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The Himalayan tragedy: A story of greed, nepotism, and brazen violations

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Himalayan tragedy- A story of greed nepotism and brazen violationsIn life, love for one another is much like a dam: if you allow a tiny crack to fall through which only a trickle of water can pass, the trickle will quickly bring down the whole structure, and soon no one will be able to control the force of the currents. This is exactly what happened in the Himalayas.

By Nazarul Islam

A shocking report this morning, has confirmed the debilitating tragedy in the Himalayas. Dozens of people are missing and feared dead after a Himalayan glacier crashed into a dam and triggered a huge flood in northern India.

As the dam broke open, a deluge of water poured through a valley in the state of Uttarakhand. Villages have been evacuated, but officials warned more than 125 people may have been caught in the torrent.

The remoteness of where this tragedy happened means no-one has a definitive answer, so far. Experts say one possibility is that massive ice blocks broke off the glacier due to a temperature rise, releasing a huge amount of water.

And that could have caused avalanches bringing down rocks and mud.

At 3,500 meters above sea level, Himalayan glaciers melt to create Ganga and Yamuna, rivers that support over 600 million Indians. This ecologically sensitive region in the state of Uttarakhand is now the site of a massive 900-km highway-building project called the Char Dham Pariyojana.

The project seeks to improve road connectivity to four Hindu pilgrimage sites, Gangotri and Yamunotri, near the source of the rivers, and the temple towns of Badrinath and Kedarnath. In 2013, a cloudburst above Kedarnath had caused flash floods in the region which killed over 5,000 people.

Himalaya Tragedy- MapWhen Prime Minister Narendra Modi laid the foundation for the Char Dham Pariyojana in December 2016, he had dedicated it to the flood victims ignoring the consensus among environmentalists that over-construction in the hills had exacerbated the 2013 tragedy.

The environmental groups opposing the project have won a significant victory in the Supreme Court. Based on the recommendation of a high-powered committee appointed in 2019, the court passed an order favoring a narrow width for the highways that are being built as part of the project.

But the order had come after substantial damage had already been done to the Himalayan ecology. As the committee’s report painstakingly documents, nearly 700 hectares of forest land have already been lost to the project, 47,043 trees felled, and the natural drainage of streams and springs blocked by muck dumping. With the hills being cut vertically, oftentimes without forest clearances, 11 landslides have occurred in just four months of 2020, causing deaths and injuries.

While the Supreme Court’s order could help reduce further damage, say environmentalists, it is silent on the illegality at the heart of the Char Dham project – 900 km of highways are being built in one of India’s most fragile and important ecosystems without a study measuring the environmental impact.

In possibly the first statement released on the Char Dham project, the Modi government had said in December 2016 that its aim was “developing 900 km of national highways” at the cost of Rs.12000 crores. Ordinarily, a highway project on this scale would require a full-scale environmental impact assessment under India’s laws. This would be presented to the environment ministry, which would decide whether the project should be given an environmental clearance, without which the project cannot be implemented.

Himalayan tragedy- A story of greed nepotism and brazen violations -4But the Modi government found a way to avoid an environmental scrutiny of the Char Dham project: the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways claimed the 889-km long project was made of “53 civil works”, each less than 100 km in length, separated by 16 bypasses. Since 2013, highway expansion projects of less than 100 km in India have been exempt from an environmental impact assessment.

In 2018, an environmental non-profit organization in Uttarakhand, Citizens for Green Doon, filed a petition in the National Green Tribunal, a special court for environmental cases, challenging the loophole utilized by the road ministry. The tribunal set up an oversight committee headed by a former High Court judge. But the non-profit decided to appeal in the Supreme Court, which modified the tribunal’s order and directed the environment ministry to form a high-powered committee in August 2019.

The committee was tasked with carrying out an independent review of the impact of the Char Dham project and suggesting measures to minimize environmental damage in the Himalayan region. The Supreme Court also asked the committee to prepare the terms of reference – or the framework – for an environmental impact assessment of the project.

This was a tacit acknowledgement that the road ministry had lied about the nature of the project, to bypass environmental scrutiny.

“In reality, it has always been one continuous project,” said Ravi Chopra, director of the People’s Science Institute in Uttarakhand, who was appointed as the chairperson of the high-powered committee formed on the orders of the Supreme Court.

Himalayan tragedy- A story of greed nepotism and brazen violations -1Speaking to Scroll.in on Tuesday, hours after the Supreme Court stamped its approval on his recommendation for narrowing down the width of the highways, he said bluntly about the government: “By not having an EIA, they have done incalculable harm.”

The high-powered committee did not produce a consensus view on the road width.

Barring Chopra and a handful of independent experts, the 26-member committee was dominated by those working for the government: eight district magistrates, the Uttarakhand forest and environment secretary, officials from the Union environment and defence ministries, and scientists working in government-run institutions.

On July 14, before Chopra could submit the committee’s final report to the environment ministry, other members, most of whom were government officials, sent a report, which they claimed reflected the majority view.

Two days later, Chopra sent a letter to the environment ministry alleging that the majority report had been sent without his knowledge. He alleged that the “subterfuge” was presumably conducted by the committee’s member secretary, who was also the forest and environment secretary of Uttarakhand, a state ruled by the Bharatiya Janata Party, which is also in power at the Centre. “You can imagine my absolute shock and amazement on hearing this and figuring out this miserable conspiracy,” Chopra wrote in the letter which accompanied his version of the final report.

Harbans Singh Chugh, the member secretary of the committee till July, declined to respond to Scroll.in’s queries on the matter. Singh said: “Everything is left available in records.”

Strikingly, both the reports – the majority report and the one sent by Chopra – contain identical findings, which paint an alarming picture of the impact of the Char Dham project in a region that the committee describes as “geographically fragile” and “seismically active”. But there is one substantial difference.

Himalayan tragedy- A story of greed nepotism and brazen violations -2While the report submitted by Chopra recommends that the width of the highways built as part of the project be limited to 5.5 meters, the majority report recommends a width of 12 meters – or double lane with paved shoulders, known as DL+PS in engineering parlance.

This design standard was outlined in a circular issued in 2012 by the roads ministry, which was shared with the committee. Based on this circular, in June, 14 members of the committee voted in favor of building 12 meter-wide highways, while two members voted in favor of 5.5 meters, one member abstained from voting and the chairman declined to express his views, both reports state.

However, two days after the voting was done, an amended version of this circular surfaced. Issued in 2018, the circular states the width of hill roads should be 5.5 meters with a two-lane structure.

When the committee asked the chief engineer in the road ministry’s regional office to explain why the 2018 circular was not brought to its notice, he cited three reasons for why the amended circular would not apply to the Char Dham Pariyojana.

For one, he claimed a “conscious decision” was taken after the 2013 floods to widen all the connecting routes to the Char Dham to ensure “prompt relief and evacuation” during disasters in the future. Two, the Char Dham projects had been sanctioned before the 2012 circular was amended in 2018. Three, the routes were highways leading to international borders “which are very important from [a] strategic point of view, which requires uninterrupted and speedy movement of defence equipment and supplies”.

Another round of voting took place on the issue of road width, with 13 committee members still sticking to the 12-metres recommendation.

But Chopra maintained this design would not be suitable for a hilly terrain because it “results in cutting deep into the hill slopes, resulting in extensive loss of green cover, slope failures and landslides”.

“Elimination and reduction of such extensive damage is the most urgent and pressing need in this sensitive Himalayan region,” he wrote in a preface to the report. “Mitigation after the fact will not do. Hence some of us suggested that a reduced road width that would serve the anticipated traffic flow and yet significantly prevent future damage was the only judicious solution.”

Given the split within the committee, he wrote that the matter of the road width should be left to the Supreme Court. Until then, he suggested that any action based on the majority “may be held in abeyance”.

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court validated Chopra’s recommendation and ruled that the 2018 circular alone would apply.

In court, Solicitor General Tushar Mehta arguing on behalf of the Central government called the 2018 circular “prospective in nature”. However, the Supreme Court dismissed his argument. “Having taken stock of the current situation and of the fragility generally of the eco system in mountain terrain, we are of the view that this argument has no legs to stand on,” the court said in its order.

