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Maharashtra: Arshad Malik poses as Harshad to marry a Hindu woman, gets his father to rape, assault her for years, threatens to cut into 70 pieces

A novel case of Love Jihad has been reported from Deopur village of Maharashtra’s Dhule district. On Thursday, the Dhule Police registered an FIR against Arshad Malik and his father Salim Malik for trapping a Hindu woman (24) in a relationship under a false name and sexually assaulting her for around two years. The police have booked the accused under sections 376(2)(n), 377, 327, 504, 506, 34, and 323 of the Indian Penal Code and have launched an investigation into the case.

The complaint was filed by the victim woman on December 1, 2022, a copy of which has been obtained by OpIndia. The woman in the complaint said that the accused Arshad Malik had introduced himself as a Hindu person named Harshad Mali and then persuaded her to get married to him. The complaint read that the victim woman was also raped by Arshad’s father, Salim Malik who is named as the second accused in the case.

Copy of FIR obtained by OpIndia

According to the complaint, the accused have been harassing the woman and raping her since January 1, 2021. The saga began in the year 2016 when the victim woman first got married to Gaurav in the year 2016. The duo also had a child together but the circumstances for the woman happened to change after her husband died in a road accident in 2019.

Her deceased husband had sold their house already and left the woman with just Rs 2.5 lakhs. The woman then decided to study for a government job and so she joined Maharashtra Police Bharti classes at Khandesh Academy in the year 2020. There she met prime accused Arshad Malik who introduced himself as a Hindu named Harshad Mali. The duo became friends and exchanged phone numbers. They began chatting and talking over the phone while they also met each other daily at the academy.

The victim woman in the complaint added that the accused one day took her on his bike to the nearby jungle and raped her. “He forced himself upon me. I kept on refusing, opposing but he sexually assaulted me. He also video graphed the incident and used the tape to blackmail me later,” the woman said in the FIR filed on December 1.

Accused named in the FIR

“After that incident, I stopped talking to him. But he blackmailed me saying that he would distribute the video to the public if I stopped talking to him. He later confessed that he was in love with me and that he wanted us to stay together. He also said that he was ready to get married to me but then he proposed for a live-in relationship. I was scared that he would blackmail me again so I agreed to a live-in relationship,” she added.

The 24-year-old complainant said that it is during their live-in stay on July 2, 2021, that she discovered that Harshad was a Muslim man and that his original name was Arshad Malik. “On asking about his identity, he shut me up saying that these things hardly mattered in love and relationships. I thought he was madly in love with me so I trusted him. Later we shifted to Amalner and Ulhasnagar cities of the state. I also had my son named Vivek from the first marriage with me,” she narrated.

The woman said that she gave Arshad Rs 2.5 lakhs that she had attained from the will of her first husband. She also mentioned in the complaint that Arshad had demanded the gold chain which her deceased husband had gifted to her. “I refused to give the ornament to him which enraged him. He then hit me and also gave me motorbike silencer burn wounds on my hand. He snatched the chain and informed his parents in Dhule about me and my son,” the complaint read.

The victim woman and the prime accused happened to stay in Ulhasnagar city for around 4 months in a rented apartment. However, later Arshad’s father arrived at the residence and brutally raped the woman with permission of Arshad, as per the woman’s complaint. “Arshad and his father raped me for several days. I got pregnant. Later they took me to their home in Dhule and got me married to Arshad according to the Islamic rituals. After the wedding his father kept on sexually assaulting me several times despite knowing that I was pregnant with a child,” the victim stated.

Complaint registered by the victim woman. FIR copy has been obtained by OpIndia

According to the complaint, the woman was given a new Islamic name and was forcefully converted to Islam. The family members of Arshad including his mother Taslim and sister Arsheen also began pressuring the woman to perform ‘khatna’ (circumcision) on her small son named Vivek. On refusing the family members physically assaulted her amid her pregnancy. The woman then sent her son Vivek to his grandmother’s home in Dhule.

Adding the dreadful details to the case, the complainant said, “I gave birth to my second child in August this year. But I was not getting proper healthcare. Instead, my father-in-law and my husband continued to rape me together. My mother-in-law also tortured me mentally.” She said that after the Shraddha Walkar murder case happened, Arshad and his father would issue her threats saying that “Aftab cut Shraddha into 35 pieces but we would cut you into 70 pieces.”

The woman somehow managed to flee from Arshad’s home after she was issued death threats by both the accused on November 29. She reached out to her earlier mother-in-law (deceased husband Gaurav’s mother) and sought help. Meanwhile, she and her family member continued to get death threats from Arshad and his family including his father Salim and mother Taslim.

The woman reached the Deopur Police station on December 1 and lodged a police complaint against Arshad and his father Salim. The police have booked the accused under sections 376(2)(n), 377, 327, 504, 506, 34 and 323 of the Indian Penal Code and have launched an investigation in the case.

Earlier a similar case of love jihad was reported from Shrirampur area of Maharashtra, where Aman Sheikh (24) who posed himself as Amrut Ram Khairnar had lured a 17-year-old Dalit girl and abducted her from Shirdi where she had gone with her family to visit the Sai Baba temple. The accused also had forged documents, including Aadhaar Card, to convince the victim girl that he was a Hindu, reports said.

Also on November 12, a minor tribal girl was abducted by a person named Imran Sheikh from Malegaon, Nashik. The girl had disappeared from her home while she was alone. The family of the girl and several Adivasi and Hindu organisations then alleged that the police were not taking the case seriously as the victim girl belonged to the tribal community.

