Sanjha Morcha

HALTING THE SURGING RIGHT IN EUROPE : HOLLAND’S EXAMPLE MAY BE INSUFFICIENT by Lt Gen Syed Ata Hasnain

Holland is such a beautiful country that it is difficult to associate anything negative with it. To even transit through Europe to the trans-Atlantic I would always prefer a few hours at Amsterdam airport for a change over halt. That positive image of the country, however, was under apparent threat as it went to the polls on Wednesday, Mar 15.  What was expected was a potential demonstration of what may happen to Europe in the coming year or the near future; the feasibility of political  parties adhering to the Far Right ideology, across nations, coming to power riding on the back of perceptibly increasing sentiments against immigrants, particularly Muslims. In addition an apparently emerging consensus against the concept of the European Union on the basis of increasing Nationalist ideology seemed to be on the cards.   The results have surprised many as Prime Minister Mark Rutte romped home successful but his Centre Right VVD party lost eight seats in the bargain. The Far Right Wing leader, Geert Wilders and his PVV party, mostly expected to garner a better standing came out second but did gain marginally from the third place that his party earlier occupied. For the well informed, it is premature to surmise anything from the elections. The real measure of the move of Far Right ideology into European politics will come once we have the results of the German and French elections later this year. UK was the trend setter but that was more specifically about the European Union and UK’s exit (Brexit), not necessarily a referendum on immigration and Islam. The arrival of President Trump, seen as an ideological turnaround, is also still not making enough sense to political pundits the world over.

For the mildly less informed there may be a need to delve a little deeper into the background which needn’t go as far as 1789, when France, Europe and the world received the first great ideological message of the proletariat; Liberty, Equality and Fraternity. Politics and ideology of the Right and the Left wing have never been fully identified and canned into compartments. The interplay has seen attempted demarcation but progressively this has changed on the basis of the order of international politics and ideologies.  In Europe’s current context it is more a competition between Centre Right and Far Right than anything to do with Left Wing. It is safer to assume that the Centre Right constitutes less isolationism, more liberalism and greater tolerance towards religious radicalism, though not necessarily linked to violent extremism and appeasement of immigrants. The Far Right which has a more populist approach today generally focuses against immigration and Islam while also harping on narrow nationalism and the need to dismantle the European Union; anti-globalization being the natural fallout.

In this election in Holland there were as many as 28 political parties in the fray leaving much to the post-election coalition politics but the significance does not lie in the details of Dutch politics; more in the agenda.  Geert Wilders’ one-page election manifesto included pledges to close borders to immigrants from Muslim nations, shutter mosques and ban the Koran, as well as to take the Netherlands out of the European Union. Where did this agenda come from?

It is important to know that post World War II liberal ideology proliferated as a result of the backlash against radical Right Wing ideas associated with the Axis powers. A country such as Turkey, the core center of the Ottoman Empire, Islam’s longest standing Caliphate, had in 1923 already been converted to the  liberal and secular model after the father of modern Turkey, Kemal Ata Turk (Mustafa Kemal) decided to  shun Islamism  and take the country closer to Europe. Western Europe’s progress after 1945 was also based upon immigration, especially from former colonies of the colonial powers to make up for the huge need for labor and many other lower end jobs. Germany got much of its immigrants from Turkey. The secular and integrative model was much in evidence by one look at the various football teams of European nations participating in the World Cup football tournament. The secular and liberal model worked well although racism never ever ended and demarcation of the types of jobs in the job market ensured it remained alive. Signs of things to come and strain in relationships within nations began to emerge once demographics started to be perceived as threats to security of the original inhabitants; the sons of the soil. Thus we had an Enoch Powell in Britain fuming against immigrants as early as the Seventies. In France, in particular the immigration from the Franco-phonic parts of the Maghreb continued through the Eighties.

Post 1989 things began to change, even as liberalism took greater hold, globalization became the buzz word, the European Union emerged strongly and the trends towards human rights became a political compulsion. However, the growth of Islamism and anti-West (read anti developed world) increased progressively almost in tandem. Violent extremism which accompanied it had an unnerving effect in the West. Post 9/11 and the series of violent incidents in Europe the seeds of cultural and faith based antipathy were sown and the effect was immediately felt by immigrants. Issues such as hijab, minarets and other cultural symbols enhanced the standoff. Disdain for immigrants took greater shape even as the need for labor increased. The intent of the Islamists was always to cause mayhem, disruption and turbulence in the Western societies and economies. The immediate effect was increasing struggle between the Liberals and the creeping ideologues of the Far Right. That is how the politics of Europe and to a great extent the US changed.

