Thursday, 6 June 2019
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hilpa Ghosh,CalcuttaHuge churnSir - In the article, "Too many blunders" (June 1), Sunanda K. Datta-Ray has highlighted some political realities in the aftermath of the Bharatiya Janata Party's overwhelming triumph in the Lok Sabha elections. One of these is the threat of the Trinamul Congress being ousted in West Bengal in the assembly elections in 2021. The people of the state seem to have forgiven Narendra Modi for not delivering on his promise to credit the account of every Indian citizen with 15 lakh rupees, and forgotten the fallouts of demonetization, the hurriedly-implemented goods and services tax and the growth of the Hindutva agenda. At the same time, they seem to have begun viewing religious minorities as a threat.Is the chief minister of Bengal, Mamata Banerjee, paying the price for her purported arrogance? When the TMC came to power in 2011, the sole credit for the victory was given to her, whereas the supportive role played by the Congress was denied. Additionally, the politics of appeasement had reared its head in the form of doles, while the legitimate dearness allowances of state government employees were being denied under the pretext of financial troubles. In such a situation, the BJP started making clear divisions among the electorate along communal lines. This contributed to it winning as many as 18 seats in Bengal.Moreover, the large-scale violence during the last panchayat elections in Bengal could have strengthened the resolve of other political parties to teach the ruling dispensation a lesson during the Lok Sabha polls. Perhaps the Left hoped that the rise of the BJP would unseat Banerjee, after which its own fortunes would improve. But given the BJP's supremacy at the Centre and its growing clout in Bengal, such aspirations will not be realized.Banerjee, however, had sensed the gradual loss of support, which is perhaps why she had taken some measures to combat it - for instance, she promised to pay Rs 380 to Brahmin priests at burning ghats for every cremation - but her actions came a little too late. The syndicate raj and anti-incumbency trends, among other factors, dealt big blows to her popularity.Now, on account of her knee-jerk reactions to new developments in the state, the chief minister's political maturity is being questioned. She is allowing the taunts of BJP supporters to get to her, and is behaving in a manner that is unbecoming of a leader. One still hopes that her years of experience in politics will help her sustain a healthy relationship between the Centre and the state. This will benefit her politically as well as help the development of the state.Indranil Banerjee,CalcuttaSir - The results of the recently-concluded Lok Sabha elections have not gone down well with Mamata Banerjee. Declining the invitation to attend the swearing-in ceremony of the prime minister was a choice she was free to make. But she reportedly did so because invitations were sent to the families of the BJP workers who, the party says, died in poll violence in Bengal. In this manner, she portrayed herself in an unfavourable light. As a feisty political personality, Banerjee had achieved the unthinkable by ousting the Left Front and keeping the Congress at bay in the state. But the cracks are now beginning to show, as she is losing ground to the BJP as the assembly elections draw closer. It is now up to the chief minister to put her administration in order and exercise her authority well in the state.Shovanlal Chakraborty,CalcuttaSir - Sunanda K. Datta-Ray has pointed to many important problems in West Bengal's politics. The BJP's victory in 18 seats was unthinkable, given the TMC's famed iron grip over the state. These surprise victories must be attributed to the hard work of the state BJP leaders. In spite of that, many members of parliament from the state, including the BJP state president, were not given ministerial berths at the Centre. This shows that the Centre has little regard for the achievements of the state leadership. Removing violence from Bengal politics must now be the first priority of all political parties.Debaprasad Banerjee,Calcutta DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: The Telegraphhttp://danmooredesigns.com/UserProfile/tabid/61/userId/350480/Default.aspx
Distorting lenses: Claiming Tagore for communal politics