Himalayan tragedy- A story of greed nepotism and brazen violations -3Speaking to the media, after the order was pronounced, Chopra said the majority of the committee voting in favor of a wider road simply reflected the fact that they worked for the government. “For example, the district magistrates, they are just told how they are going to vote,” he said. “Even the scientists and experts who came to us from institutions primarily funded by the government, even they did not take an independent stand. They just followed the government decision.”

Explaining why the road width was crucial, he said: “If you have a road that is narrow then you have to cut less of a mountain…Secondly, with narrow roads, you can also try some valley-side filling.”

A tarred road surface of 5.5 meters would still require space for a drain on the hillside and a crash barrier on the valley side, he said. The formation width – or the scale of the cut that needs to be made – would be at least 7 meters.

In the 12-metre width design, he said: “You cut much more because on the mountain side you will have to put up a protection wall…The greater the formation width, the greater the width of the protection wall base, the higher will be the slope cut….And the more you cut, the more muck you generate. And you have to find a place to put that which is usually forest land.”

But JC Kuniyal, a scientist at GB Pant National Institute of Himalayan Environment, among the majority of members who voted in favor of widening the roads, argued that the future needs of the region also needed to be taken into account.

“We have to plan for the next 40 to 50 years,” he said. “Pilgrims are increasing, population is increasing, the demand is high and the road congestion will also go up. A wider road will reduce emissions and the travel time of tourists and the traffic congestion.”

Responding to the criticism that the majority report reflected the views of the government, Kuniyal said it was unfair. “I am from an autonomous institution. I am a scientist,” he said. “It is wrong to say that I am from the government.”

“If we want development then we have to bear some damage,” he added. “People have to adapt.”

Himalayan tragedy- A story of greed nepotism and brazen violations -5Another scientist from the majority group alleged that the committee did not have serious discussions on the matter. “It was discussed only in the last meeting when voting had taken place and the chairman had not disclosed his view…and then all of a sudden we read his view in the letter [dated July 16] that he wanted to leave it to the Supreme Court to decide,” said Vikram Gupta, a scientist at Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology in Uttarakhand.

“We said that if we want to change the road width then let us invite chief engineers from the road ministry,” Gupta added.

Responding to these criticisms, Chopra asked: “What is your priority? Is your priority saving a fragile ecological region? Or is it that you want to make money?”

All the four Char Dham shrines are within a radius of 50 km, he pointed. “The last 30 km to 40 km of these roads are very narrow valleys,” he said. “What happens in one valley influences what happens in the other valleys. There are cumulative impacts.”

Wider roads would lead to more vehicular traffic, he said. “The more people you take by motor vehicles, the more carbon dioxide you will generate.”

“We calculated that during the 60-day peak period, every day the Badrinath route adds half a microgram of carbon dioxide, which comes up to 30 micrograms per cubic meter for that two-month period,” he explained. “The average worldwide carbon dioxide concentration today is about 400 microgram per cubic meter. In two months, we have increased that by 7.5%. This is a very concentrated amount of carbon dioxide generation. Should we accept this?

Himalayan tragedy- A story of greed nepotism and brazen violations -6Chopra’s grim assessment is expressed in both the reports, which say carbon added to the atmosphere because of construction activity and higher number of road vehicles once the Char Dham project is complete, could potentially lead to “regional climate warming” around the 50 km radius where the shrines are located.

Barring the divergence on the question of the road width, both the reports, in fact, contain identical findings on the impact of the project.

The reports note that the Char Dham Pariyojana “has been undertaken almost solely as an engineering exercise with little concern for the loss of green cover or impacts on social life.”

Roads were being widened mostly by cutting hillsides, even when space was available for expansion on the valley side. Heavy earth excavators were being used instead of less destructive equipment which could minimize the environmental damage. “The Pariyojana authorities have adopted a high risk approach to road widening,” the reports state.

The freshly cut hill slopes had been neglected and slope protection measures were missing. At least 40 slope failures or landslides had been recorded, causing deaths and injuries to road users and laborers. “This neglect indicates that the project authorities are more worried about meeting the project schedule than people’s lives,” the reports state.

Both remote sensing imagery and field visits showed “muck has been deposited at unauthorized locations, including forests”. This had blocked the natural drainage of streams and springs and “severely degraded riverine vegetation that cannot be regenerated at any other type of habitats”.

Nearly 700 hectares of forest land has been diverted for 30 projects, with 47,043 trees felled, and another 8,888 trees facing the axe. The reports add that the roads ministry had an “insufficient understanding” of multiple forests and viewed them “just as trees”.

The routes for the Char Dham project lie in close proximity to ecologically sensitive zones like the Rajaji National Park, Valley of Flowers, Kedarnath Wildlife Sanctuary and Govind National Park, the reports point out. The felling of trees was leading to a loss of habitat, which would force animals into invading human settlements, endangering human safety and farm productivity.

The impact of the project could be felt by residents in the region as well, said Himanshu Arora of Citizens for Green Doon, the original petitioners in the case. “There are regular accidents here, boulders are falling…it is in front of everyone,” Arora said. “We are giving an invitation to 2013 again,” he said, referring to the flash floods in the state that year.

While the Char Dham Pariyojana had evaded an environmental impact assessment, each of the individual projects that were part of it still needed to apply for clearances under the Forest Conservation Act.

On August 13, Chopra sent a detailed note to the environment ministry flagging how project proponents had flouted these forest and wildlife laws.

The committee found work had started at four projects that fall under eco-sensitive zones. While applying for a forest clearance, the project proponents had incorrectly answered “No” to a question about whether the project fell under an eco-sensitive zone. One of the projects also dodged obtaining a clearance from the National Wildlife Board.

Further, work continued on five projects even after their Stage-I forest clearance had expired. Under the Forest Conservation Act, Stage-I clearance is granted for one year and can only be extended after the state government sends a progress report to the Centre. The committee found that the progress report of many of these projects was still awaited.

Tree felling for these five projects took place even before any orders were issued by the divisional forest officer. “The entire construction work in the above mentioned projects including cutting of thousands of trees therefore, started illegally,” the note states.

Pointing out that these projects were allowed to bypass procedures, the note cites a letter sent by state forest department officials to the project authorities in February 2018: “Since Chardham project is related to the ambitious plan of Hon’ble PM…considering the importance of project, tree felling in above listed 1-6 matters is completed without having any compliance report.

Though, without complying of in-principle approval such act is in fact is in clear violation of the conditions of Govt. of India.”

The note also points out that two other projects were started on the basis of old forest clearances granted to Border Roads Organization between 2002 and 2012, “even though the nature of the works was quite different”.

Three projects did not have fresh forest clearances. When the committee visited the sites in October 2019, work had not started on these projects. The committee made recommendations to the roads ministry against starting work at these sites, but subsequently found that the project proponents had gone ahead with tree felling and hill cutting, despite not having forest clearances.

“This is a brazen violation, as if the Rule of Law does not exist,” the note states.

Himalayan tragedy- A story of greed nepotism and brazen violations -7In an affidavit to the Supreme Court in April 2019, the road ministry had identified 19 projects where work was yet to begin. The court explicitly tasked the committee with reviewing such projects to “recommend measures which will minimize the adverse impact on environment, social life…” However, even before the committee could submit its recommendations, work began at these sites, the note points out.

The main report itself extensively recounts one instance – the Kund bypass – where project officials reassured visiting committee members in October 2019 that “the forest would not be touched until the HPC gave clearance”.

“Surprisingly, during the second site visit, barely two months later in December 2019, the HPC members were shocked to see earthmoving machinery inside the Kund forest with significant damage already inflicted to the slopes, trees and other vegetation,” the report states.

The report also mentions that the committee repeatedly requested the road ministry official to “respect the spirit of the Supreme Court’s order” and avoid starting fresh work sites until the project’s environmental impact had been assessed. But these requests were ignored. “This willful non-compliance has caused disappointment and a feeling of helplessness among the HPC members in fulfilling their responsibility,” the report states.

