Friday, June 29, 2018

Quick notes: Digital colony, Reverse brain-drain...

  • Is India becoming a digital colony? Unlike China which has its own internet platforms and controls its domestic data, India is a major user of US internet services. Indian citizens’ and govt data are vulnerable because they are hosted in USA. GOI does not understand the terrible consequences of such dependency on the economy and national security.



  • China Mines Silicon Valley for Tech Talent: Alarmed that a brain drain to China may erode the U.S.’s technological edge and weaken national security, the Trump administration is trying to restrict Chinese ownership of some tech companies. 


  • World's envy, but not anymore: Why are cancer rates so low in India? 


  • Parking lots over fresh air: The decision to cut trees has sparked off much furore and public agitation in Delhi. Many areas witnessed reverberations of the Chipko Movement.


  • Own goal: By imposing 43% tax on hybrid cars, govt has killed the Indian electric vehicle industry. India hurts itself even as China has become the world’s largest EV/hybrid car manufacturer


  • e-commerce policy: Walmart faces backlash in India; massive protests planned on July 2.


  • Persian wonder: Alireza Beiranvand



  • Not so global: Cricket has over one billion fans globally, with the Indian sub-continent alone constituting more than 90 per cent of them



Thursday, June 28, 2018

massive data leak

: data on almost all americans possibly hacked. . india, meanwhile, continues to be totally blase to this serious problem, even in the wake of controversy, rise,

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apple wins samsung design patent case

amazing stuff from sri kalyanaraman. pretty overwhelming though

https://www.academia.edu/36935258/Veda_knowledge_system_and_wealth_of_nations_India_links_Ancient_Far_East_and_Ancient_Near_East

very interesting material from shri kalyanaraman. it's overwhelming, actually: sarasvati era metalworking, trans-asian trade routes of , the economics of river-linking, etc.

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so mediterranean diet isn't the panacea we were taught it is?

but mission accomplished: the cult of olive oil has been created by #bigfood 

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Fwd: Watch now: Dialogue (not debates) from leading minds


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Stanford Alumni Association <webcasts@alumni.stanford.edu>
Date: Wed, Jun 27, 2018 at 2:55 AM
Subject: Watch now: Dialogue (not debates) from leading minds
To: 
 

Tune in on demand to five conversations on society's most complex issues, jointly hosted by the Hoover Institution and the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies. This speaker series brought prominent thought leaders together to introduce the campus community to opposing perspectives on a range of burning topics, from technology and fake news to inequality and diversity.

Open dialogue in a time of divisiveness

 

Spurred by interest from Stanford undergraduates, Cardinal Conversations convened prominent thought leaders for honest conversations about the burning issues of our time. Hear expert perspectives on topics ranging from technology to fake news.

 

"Stanford aims to ensure that a diversity of views is not just a possibility but also a reality at Stanford—both in the classroom and outside it."

—Stanford President Marc Tessier-Lavigne and Provost Persis Drell

Watch Cardinal Conversations on demand

Technology and Politics
Reid Hoffman, '90, and
Peter Thiel, '89, JD '92

Free Speech and Diversity
Danielle Brown, John
Etchemendy, PhD '82,
and Claude Steele

Inequality and Populism
Francis Fukuyama
and Charles Murray

Sexuality and Politics
Christina Sommers
and Andrew Sullivan

Real and Fake News
Ted Koppel, MA '62,
Anne Applebaum and
Jessica Lessin

This series was presented by the Hoover Institution and the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies.

facebook twitter instagram linkedin
 
                                                           



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thanks
rajeev

sent from samsung galaxy note, so please excuse brevity

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Quick notes: EV jobs, Tech curbs..

  • Germany fears massive job loss due to electric cars: The EV powertrain utilizes only about one-sixth of the components of an ICE powertrain. Battery production will require only a fifth of the workforce, when compared with an engine plant


  • Curbing tech exports to China: Trump plans to curb technology exports to Beijing while also  barring Chinese firms from investing in U.S. technology. “Made in China 2025” is Beijing’s industrial plan to dominate high-tech industries including robotics, aerospace and computer chips.


