Thursday, 19 April 2012

UPA should leave aside ego and pass Lokpal Bill: Hazare


Social activist Anna Hazare today advised the Congress-led UPA government to "shed ego" and get the Janalokpal Bill passed in current session of Parliament.

"I am hopeful the Lokpal Bill will come up before Parliament before the conclusion of current session by May end. The government should shed ego and think of the country and society (by enacting a strong Lokpal Bill)," he told reporters here.
Hazare, who was in the city in connection with a court case, said he would address a joint rally with Yoga guru Baba Ramdev in Delhi on June 3 to highlight the issue of Janalokpal and blackmoney.
In reply to a question, he said Maharashtra ministers who have been named for irregularities in land allotment by CAG should be sentenced to "life imprisonment" if found guilty in the cases mentioned in the report.
Hazare said he would undertake a tour of Maharashtra from May 1 to mobilise public opinion on the issue of having a strong "Lokayukta" in the state.
Asked about the criticism against his team mate Arvind Kejariwal for using objectionable language against parliamentarians, he said, "I have told them to observe restraint."

News Source: Indian Express

CBI searches BEML chairman’s house


V.R.S. Natarajan, Chairman and Managing Director of Bharat Earth Movers Ltd.

The CBI on Thursday carried out searches at several locations, including the residence of BEML (Bharat Earth Movers Ltd.) Chairman V. R. S. Natarajan, in connection with alleged irregularities in tendering process for hiring a consultancy firm.

Teams of CBI officials reached the residence of Mr. Natarajan early morning in connection with the case and took into their possession some incriminating documents related to the case, CBI sources said.

The searches were spread at several locations in Bangalore and Coimbatore, they said.

The case relates to alleged irregularities in the tendering process for hiring a consultancy firm Astral by the BEML, they said.
Mr. Natarajan was already questioned by the CBI in connection with the Tatra trucks case.

News Source: THE HINDU

Mumbai: 2 dead, 15 injured after falling from local train


The turbulence in local trains in Mumbai has taken a toll. Two people died after they fell from a local train between Nahur and Bhandup stations (central line) during heavy rush. Fifteen people were injured.
The Nahur station is just ahead of the Mulund station. Central Railway chief PRO Vidyadhar Malegaonkar said the primary reason of the incident was overcrowding.
Union Railway Minister Mukul Roy has announced compensation for the victims' families. "Railways announces compensation of Rs 2 lakh for the families of the two who died in the accident. The ministry is working overtime to normalise the situation by this evening. 8% of the services have been normalised. Senior level railway officials inspected the technical snag in Mumbai, a committee has been formed to look into the technical snags."
Fifteen per cent of the trains on the central line were not yet running. The Central Railway announced that it has restored over 85% of the services on Thursday.
Alternate arrangements were made on Wednesday like allowing passengers in express trains, allowing them to use parts of Western line.
Millions of commuters and students in the city faced a harrowing time on Wednesday as local trains were running late by around 40 minutes following a fire in a signal cabin on the Central Railway (CR).
Around 12.15 am early Wednesday, fire gutted the main signal cabin at Kurla station and sent the entire electric and signal cabling network on the blink.
The fire was brought under control in a short time and there were no casualties reported.
Mumbai's suburban train services, comprising Western Railway, Central Railway and Harbour lines, which ferry nearly eight million people to and from their homes and offices in Mumbai, Thane and Raigad, are the lifeline of the country's commercial capital.

