Categories
-Top News UAE News Woman

UAE pledges AED 367 mn to support women’s education

This came during the participation of Reem bint Ibrahim Al Hashemy, Minister of State for International Cooperation, in the GPE Replenishment Summit…reports Asian Lite News

The UAE has pledged AED 367 million ($100 mn) to the Global Partnership for Education (GPE) to support the strategic plan for educational programmes in developing countries, over the coming five years.

This came during the participation of Reem bint Ibrahim Al Hashemy, Minister of State for International Cooperation, in the GPE Replenishment Summit organised by the UK and Kenya and the GPE to renew pledges on 28th and 29th July in London.

In her remarks, Reem Al Hashemy affirmed the UAE’s keenness and sustained efforts to provide quality education to children around the world. She also underscored the UAE’s determination to work in cooperation with its regional and international partners, such as the GPE, to develop the skills women, girls, and youth need for long-term success, in light of the challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic around the world.

Al Hashemy also emphasised the UAE’s firm belief in the pivotal role of education in supporting the sustainable development of societies around the world. This belief, Al Hashemy noted, has driven the UAE to host the RewirEd Global Education Summit in partnership with Dubai Cares and Expo 2020 Dubai and in coordination with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation.

RewirEd will be held at Expo 2020 Dubai with a clear vision to reshape the educational landscape for a prosperous, sustainable, innovative, and accessible future for all while showcasing the country’s development aid.

Al Hashemy also highlighted the key role of UAE foreign aid in nurturing international partnerships to support key sector development in developing and least developed countries, with education as a priority.

The UAE is working to ensure the provision of education to women and girls to support the fourth goal of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals 2030 Agenda, Al Hashemy explained, adding that the UAE also plays a prominent role in advancing the efforts undertaken by the GPE.

In 2018, the UAE pledged US$100 million to support the GPE at the 3rd replenishment conference in Dakar, Senegal, becoming the first Arab and Middle Eastern member in GPE.

The Global Partnership for Education is the largest global fund solely dedicated to transforming education in lower-income countries. Established in 2003, the programme works in partnership with donors, governments in developing countries, international organisations, the private sector, teacher associations, and civil society institutions.

ALSO READ: UAE stresses on two-state solution at UNSC meet on Palestine

Categories
-Top News UAE News

Etihad Rail completes excavation of GCC’s longest rail tunnel

The tunnel is part of Package D of Stage Two, which runs for 145 kilometres from Dubai and Sharjah, through the Al Hajar Mountains, toward the emirate of Fujairah…reports Asian Lite News

Etihad Rail, the developer and operator of the UAE National Rail Network, has completed excavating the longest tunnel in the Gulf Region, running for 1.8 kilometres.

The tunnel is part of Package D of Stage Two, which runs for 145 kilometres from Dubai and Sharjah, through the Al Hajar Mountains, toward the emirate of Fujairah. The package includes the construction of nine tunnels through the mountains at a cumulative length of 6.9 kilometres, and additionally includes 54 bridges and 20 animal crossings.

The achievement is a significant step in the project’s development. The route passes through some of the most complex topographical areas in the construction of the network. In total, the completion of the tunnel contributes to ensuring development continues on an accelerated schedule.

All tunnel excavation operations were implemented in line with international best safety practices. Teams ensured that all construction was carried out safely, given the mountainous terrain surrounding the site. The tunnel’s excavation required 300,000 working hours to complete, with over half a million tonnes of stone removed.

The UAE National Rail Network is being constructed on schedule. Track laying recently commenced at Saih Shuaib, the rail head for track running toward Abu Dhabi and Dubai as part of Stage Two. The overall track on Stage Two will run from Ghuweifat on the border of Saudi Arabia to the emirate of Fujairah on the UAE’s eastern seaboard. At the beginning of 2021, track laying began in the Al Dhafra region toward the UAE’s border with Saudi Arabia.

ALSO READ: Etihad launches IATA Travel Pass to 7 cities

Categories
-Top News Afghanistan Africa News

Afghan void could lead to new terror axis in Africa

Experts said that the political vacuum in Afghanistan which has led to a rapid comeback of the Taliban will only bolster these terror groups in Africa…reports Mahua Venkatesh

 Just about a week ago, Ghanas Information Minister Kojo Oppong Nkrumah said that terror activities in West Africa could increase. Nkrumah even said that the terror outfits are recruiting in Ghana.