We are just left surprised and speechless."The substance of the message consists of excerpts from Tagore's letters to Amiya Chakravarty and Hemantabala Devi, and from a couple of his essays on Indian history. I did not have time to fact-check all the quotations but did manage to check up on five of the eight excerpts provided. In each case, there was distortion and falsification of what Tagore actually said. The quotations either mangled sentences quoted or simply overlooked sentences that showed what Tagore's authorial intention may have been. Let me give a few examples. The forwarded message quoted the following from Tagore: "Everyday lower-class Hindus keep becoming Muslims or Christians [but] Bhatpara [pandits] remain unconcerned." What was entirely missing from this quotation were the first few words with which the sentence began: "Everyday, to save themselves from social humiliation [samajik asamman], lower-class Hindus ..." Thus, the sentence actually was an indictment of Hindu society and its caste oppressions, not of Islam. Or take this other example. The author(s) of the email message had Tagore saying, "wherever this religion [Islam] has gone, it has never rested before striking out against religions opposed to itself and laying them to the ground. India also had to bear [the momentum of] this terrible assault that worked its way through centuries." The citation was from an essay in Tagore's book, Santiniketan. I looked up the essay, and sure enough, the sentences were there. But their intended meaning became clear as I read further along, for a few sentences on, Tagore writes: "If we discuss the sayings of the saints [sadhak] who awoke to the age of the advent of Muslims [Tagore named Nanak, Ravidas, Kabir, and Dadu], we clearly see that Bharatvarsha was able to withstand easily the impact of this assault by baring her inmost truth... Bharatvarsha showed then that the [inner] truth of the religion of the Musalman was not something opposed to what Bharatvarsha regarded as the truth." This was surely not the full-throated indictment of Islam that the email my friend had received made it out to be. We have always known Tagore, correctly, as a well-wisher of both Hindus and Muslims and as someone desirous of their unity and brotherhood in Bengal. But he also always acknowledged the real difficulties that stood in the way of communal amity, though he never ceased to wish that Hindus and Muslims would find ways of being together. In his autobiography, the Bangladeshi leader, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, names only three Hindu-Bengali leaders as genuinely anti-communal in British India: Tagore, Chittaranjan Das, and Subhas Bose. The book of the historian, Sumit Sarkar, on the Swadeshi movement protesting the Partition of Bengal in 1905 discusses in detail how much Hindu zamindars' oppression of Muslim peasants in East Bengal contributed to Tagore's disenchantment with what passed for politics in our nationalist movement. I was simply appalled to see a distorted and caricatured Tagore now being mobilized to fan the flames of anti-Muslim sentiments among the Hindus of West Bengal - all in the interest of harvesting a few more seats in the elections to the Lok Sabha.The Bharatiya Janata Party's share of Lok Sabha seats from West Bengal has greatly increased. But what has also grown is what today, even from the distance of thousands of miles, feels a like a creeping communalization of Hindu sentiments in Bengal, at least among the urban, educated middle classes. The causes for this are no doubt multiple and deserve investigation. Perceptions are moulded in part by personal experiences. The stories I have been told by friends to explain the perceptible rise of anti-Muslim (translating into anti-Mamata Banerjee) sentiments in Calcutta and elsewhere are anecdotal and too few in number to act as a sure guide to any sociological conclusion. But some of the anecdotes are telling. A Hindu-Bengali friend I trust and respect told me about the difficulty he faces in selling his ancestral house in central Calcutta located close to a mosque that serves an established and increasingly assertive Muslim community. No Hindu, apparently, would buy in that area while my friend's family is reluctant to sell to Muslims. "Why should I," my friend asked in frustration,"have to suffer this situation in my own city?" He lays the blame, partly, at the door of what he regards as Mamata Banerjee's 'appeasement policy' towards Muslims.It is, of course, not surprising to hear Hindus or Muslims in Bengal speak of each other's community in derisive terms. The sentiments are old, powerful, and understandable, especially in a community still scarred by the memories of 1947. And the politics of aiming for 'Muslim' votes without doing anything substantial for the development of the community goes back to a time well beyond the Trinamul years. But now, since the BJP was desperate to win more seats in West Bengal, these feelings were stoked and worked upon to ensure electoral victory. Mamata Banerjee, some of my friends tell me these days, is not just a Muslim-lover, she is actually 'anti-Hindu'. There is a perception abroad that the Hindu-Bengalis are, once again, a threatened species and only the BJP can save them from extinction. Friends on social media have forwarded fake videos of Mamata Banerjee's police beating up 'white' Hare Krishna devotees for selling or distributing copies of the Gita (the video was actually of a 2008 incident that took place in Goa and involved Russian Hare Krishna devotees against whom the Goa police had received complaints from the locals). The doctored quotations from Tagore were just the latest in the series. Some tectonic shifts in the landscape of the cultural politics of West Bengal are signalled when one of the greatest personalities of modern Bengal - claimed by both West Bengal and Bangladesh - has his words mangled and distorted in order for him to be enlisted, by speakers of his own language, in the effort to produce feelings of hatred against a particular community. The prospect of West Bengal being divided on communal lines is a not happy one. Practising majoritarian politics against 30 per cent of the state's population cannot be productive of peace. Politicians may well like to fish in troubled waters but could that ever be good for the fish? 1691397 1682731 DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: The Telegraphhttps://www.sbnation.com/users/renaultregens