2014 is just recent times and perhaps not even within range of being termed history. Yet, it was a defining year. The emergence of ISIS (Daesh), the slick social media based propaganda, the attraction of western fighters to the battle arena, the employment of Lone Wolves in Europe and the US and larger terror attacks, changed the attitude of the sons of the soil. Anti-Islamism came to the fore, as also Nationalism, as a throwback from the events of 2014-16. It all happened at break neck speed. It was evident that Far Right ideology was taking shape faster than imagined and its grain was finding favor most in the US, France and UK with some strains in Germany too. It was the surge of human migration from the battle zones of West Asia and some of the failing states of North Africa which proved to be last straw. Much of 2016 witnessed barbed wire fences across national boundaries in Europe; the same nations which first believed in open borders. It strengthened the hands of the Far Right even further as nations squabbled on quotas of immigrants to be admitted and the general treatment to be meted out to them. That is where the current status is.

The emergence of Trumpism and Brexit have both been viewed as symbols of success of the Far Right, although they are not necessarily in congruence in ideological terms. 2017 has democratic electoral processes lined up in France and Germany among many other countries. All eyes were on Holland for the current elections which have somehow proven that the Far Right may have gained but not as substantially as was expected. German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the champion of the Centre Right and rights of immigrants is possibly seeking re-election in a personal vindication of her open door policy on immigrants.   Far Right party the Alternative for Germany (AfD) has made gains in the wake of the migrant crisis and Brexit victory in the UK. However, events through to Sep 2017 when the German federal election takes place will decide her future and perhaps that of Europe. Prior to that France’s presidential election in April 2017 will attract much attention and is being viewed as one of the major political risks in Europe this year. Marine Le Pen of the anti-European Union National Front leader is the Far Right populist leader on the lines of Geert Wilders.

So Brexit, Trump and now Rutte (Holland) in progression do not give enough of what is in store ideologically in Europe. Perhaps France and Germany may give clearer indications. An event which cannot be forgotten in the rush of looking at the US and West Europe is the fact that Turkey too has a referendum lined up in Apr 2017. It’s a referendum for enhanced powers to Erdogan through conversion to a presidential system and would be counted as a vote for his ideology of taking Turkey on the opposite path from liberal secularism. Will that too have an impact on the coming elections in Europe is something that analysts will watch with much interest. 


12 SSPs shifted

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, March 16

The state government today ordered the transfer of 41 senior police officers, including two Additional Director Generals of Police (ADGPs) and 12 Senior Superintendents of Police (SSPs).The SSPs and their new postings are: Alka Meena (Fatehgarh Sahib), Baljot Singh Rathore (Muktsar), Gurpreet Bhullar (Jalandhar Rural), Surjit Singh (Ludhiana Rural), Vivek Sheel Soni (Pathankot), Jagadale Nilambari Vijay (Ropar), Sandeep Goel (Moga), Bhupinderjit Singh (Gurdaspur), Parambir Singh Parmar (Mansa), Raj Jit Singh (Khanna), Sushil Kumar (Barnala) and Sandeep Kumar Sharma (Kapurthala).Satinder Singh has been appointed the SSP (Vigilance Bureau), Jalandhar.Gaurav Yadav will be the new ADGP (Administration), while Dinkar Gupta will take charge as the ADGP (Intelligence).Naunihal Singh has been appointed as the new IG (Border Zone), Amritsar; Naresh Arora, IG (Crime); Kunwar Vijay Pratap, Commissioner of Police, Ludhiana; Nilabh Kishore, IG, Special Task Force (Intelligence); Jatinder Singh Aulakh, IG (Law and Order); and Ranbir Singh Khatra, will take charge as the DIG (Administration), IRB, Patiala.


Karan Avtar Singh named Punjab Chief Secretary among 12 top transfers

Karan Avtar Singh named Punjab Chief Secretary among 12 top transfers
Capt Amarinder Singh with former PM Manmohan Singh, Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi and Himachal CM Virbhadra Singh in Chandigarh on Thursday.

Tribune News Service
Chandigarh, March 16In a first major shake-up in Punjab, soon after taking over as Chief Minister, Capt Amarinder Singh on Thursday transferred 12 top officers.Karan Avtar Singh, additional Chief Secretary, has been appointed Chief Secretary.Meanwhile, Sarvesh Kaushal has been appointed the Director General of Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Public Administration.
Himmat Singh, who is the seniormost IAS officer of Punjab cadre, and a long-time faithful of Amarinder, has been given the charge of Horticulture Department.Anurag Aggarwal has been appointed Financial Commissioner of Taxation and Vivek Pratap Singh Excise and Taxation Commissioner.

