of resistance' roll…


For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008

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

Read these article :-
Delhi/ NCR B- Schools get better
IIPM fights meltdown

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Tinderbox state

Punjab is skating on thin ice as long-dormant militant outfits rear their heads in the face of continuing government apathy and ineptitude, reports Jagtar Singh

A July 30 e-mail addressed by Babbar Khalsa to journalists in Patiala set the cat among the pigeons. The militant outfit claimed responsibility for the murderous attack on Rashtriya Sikh Sangat leader Rulda Singh, who succumbed to his injuries a few days later. This was not an isolated incident.

A day earlier, Lily Kumar, a follower of the Sirsa-based Dera Sacha Sauda, had been gunned down in Patiala. This Dera, headed by the controversial Baba Ram Rahim Singh, has followers in parts of Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh. It has the power to influence political permutations and combinations in the region in general and the Malwa area of Punjab in particular. The Dera has been at loggerheads with Sikh religious organisations for some time.

The Rashtriya Sikh Sangat is an affiliate of the Sangh Parivar. When the Akali Dal-BJP combine came to power in Punjab in 1997, the Sangat had tried to spread its tentacles in the border state. The activities of the Sikh Sangat and its parent body, RSS, provoked hardliners in the state. The Akal Takht, the supreme Sikh institution for prayer and politics, had to take a stand against the RSS much to the discomfiture of moderate Akalis. Rulda Singh, who had his religious training in Damdami Taksal, considered to be the fountain head of militancy in the 1980s, shot into prominence when he came into contact with some militant leaders settled overseas, particularly in Europe.

This interaction was part of an RSS initiative to put an end to the legacy of the dark days of Punjab militancy. The Sikh Sangat considers Sikhs to be part of the greater Hindu family. In a recorded interaction with some leaders, Rulda Singh had claimed that he was close to BJP leader L.K. Advani.

Senior police officials who have been in the forefront of the fight against militancy are keeping their fingers crossed. Preferring anonymity, one officer says, “These two incidents cannot be dismissed as isolated. The situation calls for a close watch.” And there are striking similarities between the current situation in Punjab and that which prevailed in 1978.

However, this perception is not shared by Dr Pramod Kumar, Director, Institute for Development and Communications and Chairman of the Administrative Reforms Committee constituted by the Punjab government. “These are only sporadic incidents but they need to be taken seriously. There is no chance of resurgence of any extreme political articulation,” he says. There is, he argues, no external stimulus to aid and abet a renewed spurt in militancy in Punjab.

The flare-up in the late 1970s stemmed from simmering tensions between Sikhs and Nirankaris. The first militant killing was of Nirankari chief Baba Gurbachan Singh in 1980 to avenge the killing of 13 Sikhs in Amritsar by Nirankaris on Baisakhi day of 1978. The second leader to be targetted was also a Nirankari. The sect had come under attack allegedly for denigrating the Sikh theology.

Today, it is the Dera Sacha Sauda that has earned the ire of Sikh organisations. The head of the sect had appeared at a congregation in a dress associated with Guru Gobind Singh, the tenth Sikh Guru. As it had done in the case of the Nirankaris, the Akal Takht issued a hukamnama (edict) against the Dera.


The similarities do not end here. Parkash Singh Badal was the Chief Minister in 1978. Of course, his government had been dismissed by the time Baba Gurbachan Singh was gunned down in 1980. However, he had come under fire from leaders like the then Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee chief, Gurcharan Singh Tohra, for pussyfooting on the Nirankari issue. This was one of the allegations levelled against him in the chargesheet submitted by Tohra and the then Akali Dal President, Jagdev Singh Talwandi, to Akal Takht Jathedar Giani Sadhu Singh Bhaura while resigning from their posts in 1979.

Badal is Chief Minister again and he is once more under severe attack from the radicals for his soft approach towards Dera Sacha Sauda. One prominent Sikh religious leader spearheading the campaign against the Dera is Takht Damdama Sahib chief, Jathedar Balwant Singh Nandgarh, an appointee of the SGPC. The tone and tenor of his speech at a recent meeting in Bathinda district, which discussed the situation arising out of arrests made by the police following the attack on Dera Sacha Sauda followers, cannot be dismissed.


For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008

An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative
Read these article :-
Delhi/ NCR B- Schools get better
IIPM fights meltdown