Cannes 2019 opener, The Dead Don't Die, is nothing to die for
Fremaux had said that the film had 'ties to President Donald Trump...It is a very anti-Trump movie. It talks about American hegemony. America is an extraordinary country. With Jarmusch, we can expect that he is not very happy with what is happening at present'. But after watching the movie, I felt that Fremaux had overstated this angle. The film's most overt political message came with a red hat worn by Steve Buscemi's character: Instead of Make America Great Again, it read Keep America White Again. Actor Bill Murray in a still from The Dead Don't Die. Obviously, The Dead Don't Die did not get the crowd on a high, and a muted ovation at the end told it all. In a script written by Jarmusch, the movie focusses on a fictional American town called Centerville, which suddenly begins to experience the strangest of happenings. The sun does not set, the moon hangs too low and as the earth slips off its axis, the graveyards come alive with the dead rising and walking about the town. Not just this, they pounce on men and women and in a vampire-like horror begin to suck blood and eat flesh. Priyanka Chopra's brother Siddharth's ex-fiancee Ishita returns to London, thanks mom for supporting her decisions These strange goings on get the town's three cops - Cliff Robertson (Bill Murray), Ronnie Peterson (Adam Driver) and Mindy Morrison (Chloe Sevigny) - on their toes. Helping them in their mission is Zelda Winston (Tilda Swinton), who behaves like a Japanese Samurai, and uses her huge sword to chop off the heads of these monstrous zombies. This is the only way that they can be silenced. As the town begins to grapple with this ghostly invasion which threatens to wipe Centerville off the map - and with reports coming in of more such disasters in other parts of the world, it seems like the end of civilisation. The cops are absolutely clueless as how to handle this supernatural happening, and Robertson has never seen anything of this kind in all his long career. And in his usual bumbling manner, he tries to knock the zombies out. The Dead Don't Die tries hard to be witty of the quiet sort of way which Murray is good at, but it lacks punch and energy. There is not enough meat to drive the script, which often looks as deadpan as Murray himself. Hardly the kind of opener one would expect from an A-lister festival like Cannes. But let us hope the 12-day event would pep up in the days to come; after all there are masters waiting to showcase their cinema. (Gautaman Bhaskaran has covered Cannes close to three decades.) DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: Hindustan Timeshttp://www.itsarab.org/UserProfile/tabid/61/userId/54474/Default.aspx
Intolerance towards diverse ideas and dissent has taken hold of our minds
Heine was reacting to the ghastly act.In Joseph Stalin's regime, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was charged with 'founding a hostile organisation' and put in the Lubyanka jail. This was in February 1945, just before World War II was to end. He had to watch the victory celebration of the war, in which he had participated as a soldier and risked his life, from behind the muzzle of the window of his prison cell. Later he was sent to the isolated prison forming the subject of his celebrated work, The Gulag Archipelago. He was among the more illustrious of the numberless writers imprisoned and tortured for writing what they had seen.Autocratic regimes, whether Right or Left, hostile to any kind of criticism, have invariably shown utter disregard for dissenting voices. Of course, this by itself cannot be taken as a defining feature of such regimes; but it certainly is one of their definitive features. If we look at our own treatment of dissenting voices, we do not have much room for taking a morally superior stand. Although most of us may have happily forgotten in recent time that a number of journalists and writers were killed in our country, our report card is not free of blood stains.Here is a random list of those who got killed because they were working with words - 2014: Tarun Kumar Acharya, M.V.N. Shankar; 2015: Jagendra Singh, Sandeep Kothari, Sanjay Pathak, Hemant Yadav; 2016: Karun Misra, Rajdev Ranjan, Kishore Dave; 2017: Gauri Lankesh, Santanu Bhowmik, Sudip Datta Bhowmik; 2018: Navin Nishchal, Shujaat Bukhari, Muhammad Sohail Khan, Chandan Tiwari. The states in which these killings happened include Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Gujarat, Karnataka, Tripura