  • Wooden cycle: Coimbatore-based PK Murugesan has crafted a bicycle using Boiling Water Proof engineering plywood .



  • Benami properties: Income-tax dept attaches over 1,500 unaccounted properties worth Rs 43 billion across the country. The benami legislation was reworked and made more stringent by the current govt from November 2016.


  • Corporate loan defaults: First steel, now power sector - Indian banks stare at $38 billion hair-cut.


  • IndLangs: “Startup's Skype classes aimed at bringing Indian languages to the fore”.


  • Champion of flesh trade: American evangelicals back brothel owner.


  • Outcastes: Italy’s interior minister evokes a dark past by vowing to expel Roma people 


  • Twitter effect:


an american finance prof says some very upbeat stuff about india

https://t.co/hdPmqYAG3k

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Monday, June 25, 2018

no, you can't find women on tinder in india. that's a good thing

https://www.wsj.com/articles/india-has-lots-of-single-women-but-good-luck-finding-them-on-tinder-1529869656

so there's much less sexually transmitted disease in india. cause and effect.

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Fwd: Saudi Arabia turns against political Islam - Muslims but not brothers


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: R


Saudi Arabia turns against political Islam

The crown prince tries to reform Wahhabism and isolate the Muslim Brotherhood

HOW TO OVERTURN God's law? Or, rather, how to change what you had previously said was God's law? This is the question facing Muhammad bin Salman as he loosens social restrictions. His conclusion? Blame it all on Iran. The crown prince says his country took a wrong turn in 1979. That was the year when Shia Islamists overthrew the Shah of Iran, Sunni extremists opposed to the Saudi monarchy stormed the Grand Mosque in Mecca and the Soviet army marched into Afghanistan.

Before that, so the story goes, Saudis could enjoy cinemas and concerts. Even in the time of Abdel Aziz Al Saud, the founder of the modern Saudi state, women worked in the fields and rode camels alone. But after 1979 Saudi kings, who call themselves custodians of the two holy mosques, resolved to outdo their foes, both Shia and Sunni, in Islamic piety.

The more relaxed social rules now being introduced are thus no heresy, says the crown prince; they are simply a return to a pre-existing normality. "Islam is moderate in its ways. It is unfortunate that extremism has hijacked this religion," says Sheikh Mohammad Alissa, head of the Muslim World League, a body that has long spread ultra-puritanical ideology. It is a sign of the new times that, these days, it is busy making ecumenical contacts with Christians, Jews and others.

For Stephane Lacroix of the Sciences-Po university in Paris, the crown prince is building a myth: "Saudi Arabia's religious authorities were extreme even before Ayatollah Khomeini ruled over Iran." The difference, he says, is that after 1979 they were given free rein to impose their rules in corners of the kingdom from which they had previously been kept out, such as wealthy neighbourhoods of Riyadh. With the emergence of global jihad, Saudi rulers have struggled to avoid association with extremist groups such as al-Qaeda, the Taliban and Islamic State (IS), whose religious practices and doctrines resemble those of Saudi clerics except in when and where to resort to political violence.

How can Saudi authorities distance Wahhabism from jihadism? One argument is semantic. They deny that there is any such thing as Wahhabism; what they practice, they say, is plain Islam as it existed among the salaf, the generation of the Prophet and his companions (thus they accept "salafism"). A second defence is doctrinal. Real salafism is quiet and non-political, they say. "It dictates that we should obey and hear the ruler," says Sheikh Mohammad. A third contention is that, if salafists have become rebellious, that is because they have been infected by the ideas of the Muslim Brotherhood. Founded in Egypt in 1928 during the agitation against British rule, the Brotherhood has inspired political Islam across the Arab world under different names, and with various degrees of militancy—from Ennahdha, the "Muslim democrats" of Tunisia, to Hamas, the armed Palestinian movement that rules Gaza.