Mallika Bhanot of the Ganga Avhaan, a non-profit organization working to protect the river Ganga, pointed out that the Uttarakhand government was equally responsible for allowing the work to continue despite the violations. “The state government is equally culpable and hands in glove with the roads ministry,” Bhanot said.

Chopra said: “Now that the court has shown its own firmness, we will be a lot more firm in dealing with the violations.

The Supreme Court’s verdict has been welcomed by environmental groups. “The lies had begun by dividing this project into 53 parts,” said Himanshu Arora of Citizens for Green Doon, the petitioner in the case. “Truth has triumphed and the court has caught this. The court has also accepted that there is no need for such a wide road.”

But questions still remain about the legality of the Char Dham project. In the past, the courts have often struck down projects that have proceeded without an environmental impact assessment. However, the Supreme Court has chosen to stay silent on this aspect while adjudicating on the Char Dham Pariyojana.

Even the high-powered committee avoided direct comment on the way the roads ministry had evaded the environmental clearance process, barring a fleeting counter to the ministry’s argument that an EIA was not required since “individual project-stretches are all less than 100 km in length”.

“In this geologically unstable and ecologically fragile Himalayan region, length of the road should not have been the criteria because ecological variability is altitudinally governed,” the committee said.

It added that “such projects are required to conduct a pre-feasibility study in the context of ecological security, the carrying capacity of the Char Dham valleys, disaster management planning and a decentralized pilgrim/tourism plan to avoid ecological overburdening and therefore minimizing the susceptibility of the area to landslides and other disasters.”

One of the tasks entrusted to the committee by the Supreme Court was preparing the terms of reference – or framework – for a rapid environmental impact assessment of the Char Dham project. The committee sent the terms of reference to the roads ministry in October 2019. But almost one year later, the road ministry is yet to submit the EIA report.

Chopra said: “It is only in June that [the ministry] awarded the contract [for the EIA] and like any other contract the contractor is not going to deliver it in four months. He is going to take six months or eight months, who knows.”

“So practically the [EIA] becomes useless now,” he concluded. Or, is that so….

In life, love for one another is much like a dam: if you allow a tiny crack to fall through which only a trickle of water can pass, the trickle will quickly bring down the whole structure, and soon no one will be able to control the force of the currents. This is exactly what happened in the Himalayas.

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About the Author

Nazarul IslamThe Bengal-born writer is a senior educationist based in USA. He writes for Sindh Courier, and the newspapers of Bangladesh, India and America.
 Photo Courtesy: India Today 

 

 

Language, linguistics and Society

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Language-Linguistic-Society-1In Sindhi linguistics, there is dearth of research work. The work which is being projected and presented in the name of linguistics focuses on historical and social aspects of the language. Other disciplines of the linguistics are also important and need to be researched.

By Noor Ahmed Janjhi

Man with his power of knowledge…reason, study, experience, observance and love…. has made wonderful advancement and it is very worth to be appreciated. Still much more lies ahead. This is only a glimpse of human potential in shape of his achievements, inventions and discoveries. Many a structural formation, invention and discovery came to the fore that had been mind boggling. By focusing on these advancements, man is going to think beyond to be a man. However, he has to be a human yet. Somewhere he seems behind animals. As human intellectual growth is limited to few and far between so it takes time to reach to a wide circle of people. As a new concept makes its way to the masses, another new idea replaces it. Thus human intellectual development and its transformation take place and travels further. The travelling of minority of ideas advances towards majority of thinking. Man is consistent in his doings in future direction and his untiring attitude leads him further. It revolves around his aspiration and inspiration. As the aspiration shifts into greed and ambition it gathers negative potential. It distorts his real image and the things become worse. All of the intellectual achievement or development is shared mostly through a language. A language is a wonderful cognitive bestowal which enables human being to be distinct from the other animals. Allah has created human being and taught him how to express, speak or narrate.

There are many proposed definitions of language. Henry Sweet, an English phonetician and language scholar, said: “Language is the expression of ideas by means of speech-sounds combined into words. Words are combined into sentences, this combination answering to that of ideas into thoughts.” The American linguists Bernard Bloch and George L. Trager formulated this definition: “A language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols by means of which a social group cooperates.”  Such definitions of language make a number of presuppositions and beg a number of questions. The language remains complicated yet. Some others tag a language as “the principal method of human communication, consisting of words used in a structured and conventional way and conveyed by speech, writing, or gesture.” Some call it “a system of communication used by a particular country or community.”

Language-Linguistic-Society-2Language is a beautiful phenomenon of human life because it is means of the expression human self, human communication and the cultural identity.  In this way language has three major roles. They are; to express inner self, to communicate with the people knowing the same language and to observe cultural identity through language. A language is a verbatim of human concepts and ideas. It becomes easy in documentation when it gets a writing system. The writing system attempts to transform the images of concepts and ideas in set symbols. The writing system has a long historical journey too. People preserve their languages in their thinking process and cultural mosaic. In this way they transfer their linguistic heritage through verbal heritage until the development of its script or writing system. All the languages are spoken items firstly and then they move ahead towards documentation in black and white after development of writing system. Some languages get official patronage and flourish than the other contemporary languages. It is another point that the language greased by the market suppresses other languages and its speakers pose as superior to others. Such influx of power inculcates feelings of inferiority and superiority among people. Resultantly people abandon their own languages. It concludes in the death of any language and strengthens deculturization process. Aware societies strive for their survival.

History of the grammar development is very much old in language process. People have tried to study the language, the rules of language, the derivative system of language, the progression, refinement, forgetting, and destruction of language. From the ancient grammar of Panini to the universal grammar of Noam Chomsky, there is vast history of language studies. The study has reached to the scientific study of language called linguistics. It is studied the sound system of the language, writing symbols for the sounds, grammatical structures and study of meaning system of words through the linguistics. The linguist, by using the scientific methods, try to teach the processes of phonemes, morphemes, words, sentences, structural dynamics and internal potential or meaning of words. All the process takes place in the complicated domain of life. None takes place beyond to reason in this process. Different concepts and ideas are passed through experimental process as the same may be tested. The whole process starts with the phoneme. “A phoneme is an indivisible unit of sound in a given language. It is a unit of sound that distinguishes one word from another in a particular language.” The language is a systematic and dynamic combination of sounds. There is a great importance of linguistics in daily life. People observe their behaviour when they express or narrate anything. They joke and show inner feelings. They keep names according to their thinking process and social context. They express abuse and curse the people. Through all of the processes there emerge many a linguistic points. Besides, there is a great human history in the background of words and sayings formations. The history reveals the pearls of cultures, faiths and the history itself. Through that linguistic process, it is known that how a human being is a human being .How the language is used? How a language functions? How a language emerges, develops during the process and how it becomes obsolete. The linguistics is a diversified, interactive and dynamic study of language. Therefore there is wide range of issues and problems pertaining to the study of linguistics. Further it is divided into different branches as phonology, phonetics, morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics. Interdisciplinary of linguistic studies involve two or more academic disciplines which are considered distinct. The most common interdisciplinary branches of linguistics are: Historical Linguistics, Sociolinguistics, Psycholinguistics, Ethnolinguistics or Anthropological Linguistics, Computational Linguistics, and Neurolinguistics.

Applied linguistics has a great importance in linguistics.  According to Corder,  “Applied Linguistics is the utilization of the knowledge about the nature of language achieved by linguistic research for the improvement of the efficiency of some practical task in which language is a central component.” According to Schmitt & Celce-Murcia, “Applied Linguistics is using what we know about (a) language, (b) how it is learned, and (c) how it is used, in order to achieve some purpose or solve some problem in the real world”.