“I am sad to say that our security situation in West Africa is getting precarious. Terrorism and piracy are our biggest threats in West Africa,” he told Asaase radio according to Ghana Web.

Experts said that the political vacuum in Afghanistan which has led to a rapid comeback of the Taliban will only bolster these terror groups in Africa.

“There is a power vacuum in Afghanistan, created by the US. We are already seeing how the Taliban is making a comeback. This is a fertile time for terrorism to bloom once again and especially in Africa since it is economically weak,” BK Singh, former joint commissioner of Delhi Police, told India Narrative.

“In fact the Taliban may invite splinter groups to join them � a move that would help in creating a pan Islamic impression,” Singh added.

Afghan security force members take part in a military operation in Chahar Dara district of Kunduz province, Afghanistan, Jan. 16, 2018. The Kunduz province, as well as neighboring Baghlan and Takhar provinces, have been the hotbeds of heavy clashes over the past couple of months as Taliban has been trying to attack the government forces in the once relatively peaceful region. (Xinhua/Ajmal Kakar/IANS)

If immediate action is not taken, the new hub for terror outfits will only give them a platform to carry out activities across the world.

Terror activities have increased all over Africa. In March, Palma in Mozambique was ripped by a massive terror attack, which forced French energy giant Total SE to pull out of the $24.1 billion liquefied natural gas (LNG) project in the country.

India’s state owned ONGC Videsh which also has a stake in the project has adopted a wait and watch mode.

A recent United Nations report noted that Africa has been hit the most by terror related activities in the first half of 2021. Along with the withdrawal of the US troops from Afghanistan, which has facilitated the comeback of the Taliban, the French military mission, present in West Africa has also started to pull out.

BBC, last month in a report noted that “both the Islamic State group and its rivals in al-Qaeda have taken a strategic decision to make Africa their new priority.”

Pic credit ANI

“If chaos, violent extremism and insecurity become the norm in Sahel nations like Mali then we are likely to see two things emerge: firstly, a new geographic base from which jihadists can plot attacks around the world and secondly, an increased flow of migrants and refugees making the perilous journey north to Europe to escape from their own countries,” Frank Gardner, BBC’s security correspondent wrote.

“The African countries and the leaders are aware of the challenges that terrorism bring about. They are ready to do the needful and deal with the problem but they do not have the required resources to fight this alone. Countries across the globe must come together to support Africa in dealing with this challenge,” Pradeep S Mehta, Secretary General, CUTS International told India Narrative.

Increased terror activities in Africa have raised concerns for the locals as well as countries including China outside the continent. China, which has been caught in a storm over gross human rights violations in relation to the Uighur Muslims, has made huge investments in Africa. Recently, nine Chinese nationals were killed in a bus blast � a handiwork of terror outfits– in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

(The content is being carried under an arrangement with indianarrative.com)

ALSO READ: PROXY WAR IN AFGHANISTAN: Pakistan in a fix as GCC, West flex muscles

ALSO READ: Drug abuse on the rise in Kashmir as Pak facilitates supply from Afghanistan

Categories
-Top News Asia News Nepal

Nepal feels hopeful as Deuba takes office

Nepal under the Prime Minister-ship of K.P. Sharma Oli had been occupying the international headlines for uncertainties and political instability….reports Asian Lite News

The restoration of Nepal’s dissolved lower house of Parliament by the Supreme Court and Sher Bahadur Deuba becoming the Prime Minister for the fifth term by winning the trust vote by a comfortable margin, has finally helped the Nepalese to heave a sigh of relief.

Nepal under the Prime Minister-ship of K.P. Sharma Oli had been occupying the international headlines for all the wrong reasons and the Himalayan nation plunged into uncertainties and political instability.

With almost one and a half years to go for the next general elections, Deuba as the most favourite choice to head the country, has already announced that his top priority would be to ensure that all the Nepalese are vaccinated against Covid-19 even as the threat of a third wave of the pandemic looms large.