Brothers are often less puritanical in Islamic practices than salafists but, because they permit rebellion against impious rulers, they are regarded as more subversive. Still, early on the Brothers enjoyed good relations with Gulf rulers, who thought them useful against nationalists and leftists. But after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990, when part of the Brotherhood supported Saddam Hussein, the Islamists were regarded with greater suspicion. In many Arab countries the Brothers established themselves by providing social services for the poor. In the rich Gulf, the Brotherhood developed a form of "rentier Islamism" in which opposition was based on religious issues, says Courtney Freer of the London School of Economics. "Islamists have not tended to focus on economic policy," she argues. "Theirs is a moralising agenda. For them, governments have to prove that they are guardians of the morality of the nation."

Muhammad bin Zayed of Abu Dhabi, the main power in the United Arab Emirates, regards the Brothers as a menace. The UAE has arrested scores of their activists. Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad of Qatar, by contrast, has been a principal sponsor of the Brotherhood (see next article). Under Muhammad bin Salman, the hitherto ambiguous Saudis now side with the Emiratis. He speaks of a "triangle of evil" encompassing Iran, IS and the Muslim Brotherhood. As such he seems to be drawing a dividing line between Arab states (and tame salafists) on one side, and all forms of Islamism on the other—be they non-violent Brothers or jihadists. "It is a crazy analysis about the threat of a pan-Islamic empire," says Jamal Khashoggi, a former editor of al-Watan, a Saudi-owned newspaper, who now works as a columnist in exile in America. "He treats IS and the Brotherhood as the same thing—the only difference being that IS tried to create the caliphate immediately by violence while the Brotherhood wants to create the caliphate slowly, through democracy."

Although the Brotherhood never seemed very strong in the Gulf, its election victory in Egypt in 2012 unnerved Gulf rulers. Saudi Arabia and the UAE enthusiastically supported the coup that overthrew President Muhammad Morsi of the Brotherhood, not least because he was moving closer to Iran. For Mr Khashoggi, the campaign against the Brothers is an attempt to extinguish the last embers of the Arab spring: "Democracy and political Islam go together."

The Saudi push for "moderate Islam" may have one paradoxical boon. Many Shias hope it will quieten the worst anti-Shia utterances of Wahhabi clerics. Shias form substantial minorities across the Gulf (see chart). Many of them live over the richest oilfields. So episodes of Shia rebelliousness carry not just the fear of separatism, or of Iranian interference, but of economic disaster, too.

To varying degrees, Shias feel discriminated against across the GCC. They are often the downtrodden "other", regarded as a fifth column for Iran if not as outright infidels. During the Arab spring in 2011, many Shias took to the streets to demand greater freedom. The worst unrest took place in Bahrain, where Sunni rulers crushed protests by the majority-Shia population.

In Saudi Arabia, protests broke out in the Qatif region. Repression set off a spiral of bloodshed, and armed clashes in Awamiyah, home to a radical preacher, Nimr al-Nimr, who was executed in 2016. The unrest has been quelled and the town centre bulldozed. Prince Muhammad now seeks to distinguish between Shias and Iran. But resentment runs deep. "The people who took up arms were criminal," says one local Shia activist, "but the Saudi government is even more criminal."

This article appeared in the Special report section of the print edition under the headline "Muslims but not brothers"
Special report: Can Muhammad bin Salman's gamble work?More in this special report:


Sent from my iPhone



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Fwd: Busting the myth of the ‘small’ tax base - Business Line


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: V


Excellent piece by Aarti Krishnan:

Busting the myth of the 'small' tax base - Business Line


https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/opinion/columns/aarati-krishnan/busting-the-myth-of-the-small-tax-base/article24222142.ece

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Fwd: [20th June 2018]: ​Moody's changes outlook on Pakistan's rating to negative from stable; B3 rating affirmed


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: V


Rating Action: 

​​
Moody's changes outlook on Pakistan's rating to negative from stable; B3 rating affirmed

20 Jun 2018

Singapore, June 20, 2018 -- Moody's Investors Service ("Moody's") has today changed the outlook on Pakistan's rating to negative from stable and affirmed the B3 local and foreign currency long-term issuer and senior unsecured debt ratings.