News Source: MoneyControlNews

Wednesday, 18 April 2012

India test launches Agni-V long-range missile


India has launched a long-range intercontinental ballistic missile able to carry a nuclear warhead, say media.
The locally-developed Agni-V missile was originally scheduled to have been launched on Wednesday in the eastern state of Orissa.
Defence officials had delayed the launch until Thursday because of heavy lightning in the area.
The missile has a range of more than 5,000km (3,100 miles), within range of targets in China.
Analysts say the Agni (meaning "fire" in Hindi and Sanskrit) missile family is to be the cornerstone of India's missile-based nuclear deterrent.
The missiles are among the country's most sophisticated weapons.
In 2010, India successfully test-fired Agni-II, an intermediate-range ballistic missile with a range of more than 2,000km (1,250 miles).
The Agni-V missile was launched from Orissa's Wheeler Island at 0805 on Thursday.
It is, however, not immediately clear if the launch met all the test parameters, says the BBC's Sandeep Sahu in Orissa.
'Deterrent'
The missile will take about 20 minutes to hit its target somewhere near Indonesia in the Indian Ocean.
The status of the test will be known only after the data from the monitoring stations set up along the entire flight path, including two on Indian Navy warships, are analysed, sources told the BBC.
The sources said the flight path of the missile over the full range of 5,000 km will be monitored by Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) scientists from launch to the point of impact in order to study its accuracy.
Defence analyst Rahul Bedi says a successful test flight of the Agni-V missile, which is capable of delivering a single 1.5-ton warhead deep inside nuclear rival China's territory, would strengthen India's nuclear deterrence once it comes into service by 2014-15.
It is 17.5m tall, solid-fuelled, has three stages and a launch weight of 50 tons. It has cost more than 2.5bn rupees ($480m; £307m) to develop.
Only China, Russia, France, the US and UK have such long-range missiles. Israel is thought to possess them.
"Agni-V is to meet our present-day threat perceptions, which are determined by our defence forces and other agencies," DRDO Ravi Gupta spokesman told AFP news agency ahead of the launch.
"This is a deterrent to avoid wars and it is not country-specific," he said.

News Source: BBC News India

India tests Agni-V missile; capable of reaching China


BHUBANESWAR, India (Reuters) - India test-fired a long range missile capable of reaching deep into China and Europe on Thursday, thrusting the emerging Asian power into an elite club of nations with intercontinental nuclear weapons capabilities.
A scientist at the launch site said the launch was successful, minutes after television images showed the rocket with a range of more than 5,000 km (3,100 miles) blasting through clouds from the Wheeler Island off Odisha coast.
"It has met all the mission objectives," S.P.Dash, director of the test range, told Reuters. "It hit the target with very good accuracy."
The Indian-made Agni V is the crowning achievement of a now-mothballed missile programme developed primarily with a possible threat from neighbouring China in mind.
Only the U.N. Security Council permanent members - China, France, Russia the United States and Britain - along with Israel, are believed to have such long-range weapons.
Fast emerging as a world economic power, India is keen to play a larger role on the global stage and has long angled for a permanent seat on the Security Council. In recent years it has emerged as the world's top arms importer as it rushes to upgrade equipment for a large but outdated military.
"It is one of the ways of signalling India's arrival on the global stage, that India deserves to be sitting at the high table," said Harsh Pant, a defence expert at King's College, London, describing the launch as a "confidence boost".
The launch, which was flagged well in advance, has attracted none of the criticism from the West faced by hermit state North Korea for a failed bid to send up a similar rocket last week.
But China noted the launch with disapproval.
"The West chooses to overlook India's disregard of nuclear and missile control treaties," China's Global Times newspaper said in an editorial published before the launch, which was delayed by a day because of bad weather.
"India should not overestimate its strength," said the paper, which is owned by the Chinese Communist Party's main mouthpiece the People's Daily.
India has not signed the non-proliferation treaty for nuclear nations, but enjoys a de facto legitimacy for its arsenal, boosted by a landmark 2008 deal with the United States.
On Wednesday, NATO said it did not consider India a threat. The U.S. State Department said India's non-proliferation record was "solid," while urging restraint.
INSIDE CHINA
India says its nuclear weapons programme is for deterrence only. It is close to completing a nuclear submarine that will increase its ability to launch a counter strike if it were attacked.
India lost a brief Himalayan border war with its larger neighbour, China, in 1962 and has ever since strived to improve its defences. In recent years the government has fretted over China's enhanced military presence near the border.
Thursday's launch may prompt a renewed push from within India's defence establishment to build a fully fledged intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) programme capable of reaching the Americas, though some of India's allies may bridle at such an ambition.
"Policy-wise it becomes more complicated from now on, until Agni V, India really has been able to make a case about its strategic objectives, but as it moves into the ICBM frontier there'll be more questions asked," said Pant.
The Agni V is the most advanced version of the indigenously built Agni, or Fire, series, part of a programme that started in the 1960s. Earlier versions could reach old rival Pakistan and Western China.
"India can now deter China, it can impose maximum possible punishment if China crosses the red line," Srikanth Kondapalli, professor in Chinese studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University told Reuters.
The rocket is powered by easier-to-use solid rocket propellants and can be transported by road.
(Writing by Frank Jack Daniel; Additional reporting by Satarupa Bhattacharjya in NEW DELHI and Sui-Lee Wee in BEIJING; Editing by Robert Birsel)