Satish Chandra, though relieved of the Taxation charge, will continue to serve as Additional Chief Secretary, Finance, as the Budget exercise is going on and the government might not change him at this juncture.

SK Sandhu, who was Principal Secretary to former chief minister Parkash Singh Badal, will now go to the Social Security Department.Tejvir Singh will be the new PS to the Chief Minister.Raji P Srivastava has been shifted to MGSIPA.Krishan Kumar, Secretary, Expenditure, has been given the additional charge of Secretary, Personnel.


Atul Nanda appointed Punjab Advocate-General

Atul Nanda appointed Punjab Advocate-General
Atul Nanda with Capt Amarinder Singh

Saurabh Malik

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, March 16

Supreme Court lawyer and senior advocate Atul Nanda was on Thursday appointed as Punjab Advocate-General. He replaces senior advocate Ashok Aggarwal, who resigned as the state’s top law officer soon after the change of guard in Punjab almost six years after he was appointed by the previous SAD-BJP government.

(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)

A prominent lawyer, Nanda has even appeared for the Supreme Court in its cases and is familiar with Punjab and its politics. Among other things, he has dealt with alleged corruption cases against Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh. One of the first tasks before him would be appointment of law officers in terms of Supreme Court’s March, 2016, order.

The Apex Court order makes it clear that the State would have to fix eligibility criterion before constituting a search committee. After its nod, the names would be sent to the Punjab and Haryana High Court Chief Justice Shiavax Jal Vazifdar.

He, in turn, would get the names examined by a committee comprising High Court judges. The appointments would eventually be made after taking into account observations on suitability of candidates.


India, Russia to speed up military hardware upkeep

India, Russia to speed up military hardware upkeep

Ajay Banerjee

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, March 10

In a first-of-its-kind meeting, Russian military spares manufacturers are set to meet Indian industry for partnerships to produce equipment in India. The Ministry of Defence wants to improve the maintenance issues on fighter jets Sukhoi-30MKI, Mi-17 helicopters, T-90 tanks and the MiG 29K naval fighters.About 70 per cent of military equipment with the Indian armed forces — the Army, Indian Air Force (IAF) and Navy — is of Russian origin. With Moscow continuing to be the largest supplier of military hardware, this scenario will not change for the next three decades.Repairs and servicing of key equipment are hampered by lack of ready availability of spares. A rather circuitous route through a single agency in Moscow makes it lengthier.The Russian Ministry of Defence had given permission and communicated to India in January about the companies or original equipment manufacturers that have been allowed to sell spares to India directly without seeking permission for each tranche.Russia’s Minister for Industry and Trade DV Manturov will lead the delegation for a two-day meeting in New Delhi (March 17 and 18) wherein they will meet with Indian MoD official and trade captains. Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar will address the meeting. The matter has been discussed during the summit meeting between PM Narendra Modi and Russian President Vladimir Putin at Goa in October.Russian manufacturers of military equipment source key parts such as engines, avionics and weaponry from producers within Russia and sometimes even Ukraine to integrate them on planes or warships or tanks.All military equipment by the very nature of it needs consumable parts which have “run-life” and need to be changed or overhauled after its specified life. For example, the Sukhoi-30 engine needs to be overhauled after a fixed number of hours — about 800-900 hours of flying.The Sukhoi is serviced and maintained by public sector undertaking Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL). There are four key suppliers. The Sukhoi has an availability rate of 65 per cent because of delay in spares. The IAF’s operated base repair depots maintain the fleet of Mi-17s.Sources here say once this is done, the HAL, IAF, Navy and the Army can source spares from Russia, have long-term supply contracts and even maintain a small stock on items which have a fixed “run-life”.

Maintenance hurdles

  • Su-30MKI jets, Mi-17 helicopters, T-90 tanks and MiG 29K naval fighters have been facing maintenance issues because of lack of spares
  • About 70% of India’s military equipment is of Russian origin. Russian makers further source key components from local producers or Ukraine
  • The Russian defence ministry has now allowed certain companies to sell spares to India directly without seeking its permission

Paltry budget for military modernisation, Parliament panel sounds alert

NEW DELHI: The armed forces, already grappling with critical operational gaps on several fronts ranging from submarines and tanks to fighters and helicopters, have hardly got any funds to go in for new modernisation projects this year.