The decision to change the outlook to negative is driven by heightened external vulnerability risk. Foreign exchange reserves have fallen to low levels and, absent significant capital inflows, will not be replenished over the next 12-18 months. Low reserve adequacy threatens continued access to external financing at moderate costs, in turn potentially raising government liquidity risks.

The decision to affirm the B3 rating reflects Pakistan's robust growth potential, supported by ongoing improvements in energy supply and physical infrastructure, which are likely to raise economic competitiveness over time. These credit strengths balance Pakistan's fragile external payments position and very weak government debt affordability owing to low revenue generation capacity.

Concurrently, Moody's has affirmed the B3 foreign currency senior unsecured ratings for The Second Pakistan Int'l Sukuk Co. Ltd. and The Third Pakistan International Sukuk Co Ltd. The associated payment obligations are, in our view, direct obligations of the government of Pakistan.

Pakistan's Ba3 local currency bond and deposit ceilings remain unchanged. The B2 foreign currency bond ceiling and the Caa1 foreign currency deposit ceiling are also unchanged. The short-term foreign currency bond and deposit ceilings remain unchanged at Not-Prime. These ceilings act as a cap on the ratings that can be assigned to the obligations of other entities domiciled in the country.

RATINGS RATIONALE

RATIONALE FOR THE NEGATIVE OUTLOOK

HEIGHTENED EXTERNAL VULNERABILITY RISKS AS ONGOING BALANCE OF PAYMENT PRESSURES ERODE FOREIGN EXCHANGE BUFFERS

Moody's expects Pakistan's external account to remain under significant pressure. The coverage by foreign exchange reserves of imports will likely fall further from already low levels, while coverage of external debt payments due will weaken from currently adequate levels. In turn, higher foreign currency borrowing needs, in combination with the low levels of foreign exchange buffers, risks weighing on the ability of the government to access external financing at moderate costs.

First, external vulnerability risks are related to Pakistan's sizeable current account deficit, which Moody's expect will only narrow slightly to around 4-4.3% of GDP over the next few years, after an expected 4.6% in fiscal 2018 (FY2018, fiscal year ending June 2018) and compared to an average deficit of around 1.5% between FY2014 and FY2016.

Further, continued growth in imports of goods -- driven by demand for capital goods under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project, higher fuel prices and robust household consumption -- will prevent a significant narrowing of the current account deficit. Although goods exports have picked up since the start of 2018, growing around 10-15% year-on-year in US dollar terms, they only amount to half the level of goods imports. While Moody's assumes continued strong growth in exports, this will not be enough to narrow the trade gap.

As a result, unless capital inflows increase significantly, Moody's does not expect official foreign exchange reserves to replenish from their current low levels. Stable foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows, in particular, have not kept pace with the increased outflows driven by trade. As of end-May 2018, official foreign exchange reserves were around $10 billion, down more than 40% from their October 2016 peak and sufficient to cover just two months of imports. Under Moody's baseline projection, the import cover of reserves will likely fall to around 1.7-1.8 months over the next fiscal year, below the adequacy level of three months generally recommended by the International Monetary Fund. Moody's expects the government's tax amnesty scheme, which expires in June 2018, to have a modest impact of around $2-3 billion in foreign exchange inflows.

Second, the coverage by foreign exchange reserves of external debt payments due is weakening, pointing to further external vulnerability risks. With a significant rise in equity inflows unlikely, Moody's expects Pakistan's external financing gap to be met by increased foreign currency borrowing, mainly by the government. Pakistan's External Vulnerability Indicator, the ratio of external debt payments due over the next year plus total nonresident deposits over one year to foreign exchange reserves, will rise to over 120% in FY2019 and further in FY2020, from around 80-85% at the start of FY2018.