and Kashmir. This list would be much longer if one were to include the killings of rationalists like Govind Pansare and M.M. Kalburgi. It would be almost unmanageably longer were one to add the names of political workers butchered. The question here is not how or who killed them; it is why they were killed. And the timeless and well-known answer to this question is that they were saying something that was not convenient for the rulers, that their thoughts were seen as 'dangerous'. Sadly, none of the killings generated as much censure and public debate as they should have. Sadly, again, they passed off as if they were ordinary murders requiring ordinary police inquiry that ends in dusty files becoming dustier as the agony of the families of the victims keeps growing duller and fades one day in the forest of cynicism.The instances in India during the last several years have by no means been a phenomenon in India alone. The situation in Russia, China, Turkey, Brazil, the East European countries and our neighbour, Bangladesh, has not been different. Even the United States of America, a country that had firmly stood for the freedom of expression throughout the decades of the cold war, has had its share in the suppression of the media; and Donald Trump's presidency has made that into an art with excellence. Although the news of explosives dispatched to the CNN office last year did not find headlines in our media, it did send shivers down the spine in US media circles.What is it in the world that has changed so radically in recent years? There is, of course, no easy answer, and one is too close to the new era to be able to comment with much objectivity. Yet, I venture to offer a comment since I cannot accept silencing of dissent and intellectual opposition through violence as acceptable in civilized society. One rather obvious explanation for the growing intolerance in the world is that during the last three decades, nation after nation has moved from the distributive-economic model for elimination of inequalities which a range of Left-oriented regimes and social welfare states traditionally held as sacred to an aspirational-growth model that the conservative political parties and the Right-oriented states have started promoting.In this shift from the Left-oriented economic views to the Right-oriented economic views, the people in these nations have also gradually gravitated towards the political Right, which in Adolf Hitler's classic - read infamous - formulation, believes that "the society is like a woman who likes to be tamed and mastered by a strong and powerful leader". For the last several years, the era of the perceived 'strong and masterly' leader has started unfolding in most parts of the world; and, together with this clemency towards violence-prone political regimes, nations have started tolerating extreme Right political parties. The parliamentary elections in Spain held in April resulted in nearly one-tenth of the elected members being from the ultra-Right. On April 27 - the day that Italy has celebrated as its 'liberation day' since 1945 - the Italian ultra-Right took out a parade in Milan with banners showing Mussolini and saluted the banner, all in the real Fascist style. In Sweden, France, Germany, Spain, Italy and, of course, Austria, the rise of the ultra-Right during the last few years has further kindled the hopes of these elements. As we saw last month, they united for the purpose of elections to the European Union Parliament and scored an increase in their strength. How Europe copes with the ultra-Right and manages to safeguard the legacy of democracy is another matter. What matters for us in India is that we have not been able to give enough thought to how the transition from our Left economic orientation to the growing-aspiration-based model of development can be negotiated without allowing anti-democratic sentiment to rule our heads and hearts.The destruction of the bust of Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar in Calcutta a few weeks back is, to my mind, a clear indication of how intolerance towards diverse ideas and dissent has taken hold of our minds, and how our changing economic wisdom has substantially altered and occluded our idea of democracy. The history of modern India tells us that the Indian renaissance bringing India to the threshold of modernity began in Bengal during the 19th century. The rise of the influential middle class as a major social phenomenon was first seen in Bengal during the twentieth century. The decline of Left politics was seen first in Bengal at the beginning of the present century. Many phenomena that impacted India later, first emerged in Bengal. This time though, what we just saw last month was the destruction of the Vidyasagar statue in Bengal. If that indicates anything, we need to think about what is in store for India. This time it was to symbolize the rise and the mainstreaming of the Right and its doctrine of violence. May 2019 will continue to engage future historians for a long time. Reading Heine again should be of interest to us.The author is a literary critic and a cultural activist ganesh_devy@yahoo.com 1691341 1677855 DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: The Telegraphhttp://www.feedbooks.com/user/5132179/profile