Though it is not certain what lies in store for the bilateral relations between Nepal and India, the statements of the Prime Ministers of both the countries have raised hopes that the ever-worsening ties would soon improve.

Deuba was instrumental in signing eight Memorandums of Understanding (MoU) during his India visit in August 2017. The MoUs largely helped in reconstruction of Nepal that was badly hit by an earthquake in 2015.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was among the first to congratulate Deuba after he won the confidence vote is a clear cut indication that the unique and millenia-old people-to-people linkages that underpin the special friendship between the two countries would take greater heights.

ALSO READ: New roads, transport corridors could boost India-Nepal ties

Modi has also assured of supply of Covid-19 vaccines. It is expected that the supply of one million doses of vaccines from India which was stalled, will soon resume.

Deuba’s diplomatic and political statements, including the one when he visited India in 2017 as the Prime Minister, proved his maturity in regard to how to maintain a balanced ties with both India and China. However, this time China has every other reason not to expect the same benevolence as it used to get during the time of Oli.

In a bid to portray India into bad light despite its best efforts to take the bilateral relation to a greater height, Oli tried to work overtime to appease its northern neighbour.

Oli’s egoistic rhetoric would have only caused more damage to the tiny country in the long run.

Deuba has a challenging task to outdo the wrong.

At least four of the eight MoUs signed in 2017, including utilisation of India’s Housing Grant Component to support reconstruction of 50,000 houses had largely helped Nepal.

Similarly MoUs on implementation of reconstruction packages in the education sector, cultural heritage sector and in the health sector in Nepal, were the testimony of how Deuba was a pragmatic leader who could easily visualise the issues and prioritize them.

India’s Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla during his two-day-long Nepal visit in November 2020, reiterated that the two nations are the closest friends and would work together to fine tune the same.

Deuba echoed the same immediately after he became the Prime Minister.

Though Deuba holds a record of not completing his tenure every time he became the Prime Minister, the way he won the trust vote this time sends a signal that he would continue to enjoy comfortable support till the time the country goes to the general election.

Though it is too early to project what lies in store for Nepal known for its political instability, Nepalese people at large are hopeful that a new dawn would usher under Deuba’s leadership.

And the development process stalled due to political quagmire, would move on fast track, under the leadership of the President of Nepali Congress Party.

ALSO READ: Nepal confirms new mutant of Delta variant of Covid-19

ALSO READ: Is China worried about new change in Nepal?

Categories
Arts & Culture Australia India News

National Gallery of Australia to return 14 ‘looted’ artworks to India

This is the fourth time that the NGA will be returning illegally exported works from Kapoor and his associates…reports Asian Lite News

The National Gallery of Australia has decided to return 14 artworks from its Asian art collection to the Indian government.

Worth a combined value of $3 milion, 13 of the artworks were purchased from the New York-based gallery, Art of the Past, run by antiquities dealer and alleged smuggler Subhash Kapoor.

The artworks include six sculptures, six photographs, a painted scroll and a processional standard. Some of the items date back to the 12th century.

This is the fourth time that the NGA will be returning illegally exported works from Kapoor and his associates.

In fact, Kapoor was extradited from Germany to India in July 2012 and has been charged with stealing and illegally exporting antiquities.

“We have strengthened our processes and have zero tolerance now for any inconsistencies in the provenance of a work of art. This is another step towards us building an ethical approach to managing our collections,” ABC News quoted NGA director Nick Mitzevich as saying.

“It’s unfortunate, and the institution is sorry for this development. We are doing all we can to avoid any future missteps of this kind,” Mitzevich said in The Australian.

“It’s a historic issue… The NGA was part of an international fraud campaign that affected more than a dozen of the world’s leading institutions,” he said.

Kapoor’s clients included the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts, as well as the Asian Civilizations Museum in Singapore, the NGA and the Art Gallery of NSW.

The Indian High Commission in Australia has welcomed the move, though it will take a few months before the works are actually handed over.

In a tweet, Manpreet Vohra, the Indian High Commissioner to Australia, said that India is grateful to Australia and the National Gallery of Australia for their decision to return the extraordinary pieces of art to India.