The Army has got only 60% of the funds it had sought for modernisation in the 2017-18 budget. The Navy and IAF, in turn, got 67% and 54%. Out of the coming fiscal’s total defence outlay of Rs 2.74 lakh crore, incidentally, only Rs 86,488 crore has been earmarked for modernisation. What makes matters worse is that the bulk of this capital outlay will be used to pay “committed liabilities” of earlier arms contracts instead of new projects.

Slamming the government for all this, the parliamentary standing committee on defence on Thursday said this kind of “ad-hocism”, “casual” and “lackadaisical” approach would adversely affect the country’s defence preparedness as well as hit the morale of the armed forces.

Take the case of the 1.3-million strong Army. As opposed to a projection of Rs 42,500 crore, the force got only Rs 25,254 as capital allocation. With committed liabilities to the tune of Rs 23,000 crore, it leaves the force with a paltry Rs 2,254 crore for new projects.

“The Army’s budgetary provisioning is critically short and is likely to affect modernisation as well as operational preparedness,” said the committee, asking the government to give at least Rs 13,000 crore additional capital acquisition funds to the Army because it faces critical shortages of main-battle tanks, artillery guns, missiles, helicopters, assault rifles, bullet-proof jackets, surveillance and monitoring networks.


INS Viraat sails into history

INS Viraat sails into history
INS Viraat

After 30 years with the Indian Navy, aircraft carrier INS Viraat was decommissioned on Monday. In its earlier avatar, the warship had won the Falklands War against Argentina in 1982 for the Royal British Navy.It weighs about 27,800 tonnes and served in the British Navy as HMS Hermes from 1959 to 1984. In the late 1980s, the Indian Navy purchased it for USD 65 million and it was re-commissioned in 1987.On its last day in service, the fate of the aircraft carrier remained unclear as to whether it will be converted into a luxury hotel or head to scrapyard to be broken up. The decision is to be taken by the Defence Ministry. 


Tricolour flutters on country’s tallest mast at Attari border

The flag post stands near the retreat ceremony area on the Punjab government land; the ₹4­crore project was completed by improvement trust

This is the right place for this project as thousands of people come here every day. This will inculcate a feeling of patriotism in their minds. ANIL JOSHI, local bodies minister, Punjab

From page 01 A 120-foot-long and 80-foot-wide Tricolour was hoisted on India’s tallest 360-foot flag post at the border here on Sunday. Till now, the Ranchi had the tallest flag mast at 300 feet.

The flag post stands near the retreat ceremony area on the Punjab government land and the ₹4-crore project was completed by the Amritsar Improvement Trust.

The project was inaugurated by Punjab local bodies minister Anil Joshi at a ceremony attended by officers of the Border Security Force and BJP leaders, including former state chief Kamal Sharma. Officials of the district administration didn’t attend the ceremony due to poll code of conduct.

As the Tricolour was hoisted on the imposing iron mast, it became an instant attraction for the tourists, who took selfies and pictures to capture the flag in the background. Floodlights have been installed around the flag post that will make it visible during the night. The flag will be visible miles away from the border.

Terming this as his dream project, Joshi said he took special permission from the Election Commission for the inauguration. “This is the right place to this project as thousands of people come here every day. This will inculcate a feeling of patriotism in their minds,” he said.

 

BSF inspector general for Punjab Frontier, Mukul Goel, said, “It is a matter of great honour that the Tricolour has been hoisted on the highest flag post here. We appreciate the effort of the Punjab government.” On there was any objection to the project from Pakistan, he said no reservations were received from the neighbouring country. BSF DIG JS Oberoi was also present.


Fleet of Rs 2.5-cr vehicles for Capt on way, courtesy Badal

Fleet of Rs 2.5-cr vehicles for Capt on way, courtesy Badal

Ruchika M Khanna

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, March 30

The Capt Amarinder Singh government, which has been quite vocal about the legacy of debt, is set to inherit from the previous Akali-BJP government a fleet of new cars, including a luxury SUV — something it won’t mind.These vehicles were ordered by the SAD-BJP government for the then Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal, but by the time the Finance Department sanctioned the money, the model code of conduct for the Punjab Assembly elections had come into force.(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)The new vehicles — a bulletproof Range Rover, and 11 Innovas and Gypsys, estimated at Rs 2.5 crore in total — will be delivered for the Chief Minister’s cavalcade shortly. Sources in the Finance Department said the amount had been released.“The budget was sanctioned by the Finance Department to the Transport Department. A sum of Rs 87 lakh has been released for 11 Innovas and Gypsys, besides Rs 1.3 crore for the Range Rover and another Rs 35 lakh for bullet-proofing it,” said a source, adding tenders had been floated in December.Last year, the former Chief Minister and his deputy Sukhbir Singh Badal had bought new Toyota Land Cruisers after the vehicles used by them were declared as “condemned”. Since parallel cavalcades had to be maintained for the Chief Minister, the new vehicles were cleared by the Akali-BJP government. Fifteen new Gypsys are also being bought to escort ministers and MLAs.