India plans to order taxi aggregators like Uber, Ola to go electric: Report
New Delhi, however, is looking to push the new policy to boost the adoption of electric vehicles (EVs) as it tries to bring down its oil imports and curb pollution so it can meet its commitment as part of the 2015 Paris climate change treaty. Indian think-tank Niti Aayog, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and which plays a crucial role in policymaking, is working with several ministries on the EV policy. The recommendations will eventually become a formal policy, with or without changes, subject to approval by the federal government, the source said, adding the idea is to 'push electrification through public transport.' Neighbouring China, home to the world's top auto market, is already leading the world in electrification by setting tough EV sales targets for car makers and offering incentives to taxi operators to increase their fleet of clean-fuel cars. EV sales in India grew three-fold to 3,600 in the year ended March but still account for about 0.1 per cent of the 3.3 million diesel and gasoline cars sold in the country over the period, industry data showed. China's electric car sales, meanwhile, rose 62% in 2018 to 1.3 million vehicles. In a meeting in New Delhi on May 28, Niti Aayog officials and the ministries of road transport, power, renewable energy and steel, as well as the departments of heavy industries and trade, were among those recommending taxi operators in India gradually convert to electric. They also recommended that all new cars sold for commercial use should only be electric from April 2026, a change that would also apply to Uber and Ola, said the person who has direct knowledge of the matter but spoke on condition of anonymity. Motorcycles and scooters sold for commercial purposes, like food delivery or for use by e-commerce companies, will also need to be electric from April 2023, the person added. India has seen a boom in food delivery apps like Zomato and Swiggy, which counts Naspers and Tencent as investors. Sales by e-commerce firms like Amazon.com and Walmart-owned Flipkart are also rising. The committee has also suggested a plan to gradually introduce electric buses within cities, with 5 per cent of the fleet electric by 2023, rising to 30 per cent by 2026. Thereafter all new city buses would need to be electric. Companies like Tata Motors and Ashok Leyland manufacture buses for intracity travel in India. MOTORBIKES TOO The EV proposal comes weeks after the inter-ministerial committee recommended electrifying most motorbikes and scooters for private use and all three-wheeled autorickshaws within the next six to eight years. While there are several electric scooter manufacturers in the country including Ather Energy, Hero Electric and Okinawa, there are only two car makers that build and sell electric cars - Mahindra & Mahindra and Tata Motors. Some taxi operators have so far had little success operating electric cars in India. Ola launched a pilot project in the central Indian city of Nagpur in 2017 but a year later drivers, unhappy with long wait times at charging stations and high operating expenses, wanted to return to gasoline cars. Ola, however, is not giving up yet. Its Ola Electric Mobility unit in March raised 4 billion rupees (USD 58 million) from investors including venture capital funds Tiger Global and Matrix Partners. It also raised USD 300 million from Hyundai Motor and Kia Motors and formed a strategic partnership with the South Korean duo to help build India-specific EVs. Modi's government in 2017 had set an ambitious target to electrify new cars and utility vehicles by 2030 but resistance from the industry forced it to scale back the plan. ... DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: Deccan Chroniclehttp://c4uc.org/User-Profile/userId/8324.aspx
WWE RAW: The Undertaker returns and delivers a message to Goldberg
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.@BrockLesnar isn&dhapos;t concerned with cashing in his #MITB contract. #TheBeast just wants to HURT #UniversalChampion
@WWERollins! #RAW
@HeymanHustle
FRIDAY. pic.twitter.com/DBGR8eAxxC
— WWE (@WWE) 4 June 2019
Shane McMahon continued his attack on Roman Reigns and helped the team combining Drew McIntyre and The Revival defeat The Big Dog and The Usos. Meanwhile, the one-on-one contest between Charlotte Flair and Lacey Evans was interrupted by Becky Lynch as she attacked Flair during the match. The match was stopped midway and Charlotte was eventually declared as the winner via disqualification. Rey Mysterio was unfortunate as he was forced to relinquish his United States championship title to Samoa Joe after sustaining an injury on his shoulder. A major highlight of the show was the arm wrestling contest between Braun Strowman and Bobby Lashley. However, after losing the match Lashley threw chalk powder into the eyes of Strowman and launched a brutal assault on him.