ALSO READ-GALLERY: Sadiq pays tribute to Jallianwalah Bagh Martyrs

READ MORE-India, B’desh reaffirm commitment to strengthen partnership

Categories
-Top News Afghanistan Asia News

PROXY WAR IN AFGHANISTAN: Pakistan in a fix as GCC, West flex muscles

Although there is an unstated broad consensus among Pakistan’s political parties on having a ‘friendly’ government in Kabul, apprehensions that the conflict escalation will lead to greater inflow of drugs, arms and refugees, damage the fragile social fabric and worsen a bad economy, is bound to cause differences among them, adding to existing friction between the Khan Government and its political opponents … writes Dr Sakariya Kareem

Pakistan’s poorly-concealed efforts, both diplomatic and military, to push the Taliban towards Kabul, have impacted its domestic politics. They have also upset the Western powers worried about an escalated civil war in the region, should the Ghani Government fall without a political resolution.

Although seemingly unconnected, the two developments converged on a meeting in London between exiled former prime minister Nawaz Sharif and senior ministers and officials of the Kabul regime. This has angered Islamabad no end, but it cannot protest beyond calling names to Nawaz that, to its dismay, has fired-up the domestic political scene.

An unnamed ‘friendly’ Arab nation facilitated the London meeting, according to The News International (July 25, 2021). This further reinforces the concerns, even among the Muslim nations, at the Taliban advance across the Afghan countryside.

“The News has learnt from the credible source that a diplomat from the Middle Eastern Arab country spoke to Nawaz Sharif and floated the idea of meeting the Afghan NSA during his London visit to meet the UK’s political and military leadership besides meeting with politicians and ambassadors from several countries,” the newspaper said, quoting “a trusted source.”

The London meeting came even as the Taliban demanded the removal of the Ghani Government as a precondition to ceasefire, which US President Joe Biden rejected by reiterating support to Ghani.

It is clear that besides the Western powers, even the Chinese, the Russians and the Central Asians have been opposed to a violent seizure of power leading to regime change. Keen to control the initiative in Afghanistan that is driven by the Taliban and going out of their control, even China and Pakistan are apprehensive.  Out of diplomatic necessity and/or in view of the worsening ground situation, the foreign ministers of the two on July 24 called on all Afghan stakeholders to “agree on a comprehensive ceasefire and work together to achieve a broad-based, inclusive and negotiated political settlement.”

Ostensibly, the London meeting and behind-the-door moves that might follow, are aimed at blocking Pakistan’s efforts and slow Taliban’s advance. World powers, diplomatic sources say, realise the urgent need to work right now, since they realise that sanctioning the Taliban after they have seized power in Kabul at some stage would be worthless.  

The meeting between Nawaz Sharif and Afghan NSA Hamdullah Mohib was pre-planned, according to The News International and was arranged by Sharif’s former finance minister, Ishaq Dar, who is also living in exile.

Afghan National Security Adviser Hamdullah Mohib

Dawn newspaper (July 25) confirmed, after the meeting, that the Afghan NSA had contacted Ishaq Dar in London “months earlier”, with a request to meet Nawaz on the direction of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani.

There was nothing unofficial about the meeting taking place amidst the Afghans conferring with the British Government. Mohib was accompanied in all meetings by the State Minister for Peace Sayed Sadat Naderi and the Afghan Ambassador to London, Tayeb Jawad. Following the meeting, Kabul went official with photographs and details and a surprised Islamabad reacted with anger.

The Pakistan Government demanded transcripts of discussion, while PML-Nawaz, the main opposition party sought to make political capital. Dar said in London that the meeting was “damage control for PTI’s failed foreign policy’.

An added reason for Islamabad’s anger is that Sharif met the very Afghan officials with whom it has been engaged in daily slanging matches. It has stopped talking to Mohib after he called Pakistan a ‘brothel’. Pakistani NSA Yusuf Moeed has called officials in the Kabul Government ‘idiotic.’ Islamabad has painted Sharif in dark colours for meeting ‘hostile’ Afghan officials.

While the Imran Khan Government is fuming, the PML-N has scored a political and diplomatic brownie point with the Nawaz-Mohib meeting. Sharif’s daughter and party vice president Maryam Nawaz posted on social media: “It is the very essence of diplomacy to talk to everyone, listen to their point of view and convey one’s own message across: something this government doesn’t comprehend and hence is a complete failure on the international front.”