Know which party was termed as AIDS of Indian politics by Kumar Vishwas

A video clipping of former AAP leader and Hindi poet Kumar Vishwas is making rounds on the internet, where he is seen commenting on various political parties while taking a jibe at his former party. In this video, which is a clip from a program on News 18 Hindi from October 2022, Kumar Vishwas is seen comparing various Indian political parties with different diseases. The former AAP leader said that while BJP is like Diabetes and Congress is like Cancer, some parties are like AIDS, which has no cure, so it is best to avoid it. While he didn’t name any party for AIDS, it was clear that he was talking about AAP.

Kumar Vishwas was invited for an interview on the TV news channel News Nation. Anchor Amish Devgan hosted this interview. In the viral video clipping of this interview, Amish Devgan asked Kumar Vishwas if he will go back to the Aam Aadmi Party if Arvind Kejriwal agrees to make him a deputy chief minister. Answering this, Kumar Vishwas said, “There are two cases. One is you you don’t know about the things. The other is you know the confirmed things. So, the thing you are asking was not known earlier, but it is confirmed now.”

Amish Devgan asked what is confirmed. Kumar Vishwas answered, “It is now confirmed that there are many diseases and disorders in Indian politics. For example, the Bharatiya Janata Party is just like diabetes. They work well and be healthy if you make them toil hard, make them run here and there, and make them sweat. Doesn’t a doctor advise you to run and sweat if you have diabetes?”

Kumar Vishwas added, “The Congress is the origin of all the malpractices seen in Indian politics. It is just like cancer. You cut it, treat it, and transplant it. Then you get over it.”

Without naming AAP, Kumar Vishwas took a jibe at his former organization as he said, “Some parties in Indian politics are just like AIDS. There is no cure for it. Prevention from them is the only cure we have. So better to save ourselves from such people. We say sorry to them with folded hands and say that we won’t repeat this thing again.” However, it is clear that he was talking about AAP, as his response came to a question about Arvind Kejriwal.

Amish Devgan asked Kumar Vishwas, “What do you think why did he (Arvind Kejriwal) change in this way? He also comes from a humble background just like you do.” Replying to this, Kumar Vishwas said, “Look, I nowadays do a program based on the life and works of Bhagwan Shri Ram. When I already have such a big topic, why should I waste my time talking about such inferior topics?”

It is notable that Kumar Vishwas recently received a death threat from a supporter of Arvind Kejriwal for his comments against the Aam Aadmi Party leader Arvind Kejriwal and praising Lord Ram. A police complaint was also filed in this regard and the culprit was arrested from Indore.

If art tells a story and does not do propaganda on behalf of victims, it loses its purpose: What Nadav Lapid needs to learn

Propaganda – The word owes its origin to an entity called The Sacred Congregation for Propagation of the Faith (Congregation for Propagation of the Faith). This entity was established in 1622. The term became political for the first time Georgi Plekhanov proposed it a as valid tool for Marxist agitation in his work Our Differences in 1885. Lenin in 1902, in his essay What is to be Done, justifies Propaganda as a tool complementary to agitation writing We must without fail devote serious attention to propaganda and agitation… as a key tool to the Communist revolution. This idea of disinformation became sinister when Hitler’s  Nationalist Socialist German Worker’s Party or Nazis used disinformation to further their political agenda causing unprecedented cruelty to the Jewish citizens of Germany, with a structured campaign carried out by creating a Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda.  

Merriam-Webster gives three definitions to it, first is the historical reference of religious connotation mentioned above, and second is the spreading of ideas, information or rumour for the purpose of helping or injuring an institution a cause or a person. It also alternately defines it as ideas, facts or allegations spread deliberately to further one’s cause or to damage an opposing cause. Cambridge Dictionary defines it as Information, ideas, opinion or images, often only to give one part of an argument, that are broadcast, published, or in some other way spread with an intention of influencing people’s opinion. 

Now as we see, propaganda can be used to lie and support the perpetrator of the Oppression as in the case of Nazi Germans creating a narrative that the subjugation of the Jews was not only desirable, rather was necessary. On the positive side, using art to oppose such brutal oppression by magnifying the atrocities of the Nazis, could also, in the most honest definition be termed as Propaganda. The cause shall define whether the propaganda is noble or not. Any art which sides with the oppressed and tries to build an opinion in support of the oppressed, the brutalised and the wronged ones, by definition is still propaganda but a positive one.

When Nadav Lapid, the pro-Palestine and anti-Israel film-maker invited as a guest at the International Film Festival of India organised by the Government of India, called Vivek Agnihotri’s telling of the true and factual story of brutal violence in Kashmir in the 90s aimed at wiping out the Hindu population from the Valley to make it an Islamic State, a Propaganda, from all indications, he did not mean it positive propaganda meant to propagate the truth. In the aftermath of the outrage at the insensitive and somewhat out-of-place dressing down of The Kashmir File, the man at the centre of the whole controversy, Nadav Lapid came to one of the TV channels and stood his ground and left no scope for any benefit of the doubt, insisted foolishly that his calling the Film propaganda was in a negative sense. Now, this should imply two things, one, what the Film depicted is based upon lies, and two, that it is meant to injure a cause. 

Well, if one has seen the movie, it stitches the narrative around the mass killings of Hindus by Muslim fanatics in Kashmir with the express objective of carving out an Islamic State out of Hindu-majority secular India with the support of the Islamic State of Pakistan; its story is woven across few critical events. These events shown in the movie through which the story moves are the killing of an Engineer in Telecom Department BK Ganjoo in March 1990, the killing of High Court Judge Neelkanth Ganjoo, the Murder of IAF officers, the brutal killing of Girija Tikku and the Nadimarg Massacre of 2003. One key feature of negative propaganda is that it is based on lies.