Language-Linguistic-Society-3In Sindhi linguistics, there is dearth of research work. The work which is being projected and presented in the name of linguistics focuses on historical and social aspects of the language. Other disciplines of the linguistics are also important and need to be researched. There should be study of fundamentals of the linguistics in the universities and there should be development of the text books in Sindhi for linguistics. These definitions should be purely from the sound system and culture of Sindhi language rather than blind following of the matter written in English. It would enable students, researchers, scholars and common men to use pertinent, exact and better language. The language is training as well because it is a complicated process to be performed by a set frame of organ performance. All the business of language is incomplete without training. To know the linguistics is very necessary for the training of language. If one will not understand the phonetic system, one may feel difficulty in teaching the language as well as the change and distortion in the language. This is the age of media and social media is surpassing the traditional media. There is a viewing process along with the reading and hearing process. There happen many changes and distortions in the language. The study of linguistics is necessary for its understanding. The study of linguistics should be important part of the language planning as there may be arranged properly for the study of linguistics at school, college and university level. Besides it, there is necessary to train the mothers as the infant learns early phonemes from the mother. If there will be no capacity of a primary school teacher and the mother in this regard, then there will be no expert of computer or a linguist able to save the language from its distortion. The language survives and sustains because of its speakers rather than the experts in computer and linguistics only.

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About the Author

Noor Ahmed JanjhiNoor Ahmed Janjhi is a senior educationist based in Desert District Tharparkar of Sindh province. He is author of several books in Sindhi and English on folk literature including two poetry books.

 

 

Rampant Road Accidents in Pakistan Pose Special Challenge

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Rampant Road Accidents in Pakistan Pose Special Challenge-1
File Photo

The present situation with regard to road accidents, poses a special challenge in Pakistan as beside poor healthcare system, which is unable to cope with the requirements needed to treat the persons injured in accidents, the authorities concerned as well as the people in general are least prepared to respond to this assault.

By Maria Khushk

Road accidents are a universal issue, as according to data collected through international studies, an estimated 10 million motor vehicle crashes are reported annually worldwide. This is the leading cause of death of people of all ages including adolescents and young adults. Nearly three quarters of deaths resulting from these crashes occur in developing countries. Pakistan is also one of the developing countries in South Asia where the road accidents have registered sharp increase with increased use of motor vehicles.

The road accidents not only put burden on healthcare facilities but also devastate the families. The deaths and injuries are being recognized as one of the important public health challenges.

The present situation with regard to road accidents, poses a special challenge in Pakistan as beside poor healthcare system, which is unable to cope with the requirements needed to treat the persons injured in accidents, the authorities concerned as well as the people in general are least prepared to respond to this assault.

According to the data compiled by Federal Bureau of Statistics, as many as 10779 road accidents were reported during the year 2018-19, of which 4879 accidents were fatal and 5901 were non-fatal. These accidents caused death of 5932 while 13219 people were injured.

The province-wise breakup of data shows that 972 accidents occurred in Sindh during the same year, of which 620 were fatal and 352 non-fatal which killed 725 people and injured 829. The data shows that the number of road accidents in Sindh was less as compared to other provinces but still it is a matter of great concern.

The major reasons for the accidents can be attributed to poor road engineering and deficient road structure, careless driving, lack of road safety awareness, inconsistent and improper law enforcement and unsafe means of pedestrian crossings.

According to my observation, in most of the cases the accidents occur due to the carelessness of drivers be it truck drivers, bus drivers or the drivers of cars and other vehicles. The truck drivers use to drink and drive, and sometimes they drink or use narcotics while driving. It causes many accidents leading them to death but in spite of this other drivers do not get any lesson from it.

They run the truck over on the wrong path or crash with the trees or collide with other vehicles. Similarly, if we examine, the bus drivers mostly overtake the cars and other vehicles and cause the accidents. They are least concerned with the results of rash driving that takes the life of many people. Even they do not have concern of their own family, as perhaps they believe their life is a trash box which has no meaning at all.

Furthermore, a few days back, we watched an unbelievable video which shocked us completely – a five-year boy drove a car by himself all alone for having an ice-cream!

We all have seen such cases wherein under-age boys use to ride a bike or car. If someone gets injured, the parents accuse the government holding it responsible but the question is why the parents allow their children to drive the bike or car? May I ask the parents who is responsible for it?

The dangerous vehicle on the earth is the bike. Teenagers habitually use a bike for one wheeling without helmet for enjoyment; they think, they’re playing but they do not think actually they are playing with their own life. Many young and older people do not like to wear helmet for safety, as they think it is old fashion. I’m an eyewitness to such kind of accident that occurred at Three Sword in Karachi where two bike riders slipped and one of them hit to the footpath. The blood was oozing from his head.

The performance of traffic police is also questionable. Of course, the duty of traffic cops is really tough, but the fact is that they are more concerned with extracting money from violators of traffic rules and allowing them to continue reckless driving rather than controlling the traffic. This happens not only in our cities but also on highways and motorways. The result is obvious – road crashes and loss of precious lives.

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About the Author

Maria Khushk is the M. Phil scholar and author of a book ‘The Cage of Innocence’. She is freelance writer and contributes write-ups on reality and current situation. Her book is compilation of short stories. In her short stories, she thematically focuses on feminism. She belongs to Baloch family, where in previous decades it was quite difficult to pursue education. It’s now the talk of the past decades but from her pen still such stories spill in the form of blood on moony pages.

Admiral Tahliani – A Sindhi who became India’s Naval Chief

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Admiral Tahliani - A Sindhi who became Indian Naval Chief - Sindh CourierAdmiral Radhakrishna Hariram Tahiliani, a Sindhi hailing from a small village Thatt Bhojraj near Mithiani town of Naushehro Feroze district of Sindh, served as the 11th Chief of the Naval Staff of Indian Navy from December 01, 1984 to November 30, 1987.     

Admiral Tahiliani, who was born in Karachi on 12 May 1930 and passed away on 14 October 2015, had also served as the Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief (FOC-IN-C) of the Western Naval Command, FOC-IN-C of the Southern Naval Command and Flag Officer Commanding Western Fleet (FOCWF). A carrier-based aircraft pilot, he also served as the commanding officer of the aircraft carrier, INS Vikrant.

Childhood and Early Education

Although Admiral Tahliani was born in Karachi, his ancestral village was Thatt Bhojraj, located near Mithiani town of district Naushehro Feroze (formerly in Nawabshah district) Sindh. Admiral Tahliani’s grandfather lived in Karachi due to his job in postal department and father Hariram was studying in Karachi.

He got his primary education at his village school. Recalling his childhood days in an interview late Tahliani had said, “I and my cousins often visited our ancestral village. I spent many years at village Thatt Bhojraj and studied at local school where only one teacher used to teach the children. That teacher also served as postman of the village.”

Admiral Tahliani-8“My father had also joined postal department after he completed his education, and was posted in Naushehro Feroze. We lived there for some time, but as my father’s first love was teaching, he quit postal department’s job and joined education department, where he was posted as principal of a school in Tando Allahyar.”

“Since my father had a big family and his salary was low, he also had to quit the teaching to shift to Baroda in Indian much before partition, and joined a business,” Admiral Tahliani told adding that at the time of shifting to Baroda, he was 13 years. He got rest of the education in Baroda, where he was admitted in a missionary school.

The partition didn’t affect his family as they had already shifted to Baroda and lived there in a rented flat. However, they lost their agricultural lands and other property due to partition.

Watch and Listen to Admiral Tahliani’s interview.   

Naval career

Admiral Tahliani - A Sindhi who became Indian Naval Chief - Sindh Courier-1Tahiliani was commissioned into the Indian Navy on 1 September 1950, and was confirmed as a sub-lieutenant on 17 May 1952. He joined the Indian Naval Air Arm and qualified as a pilot for carrier-based aircraft. He is a graduate of the Naval War College, United States and the National Defence College, New Delhi. He also qualified as a test pilot. He was a distinguished graduate of the French Test Pilot School and an outstanding pilot.

Promoted lieutenant-commander on 16 July 1960, he was the first naval pilot to land an aircraft on the deck of INS Vikrant, when he landed his Hawker Sea Hawk fighter on 18 May 1961. He served as a carrier-based strike pilot on board INS Vikrant; following his promotion to captain on 31 December 1970, he commanded its carrier borne squadron during the Indo-Pakistan War of 1971. His exemplary vision, catapulted the Indian Naval Air Arm to where it is today. He was instrumental in the procurement of the second aircraft carrier INS Viraat along with its fighter complement of Sea Harrier aircraft.