She also tweeted a photo collage of Nawaz’s meeting with Mohib alongside an earlier meeting of the Afghan NSA with Chief of Army Staff Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa, with the remarks, “Both pictures nice, no?”

Although there is an unstated broad consensus among Pakistan’s political parties on having a ‘friendly’ government in Kabul, apprehensions that the conflict escalation will lead to greater inflow of drugs, arms and refugees, damage the fragile social fabric and worsen a bad economy, is bound to cause differences among them, adding to existing friction between the Khan Government and its political opponents.

Categories
Environment

A pond where turtles thrive on devotion

Pathak says he once tried to lift them but found them too heavy. “Going by their size and weight, I think they are quite old,” he said…reports Asian Lite News.

In a nondescript corner of Kanpur, a pond near a Shiva temple has become home to a thriving turtle population.

At a time when water bodies in India are either shrinking or vanishing, the pond surrounded by a concrete jungle in Kanpur, is thriving mainly due to the religious beliefs of the Hindus.

Hindu devotees ensure that nobody harms the turtles and visitors to the temple feed them regularly.

Turtles are an endangered species and possessing or catching one is banned under India’s Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972.

According to Rajesh Pathak a local resident, “The temple was built about 200 years ago and the pond is much older. There is a possibility that the turtles may also be very old but things are yet to be verified by a wildlife expert. Till date, no expert has visited the pond.”

According to him, some of the turtles have shells that are three feet long.

Pathak says he once tried to lift them but found them too heavy. “Going by their size and weight, I think they are quite old,” he said.

Pathak is not sure about the number of turtles in the pond. “There may be hundreds in number,” he said.

The surface of the pond looks blackish green and going by the colour, it is hard to believe that the pond supports a rich aquatic life.

The turtles have started responding to human voices. On Tuesdays, a large number of devotees gather at the pond because Tuesday is considered an auspicious day for feeding turtles.

The people shout, “Aah, aah, aah….”

Ripples break the calmness of the surface. Then, there is some disturbance on the surface close to the bank. Finally, with a splash, a turtle appears, perhaps the biggest and the boldest one — its pink mouth wide open.

It hungrily devours the cottage cheese that people are offering. Soon, another one appears. Then, a third. In less than a minute the bank is lined with turtles.

Once the stock of cottage cheese gets exhausted, people start throwing loaves of bread at them. But the turtles have apparently developed a taste for cottage cheese and ignore the bread.

One by one, they start returning to the depths of the pond and soon the surface is once again calm.

“The turtle is much revered in the Hindu mythology. It is mentioned in some texts that the earth rests on the back of a giant turtle. In some, it is written that the turtle is an incarnation of Lord Vishnu. Many Hindus believe feeding turtles will help them in getting salvation. Hence people feed them,” said Pathak.

“Whatever may be the reason, it is good that if the people are feeding the turtles. Try to imagine what would happen if people stop feeding them. They may starve to death,” he added.

“It is not unusual if a small turtle sneaks into a home but it is safely returned to the pond,” said Pathak.

In the past, some people have tried to poach the turtles but were chased away by locals.

A retired forest official said a turtle population flourishing in a pond in a straggling, unplanned city was no less than a miracle.

“Where in Kanpur can a person today see a turtle? Either in the zoo or in the Ganga,” he said.

“Once, Kanpur had hundreds of ponds. Most of them have disappeared over the years. But if there is a pond that supports a big population of turtles, then it is something very unique. And we must remember that till date no government or any organisation has protected the pond or the turtles. Still, both have survived for such a long time. Steps must be taken to preserve the pond and the lives in it,” the official added.

Rain is the only source of water for the pond at present. Pumps are installed that draw water from the ground and fill the pond. The water level in the pond will then remain constant throughout the year,” said Pathak.