Now let us look at all of these incidents in isolation. Was BK Ganjoo killed in 1990? Yes, The Hindu, a known anti-Hindu newspaper carried a report which also speaks of his wife, Mrs Vijaya Ganjoo, now living in Delhi, having been driven out of Kashmir, the land of their ancestors by the Terrorists (see the Link, somehow having an unrelated picture from Gujarat in a Kashmir story). The killing is a story of worst betrayal and brutality where allegedly the terrorists made the grieving wife of a slain man eat rice soaked in the blood of the victim. The second story is about the killing of Judge Neelkanth Ganjoo. He was murdered in broad daylight. It was alleged that he was murdered to avenge the sentencing of terror accused Maqbul Bhatt.

As the victim was a High Court Judge, his assassination is a matter of public record and the story cannot be made up. The third incident in the movie is the gruesome rape and murder of Hindu woman Girija Tickoo. She was raped and murdered by cutting in the woodcutting sawing machine on June 4th 1990, while she was still alive. This was also reported in the newspaper and a factual real incident.  Another incident which is shown in the movie across which the story moves is the Nadimarg Massacre of 24 Hindus including the infants (NewYorkTime Article is linked). As for the mass-scale exodus of Hindus from Kashmir, the visible proof of that is the Kashmiri Refugee camps in Delhi. 

Now we have established that there is enough documented proof of all the incidents built as a story around one single family, we know that this is not misinformation or a lie for which it can be termed as propaganda. That leaves the second part of the definition of Propaganda, which is damaging the cause. The only cause this is harmed here is that of the fanatics, who wanted to establish an Islamic state on the lines of the one made in Syria infamous for bloodshed and women and child slaves. The clause that it supports is that of the Hindu victims who were threatened to leave the valley by the announcement made from the Mosques. Now, if a threat is released from places of worship, then how is it not an act of religious terror is hard to believe and to support it is only supporting the cause of religious terror. 

If Art tells a story and does not do propaganda on behalf of victims and oppressed, then it loses its purpose. Any art and positive propaganda associated with a German story from the world war needs to side with the Jews, not the Germans. That it moves the opinion of the masses could be one reason for calling it Propaganda. But then is that not the purpose of Art, to move people’s opinion – in favour of peace, in support of love, in defiance of oppression and terror? Why would create a word of Art at all if it leaves no impression on people, changes no opinion, or creates no ideas to improve a world ridden with violence and pain?

Another charge that Nadav Lapid makes is that the movie is vulgar. The term Vulgar comes from Latin Vulgaris, which is derived from Vulgus, meaning Common Folks. Although some amount of snobbishness is visible from the way Nadav lists out how he has been on the jury of many prestigious Film Festivals, still, why attack a movie merely because it caters to the sensibilities of common folks? The Kashmir Files is about the minorities of Kashmir facing Muslim majoritarianism. It is a movie about the pain that fell upon the common people- the telecom Engineer BK Ganjoo, the Librarian Girija Tickoo, the poor villagers of Nadimarg, common people abandoned by the state in front of the fanatics. The movie does not claim to be clever or crafty. It merely claims to be truthful and supports the cause of the victims. It does not tell the story of both sides. In this story, there is only one side. Just as the story of the Holocaust does not speak about the unjust treaty of the first World war which broke the back of German pride.

In Nazi Germany, it was the Jews who were the victims, not the Germans. A movie is not a mathematical equation where two sides have to be equal. Art is always a creation of the opinionated, just as Nadav has a very poor opinion of his own homeland which he believes has something rotten. This movie evokes very naked emotions towards violence in human mind, vulgar emotions, if I may say. There is nothing lofty or philosophical about the deaths depicted by Vivek in the movie. The acts of violence are deeply depressing and often disgusting. They do not leave the audience as angry as they leave her sad. Many half-educated men have jumped into it, once again attacking the movie and claiming it will create Islamophobia. Phobia by definition is fear, not hatred, and it is a nature-given defence mechanism.

It rises when one finds violence and terror, not because someone wants one to be fearful. The way to stop Islamophobia is not to threaten people to desist from being Islamophobes, but rather stop threatening people and to stop creating absolute terror of the faith. It is for the followers of the faith to stop being intolerant and violent. To demand that a film built on factual incidents of violence in Kashmir should be pleasant and not vulgar is insane and insensitive at the same time. This demand of Nadav is in reality fascism in art. As Susan Sontag wrote in her 1974 Essay, Fascinating Fascism- Fascist Art glorifies surrender, it exalts mindlessness, it glamorises death. This is what the Kashmir Files does not do. It presents death in its mournful sadness and painful ugliness. Maybe the reason why a practitioner of fascist art, Nadav, himself hated the movie is not that it is not truthful, but because it is too real. As Susan Sontag writes in the same essay quoted above that Fascist art scorns realism in the name of idealism. 

When cornered, Nadav Lapid concedes that whether a work of Art is propaganda and vulgar or not- is a subjective decision and may vary from person to person but fails to explain why then he took to a public platform to denigrate a movie. There were Fifteen movies in the run. Out of them Costa Rican film I have Electric Dreams has been chosen by the jury. Nadav claims now that his criticism of the movie had nothing to do with the politics around it. But then he did not comment on art, nor did he utter one word about any of the other movies which did not make it to the winner’s place. Obviously, they were not unto the mark on one count or another, as far as the art of Film-making is concerned. If he had not made the highly political statement, picking and lampooning one movie, it would have passed without any notice. A seasoned man of many platforms like Nadav must have known that and made the statement for a purpose. 

While Nadav has not commented on any lobby at play here, much like Jack Dorsey’s infamous ‘Smash Brahminical Patriarchy’ moment, those who are hell-bent on defending him, mostly those leaning towards left and Congress, bring forth another lame argument. They claim that Vivek Agnihotri has made money out of The Kashmir Files. Which other movie maker has claimed that they made the movie not for making money but because their movie carried a higher purpose. The second leg of their argument is that the Movie is supported by the ruling Narendra Modi Government. Both of these two are such lame arguments. When they claim BJP supported the movie depicting the horrors of Hindus left alone in a Muslim-majority state by an apathetic state, they imply that the opposition opposes the movie for the same reason.