While policymakers have started to respond to the external pressures, the policy tools available are politically challenging and would likely have a negative economic impact. The authorities have so far allowed the Pakistani rupee to depreciate by a total of 15% against the US dollar since December 2017, raised policy rates by a total of 75 basis points, and imposed regulatory duties on imports of nonessential goods. Moody's expects these measures to contribute to somewhat lower growth, at 5.2% on average over the next two fiscal years, from an expected 5.8% in FY2018, and higher inflation at 7.0% in FY2019, from around 4% in FY2018. Further currency depreciation, higher policy rates, fiscal tightening, and/or higher regulatory duties would likely weigh further on growth and raise inflation above Moody's current projections.

RATIONALE FOR THE RATING AFFIRMATION

ROBUST GROWTH POTENTIAL, SUPPORTED BY INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS

Pakistan's relatively strong growth potential, enhanced by investment that strengthens and stabilizes power supply, provides the economy with some capacity to absorb external or domestic shocks.

Notwithstanding a moderate slowdown in near-term economic activity induced by policy tightening, Moody's expects GDP growth in Pakistan to remain robust, above 5%. Pakistan's growth potential has risen in part with the gradual elimination of the country's chronic energy shortage, which encourage investment in other sectors. Moody's expects the ongoing implementation of CPEC-related infrastructure projects to raise the country's growth potential further, by improving road and rail connectivity within Pakistan, and allowing it to function as a transport and logistics hub under China's Belt and Road Initiative.

CPEC-related investments over FY2019 and FY2020 include the ongoing implementation of further energy projects, infrastructure projects such as the Karachi Circular Railway, the Karachi-Lahore-Peshawar Railway, and a highway connecting Gwadar and Quetta, which will shorten travel times in the western route of CPEC, and the establishment of special economic zones aimed at boosting Pakistan's export sector.

That said, Pakistan's very low economic competitiveness remains a significant credit constraint. The country's global competitiveness ranking is low compared to peers, at 115th out of 138 countries according to the World Economic Forum's 2017-2018 Global Competitiveness Report, due mainly to poor infrastructure (including the chronic power supply shortage that is gradually being addressed), weak institutions, and deficiencies in health and primary education.

Like many of its South Asian neighbors, Pakistan is also vulnerable to climate change risk. The magnitude and dispersion of seasonal monsoon rainfall continues to influence agricultural sector growth and rural household consumption. As a result, both droughts and floods can create economic and social costs for the sovereign.

LOW REVENUE GENERATION CAPACITY, HIGH GROSS BORROWING WEIGH ON DEBT AFFORDABILITY

In addition to the fragile external payments position, Pakistan's weak revenue generation capacity is a main credit constraint for the sovereign.

Moody's expects government revenue to remain around 16% of GDP over the next two fiscal years -- one of the lowest globally -- albeit gradually increasing given the authorities' focus on expanding the tax base and raising tax compliance. As a result, debt affordability will remain among the weakest across Moody's rated sovereigns and constrain the government's fiscal space, particularly in light of ongoing infrastructure and social spending needs.

Moody's expects the government's fiscal deficit to remain around 5% of GDP in FY2019 and FY2020, after a projected deficit of 5.8% in FY2018. Unless nominal GDP growth deteriorates substantially, Moody's does not anticipate that the government's debt burden will rise significantly. However, the debt burden will not fall from the current, relatively high levels, hovering around 70-73% of GDP.

As a result of persistent deficits and a significant share of overall debt being financed through short-term securities, the government's gross borrowing requirement is one of the highest across Moody's rated sovereigns, and expected to remain around 27-30% of GDP over the next two fiscal years. With Treasury bills estimated at around 12% of FY2018 GDP, and an average maturity of government debt of less than four years, a sudden rise in the cost of debt beyond Moody's assumptions would have a rapid and significant negative effect on debt affordability.