.@BraunStrowman wins tonight&dhapos;s #ArmWrestlingMatch against @fightbobby, but will he win this Friday&dhapos;s match against #TheAllMighty at #WWESSD as well? #RAW
pic.twitter.com/POaGYNETRy
— WWE (@WWE) 4 June 2019
In other results: Lucha House Party fought off another Lars Sullivan attack Nikki Cross def. Peyton Royce via pinfall Bray Wyatt preached fitness in this week's Firefly Funhouse Ricochet defeated Cesaro via pinfall function catchException() {try{ twitterJSDidLoad(); }catch(e){}} function getAndroidVersion(ua) {ua = (ua || navigator.userAgent).toLowerCase(); var match = ua.match(/android\\s([0-9\\.]*)/);return match ? match[1] : false;}; var versions='4.2.2'; var versionArray=versions.split(',');var currentAndroidVersion=getAndroidVersion();if(versionArray.indexOf(currentAndroidVersion)!=-1){var blocks = document.getElementsByTagName('blockquote'); for(var i = 0; i < blocks.length; i++){blocks[i].innerHTML = '';}}DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: The Indian Expresshttp://southmainalliance.org/UserProfile/tabid/57/userId/638726/Default.aspx
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Water crisis: Act now or perish
If one reads this with the Indian Meteorological Department's second forecast that northwest and northeast India could have less-than-normal rains, and private weather forecaster Skymet's advisory that Vidarbha, Marathwada, west Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat will have 'poorer than normal' rains and southern India will receive below normal rainfall, the overall water scenario looks daunting. India, in any case, is facing the worst water crisis in its history. According to NITI Aayog's Composite Water Index, by 2020, 100 million people will be affected by a shortage of groundwater in 21 Indian cities, including Delhi, Bengaluru, Chennai and Hyderabad. And about 40% of the country's population will have no access to drinking water by 2030. It's not too difficult to discern why the country is facing such an acute crisis. A report released by a team of researchers from Canada's McGill University and Utrecht University in the Netherlands blames irrigation techniques, industrial and residential habits combined with climate change for this problem. Along with its economic and ecological dimension, the water crisis also has a huge health cost. In India, about 200,000 people die every year due to inadequate access to safe water, according to the Composite Water Management Index report (2018). The situation is expected to worsen as demand for water increases. While there are no easy solutions, India must turn this crisis into an opportunity by building artificial recharging structures, renovating the existing water harvesting systems, cleaning up water bodies, investing in water recycling, focusing on crops that are not water intensive, improving irrigation efficiency and reducing water leakage, among other things. However, the key will be to make citizens understand that water is a finite resource and it is critical to reduce consumption. DailyhuntDisclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by Dailyhunt. Publisher: Hindustan Timeshttps://www.viki.com/users/yoz_kelv_ozk_eeneens_626/about
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