Also, there is no evidence of the claim that the movie was promoted by the ruling BJP, in any material terms. On the other hand, the movie Gandhi made by a British filmmaker was funded with seven million dollars of Indian taxpayers’ money. The movie earned around 127 Million Dollars Worldwide. This is how a commercial private venture of a foreign production house was funded by the Government of India. Nadav has himself made a few movies. His own body of work mostly includes short films and documentaries. The fact that he abused the privilege given by the Government of India as a guest and Chief of Jury in an Indian event and that he was invited in the first place, both are problematic. As for the makers of the Kashmir Files, more power to Vivek Agnihotri and his team.

Pakistan seeks the same discount on crude oil as India and China, Russia says no

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In a not-so-surprising rejection, Russia has refused to sell its crude oil to Pakistan at a discounted rate. Russia rejected Pakistan’s request to give crude oil at a 30-40% discount, saying that it will not be able to offer anything at present as all volumes are committed.

During talks in Moscow, a Pakistan delegation led by State Minister for Petroleum Musadik Malik, a joint secretary, and officials from the Pakistan Embassy in Moscow requested a discount, as per Pakistani media.

The talks ended without a clear conclusion, but the Russian state assured that they will consider Pakistan’s plea and share its decision later via diplomatic channels.

According to media reports, Russia can offer crude at the same rates it offers to its large client countries, which have reliable and sound economies, at a suitable time. They stated that all volumes are currently committed with big buyers.

Notably, the Russian side urged Pakistan to honour its commitment to the Pakistan Stream Gas Pipeline, which will run from Karachi to Lahore and Punjab.

During the talks, the Pakistani side desired to alter the PSGP project’s model. According to the Russian side, the project model under the GtG arrangement has already been finalised, with only a few clauses of the shareholding agreement remaining to be finalised.

On November 29, a representative delegation from Pakistan flew to Moscow for a three-day visit with Russian officials to discuss the possibility of importing crude oil at a reduced price and discussing payment options and shipping costs.

While Pakistan is requesting Russia to consider its demand for discounted crude oil supplies, India has been increasing its oil imports from Russia significantly in recent months.

India’s imports from the Middle East fell 16.2% to about 2.2 million bpd in August, while imports from Russia increased 4.6% to about 896,000 bpd in September.

China and India now account for two-thirds of all Russian crude exports by sea, with China receiving at least half of all Russian crude exports through pipelines too.

India typically imports just 2 to 5% of its crude from Russia, which is about the same amount as the United States did prior to its announcement of a complete ban on Russian energy products. In 2021, India imported only 12 million barrels of Russian crude, with the vast majority of its oil coming from Iraq, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Nigeria.

“Today, the Indian government’s motivations are economic rather than political.” In their oil import strategy, India will always look for a bargain. “It’s difficult not to take a 20% discount on crude when you import 80-85% of your oil, especially in the aftermath of the pandemic and the global slowdown,” Samir N. Kapadia, head of trade at government relations consulting firm Vogel Group, told CNBC.

It is pertinent to note here that India has saved 35,000 crores after it began purchasing discounted Russian crude. 

Recently, the European Union failed to draw a consensus on approving a price cap on Russian oil. EU governments have disagreed over the price level at which the cap should be set. The price cap is the West’s effort to wipe out Russia’s oil revenues as retaliation for its invasion of Ukraine while maintaining global oil supplies and mitigating an increase in global energy prices. Poland, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, the bloc’s easternmost members, objected that the proposed $60-$70 per barrel for Russian crude is too modest and far above the rates at which Russia currently sells crude. The EU officials have sought time to design a better deal.

With volumes of crude committed to buyers such as India and China, as well as the looming threat of the West’s attempts to ‘punish’ Russia for invading Ukraine, it will be interesting to see if Russia agrees to provide discounted crude to Pakistan in the near future.

Viral video: MBA student gatecrashes a wedding in Bhopal, forced to wash dishes after being caught

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On November 30, a video of a young man washing utensils at a wedding in Bhopal went viral on social media. Once the video went viral, the young man who washed the dishes has come forward and asked Police Commissioner Makrand Devaskar that strict action should be taken against those who made the video viral.

According to a report by Patrika, the young man is a resident of Jabalpur and had gone to eat food at a wedding without being invited and when caught there, he was forced to wash utensils.

At a wedding held in a garden in Bhopal, the MBA student from Jabalpur had gatecrashed the wedding, but he was caught by the people for being an uninvited guest and was made to wash utensils after eating free food. The video of the incident went viral on social media on Wednesday. In the video, the youth is seen cleaning utensils at the wedding and another young man is also talking to him.

In the video, the person making the video is heard asking questions, and the young man who ate food as an uninvited guest is seen washing the plates as he answered those questions. The person making the video is also taking information from him about his studies, work, and where he lives.

The person who made the video is asking ‘how does it feel to wash the plates’. The MBA student from Jabalpur answers, “If I have eaten for free, I have to do something.” The conversation in the video shows that the young man had gone to a wedding going on in a garden in Bhopal for the food, but he was caught by the hosts. The video of his “punishment” has since gone viral.

Delhi liquor scam: Telangana CM’s daughter K Kavitha named by ED in remand report, YSRC MP M Srinivasulu Reddy named too

On November 30, in a remand report submitted by the Enforcement Directorate (ED), the agency named ruling TRS party MLC K Kavitha who is the daughter of Chief Minister K Chandrashekhar Rao, in the ongoing probe over the Liquor Policy Scam. The remand note was submitted in court by the investigation agency following the arrest of one of the accused, Amit Arora.