WHAT COULD CHANGE THE RATING UP

The negative outlook signals that a rating upgrade is unlikely. The outlook would likely be changed to stable if external vulnerability risks decreased materially and durably, including through policy adjustments that strengthen the external payments position. A resumption of fiscal consolidation pointing to a meaningful reduction in the debt burden would also be credit positive.

WHAT COULD CHANGE THE RATING DOWN

A further deterioration in Pakistan's external position, including a more pronounced erosion of foreign reserve buffers, which would threaten the government's external repayment capacity and heighten liquidity risks further, would likely result in a downgrade of the rating. Expectations that government debt would continue to rise markedly, with a related deterioration in debt affordability from already weak levels, would also put downward pressure on the rating.

GDP per capita (PPP basis, US$): 5,095 (2017 Actual) (also known as Per Capita Income)

Real GDP growth (% change): 5.4% (2017 Actual) (also known as GDP Growth)

Inflation Rate (CPI, % change Dec/Dec): 3.9% (2017 Actual)

Gen. Gov. Financial Balance/GDP: -5.6% (2017 Actual) (also known as Fiscal Balance)

Current Account Balance/GDP: -4.1% (2017 Actual) (also known as External Balance)

External debt/GDP: 27.3% (2017 Actual)

Level of economic development: Very Low level of economic resilience

Default history: At least one default event (on bonds and/or loans) has been recorded since 1983.

SUMMARY OF MINUTES FROM RATING COMMITTEE

On 18 June 2018, a rating committee was called to discuss the rating of the Pakistan, Government of. The main points raised during the discussion were: The issuer's economic fundamentals, including its economic strength, have not materially changed. The issuer's institutional strength/ framework, have not materially changed. The issuer's fiscal or financial strength, including its debt profile, has not materially changed. The issuer's susceptibility to event risks has not materially changed.

The principal methodology used in these ratings was Sovereign Bond Ratings published in December 2016. Please see the Rating Methodologies page on www.moodys.com for a copy of this methodology.

The weighting of all rating factors is described in the methodology used in this credit rating action, if applicable.

REGULATORY DISCLOSURES

For ratings issued on a program, series or category/class of debt, this announcement provides certain regulatory disclosures in relation to each rating of a subsequently issued bond or note of the same series or category/class of debt or pursuant to a program for which the ratings are derived exclusively from existing ratings in accordance with Moody's rating practices. For ratings issued on a support provider, this announcement provides certain regulatory disclosures in relation to the credit rating action on the support provider and in relation to each particular credit rating action for securities that derive their credit ratings from the support provider's credit rating. For provisional ratings, this announcement provides certain regulatory disclosures in relation to the provisional rating assigned, and in relation to a definitive rating that may be assigned subsequent to the final issuance of the debt, in each case where the transaction structure and terms have not changed prior to the assignment of the definitive rating in a manner that would have affected the rating. For further information please see the ratings tab on the issuer/entity page for the respective issuer on www.moodys.com.

For any affected securities or rated entities receiving direct credit support from the primary entity(ies) of this credit rating action, and whose ratings may change as a result of this credit rating action, the associated regulatory disclosures will be those of the guarantor entity. Exceptions to this approach exist for the following disclosures, if applicable to jurisdiction: Ancillary Services, Disclosure to rated entity, Disclosure from rated entity.

Regulatory disclosures contained in this press release apply to the credit rating and, if applicable, the related rating outlook or rating review.

Please see www.moodys.com for any updates on changes to the lead rating analyst and to the Moody's legal entity that has issued the rating.

Please see the ratings tab on the issuer/entity page on www.moodys.com for additional regulatory disclosures for each credit rating.