Admiral Tahliani-4Later, he served as the commanding officer of INS Trishul (1960) and INS Vikrant. Promoted to acting Rear Admiral on 30 December 1977, he was appointed Flag Officer, Goa Area, with promotion to substantive rear admiral on 1 February 1978. Later, he was appointed the Flag Officer Commanding Western Fleet.

His next appointment was as Assistant Chief of the Naval Staff at Naval Headquarters. This was followed by appointment as the Deputy Chief of the Naval Staff. He was promoted to Vice Admiral while in this office.

In February 1982, Tahiliani was appointed the Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief Southern Naval Command.

In March 1983, he was appointed the Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief Western Naval Command. In May 1984, he was appointed the Vice Chief of the Naval Staff.

On 1 December 1984, he took over as the Chief of the Naval Staff of the Indian Navy.

Tahiliani retired from the Indian Navy on 30 November 1987.

Admiral Tahliani-2Awards

Admiral Tahiliani was awarded the Ati Vishisht Seva Medal and the Param Vishisht Seva Medal for his distinguished service for 37 years.

Later career

After retirement, Admiral Tahliani didn’t sit idle and engaged himself in social work, for which he founded an organization named as “Servants of the People Society”. After a couple of years, then Prime Minister of India V. P. Singh offered him to be the Governor of Sikkim, which he accepted. Tahiliani served as the Governor of Sikkim from 8 February 1990 to 20 September 1994 when he tendered resignation.

After quitting the office of Governor, he again became active in Servants of People Society. During that time he helped launch the India chapter of Transparency International as a founder member in 1997. He served as the chairman of the India chapter practically from its founding until 2010 and was chairperson of Balvantray Mehta Vidya Bhawan Anguridevi Shersingh, a senior secondary school located in the South District of New Delhi, India.

Tahiliani was elected to the board of Transparency International in 2002.

Admiral Tahliani-3Admiral Tahiliani, while he was chairman of TI India chapter, once had said, “If the political leadership is serious in tackling poverty as it professes, it has to deal with corruption first”.

He was very much outspoken on issue of corruption in India. When the Transparency International released a report about corruption in India, he had said, “This study is not at all surprising as some of the most significant legislations have not yet been passed. The Lok Pal Bill, declaration of assets by politicians, auditing of accounts of political parties, speedy trial of erring politicians, forfeiture of illegally acquired property and many other such legislations are in a limbo.”

Admiral Tahliani - Veena Shringi
Eminent writer and broadcaster Veena Shringi interviewing Admiral Tahliani for All India Radio when he was Chief of Naval Staff of Indian Navy

Personal life

Tahiliani was married to Jaswanti Tahiliani. His wife Ms. Jaswanti Tahliani was equally distinguished as the first female engineer in Mumbai. He is the father of noted Indian fashion designer, Tarun Tahiliani, and executive director of Ensemble India, Tina Tahiliani Parikh.

His son Tarun Tahlianimother, in an interview had jokingly said, “My father, one of the most wonderful men, has got the worst taste. Every time he bought something, even bed sheets, I got nightmares.”

But his mother, he admits, had a great aesthetic eye. “She loved beautiful things and was a model once.” It could be the Sindhi blood in his veins, too.

“Sindhis are generally very shaukeen (fond), you know,” he said.

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Source: Press Information Bureau Ministry of Defence India, India Today, BMVBASMA, Indian Navy Press Release, NDTV, Indian Navy Aviation Press Release, Stratpost, The South Asian and other websites

Loving, forgiving Mummies and Dogs!

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Loving-forgiving Mummies and Dogs - Sound of Music

  • Music in general has the extraordinary power to shape a human being. Scientifically speaking, music exerts a great influence on the cognitive and psychological make-up of a person.

  • Change is the only constant and brings with itself new opportunities. Although the Covid-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc in the lives of many, it has brought about a monumental change in the way we look at things and perhaps presented many with newer opportunities and space to grow.

By Nazarul Islam

Like so many movie buffs, I was devastated with the news of Christopher Plummer, popularly known as Captain von Trapp’s passing I felt the intense urge to write about the movie that impacted my life morally as well as musically. The Sound of Music was perhaps one of the first movies I saw as a teenager. A movie revolving around seven mischievous children, one determined governess and their father, the daunting Captain von Trapp.

Robert Wise’s The Sound of Music has and will forever remain a classic. Originally a stage musical composed by the incredible Rodgers and Hammerstein II the movie not only bagged five Academy Awards, but left an indelible impression on the minds and hearts of people all over the world.

A tale of music, romance and the importance of family, The Sound of Music has been one of my greatest value education teachers. Just recently as I re-watched the movie with one of my closest friends for the umpteenth time, I realized how it has contributed to the person I am today.

The title of the movie could not be more apt. The movie was my initiation to western music. Music in general has the extraordinary power to shape a human being. Scientifically speaking, music exerts a great influence on the cognitive and psychological make-up of a person. Multiple instances in the movie have reiterated this fact.

All the main characters of the film can be seen serenading the audience with melodious songs, exuding joy and hope. Every song from the title track of the same name as the film to the Reverend Mother’s ‘Climb Every Mountain’ showcases the heart and emotion of benevolence and humanity.

Various life lessons are interlaced throughout the movie. The movie greatly emphasizes the power of love. As Khalil Gibran once said, “When love beckons to you, follow him…” The movie restates just that in the form of Maria’s love for music, the children and ultimately the Captain.

It’s a perfect portrayal of love’s “hard and steep ways” and how it can produce wonders in the life of a human being. Love binds every character together and helps them rise above the brutal Nazi occupation of Austria. The songs, ‘I have Confidence’ and ‘My Favorite Things’ not only inspire but also remind us to not be afraid of challenges.

One song that is particularly emotionally stirring, ‘Climb Every Mountain’ teaches us to chase rainbows and follow our dreams. The unadorned optimism and encouragement of the song will resonate with almost anyone listening to it. Even Captain Von Trapp’s homage to his homeland, Austria, through the song ‘Edelweiss’ is simple yet radiates patriotism – What a home country can and should mean to one is wonderfully captured.

Initially slated to marry the Baroness Elsa, when the Captain realized his true feelings for Maria, he confessed with clarity his feelings which the Baroness not only understood but accepted with inordinate grace. Her acceptance of rejection with forbearance and understanding should serve as paragons of how to be a good human being.

Another line from the movie that resonates with me till date is, “When God closes a door somewhere he opens a window.”  Eons ago Heraclitus rightly said, “Change is the only constant” and change brings with itself new opportunities. In the movie as Maria prepares herself to face the new challenge of governing seven children, she is bestowed with the opportunity of proving her capabilities on a new job.

Coming to the real world, although the Covid-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc in the lives of many, it has brought about a monumental change in the way we look at things and perhaps presented many with newer opportunities and space to grow.

The movie The Sound of Music, the character of Captain von Trapp, so well brought to life by Christopher Plummer, is a sublime reminder of rudimentary lessons. In his own words: “Unless, you surround yourself with as many beautiful things as you can afford, I don`t think life has very much meaning”.

Christopher Plummer will live in our hearts, for a long time to come.

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About the Author

Nazarul IslamThe Bengal-born writer is a senior educationist based in USA. He writes for Sindh Courier, and the newspapers of Bangladesh, India and America.

Capacity Building Workshop held for Tharparkar police

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Capacity Building Workshop held for Tharparkar police- Sindh Courier-1Speakers urge for devising coordination mechanism for success of system

Despite huge budgets, Child Protection Authority and Human Rights Cell have failed to deliver

By GR Junejo

Mithi: A capacity building workshop on strengthening the police investigation and stakeholders’ coordination mechanism was held here on Friday by the Tharparkar police in collaboration with Civil Society Support Program, a non-government organization.

DSP Rasheed Haroon Sirai, Kashif Bajer, Natho Khan Rahmoon, advocate Rai Singh Sodho and officers from all over district attended the workshop.