Arora was apprehended and presented before the court on Wednesday. Apart from Kavitha, YSRC MP Mahunta Srinivasulu Reddy and his son Raghava were also mentioned by the agency. ED said that Kavitha changed her phone’s International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) six times after the case was handed over to the agency. Furthermore, the agency said the accused destroyed digital evidence in an attempt to hamper the ongoing investigation into the matter.

Notably, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders have said earlier that Kavitha’s role in the alleged liquor policy scam would come out anytime. BJP leaders Parvesh Varma and Manjinder Singh Sirsa had alleged in August that Kavitha was involved in facilitating the Delhi Liquor Policy. Kavitha had denied the allegations and said she would file a defamation case against them.

ED officials noted that their investigation revealed one of the accused, Vijay Nair received kickbacks worth Rs 100 crores on behalf of Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) leaders. The kickbacks came from a company named ‘South Group’. Sharath Chandra Reddy, K. Kavitha, Mahunta Srinivasulu Reddy, and Amit Arora control the said company. ED sources were quoted by Deccan Chronicle saying that Arora confirmed the same in his statement to the investigation agency.

ED said, “The 12% profit margin to the wholesalers was devised to extract half of it as a kickback to the AAP leaders. As per the investigation carried out so far, Sh Vijay Nair, on behalf of leaders of AAP, has at least received kickbacks to the tune of Rs. 100 Cr from a group called South Group (controlled by Sh Sarath Reddy, Ms K Kavitha, and Sh Magunta Srinivasulu Reddy) by various persons, including Amit Arora. The same has been disclosed by the arrestee Sh Amit Arora in his statements.”

Kavitha accused BJP of using ED for politics

In a statement, Kavitha accused BJP of using ED for politics in light of upcoming state assembly elections in Telangana. She said, “Modi govt came 8 yrs ago & in these 8 yrs, democratically elected govt in 9 states were toppled while BJP formed its govts in an inappropriate way. Every child in the country knows ED arrives before PM Modi in poll-bound states. This has happened in Telangana.”

Furthermore, she said, “Same thing is happening in Telangana as we’ve elections next year ED has arrived before PM Modi in the state. We’ve welcomed them and will be cooperating with them. Still, BJP is playing cheap tricks.”

She added, “PM Modi can put us behind bars, but we will still be working for the people & expose the failures of the BJP. TRS govt is running smoothly in Telangana. We have exposed their conspiracy to topple the state govt & Telangana’s people have witnessed it.”

Recently, after Kavitha’s statement that BJP leader Arvind Dharampuri should be beaten up with slippers, TRS workers attacked his house.

ED also mentioned in its report that after the case was handed over to the agency, all the accused, including Delhi’s deputy CM Manish Sisodia changed their phones multiple times, allegedly to destroy evidence and hamper the investigation.

OpIndia has reached out to the BJP leaders in Telangana for comments. We will update the report accordingly.

China’s communist government employing intimidating tactics against big businesses, Alibaba founder Jack Ma staying in Japan: Report

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The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has aggressively choked financing to non-state entities it views as not aligned with the party’s economic or political goals in its quest to intimidate large-scale businesses and technocrats, media reports claim. According to a report by Financial Post titled “CCP’s Intimidating Tactics Against Technocrats and Big Businesses in China,” the “party-cum-state has begun its long-awaited crackdown on big businesses that refused to endorse the party’s repressive policies.”

According to the report, Alibaba founder Jack Ma’s case demonstrates the CCP’s intimidation through coercion tactics, which has instilled fear in other business owners who have earlier expressed similar concerns.

Notably, according to a Financial Times report, Jack Ma, the founder of the e-commerce company Alibaba, has shifted to Japan, and he is living in Central Tokyo for the last six months.

Jack Ma has reportedly become an enthusiastic collector as several people involved in Japan’s modern art scene said. Ma spends most of his time painting to pass time. Others claim that Ma has been working to expand his business beyond Alibaba and Ant. He has handed over the reins of his e-commerce giant Alibaba and Ant, to new generation leaders.

In 2020, Ma suddenly disappeared from public view after accusing Beijing Chinese regulators of having a “pawnshop mentality.” He even advocated for the introduction of daring new players capable of extending China’s credit to collateral-poor people.

Right after Ma’s criticism of the regulators, Ma’s Ant Group and the e-commerce behemoth Alibaba were hit with a slew of regulatory issues. According to the report, Chinese regulators cancelled Ant’s USD 37 billion initial public offering (IPO) last year and fined Alibaba a record USD 2.8 billion for alleged antitrust violations.

According to the United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission (USCC), under Xi Jinping, “China’s financial regulators have also aggressively choked off financing to non-state entities they as unaligned with CCP’s political and economic goals.” “The CCP leadership also engaged in several targeted measures to enforce political unity and preempt criticism from individuals and groups within the Party-state,” the USCC report read.

According to USCC, “Further inclusion of Leninist political institutions in China’s private firms increases top-down control and drives companies to meet political rather than market objectives.” This approach views the market as a tool for allocating resources toward CCP-determined ends, and it is skeptical of any market activity that goes beyond serving political objectives.

Major Shaitan Singh and the battle of Rezang La: How 120 Indian Army soldiers manifested the phrase ‘Last Man, Last Round’

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Among the many great stories of heroic bravery for India on the frontline, the Battle of Rezang La figures prominently. The Indian Army’s gallantry and fortitude at the battle of Rezang La during the 1962 war with China is a goosebump-raising story of unimaginable bravery. Major Shaitan Singh, Param Vir Chakra, of the 13 Kumaon regiment, a great Indian hero and the sheer embodiment of valour and patriotism, perished in the battle, but his legacy lives on in the hearts of Indians who will be eternally grateful for his bravery.