New game, new rules

Vivek Katju
Political propriety is a thing of the past

New game, new rules
SHOWTIME: The Captain’s fine with his minister providing comic relief to TV audiences.

NAVJOT SINGH SIDHU in his present avatar as a Congress minister in Punjab is insisting on continuing with his participation in a television comedy show. A Shiv Sena member of the Lok Sabha, Ravindra Gaikwad, who has emphasised that he is a teacher, is loudly acknowledging and justifying his beating up of an elderly Air India executive. Sidhu’s approach and Gaikwad’s conduct profile the transformation of the normative landscape of India’s public life. This great change is further underlined by the responses of the leadership of the two parties of these politicians.Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh has treated  Sidhu’s desire as a legal matter not as a question of norm and convention. The Advocate-General of Punjab has opined that Sidhu’s wish does not violate the office of profit statute. There is little doubt though that old Congress icons such as Nehru and Indira Gandhi would have had little patience with Sidhu’s demand even if they may have been, as a remote possibility, amused by his hazir jawabi. But times have changed and Amarinder Singh obviously finds nothing wrong with one of his ministers providing comic relief to television audiences. Perhaps he recalls how rajas were kept in good humour. It is unclear, as yet, of what the Congress’ first family feels of the propriety of Sidhu’s insistence.Unlike the civil service which has conduct rules that prescribe dos and don’ts, persons in public life were expected to set standards of propriety. As guardians of public welfare they were expected to have an innate sense of what was ‘the done thing’. Naturally, the ‘done thing’ may change with the passage of time but the need for self-restraint in public life is the bedrock of a democratic system and distinguishes it from an authoritarian order. It is only self-restraint that keeps a check on the limitless temptations that every minister can find to pursue sama-daam-dand-bhed to achieve political ends.Over the years when the hard choice between power and expediency and the upholding of norms and conventions which flowed from the spirit of the Constitution was to be made political leaders and parties often opted for acquiring or maintaining power. Technical and legal reasons were invariably invoked to justify actions, as the Congress did in 1999. Its then Orissa CM Giridhar Gamang’s crucial vote against the Vajpayee government in April 1999 is now a distant memory. He was still a member of the Lok Sabha and chose to cast his vote despite being a CM. Vajpayee was voted out by one vote. Prima facie it is absurd for a CM to cast a vote in the Lok Sabha but now a precedent was set. This is relevant today when Yogi Adityanath even while being CM of UP can take part in a Lok Sabha vote to elect the President. Convention more than any rule demands that professionals, who hold political office, suspend their professional careers so long as they hold such office. Certainly, this was the case in the initial years after Independence. The only exception was for some distinguished doctors to see patients for a few hours every week or month on a purely honorary basis in order to keep up with their skills. Thus Dr BC Roy, the legendary CM of West Bengal who was a distinguished physician, devoted a couple of hours periodically to see patients on an honorary basis. The desire to continue with activity to maintain professional licences such as those of commercial pilots may fall within such exceptions. But can the same exception be invoked to take part in television comedy shows?  If simplicity and frugal life styles derived from Gandhiji’s example were the norm followed by those who held ministerial office immediately after Independence, over the decades, it has become its reverse. It may come as a surprise to many that ministers in the 1950s used their private cars, although with official drivers, for their private journeys. This writer may be forgiven for recalling childhood memories of his grandfather, a member of the Union Cabinet in the early 1950s, of occasionally taking him and his other siblings for drives in his personal car, a small Hillman Minx. Obviously, now security considerations may not permit the use of private cars but the idea of self-restraint in these matters has gone. To turn to Gaikwad, the Shiv Sena’s initial response to his reprehensible and potentially criminal conduct was to virtually ask for an enquiry and emphasise his good conduct in his constituency. A few hours later the party made it known that its president Uddhav Thackeray was ‘angry’ with Gaikwad and had summoned him presumably for a tongue-lashing. Perhaps he will ask him to apologise for his behaviour and  the party will take recourse to the favourite words in all such situations — the law will take its course. This is especially as an FIR has been registered against him. Legally this may pass muster but does it uphold the norm that is expected of an MP? In all likelihood, the political class will let this pass with only critical comments even though Gaikwad has aggressively asserted and justified that he beat up the Air India executive. Political leaders of the past would have found such brazen conduct unacceptable and taken action. But now we are in a different normative territory.Normative structures in the civil services have also undergone a sea change. Wide discrepancies between the provisions of the conduct rules which concretise them and what the senior bureaucracy and the political leadership not only permit but also perhaps expect have arisen. One such area is that of lobbying for jobs and posts. The rules prescribe that officials will not lobby for posts and transfers and postings. Some years ago,  when this writer asked a PMO official the reasons for a suitable officer being overlooked for a job in the foreign office for which he was eminently qualified, he was told that no one had pushed his case by speaking on his behalf. Only the naive now let their work speak for them.Another area is the public airing of views on government policies in areas outside their assignments even though this was not the earlier norm. The conduct rules permit officials to undertake cultural, scientific and literary activities but the expression of personal views on government policies do not fall within this ambit. Perhaps Sidhu will claim that television comedy shows are part of the present-day culture and hence he should be allowed to carry on after office hours!The writer is a former Secretary, Ministry of External Affairs