ALSO READ-Rare and exotic animals in India

READ MORE-SL struggles to repay debts as economy suffers setback

Categories
-Top News ASEAN News PAKISTAN

Pak’s terror outfits could be Waterloo for its ASEAN ambition

A country which has become a synonym for terrorism can only prove to be an embarrassment and disruption for a grouping like ASEAN…reports Asian Lite News

Pakistan carries too much unsavoury baggage and labels to be a Dialogue Partner in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

Pakistan has long been considered as a terrorist sponsor. It is currently under watch from the international watchdog on terrorism financing, FATF. It hosts, according to Prime Minister Imran Khan, over 30,000 terrorists. It is home to the largest number of militants and terrorist entities proscribed by the UN, various international organisations and more than 100 countries.

A country which has become a synonym for terrorism can only prove to be an embarrassment and disruption for a grouping like ASEAN which faces more urgent challenges of an aggressive China and unprecedented fluidity in global economy.

What ASEAN members would do well to remember is that Pakistan has also been consistently labelled as the ‘most dangerous place’ in the world to be a journalist or a human rights activist. It has rarely been a free country for journalists or human rights activism. But it has become one of the worst under Prime Minister Khan.

Journalists, bloggers and human rights have been brutally killed, assaulted and threatened in large numbers under his captaincy of the country. In fact, his government’s agents have hunted down journalists and activists in other countries where they lived in asylum.

ALSO READ: Big blow to Pakistan as TTP eyes ‘Greater Afghanistan’

Khan has adopted a more aggressive campaign against the media than his predecessors. He has gone after media companies and owners who refuse to kowtow to his diktat. His government disrupted the functioning of several media houses by ordering unwarranted raids on their offices, stopping their printing presses and blocking their supply lines. The owner of a powerful media house, the Jang Group, was hauled up on an old charge related to property.

India slams Pakistan for its human rights situation 

Television companies that refused to tow the line of the Khan government or his patrons in Rawalpindi have been slapped with taxes, fines and allegations of misdemeanor at the drop of a hat. Even popular anchors like Hamid Mir have not been spared for speaking up against journalists getting assaulted inside their own homes. Several bloggers and human rights activists have disappeared in the past months, with accusing fingers pointing at the government and the military for running a brutal campaign to silence the people. Such a country deserves no place in a respectable organisation like ASEAN.

Pakistan’s treatment of its minorities and women, a large number of them Muslims, should also raise heckles among the ASEAN leadership. Pakistan has been punishing Ahmadis and Shias for long. Ahmadis, a minority sect among Muslims, are virtually slaves in Pakistan with no claim to normal citizenship rights like worship or voting. Shias for decades have been targeted by various extremist Sunni outfits, most of them flourishing under the patronage of the state. Hindus, Sikhs and Christians have rarely, if ever, fair and just treatment as citizens. Pakhtuns, Baloch and Sindhis, almost all of them Muslims, have been facing the state’s brutality for raising their voice for just treatment. Pakistan’s worsening human rights record and religious persecution have been highlighted by the US and European Union besides other countries.

With such an abysmal record in safeguarding the interest and life of its own citizens, Pakistan has proved to be a failing state, a factor which alone should nix any move to make it a member of ASEAN.

ALSO READ: India slams Pakistan for holding polls in PoK

ALSO READ: Taliban Targets Pakistan’s Dirty Bomb Assets

Categories
India News

Assam asks residents not to visit Mizoram

The advisory said that there have been several cases of violent skirmishes in the Assam-Mizoram border area, including recently in Assam’s Cachar, Karimganj and Hailakandi districts bordering Mizoram…reports Asian Lite News.

In wake of the bloody border clash on Monday and subsequent developments, the Assam government on Thursday asked its citizens not to visit Mizoram and those staying in the neighbouring state to maintain utmost caution.

The unprecedented travel advisory, issued by Commissioner and Secretary, Home and Political, M.S. Manivannan said that given the critical prevailing situation, the people of Assam are advised not to travel to Mizoram as any threat to their personal safety cannot be accepted.

“People of Assam, staying in Mizoram due to work related compulsion, should exercise utmost caution,” it said.

The advisory said that there have been several cases of violent skirmishes in the Assam-Mizoram border area, including recently in Assam’s Cachar, Karimganj and Hailakandi districts bordering Mizoram.