60 years after the battle, the story, the truth, and the permanence of unfathomable sacrifice, where the Indian men in uniform were confronted with overwhelming odds, continues to inspire us. It is scarcely believable that such brave men were ever born and lived amongst us.

When we talk about the Rezang La battle, the name of Major Shaitan Singh PVC, who symbolised bravery and courage, is the first name that comes to mind. Today is Major Shaitan Singh’s 98th birthday and a good time to remember this great son of India.

Birth and early years

Shaitan Singh Bhati was born on December 1, 1924, in Banasar village of Jodhpur district in Rajasthan to a Rajput family of the Bhati clan. His father was Lieutenant Colonel Hem Singh. Singh completed his secondary education at Jodhpur’s Chopasni Senior Secondary School. He was well-known in school for his football prowess. Singh attended Jaswant College after finishing high school in 1943, and graduated in 1947. 

Shaitan Singh joined the Jodhpur State Forces as an officer on August 1, 1949. He was assigned to the Kumaon Regiment when Jodhpur was merged into India after independence. On November 25, 1955, he was promoted to the rank of captain and participated in operations in Naga Hills as well as the Indian takeover of Goa in 1961. He was subsequently elevated to the rank of major on June 11, 1962.

Indo-China war 1962

On October 20, 1962, China launched a full-fledged military attack on India. India sustained substantial losses along the Ladakh border in the days that followed. The Chinese had overrun border checkpoints from Daulat Beg Oldie to Damchok in their initial attack on Indian forces in October.

Indian forces were preventing the Chinese from crossing the Spanggur Gap, a 2-kilometre-long opening in the Kailash Range, south of Pangong Lake, and moving into Chushul. Rezang La is located around 11 kilometres south of the Spanggur Gap. The formation, which guards the southern gates to the Chushul Valley, is situated at an elevation of around 5,500 metres.

Shaitan Singh
Image: Wikiwand

The Chinese might would have cut off the route that connected Chushul and the areas south of it to Leh if they took control of Rezang La, a road that was finished just before the war. Chushul’s defence was under the command of the Indian Army’s 114 Infantry Brigade, which was operating without a battalion. An infantry brigade typically consists of three battalions, however, the 114 Brigade only had the 1/8 Gurkha Rifles and the 5 Jat Regiment.

The 13 Kumaon regiment was moved from Baramulla to support the 114 Brigade when the threat to Chushul was ascertained. The 13 Kumaon Battalion, which reached Leh on October 2, 1962, and was undergoing acclimatisation, was given the task of defending the area south of the Spanggur Gap by the 114 Infantry Brigade.

Shaitan Singh
Charlie Company 13 Kumaon Regiment. (Source: Reddit)

The weather was perilous, with a chilly and piercing wind and rough terrain. Another disadvantage India had was that it was inaccessible to Indian artillery owing to an intervening feature, requiring soldiers to go without the protective cover of the artillery cannons. The other 13 Kumaon companies held Gun Hill, Gurung Hill, and Mugger Hill. Rezang La, a 19-kilometre pass on the southern approach to Chushul, was assigned to Charlie Company under Major Shaitan Singh. Rezang La was all rock, terribly cold with bone-chilling winds, and the men did not have time to acclimatise to the conditions.

Chinese attack Rezang La post

Charlie Company was unprotected, unsupported, and all on its own. The Chinese Army attacked the 7th and 8th platoons in the early hours of November 18. The Indians responded with a fierce response to the Chinese aggression at 05:00 hrs. The reaction was so fierce that hundreds of Chinese were killed. and the Chinese Army’s initial wave was crushed.

At 05:40 hrs, Charlie Company came under heavy artillery and mortar shelling, and 350 Chinese attacked the 9th platoon under cover of this fire. True to their instruction, the platoon delayed its fire until the very end. The 9th platoon opened fire with all their guns when the Chinese were only 90 metres away. Hundreds of Chinese perished in the face of this onslaught from India.

For the next round of strikes, the Chinese deployed recoilless (RCL) guns to the Charlie Company’s wings and began relentlessly hitting Indian positions with 75 mm and 57 mm bombs, as well as 132 mm rockets. As visibility increased after dawn, the Chinese were also spotted deploying a Medium Machine Gun (MMG) and putting it 600 yards away from the Indian position. Chinese soldiers quickly began hitting Indian positions in the area with mortars and RCL guns.

Recoil Less Gun (RCL)

Major Shaitan Singh moved from platoon to platoon, shooting at the enemy and encouraging his troops. He continued to fight despite the significant threat to his life. He battled like a man possessed, utterly unconcerned about his own safety.

The incredibly high rate of casualties could not be sustained by the Chinese and they altered their strategy. The 9th platoon was placed under MMG fire, while 400 Chinese attacked the 8th platoon from behind. The platoon’s barbed wire fence halted the onslaught. At the same time, a highly equipped assault party of 120 Chinese struck the 7th platoon from behind. The 7th platoon fired mortars and rifles in response. Both sides suffered a high number of casualties in the subsequent battle.

The strength of the 7th and 8th platoons had been badly diminished by this point. When the Chinese attacked the 7th platoon again, Indian men jumped out and confronted the Chinese in a hand-to-hand battle. The Chinese arrived with reinforcements and Charlie Company’s entire 7th and 8th platoons were decimated with no survivors. The strength of the 9th platoon was also badly reduced and ran out of supplies. As a result, the survivors used their bare hands to fight the fully armed Chinese.

Major Shaitan Singh moved from bunker to bunker, motivating his soldiers and leading from the front. During the conflict, he was seriously wounded by MMG fire. During the evacuation, the Chinese opened fire on him and the two men escorting him. He ordered his men to leave with his weapon and go to battalion headquarters since he did not want them to be killed in this situation.