Road map for Punjab

Leave the rear-view mirror and look ahead

PUNJAB’S fiscal condition has turned out to be worse than what was portrayed in the last budget. While announcing Rs 3,000 crore sops, the pre-poll budget had projected a Rs 1.38 lakh crore debt by year-end. The new Congress government has scaled it up to a mammoth Rs 1.82 lakh crore. This means the SAD-BJP government had disrespected the sanctity associated with budget figures. It did not disclose, or account for, the Rs 25,000 crore expenditure carried out subsequently, according to Finance Minister Manpreet Badal. Doubts about Akalis doctoring figures may be partly cleared after a third-party audit of the state finances, publication of a White Paper and a Vigilance probe into the Rs 31,000-crore “food scam”. Vigilance, as Capt Amarinder Singh ought to know from experience, is unreliable. It is useful more for high-profile bailouts than convictions. More skeletons are expected to tumble out of the Badal closet. The CAG has put up a damning report saying PSPCL under-used its own plants and charged Rs 1,428 crore extra from consumers. The new leadership, however, need not dwell too much on Akali misrule as voters have already punished them. While witch-hunting is certainly undesirable, punishment for violations of the law, if any, can be ensured by letting the law take its course, regardless of the law-breakers’ position or cosy relationship with some in the ruling party.Other than abundant talk and oodles of confidence, the new rulers have displayed little else. The sense of purpose and urgency seen at the first Cabinet meeting was missing in the first assembly session. It needs to go beyond red beacons and focus on the road ahead — how to effect financial transformation of Punjab and arrange funds for keeping the party’s populist promises, including a farm loan waiver. How the GST rollout will affect the state finances needs to be urgently studied, as also the fallout of the likely pay hike. Restoration of the state’s financial health will require hard decisions. Going by the new dispensation’s please-all approach and adjustment of every available Captain loyalist in key posts, populism may triumph over fiscal rectitude.

Pending bills: Water shocker for residents

Pending bills: Water shocker for residents

Sanjeev Singh Bariana

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, March 30

The Water Supply and Sanitation Department has issued pending bills in the range of Rs 30,000 to Rs 60,000 to a majority of consumers in 139 towns of the state, leaving them in shock.In several cases, the bills are pending for three to five years. This is so because the department did not issue bills all this while.Legislators have apprised Local Bodies Minister Navjot Singh Sidhu of the situation. He has convened a meeting of officers and MLAs next week.Sidhu told The Tribune, “In certain towns, bills had not been collected for nine to ten months. There are cases where bills accumulated for a long period. I have asked the officer concerned to prepare a detailed note and give us a correct perspective on the situation. I have also called MLAs to join us in a discussion to thrash out the matter next week. The SAD-BJP government slept over the matter.”The department is still to work out the exact figure of dues. But going by the population of more than 1.05 crore in 139 towns, the amount will be “definitely very high”.Sidhu said, “Officers will have to do a lot of explanation over why the bills were not issued for months and, in some cases, years.”Jalandhar North MLA Bawa Henry said, “Slum dwellers and those living in poor localities are the most affected. I have sought the minister’s intervention to find a way out. One solution can be to allow people pay up in easy instalments. Any other solution can be found. The idea is to give people immediate reprieve. But what’s important is that a permanent solution needs to be found to avoid such a situation in the future.”

Japanese envoy meets CM

Japanese envoy meets CM
Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh with Japanese Ambassador Kenji Hiramatsu in Delhi on Thursday. PTI

New Delhi: A Japanese delegation, including the country’s envoy, met Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh here on Thursday and explored the possible areas for investment in the state. The areas discussed were power, Smart Cities, automated guideway transit, industrial parks, agriculture, horticulture and roads. tns

Japanese delegation meets Capt, shows interest in investing in state

HANDIGARH: Japan has evinced interest in investing in Punjab and partnering the state across key segments of growth and development.