News Source: Yahoo India News

Agni-V, India's first ICBM test-fired successfully

NEW DELHI: India on Thursday test-fired for the first time its most-ambitious strategic missile, the over 5,000-km range Agni-V, in a bid to join the super exclusive ICBM(intercontinental ballistic missile) club that counts just US, Russia,China, France and UK as its members.

The solid-fuelled Agni-V, which will bring the whole of China as well as other regions under its strike envelope, was tested from Wheeler Island off the Odisha coast at 8.07 am.


''We have met all our mission objectives,'' said a jubilant DRD0 chief controller of missiles, Avinash Chander.

DRD0 chief V K Saraswat, in turn, said India had emerged as a major missile power with Thursday's test.

The nuclear-capable, three-stage Agni-V, about 50-tonne in weight and 17.5-metre tall, will become fully operational by 2014-2015 after "four to five repeatable tests" and user trials.

India could have gone for a higher strike range but believes the solid-fuelled Agni-V is "more than adequate'' to meet current threat perceptions and security concerns. The missile can, after all, even hit the northernmost parts of China.

India, of course, cannot match China in terms of its vast nuclear and missile arsenals. But missiles like Agni-V and the 3,500-km Agni-IV, tested last November, will certainly add teeth to its credible minimum nuclear deterrence posture.

With a canister-launch system to impart higher road mobility, the missile will give the armed forces much greater operational flexibility than the earlier-generation of Agni missiles.

"The accuracy levels of Agni-V and Agni-IV, with their better guidance and navigation systems, are far higher than Agni-I (700-km), Agni-II (2,000-km) and Agni-III (3,000-km),'' said the source.

The Agni missiles will get deadlier once MIRV (multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicles) payloads for them are developed. An MIRV payload on a missile carries several nuclear warheads, which can be programmed to hit different targets. A flurry of such missiles can hence completely overwhelm BMD (ballistic missile defence) systems.


News Source: The Times of India

Akhilesh Yadav revives Janata Darshan


Making a difference in style of governance, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav today revived the practice of meeting people to listen to their grievances at his official residence here, a step that was ended by his predecessor Mayawati.
Long queues of people were seen at 5, Kalidas Marg, an area that was out of bounds for the common man during Mayawati's days.
The practice of Janata Darshan, which was very popular in the earlier regime of Mulayam Singh Yadav, was done away with by Mayawati.
In fact, all the roads leading to the chief minister's residence were closed for commoners with barricading done on both the sides when the BSP supremo was in power. The entry was open for media only during press conferences and that too for those who are invited.
Though immediately after assuming power in the state, Akhilesh started meeting people at his official residence, the formal Janata Darshan was revived today.
People from all over the state gathered at the first Janata Darshan of the youngest CM and police and security personnel had a tough time controlling them. There were directives not to use power to regulate the crowd.
Ram Swarup from Gonda, who came here to get a road laid in his village, was happy with his meeting. He is hopeful that his request would be addressed.
"We were left with no option in earlier regime. Local officials did not listen to them and there was no one to take hear our grievances", he said.
Another man, Harish from Ambedkar Nagar, who is running from pillar to post for job after his father's death, also hailed the chief minister's decision to meet commoners.
"I think, applications taken here will be taken seriously and officers will dispose them off," he said.
"Leave aside Janata darshan, Mayawati even did not met her party leaders and legislators. Her government was run by bureaucrats and she did whatever they feeded her.
"Now people are witnessing a change with SP at the helm of affair and Janata Darshan is the way by which CM can know the real problems being faced by his people", SP spokesman Rajendra Chowdhury said.
The complaints that poured in on the first day of Janata Darshan included that of land dispute, atrocities on poor, employment and promotions besides requests for electricity, roads and water facilities in their areas, sources said.
During the programme, Yadav received petitions from the people and assured them that he will look into them.
News Source: The Indian Express