Addressing the participants, advocate Kashif Bajer lauded introducing the community policing and setting up of human rights cell and child protection authority but said that nobody knows about it. “The Child Protection Authority has annual budget of about Rs.200 million while the Safe House has annual budget of Rs.5 million, however these organizations need to improve their working, as owing to inactive role and non-utilization of funds on assigned tasks, the budgets have reportedly lapsed,” he said and added that it is because of absence of coordination mechanism.

“We need to devise the coordination mechanism for better results,” he urged.

Capacity Building Workshop held for Tharparkar police- Sindh Courier-2Kashif Bajer viewed that these are very small things but one needs to understand. “We can work in a better way despite all these weakness in the system,” he said.

He also spoke about the conditions of prisons, and said that prisons are considered as Reform Houses in other civilized countries but here a person becomes a habitual criminal after being imprisoned even if he is convicted in a minor crime.

Advocate Rai Singh Sodho underlined the need of new legislation so that the investigation side could be strengthened. He also spoke about the powers of Station House Officer (SHO) and said that SHO has vast powers but he is not allowed to use it.

Psychologist Dr. Bhart in his speech called for changing the attitudes. “We must pay respect to others, as several issues can be resolved only through changed behaviors.”

Dr. Bhart also urged the parents to spare time for their children. “Pay special attention to the children, who indulge in consuming drugs that often cause mental disorders. Even the excessive use of social media is the result of mental disorder, which in turn develops other complications,” he said.

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Observations of an Expat: A Sad Burmese Tale

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Observations of an Expat - A Sad Burmese TaleThe military claimed the election had been “stolen”. They tried to bully the electoral commission into reversing the result. When that failed they marched on parliament. Sound familiar so far? Backed up with tanks and guns, the generals arrested the NLD politicians and returned Aung San Suu Kyi to house arrest.

By Tom Arms

This week’s coup in Myanmar (aka Burma) is a warning of the dangers of Faustian pacts between politicians and the military.

To be fair, the political maneuverability of human rights icon Aung San Suu Kyi was severely limited. Her country had been under a brutal military regime for nearly half a century when she started talks with the generals.  And she was negotiating while under house arrest.

But the government which eventually resulted in multi-party general elections in 2015 and again last November was neither political fish nor fowl and thus inherently unstable. The Tatmadaw (the military’s name for itself) called the result a “discipline-flourishing democracy.”

The new constitution allowed multi-party elections, but 25 percent of the seats were reserved for the military’s political vehicle the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP); which had a blocking vote because major legislation required a three-quarters majority.

In addition, the cabinet portfolios of defence, border security and home affairs were held by serving military officers.  The military also appointed two of the vice presidents. Ms. Suu Kyi was specifically barred from the presidency by constitutional clause which said no one married to a non-Burmese citizen or who had non-Burmese children could hold the top job. Aung San Suu Kyi was married to a British subject and had British children.

The generals were the real power in the land. The problem was that they craved political legitimacy; and Aung San Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy (NLD) repeatedly thwarted them by winning landslide victories.  The latest was in November when the NLD secured 86 percent of the elected seats in parliament. The USDP won a derisory seven percent.

The military claimed the election had been “stolen”. They tried to bully the electoral commission into reversing the result. When that failed they marched on parliament. Sound familiar so far? Backed up with tanks and guns, the generals arrested the NLD politicians and returned Aung San Suu Kyi to house arrest.

The generals had hoped that blocking Ms. Suu Kyi from the presidency and her lack of government experience would lead to her failure that would strengthen the USDP. She started by confounding them over the leadership issue. Barred from the presidency, Ms. Suu Kyi created the post of “state counsellor” which she said was above the presidency.

But the generals appeared to be right in Aung San Suu Kyi’s lack of government experience. She failed miserably to negotiate an end to the long-standing civil wars which has plagued the country since 1948, with several ethnic factions fighting the dominate Burmese-speakers for autonomy or outright independence.

The ethnic problem was highlighted by Ms. Suu Kyi’s failure to control the Tatmadaw from waging virtual genocide against the Rohingya Muslims. Her defence of the Burmese military before the International Court of Justice caused Ms. Suu Kyi to fall from the human rights pedestal on which Western liberals had placed her.

Suu Kyi’s handling of the economy was too little too late. Under her government the economy grew at about 6.5 percent a year, but it needed growth of well over 10 percent to make up for decades of mismanagement.

Before independence in 1948, Burma was one of the richest countries in Asia. The country was—and still is—awash in oil, natural gas, minerals and precious gemstones. But its long and repressive military dictatorship resulted in sanctions, lack of foreign investment and international isolation which destroyed the colonial economy. Myanmar’s per capita income is £1,298 per annum compared to $6,502 in neighboring Thailand.

All this led the military to believe that they had a chance of at the very least making a substantial dent in the NLD’s substantial majority in the elected parliamentary seats. But the November elections only increased the NLD’s position. Democracy had failed the generals, so they staged their coup, put Aung San Suu Kyi back under house arrest and returned to the tried and tested military dictatorship.

World-View-Observations-of-an-ExpatWorld Review

Move over Donald Trump. America’s conspiracy-driven ultra-right has a new darling. She is the photogenic 46-year-old freshman Congresswoman from Georgia Marjorie Taylor Greene. In less than a month in office, Ms. Greene has infuriated Democrats, embarrassed the Republican leadership, made Trump look like a wet liberal, shot to media prominence, sparked a movement to force her expulsion from the House of Representatives, and won the hearts of White supremacists. Ms. Greene hit the hallowed corridors of Congress running. The day after she was sworn in she filed articles for the impeachment of President Biden. But it is her record of conspiracy-laden Trumpism before officially taking office that has done Ms. Greene the most damage (or help). Obama is a secret Muslim. Mass shootings were false-flag exercises designed to undermine gun rights. Bill Clinton murdered John F. Kennedy Jr. Hillary Clinton is a pedophile. Nancy Pelosi should be executed for treason…. Leading Democrats have called for her expulsion from Congress. They won’t succeed and that, but they have blocked her appointment to committees. However, the Democratic ire seems to only encourage the Republican grassroots to rally around Ms. Greene, especially after Trump declared: “I love her.” One thing is certain: The fate of Marjorie Taylor Greene is now tied to the future direction of America’s Republican Party.