HT PHOTOPunjab chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh meeting Japanese ambassador Kenji Hiramatsu in New Delhi on Thursday.

A high-level Japanese delegation, including its the envoy to India Kenji Hiramatsu and Mitsubishi managing director Kazunori Konishi, met chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh in Delhi on Thursday and discussed possible areas of investment and collaboration.

The discussions were preliminary but it will pave the way for more intensive discussions in future, said a state government spokesman. The discussion covered a wide range of subjects which the two sides agreed to deliberate further to work out a collaborative mechanism.

The spokesperson said after the meeting, Mitsubishi officials made a presentation to the CM listing several important areas for possible investment. These included power, smart cities, (automated guideway transit), industrial parks and captive power plants, besides strengthening of some existing projects.

Amarinder also discussed development of roads and highways as a key step towards improvement of Punjab’s infrastructure.

The two sides decided to explore possible cooperation in agriculture and the CM invited Japanese experts to visit the state, particularly Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana, to examine the feasibility of agricultural cooperation. An exchange programme for agricultural scientists could be worked out, the spokesman added. Amarinder said he was committed to Punjab’s modernisation in which Japan could join in as an important partner.

 

MP Singh to head technical board

Chandigarh: The Amarinder Singh-led Congress government has decided to give the charge of Chairman of the Punjab State Board of Technical Education and Industrial Training to MP Singh, Additional Chief Secretary, Technical Education and Industrial Training. A senior government functionary said till a new Chairman was appointed, MP Singh would remain the officiating Chairman of the board. In other cases, where the politically appointed chairmen of various boards and corporations were resigning from their posts, the principal secretaries of the respective body were being told to take the charge as an interim arrangement. TNS

Guv seeks revamp of sainik programmes

Chandigarh: Governor VP Singh Badnore while presiding over the 32nd meeting of the Rajya Sainik Board Punjab asked the officers to restructure their programmes and involve maximum ex-servicemen and students in their development projects. TNS

Hope floats for ‘neglected’ rest house near Badal resort

Hope floats for ‘neglected’ rest house near Badal resort
The dilapidated rest house of the Forest Department at Palanpur village near Chandigarh. Tribune photo

Rajmeet Singh

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, March 30

A “neglected” forest rest house in the vicinity of the Badals’ luxury resort, Sukhvilas, at Palanpur village near here has caught the attention of the Congress government.Forests and Wildlife Minister Sadhu Singh Dharamsot has sought a report from the top functionaries of the Forest Department on the rest house, which also has provision for a forest sensitisation centre (Van Chetna Kendra).Dharamsot confirmed that he had asked the officials to explain why the facility had remained non-functional during the past five years.The rest house fell on bad days when the construction of the resort started in 2012, the year the Akali-BJP government was re-elected. As the road to the rest house passed adjacent to the main premises of the resort, temporary barricading was done to keep passersby away.Due to the apathy, the place has been overrun by wild growth. The two-storeyed building is in a dilapidated condition. The whitewash on the façade has peeled off. “Officially, no order was passed to shut down the centre, but forest officials were told to stay away,” a senior functionary said.Back in 2007, during the tenure of the SAD-BJP government, the rest house had hit the headlines when the then Chief Parliamentary Secretary Harish Rai Dhanda was not allowed by the department to use the premises as his residence. The department had stated that Dhanda could visit the rest house with a permit, but not reside there as it was in violation of the Forest Conservation Act, 1980.

Away from prying eyes

  • The rest house fell on bad days when the construction of the resort started in 2012, the year the Akali-BJP government was re-elected. As the road to the rest house passed adjacent to the main premises of the Badals’ resort, temporary barricading was done to keep passersby away

Dept in doldrums, govt must intervene: Roadways staff

Dept in doldrums, govt must intervene: Roadways staff
Members of the Punjab Roadways Employees’ joint action committee address the media in Jalandhar on Thursday. Tribune Photo: Malkiat Singh