“I want you to leave me here and go to the battalion headquarters. Report to the CO how bravely our company fought. Go fast, save yourselves. The enemy can come here any time,” he said, according to Kuldeep Yadav in the book ‘The Battle of Rezang La.’

“Finally, after helping their company commander to rest against a boulder, the jawans reluctantly left. By now, Maj. Shaitan Singh had given his personal pistol to Sepoy Mamchand of platoon 9 who was with them, to deposit it with the battalion quartermaster so that it would not fall into the enemy’s hands,” Yadav writes.

The benchmark of valour

Charlie Company, 13 Kumaon, withstood seven Chinese attacks until every man of the company sacrificed their life in battle. The frozen remains of Indian troops were discovered in February 1963 by a Ladakhi shepherd who arrived at Rezang La. The Indian Army spotted Shaitan Singh’s body three months later at the exact location where the soldiers had left him.

Major Shaitan Singh’s frozen body was discovered against a boulder, where his troops had left him. Many of the troops had perished while holding their rifles. There was no undamaged bunker in the Charlie Company area. The search party of the Indian Army which went to the location discovered 759 bullet holes in the shield of one of the bunkers. One of the soldiers was shot 47 times.

In the attempt to seize Rezang La, 1300 Chinese soldiers were killed. 114 Indian troops died out of a total of 120. Major Shaitan Singh’s body was transported to Jodhpur the next day after it was discovered at Rezang La. He was posthumously bestowed India’s highest gallantry medal, the Param Veer Chakra, for exceptional valour and heroism beyond the line of duty. In addition, the company received eight Veer Chakras and four Sena Medals for extraordinary courage. The Charlie Company was afterward renamed “Rezang La Company.”

Today, a memorial honours the soldiers of Charlie Company who fell in the battle. It reads, “And how can man die better, than facing fearful odds, from the ashes of his fathers, and the temples of the gods.”

Shaitan Singh
Rezang La Memorial. (Image: Indian Observer Post)

Major-General Ian Cardozo writes in his book Param Vir, Our Heroes in Battle, “When Rezang La was later revisited, dead jawans were found in the trenches still holding on to their weapons… every single man of this company was found dead in his trench with several bullets or splinter wounds. The 2-inch mortar man died with a bomb still in his hand. The medical orderly had a syringe and bandage in his hands when the Chinese bullet hit him… Of the thousand mortar bombs with the defenders, all but seven had been fired and the rest were ready to be fired when the (mortar) section was overrun.”

The phrase ‘Last Man, Last Round’ finds its manifestation in the battle of Rezang La. As Major Gaurav Arya writes, “At minus 30 degrees Celsius, Ahirs from Haryana, headed by Major Shaitan Singh Bhati of Jodhpur, fought for Naam, Namak, Nishan.”

It would be fair to say that the rugged mountains never witnessed such tenacity and such bravery before, and since. On this very first day of December in 1924, was born Shaitan Singh, the man who never learned to surrender, to give up for mother India, as he knew sacrifice, not defeat.

Jharkhand HC says Muslim girls can marry after attaining 15 years of age, adds ‘Muslim marriage is governed by personal law’

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On Thursday, the Jharkhand High Court referred to the Muslim Personal Law and ruled that a Muslim girl who has attained 15 years of age or above has the liberty to marry the person of her choice without any interference from their guardians. The Court said this while it was hearing a criminal case lodged against a Muslim person who married a 15-year-old girl from within the community.

According to the reports, the Court dismissed the proceeding and ordered the cancellation of the FIR which was filed by the girl’s father. The father in the FIR had accused Mohammed Sonu (24) of persuading his daughter to marry him. The girl belongs to the Jugsalai area of Jharkhand’s Jamshedpur. Sonu then challenged the FIR and approached the Jharkhand High Court.

However, during the hearing, the father of the girl stated that he was no more opposed to the marriage. He also thanked Almighty for arranging a suitable match for his daughter and said that he had filed FIR against Mohammed Sonu due to some misunderstanding. He added that his daughter had found the right match by the grace of Allah and that there was no other perfect match than the petitioner.

“In view of this judgment, is clear that the marriage of a Muslim girl is governed by Muslim Personal Law. As per Article 195 from the book ‘Principles of Mohammedan Law by Sir Dinshah Fardunji Mulla’, the girl is approximately 15 years of age and was competent to enter into a contract of marriage with a person of her choice,” the Court said in its order.

“The petitioner is stated to be more than 24 years of age. Thus, both the petitioner and the girl attained marriageable age as defined by Muslim Personal Law. Article 21 of the Constitution of India provides for the protection of life and personal liberty and further lays down that no person shall be deprived of his or her life and personal liberty except as per the procedure established by law,” Justice Dwivedi added.

The Court referred to Yunus Khan v. State of Haryana & Ors., 2014 (3) RCR (Criminal) 518, wherein it was held that the marriage of a Muslim girl is governed by personal law.

This comes after a similar judgment was passed by the Punjab and Haryana High Court reaffirming that a Muslim girl who reaches the age of 15 can marry whoever she wants, and such a marriage would not violate the Prohibition of Child Marriage (PCM) Act. Notably, according to the personal laws in Islam (Sharia), the age of attaining puberty is 15. The High Court also reassured that Muslim girls would continue to be governed by Islamic personal laws. Several other High Courts have passed the same verdict in several other cases earlier.

However, two contrasting verdicts were delivered by two high courts, ruling that having sex with minors is still an offence under POCSO. Last month, Karnataka High Court ruled that POCSO Act overrides Personal Law, and declared the marriage of a minor Muslim girl invalid as it violates the POCSO act. The High Court said that POCSO is a Special Act and it overrides the personal law which is based on Sharia Law.