Assam-Mizoram border row turns violent, CMs seeks Centre’s intervention

Noting that Cachar on Monday saw indiscriminate firing on the police personnel as well as civilians, claiming the lives of six policemen and leaving scores of police personnel and civilians seriously injured, it said: “Even after this incident, certain Mizo civil society, students, and youth organisations are constantly issuing provocative statements against the state of Assam and its people.

“It has been reliably learnt from video footage available with Assam Police, that many civilians are heavily armed with automatic weapons etc. In view of the above and with the purpose of ensuring safety and security, this travel advisory was issued to all the people of Assam,” it said.

Assam Police to probe role of Mizoram MP

An Assam Police team, including CID officers, is going to Delhi to probe Mizoram’s Rajya Sabha member K. Vanlalvena’s alleged role in the Monday’s violence along the inter-state border, which left six Assam cops dead, officials said on Thursday.

A senior Assam Police official said that the decision to question Vanlalvena was taken following his “controversial interview to the electronic media in which he allegedly has warned the Assam police with objectionable words”.

Vanlalvena said: “I do not have any comment now. I have not received any official information.”

The most violent clashes along the Assam-Mizoram border left six Assam Police personnel dead and around 100 civilians and security personnel of the two neighbouring states injured, including an Inspector General of Police in Assam and Cachar Superintendent of Police Vaibhav Chandrakant Nimbalkar.

Assam Police’s Special Director General G.P. Singh, in a tweet, said: “Assam police team including officers of CID are leaving for Delhi to take lawful action relating to conspiracy behind the incident in light of media interviews of Rajya Sabha MP Sri K Vanlalvena indicative of his active role in conspiracy.”

In another tweet, he said that a case has been registered at the Dholai police station in Cachar district in the killing of Assam Police personnel, under various provisions of Indian Penal Code, and the Arms Act besides Prevention of Damage to Public Property Act.

An Assam Police spokesman said that a “picture gallery” of Mizoram Police personnel and civilian miscreants who fired at Assam Police has been prepared, and is being further updated.

“They would be brought to law,” he said, adding that the state also announced a reward of Rs 5 lakh for information leading to the arrest of the individuals involved in the “barbaric killing of the Assam Police” personnel.

Meanwhile, the Assam government has transferred Hailakandi Superintendent of Police Ramandeep Kaur to Cachar as incumbent Nimbalkar, who had sustained serious injuries in the Monday’s firing and clashes, has been airlifted to Mumbai. IPS officer Gaurav Upadhyay has been posted as new SP of Hailakandi.

An uneasy calm now prevails on the border areas where the Central Reserve Police Force and Assam and Mizoram Police have been posted.

The Chief Secretaries and DGPs of Assam and Mizoram met Union Home Secretary Ajay Bhalla on Wednesday in Delhi to discuss the prevailing situation, and it was decided to deploy “neutral” Central Armed Police Force, headed by a senior CAPF officer, along National Highway 306 to keep peace along the border”.

The Mizoram Chief Secretary also complained of the problems faced by the state due to the “economic blockade” by Assam and the destruction of railway tracks leading to the state’s lone rail head at Bairabi.

ALSO READ-Amit Shah urges Assam, Mizoram CMs to maintain peace

READ MORE-Mizoram complains against Assam’s ‘economic blockade’

Categories
-Top News India News Travel

India extends ban on int’l flights till August 31

The circular issued by DGCA said that the restriction shall not apply to international all-cargo operations ..reports Asian Lite News

India on Friday extended the suspension on international commercial flight operations till August 31.

“In partial modification of circular dated June 26, 2020, the competent authority has further extended the validity of circular issued on the above subject… regarding scheduled international commercial passenger services to or from India till 2359 hrs IST of August 3, 2021,” the circular issued by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said.

The circular said that the restriction shall not apply to international all-cargo operations and flights specifically approved by the DGCA.

“However, international scheduled flights may be allowed on selected routes by the competent authority on case to case basis.”

Passenger air services were suspended on March 25, 2020 due to the nationwide lockdown to check the spread of Covid-19.

Domestic flight services, however, resumed from May 25, 2020.

ALSO READ: India called for early removal of travel curbs during Foreign Secy visit

ALSO READ: India slams Pakistan for holding polls in PoK