Christian Fang
Asst Vice President - Analyst
Sovereign Risk Group
Moody's Investors Service Singapore Pte. Ltd.
50 Raffles Place #23-06
Singapore Land Tower
Singapore 48623
Singapore
JOURNALISTS: 852 3758 1350
Client Service: 852 3551 3077

Marie Diron
MD - Sovereign Risk
Sovereign Risk Group
JOURNALISTS: 852 3758 1350
Client Service: 852 3551 3077

Releasing Office:
Moody's Investors Service Singapore Pte. Ltd.
50 Raffles Place #23-06
Singapore Land Tower
Singapore 48623
Singapore
JOURNALISTS: 852 3758 1350
Client Service: 852 3551 3077

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Fwd: How many Indians died in Terrorism and Insurgency - data compiled on eSamskriti.com


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sanjeev Nayyar


Namaskar,
 
Since the 1980's so many Indians have been killed in acts of terrorism and insurgency, not to forget bomb blasts, that we have lost track and perhaps the value of one life.
 
It is with that feeling I have compiled this data by referring to the South Asia Terrorism Portal.
 
Deaths in J&K, Punjab and Left-wing extremism were 74,219 and north east 21,602.
 
Table 1 gives lives lost in Jammu & Kashmir, Punjab, Left-wing extremism and each north eastern state.
 
Table 2 gives lives lost in Bomb Blasts from 1993 onwards.
 
 
In case of any errors or suggestions write back.
 
Om Shanti Shanti Shanti
sanjeev nayyar
 
 

 



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Fwd: Kashmir : From Azadi to Nizam-e-Mustafa+Trump’s North Korea diplomacy aims to contain China+Biggest ever FDI project – Lanka gets final cheque


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sanjeev Nayyar


1 Trump-Kim An arduous effort to resolve the many tangled issues awaits by Kanwal Sibal 21.6.18 http://en.metro-un.com/infinity/article_popover_share.aspx?guid=4142c61c-2a5a-4b88-8cb4-2c53d3965ea5
 
2. Kim Jong visits China again 19.6.18 http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1107582.shtml
 
2a. Trump's North Korea diplomacy aims to contain China 20.6.18 by Brahma C https://asia.nikkei.com/Opinion/Trump-s-North-Korea-diplomacy-aims-to-contain-China
Not only does such an arsenal hold greater security implications for China than for the U.S., but also Trump's diplomacy is making it more difficult for Beijing to keep North Korea in its orbit. Washington's direct diplomacy with North Korea began in dramatic fashion, with Pompeo, when he was CIA chief, holding unpublicized talks with Kim in Pyongyang.
 
3. Robust China N Korea ties instill energy to the region 20.6.18 http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1107736.shtml
 
 
5. Kashmir : From Azadi to Nizam-e-Mustafa 21.6.18 by Col Anil Athale http://www.indiandefencereview.com/news/kashmir-from-azadi-to-nizam-e-mustafa/
The youth in the valley today is driven by ideology of militant Islam that sees 'Nizam e Mustafa' or Shariyat rule as the ultimate goal. 
Economic rationale for insurgency no longer exists, yet in the popular narrative it is still regarded as the main driver of violence. The current spate of economic packages and goodies being given by the Central Govt. is like treating a Cancer patient with drugs for TB! 
Reorganization of the state of J&K faces a major hurdle due to its internationalization by us on 1 January 1948 when we took our complaint of Pakistani aggression to the UN. It is time to correct the mistake made by Mr. Nehru and withdraw our complaint from the UN forum. 

6. Donald Trump upends the world order 19.6.18 by Shahid Burkhi https://tribune.com.pk/story/1736943/6-donald-trump-upends-global-order/
 
Warm Regards
sanjeev nayyar



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sent from samsung galaxy note3 neo, so please excuse brevity

Fwd: International Yoga Day Special - eSamskriti.com. LINKS to Movie, Album, Articles


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sanjeev Nayyar


Namaskar,
 

One of the good things the current government has done is to get the United Nations to declare June 21 as International Yoga Day. We present -

 

1. Anand Ashram Foundation Bali & supported by the Embassy of India, Jakarta & JNICC organised three pre-events in the Indonesia namely Jakarta, Bali and Jogjakarta. Album has pictures of how Yoga is learnt and enjoyed. https://www.esamskriti.com/a/Indonesia/International-Yoga-Day-Indonesia-Pre-event.aspx