  • Britain did not, on 1 January, fall off the economic cliff as some anti-Brexiteers predicted. But neither has the country’s formal departure from the European Union been an economic walk in the park. Red tape at borders has meant bureaucratic headaches, especially for anyone supplying perishable products such as fish, meat, vegetables and some medicines. Particularly hard hit has been Northern Ireland which now has an open border with Eire and a hard border with the rest of the United Kingdom. The border, however, can be closed by either the UK or EU if either party has reason to believe that the agreement causes “economic, societal or environmental difficulties.” The commission briefly closed the border to stop the export of coronavirus vaccines. It was a stupid move which was immediately rescinded. Now the pro-Unionist Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) is calling for the border to be closed and the UK/Northern Ireland border to be thrown open to alleviate the trade in fresh food from the UK to Northern Ireland. But closing the border between North and South Ireland would breach the Good Friday Agreement which is the foundation of the fragile peace in Northern Ireland. A predicted Brexit conundrum.
  • There is no doubt that Alexei Navalny is a brave man and a hero to thousands of Russians demonstrating for his release from prison. Navalny also receives a favorable press outside of Russia. But beware he is not the cuddly politician one might think. He is an anti-immigration, xenophobic ethnic Russian nationalist. In 2013 he defended anti-immigration riots in Moscow. He supported Putin’s annexation of the Crimea and has campaigned for the political integration of Russia with Ukraine and Belarus. Navalny has also supported Russian secessionists in Georgia and Moldova and attacked the building of Moscow’s first mosque in 2015.  The major difference between Alexei Navalny and Vladimir Putin is the former’s campaign against the oligarchical-controlled corruption that is dragging down the Russian state.
  • The good news is that this week the US and Russia signed a new five-year Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) which cuts the nuclear arsenals of the two countries. The bad news is that Russia withdrew from the 1992 Open Skies Treaty which allowed the US, Europe and Russia to conduct aerial surveillance of each other’s military installations. The US withdrew in November. The treaty is dead. That is a concern. The Russians say they withdrew because of Donald Trump’s withdrawal. But it is not that simple. Trump withdrew because the Russians were blocking surveillance flights, especially over the heavily-armed Russian enclave of Kaliningrad which is sandwiched between the Baltic States and Poland. In making the announcement, President Vladimir Putin said the door was ajar for a renegotiated Open Skies Treaty. But this seems unlikely in the immediate future because President Trump scrapped the specially-equipped planes needed to enforce the treaty. The end of Open Skies is particularly worrying when considered in the context of the end of the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty which regulated the nuclear weapons regime based in Europe. START lessens the danger of an intercontinental nuclear exchange. But the demise of the INF Treaty and the Open Skies Agreement increases the possibility of hostilities in Europe.
  • Britain plans to join the Trans Pacific Partnership (full name Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership, AKA CPTPP). This is a bit surprising because the agreement is a trading bloc of countries bordering the Pacific Ocean. Britain now has only one possession in the Pacific—Pitcairn, population 50. It does, however, have historic and cultural links throughout the region. The main reason for the British application for membership of the TPP is to curry favor with Washington. One of the main reasons Obama devised the TPP was to block against Chinese economic expansion. For the first 18 years of the 21st century successive British governments have curried favor with the Chinese, in the hope that economic liberalization would lead to Chinese democratization. Whitehall have reluctantly admitted this is a lost cause and are now falling in behind the Trump/Biden tougher stance on Beijing. The TPP also offers a back door trade agreement with the US–a key target of UK foreign policy since the Brexit referendum. It would not be as good as a bilateral deal, but it could be something on which a bilateral arrangement could be constructed.
  • Apologies to Russia’s scientists and President Vladimir Putin. I was skeptical of their coronavirus vaccine Sputnik V. This was understandable given that the vaccine was tested on only 76 volunteers before being approved and rushed into production. However, the Russian gamble appears to have paid off. A peer-reviewed article in The Lancet shows that Sputnik V is 91 percent effective in combatting the virus. On top of that, the Russians are about to launch two more vaccines—Epivac and Covivac. This is great news because the world desperately needs as many countries as possible manufacturing as many vaccines as possible to jab as many arms as possible as quickly as possible. So far 15 countries have ordered a billion doses of Sputnik V. The Russian vaccine is even being considered by the European Union to make up for the shortfall in BioNtech and Astra Zeneca doses. Unfortunately, the Russians are a bit slow on distribution. They are hoping to counter this with partnership agreements to produce their vaccines in different countries.
  • There is more good news on the vaccine front. British health officials reported that the vaccines are having an effect on reducing transmission rates as well as providing immunity. Officials have also said that spacing the two necessary jabs 12 weeks apart actually improves the efficacy of the vaccines. Taking this route was a British government gamble as researchers originally wanted the jabs to be two weeks apart and refused to vouch for the effectiveness of the vaccine if it was administered at 12-week intervals. Also, scientists report that tweaking the vaccine to deal with mutant strains will be a fairly simple operation. And finally, the Astra Zeneca vaccine can be mixed and matched with the Russian offering to increase doses. Russian and British research scientists are in talks about details.
  • Underneath Warsaw’s Vistula River is a bank of computers hooked up to…clams. The mollusks are the latest in anti-pollution devices. And these particular clams are monitoring the safety of Warsaw’s drinking water. A coil runs between a computer and a magnet inside the clams. Water is then run past the clams who have a strong aversion to pesticides, heavy metals and other pollutants. When exposed to these nasties they literally “clam up”. The movement is picked up by the magnet which in turn is connected to a computer which tells the engineers to start cleaning.

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About the Author

Tom Arms Journalist Sindh CourierTom Arms is the London-based American foreign affairs journalist. He has nearly half a century’s experience of world affairs, and has written and broadcast for American, British and Commonwealth outlets. Positions he held included foreign correspondent, diplomatic correspondent, foreign editor, editor and founding CEO of an international diary news service. He is the author of “The Encyclopedia of the Cold War,” “The Falklands Crisis” and “World Elections on File.” His new book “America: Made in Britain” is expected this year.
{The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Sindh Courier}

 

In the face of ‘Vaccine Apartheid’

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In the face of ‘Vaccine Apartheid’The South African government has aptly warned of a coming global ‘vaccine apartheid’ as wealthy countries have bought up vast vaccine supplies, leaving poorer ones to cope with extreme scarcity.

By Nazarul Islam

Our world is pretty much on the brink of failing a critical test: the one measuring whether the international community is willing, or able to end a global pandemic without leaving anyone behind. Wealthy countries have bought up vast vaccine supplies, leaving poorer ones to cope with extreme scarcity.

An international initiative known as the COVID-19 Vaccine Global Access Facility (COVAX) aims to distribute vaccines widely and equitably, but it is short of funds. At best, COVAX will reach only a small portion of the populations of low-income countries this year. The South African government has aptly warned of a coming global ‘vaccine apartheid’.

Perhaps there is still time to manage this in an alternate way. Wealthy countries have a moral duty to help distribute vaccines. This is also in their economic interest. Instead of hoarding supplies, these countries should reallocate doses to low- and middle-income countries and provide funding to ensure that the most vulnerable populations—including minorities and stateless people—and, ultimately, entire populations are immunized, regardless of income.

Political leaders have faced strong pressures to prioritize vaccination of their own populations. The impulse to care first for one’s own people can be morally justified but only within limits. All people enjoy an equal worth, with similar aspirations for health and productivity.

The equitable distribution of vaccines—as well as tests and therapies—is an ethical and humanitarian imperative. It is also the most efficient way to address or reverse the crises that the coronavirus pandemic has set in motion, many of which will soon enough affect all nations, whether they have vaccine supplies or not.

While the ongoing pandemic has persisted, progress in other areas of global health, such as immunization of children and eradication of polio, has sharply reversed. Pakistan is yet to come out clean, in its success of the allocated program for eradication of polio.

Because of COVID-19, nearly 1.5 million more people were projected to die from AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria in 2020. And this number is near that of the world’s COVID-19 deaths in the same period. The number of people experiencing or at risk of acute hunger has doubled in the last year, and the World Bank estimates that the pandemic has thrust 100 million people into extreme poverty—a fate that another 50 million are expected to suffer by the end of this year.

Women and minor girls confront a greater risk of gender-based violence, including rape, child marriage, and sex slavery, during the pandemic. And school closings and inaccessible remote learning have left 463 million children around the world, without formal education.

Only by vaccinating the world’s populations can these destabilizing and immiserating trends be reversed or brought to heel. Large clusters of disease in low-income countries risk reseeding the pandemic in high-income countries—and such unchecked spread will hinder the global economic recovery and undermine the security of governments worldwide.

To distribute enough vaccines, drugs, and tests to developing countries will cost an estimated $24 billion in 2021. And, that is a significant sum at a time when even high-income economies have been battered. But the investment will bring benefits that far outstrip the cost.

The International Monetary Fund has projected that worldwide vaccination would add nearly $9.0 trillion to the global economy by 2025—conversely, the RAND Corporation has projected that for each year that low-income countries cannot access vaccines, the combined GDP of high-income countries would fall by $100 billion.

Leaders of wealthy democracies must look beyond today, or their decisions will haunt them tomorrow.

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About the Author

Nazarul IslamThe Bengal-born writer is a senior educationist based in USA. He writes for Sindh Courier, and the newspapers of Bangladesh, India and America.
Also read: Covid under Apartheid – How Israel manipulates Palestinian sufferings  

Dadu administration plans to bulldoze 750 homes

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Dadu administration plans to bulldoze 750 homes - Sindh Courier-0150 houses would be demolished in first phase and 600 more houses in the next – Executive Engineer Irrigation

Anti-encroachment drive launched on Thursday on court orders was suspended for two days after death of a man and protest of residents

By Allah Bux Khushik

Dadu: The district administration of Dadu plans to bulldoze 750 homes built at the irrigation department’s land and at the embankments of canals and channels. The action is being taken to remove encroachments from the lands as per directives of the Supreme Court of Pakistan.