Tribune News Service

Jalandhar, March 30

A joint action committee of the Punjab Roadways Employees’ Union today blamed the Akali-BJP government for the alleged losses worth crores of rupees which were being incurred by the Transport Department in the state. They demanded that the new government should take remedial action to fix the department which was stuck in the doldrums.They said the Congress government should investigate into the losses caused by the previous regime in the department. Action committee convener Surinder Singh said in the past ten years, the transport mafia in the state had looted the state. They said as the new government had come to power in the state, it should make efforts to save the public transport from the clutches of the mafia.Activists of the committee Jagdish Singh Chahal and Mangat Khan demanded the implementation of the Punjab and Haryana High Court order as per which the HC had on December 20, 2016 rejected all previous transport policies made after 1990, and had cancelled all extension of routes of over 24 kilometres. They also sought a dedicated budget for the inclusion of more buses in the Punjab roadways.The committee also demanded the dismissal of time tables made during the previous government, alleging that these were made to accommodate the Akali-BJP buses in the city.Activists also alleged that general managers had been deputed in the Punjab Roadways without considering the seniority level, despite the fact that the current duty charts were asked to be issued on seniority basis by the government. They also alleged that after three or four months after the passage of the orders, the charge of general managers had not been withdrawn.

Now, police say won’t cut VIP security in haste

CHANDIGARH: After the flip-flop over review of security cover to VIPs, the Punjab Police on Thursday clarified that any cut in the security will not be done in haste.

Senior police officials in the police headquarters here said the March 21 order of pruning the security of many VIPs, including senior SAD-BJP leaders, with immediate effect was issued in “haste” and out of “overenthusiasm”.

“Police department received a letter regarding the security review from the government and the pruning was ordered by the said officer without studying the perception of threat to each individual concerned. Even the field officers were sent the list of VIPs whose security was to be pruned,” sources said.

As the “unrealistic” orders created a confusion and the matter reached the high-ups, it was decided on March 24 to keep these orders in abeyance and a committee headed by DGP (law and order) Hardeep Dhillon was formed to review the threat perception to the VIPs concerned before ordering the cut.

“Dhillon-led committee will make recommendations after going through the reports of various intelligence wings of the police and other factors. There was no question of stopping the review,” Punjab DGP Suresh Arora told Hindustan Times.

On Wednesday, after getting reports from the Dhillon-led committee, security of many low-profile VIPs and those officials who enjoyed the trust of the previous SAD-BJP government, was pruned. More than 175 cops were ordered to join their original battalions with immediate effect.

Interestingly, it’s the Congress leaders who are feeling the pinch of this review exercise. Many party leaders can be seen speaking openly against the move. “In the March 21 list, an MP was left with four cops. Keeping in view the 8-hour duty, only one cop will be with the MP most of the time. Can a single constable guard an MP and his family?” said a Rajya Sabha member from the state. Sources said the SSPs and the police commissioners have even received requests from districtlevel Congress leaders for security.

SIMILAR MOVES FAILED IN PAST

It’s not for the first time that the security of VIPs was pruned in Punjab. In 2012 and 2014 as well, such exercises were carried out and many VIPs lost the security cover. However, both the times, they managed to get back the cover on some pretext. As per officials, in last six months of the previous government, security of the SAD-BJP leaders was heightened just to give them the “feel of power”.


*Bhog and Antim Ardas* ::::MAJ SS DHILLON ,PARA SIGNLAS ,Ex-Chairman Sanjha Morcha

*Bhog and Antim Ardas*
 for the departed Soul to rest in peace in respect of Major SS Dhillon  (Santokh Singh) will be held on 02 Apr at 1200 hrs at Dhillon Farm. 
Dhillon Farm is located opposite to Shahe Tibbi Gurdwara located on Road from Ropar to Anandpur Sahib. 
Cross the Manned Railway crossing opp Gurdwara to hit the Dhillon Farm. 
The exact location is opposite Shahe  Tibbi Gurdwara located on Ropar– Anandpur Sahib Road six(6) Km short of Kiratpur Sahib and 24th  Mile stone from Ropar.
Maj SS  Dhillon was the founder Chairman of Sanjha Morcha since 2009 .
Contact Number of Col APS Dhillon younger Brother of Maj SS Dhillon is
Mobile +919815361238
Major SS Dhillon was a very active Veterans always ready to jump for welfare of ESM Community at any place and at any time. Some old pictures and News paper News are self explanatory 

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 Sanjha Morcha Team at TANDA URMUR on 26 Jan 2007 campaigning  for Capt Amarinder Singh

L to R –Col CJS Khera(Gen Secy),Major SS Dhillon(Chairman)

Col RS Boparai(President)  with Col Bhag singh (President IESL

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Hosting of Flag by Capt Amarinder Singh

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L to R Col CJS Khera,Major SS Dhilon,Sep Narinder,Brig Manjit and Col PS Bajwa

chd savera

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L to R Major SS Dhillon,Sep Narinder and Brig Manjit

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