 

2. Movie titled History of Yoga – the path of My Ancestors. Made by Deepika Kothari and Ramji Om the 44 minute movie can now be viewed on U Tube in 4 languages namely English, Hindi, Chinese and Spanish. https://www.esamskriti.com/e/Yoga/Darsana/History-of-Yoga-~-the-path-of-my-Ancestors-1.aspx

 

3. Kaivalyadhama are opening a branch at Jakarta. Ravi Dixit, Jt Director Kaivalyadham Mumbai shares his experiences of teaching Indonesians. https://www.esamskriti.com/e/Yoga/Worldwide/Taking-Yoga-to-Indonesia-1.aspx

 

4. Book on Yoga Asanas – your guide to Yog by Prof G S Sahay. It gives name of asana, picture, do's and don't's.  https://www.esamskriti.com/e/Yoga/Asanas-ad-Pranayama/Photos-of-Yoga-Asanas-1.aspx

 

5. Impact of Shavasana on your memory scores. https://www.esamskriti.com/e/Yoga/Research/Impact-of-Shavasana-and-meditation-on-memory-scores-1.aspx

 

6. Article explains the Concept of Yoga in Patanjali's Yoga Sutras by T N Sethumadhavanji https://www.esamskriti.com/e/Yoga/Darsana/A-Note-on-The-Concept-Of-Yoga-In-Patanjali-Yoga-Sutras-1.aspx

 

 

Warm Regards

sanjeev nayyar

 

 

 




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ikea minus the swedish meatballs

Saturday, June 23, 2018

Fwd: Sharyl Attkisson: The Left Invented Fake News





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Fwd: The Guardian: ' 'Elitist den of hate': Silicon Valley pastor decries hypocrisy of area's rich liberals



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Fwd: UK links visa snub to India's refusal to take back migrants


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Rajeev Mantri


UK links visa snub to India's refusal to take back migrants

LONDON: Bilateral relations between the

UK

and India have taken a nosedive ironically at the launch of the first ever 'UK-India Week', which was meant to celebrate the bond between the two countries.


The UK's international trade secretary

Liam Fox

said on the sidelines of the launch event that the reason India was excluded from a list of countries offered easier access to student visas was because it had in April refused to sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU) promising to facilitate return of

illegal Indian immigrants

in the UK to India. His remarks went down like a lead balloon with officials at the Indian high commission in London.

The aim of the UK-India Week was to address prospects for post-Brexit partnerships. But instead, after day one of the event organised by PM Modi's ex- communications director Manoj Ladwa, ties have hit an all-time low.


Responding to Fox's remarks, an Indian high commission official told TOI, "It's up to the British government to decide what kind of visas they want to give and whether they want closer ties with India. I feel the signals they are sending our way are wrong but whether they bring lasting damage to our relations is a longterm perspective. It's for them to decide if they want to link this to the MoU, but if they do, they will have to bear the consequences. I am not confident this is going to turn out well."


A UK foreign office spokesman said: "There is no limit on the number of genuine Indian students who can come to study in the UK, and the fact that last year saw a 30 per cent increase in tier-4 visas issued to Indians is proof the current system allows for strong growth in this area. We continue to discuss finalising an agreement on the returns of Indian nationals in the UK who are here illegally, with the hope that it will be ratified and implemented as soon as possible."

Britain believes there are 100,000 illegal Indian immigrants in the UK whereas India puts the figure at 2,000.


On Monday, at the release of an edition of 'The 100 Most Influential in UK-India Relations', Fox surprisingly helped sour ties by saying, "There is always a demand for easier norms, but we cannot look at that without addressing the issue of overstayers."


Junior home minister

Kiren Rijiju

initialled the MoU in January but PM Modi pulled out of signing it when he visited the UK in April. Sources at the Indian high commission had told TOI at the time that the MoU had not been signed because India was "not seeing any progress on easing of visas for Indians".



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