Executive Engineer irrigation Lutufullah said that in first phase 150 homes would be demolished built at the embankments of Phakka and Jagir channels from Shahjahan Park to Panj More and in second phase more 600 hundred homes would be demolished on Dadu canal’s both sides from Panj More to Siyal More.

Following the court directives, the district administration of Dadu started anti-encroachment drive on Thursday to vacate the irrigation land and clear the embankment of Dadu Canal and its channels however it was suspended for two days by the Deputy Commissioner due to protest of residents and death of an aged man.

The anti-encroachment team was led by Assistant Commissioner Dadu Muhammad Ali Lund. Executive Engineer of Irrigation Department Lutufulallah, Mukthiarkar Dadu Abdul Hameed Khokar, DSP City, Anti-Encroachment SHO and lady police were also part of operation.

The authorities used heavy machinery to demolish homes of people who had illegally constructed homes on both sides of Phaka and Jagir channels.

Using bulldozers the team demolished the home of Ameer Jamali who had already vacated it.

Dadu administration plans to bulldoze 750 homes - Sindh Courier-4During the operation a large number of men and women of the area staged sit-in and laid in front of bulldozers and demanded to stop demolishing their homes.

Laborer Muhammad Ali Mallah, one of the protesters, said that two years ago same operation was lunched by district administration and 180 homes were demolished but former Deputy Commissioner Shahzaman Khuhro and MNA Rafique Ahmed Jamali had assured on behalf of Chief Minister that victims, whose homes were demolished, would get free plots in Benazir Basti but neither DC nor MNA fulfilled their promise and plots were allotted to their own men.

Dadu administration plans to bulldoze 750 homes - Sindh Courier-5He said that now they had constructed their three homes after getting loan but once again the government wants to demolish their homes, which is injustice with poor families. He warned that if their homes are demolished they would be compelled to commit suicide.

Ms. Pathani, another protester, said that the court had directed officials that they should first provide shelter before removing encroachments but even then poor people are being targeted.

During the protest, an aged man Muhammad Umar Joyo died at his home due to heart attack. Deceased’s heir and neighbors alleged that man had died due to shock of his home being demolished.

Dadu administration plans to bulldoze 750 homes - Sindh Courier-3One Ghulam Ali Mallah told that two years ago during operation two aged women Shabana Mallah,  Gulshan Mallah and 12-year girl Sorath had died but no one helped them except making tall claims by elected MNA.

Later, DC Dadu Samiulallah Shaikh gave two-day time to the residents to leave their homes and warned that in case of violation FIRs would be lodged against them and they would be held responsible if any untoward incident took place.

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Contemporary World Literature: Poetry from Palestine

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Contemporary World Literature - Poetry from PalestineContemporary World Literature: Poetry from Palestine

Poems by Nizar Sartawi

Nizar Sartawi is a Palestinian poet and translator committed to building bridges between nations of the globe through poetry and translation. He believes that poetry, like other arts, has the power of bringing people together.
Nizar Sartawi - Palestinian Poet - Sindh CourierSartawi is a member of various international literary and cultural organizations. He has participated in many Arab and international literary conferences and poetry and festivals in Jordan, Palestine, Lebanon, Morocco, Egypt, Dubai, Sharjah, Kosovo, and India.
Sartawi has published about 30 books. His poetry and translations have been anthologized and published in numerous international literary journals, magazines, newspapers. His poetry has been translated into more than a dozen languages.
Sartawi was awarded the first prize in translation by Al-Nour Literary Organization (1913), Naji Naaman Award for Creativity (2018), and Jerusalem Intellectuals Forum Honorary Award (2019).

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Violas

O how your heart

Throbs aloud

When you glimpse those

Autumn violas

On your windowsill!

 

How only to them

You un-bosom

Your hidden qualms!

 

How your eyes sparkle

With joy

When their petite petals

Wave at you!

~ ~ ~ ~

What will you do when

Winter comes

And violas go to sleep?

 

When ghosts of frost

Perch on your eyelids

Sprawl on your chest

Creep into your heart?

 

When death comes close

With none nearby

To comfort you –

Not even a viola?

* * * * *

Contemporary-World-Literature-wind-olive-treeThe wind and the Olive Tree

The vengeful wind of autumn roared

Threateningly

At the olive tree:

“I’ve come again

For you old witch

I’ll unravel your dark green dress,

Stitch by stitch

I’ll break your limbs

I’ll crush your bones

Until the skies hear your moans

I’ll spill you blood

Until the dry dirt in these fields

Turns into mud!

 

“I know,”

Replied the thick rough trunk,

“You told me so

Twelve months ago.”

* * * * *

Contemporary-World-Literature-Ishmael-songIshmael’s Song

Why are we staying here?

O mother,

In a barren land

No plants

No grass

No water

No love!

 

And why, O mother

Do these sand dunes sneer?

And those clouds jeer

When our scrawny sheep

Crawls!

 

And where is father,

O mother?

Has he abandoned us?

O mother

And has God too?

* * * * *

Contemporary-World-Literature- Gun SmokeGun Smoke

Where are they now

Those carefree larks

That gathered straw

And built their nests

In yonder meadow!

 

Where are

Their morning songs

Their noon siestas

Their evening whispers?

 

All gone

Since these lands were

Colonized

By gun smoke

* * * * *

Contemporary-World-Literature-Leaf-1Leaf

Little lonely leaf

Knocking on the glass door

With your whole feeble

Form

Gaping at me

Begging for

Refuge!

 

Poor purplish fragile fugitive

Tired –

Of running away

From nook to nook

Threatened –

By the ruthless autumn wind

And unheralded rain?

Frightened –

By the heavy plodding pedestrian feet

The hideous hooves

And horrendous hoops!

 

Come in

Tiny timid tramp!

Let’s sit

Side by side

To tell silently our sad story

And voicelessly lull each other

To sleep!

 

… For I too

Am but a deciduous

Leaf

Counting the days

Before its fall

* * * * *

Contemporary-World-Literature-MailboxMailbox

So every evening

Coming back home

I take a knowing peek

Inside the old mailbox

 

And knowing I know,

It seems to me,

The rude bare bottom

Sneers at me

* * * * *

Contemporary-World-Literature-RainRain

Listen sweetheart!

Listen!

Outside the rain

Whinnies out loud

As it pummels the little hill

And rests a while

Then gently… gently penetrates

The soggy soft soil

Hear the blossoms on the cherry tree

Moaning with pain

* * * * *

Contemporary-World-Literature-Crepuscular MomentsCrepuscular Moments

Do you remember?

Those late afternoons

When you and I

Sat

On the edge of the cliff!

 

We kept our eyes fixed

On the west horizon

As the sun

Tired of the day’s toil

Pulled himself loose

From the tenacious tentacles of the

Clouds!

 

You held my fingers tight

As we both watched him

Bathe

In the purple red blue orange mass of mist

Then slowly sink

In the deep

Hidden behind the hazy hills!

* * * * *

Contemporary-World-Literature- Words-of-WisdomWords

Words words words

Here and there

I walk

They walk

I hop

They hop

I run

They run

I slow

They slow

I stop

They stop

 

I stretch my hand

To catch them

They flap their wings

And fly away

* * * * *

Contemporary-World-Literature-Bedouin_SongThe Bedouin’s Song

I’m just a Bedouin:

I live in a tent –

Cozy an’ fair

Its fabric woven

From rough goat-hair –

A shady cover

In the summer

A rain-proof shelter

In the winter

 

My possessions:

A single garment – a loose black robe

I call a thobe

A pair of worn-out sandals

A coffee kit

And other little things

I put in a sack

That may not fit

With country-siders’ appetites

Or urbanites’

 

My homeland:

All this infinite expanse

Of deep beige sands

 

My sole companion:

A faithful camel

Who carries me

And all my stuff

Together we cross the endless desert

 

And when i sing

Some cameleer song

He gets so light

Out of delight

And makes as if to fly

Towards the blue sky

_________________________

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