Just three weeks later, Kerala High Court passed a similar judgement, saying that a marriage between Muslims under personal law cannot be excluded from the Protection Of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act. The court said that if one of the partners in the marriage is a minor, offences under POCSO Act will apply. The validity of the marriage would not be considered in such cases.

Here are 11 things that India can do to take advantage of the brewing crisis in China

We have yet another reason to thank our stars that social media and alternative sources of information have sprung up and grown stronger over the past few years. In the Indian context, that gives us freedom from the monopoly of Palazzo and Politburo narratives fed as “independent journalism” by the corrupt MSM elites. The freedom they recent every single moment of their wretched lives and try to subvert in every way possible. Even as they tried to recruit the likes of Cambridge Analytica to swing things in their favour.

I am talking about the recent wave of protests in China over the zero COVID policy of “our” Chairman. If not for social media, it would be blacked out. Total blackout is now impossible, precisely because we have alternatives, but then our comrade journalists do their best playing it down. As I write, the wave of protests appears to have simmered down. 

Those of us old enough will remember the events of August 1991 when it appeared the hard-line Soviet communist group would oust Gorbachev and go back to its glory days. Stalinists and Moscow’s servants in India were celebrating with wild parties in Kolkata. And then Yeltsin happened. Rest is history. 

Today similar celebrations must be breaking out in Lutyens and Mount Road as it appears Xi has won this round. One hopes that too would be short-lived. Although I am sceptical as the regime may survive for foreseeable future.

Be that as it may, the purpose of this article is not to predict events in China or discuss the obedience of our comrade left to despot demigods but to what India and Modi Sarkar can do to make sure the brief window of opportunity is used well. I am not claiming any credit for bringing up this topic as several have already spoken about it and written about it. 

But here is my list of eleven things Modi government can do. Pun intended.

1. Fly under the radar

Make things happen at the state level. BJP rules enough states. Plus, there are non-hostile ones like Odisha. Get them to move. Modi should not underestimate the power of the left ecosystem to sabotage.  They could survive Moscow’s fall although weakened. If Beijing falls, they are finished, they know it. It is much easier to do small bang than big bang that will see leftists hollering all the way from Lutyens to NYT Op-Ed pages. Remember land reforms? It is far easier to bring in 500 small factories than waste 30 years fighting for one POSCO.

2. Go East, young man!

Our media, both right and left, is obsessed with the West and what they say or write about us. We pop the champagne bottles when they praise and wring out hands and lash out when they critique. Third-rate academics are given star billing, whether they praise Modi or Aurangzeb. But all the action is to our East. The investments we need are in manufacturing that can get our farm labour productive and earn far more. Decisions about the next factory are taken in Hong Kong or Singapore, not Germany or Finland, even in Western companies. Because that’s where key executives and competition is. The dollars and jobs that don’t come here go to Vietnam or Indonesia, not Poland or Mexico. GOI should appoint business-savvy, eloquent babus, not file pushers and form fillers, as highly visible, dedicated Investment promotion officers in every embassy in the East. And hold them accountable for results. And praise, and reward them when they deliver.

3. Simplify tax and corporate compliance laws

This sounds like a clique, and many would say that is being done. Too little and too late. In fact, compared to 2014, in the name of cracking down on fraud, we have regressed. MCA, among others, has introduced form after form that serves no useful purpose. Electronic filing means nothing if that is simply an excuse to introduce more and more compliance. The nonsensical “COVID Compliance” form that was thankfully withdrawn after outcry is a symptom of the disease. This kills small businesses and disgusts big overseas investors. Many run a mile in tight shoes to Vietnam just to escape our babus. Believe me, I have not only seen this myself but heard this from responsible executives. Some have directly asked me – “Why is this so Mr Ganesh?”. They KNOW. Because they do the exact same business across the region and benchmark all the time. We must benchmark ourselves with ASEAN and get rid of forms, returns, paperwork and complexity that they don’t and we have. 

4. Get rid of IAS, at least in economic, business related decision-making areas

Obviously I am not saying every babu is worthless. Many are stars. But it is fair to say on an overall basis, they have destroyed a lot more than they have created. We have talked for too long about outside talent etc. Our babus must run after industrialists and beg for job-creating investments, not the other way around, sit in Delhi and expect to be carried in palanquins. Because that is exactly what Chinese babus do. For that, we need people that have been there and done that, not lived their entire career in some dingy office doing unproductive paperwork.

5. Facilitate gig work – the world is the playground for our talented youth

Not everyone needs to work for Infosys or IBM. There’s enormous scope for gig work, be it design, IT development or even things like repairing costly watches or tailoring. Today compliance and tax navigation, customs and procedures are nightmares if you operate in India, especially if small. Our laws must make things simple and reward the ones bringing in money – not treat them like thieves and cheats. Why not say the first $50,000 of self-earned overseas income is tax-free? That will keep the Mallyas in check but help thousands of youth.

6. Watch the digital nomad space

Many countries, such as Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia etc., are offering great incentives for high-tech digital nomads to move in. They offer long terms visas, cheap rentals, a great entertainment scene and cuisine, a beach lifestyle, safety and peace. Not medieval Talibanic prohibition and tax raids. I know it is much harder for India to mimic them. But watch the space and at least make sure we don’t lose even more tax, skills and revenue. This, in fact, reinforces what I said earlier – our competition is to our East.

7. Continue with PLI in even more areas 

Forget what Raghuram Rajan says. Key factors of production – reliable power, logistics, land, and even labour in some cases, are super expensive in India. Fixing that is a multi-decade problem. In the meantime, we need incentives. When the jobs are here, factories are here, things will sort out and solutions will emerge. Until then PLI helps. Yes, we need more skilled labour, faster ports, engineers that are employable etc., but nothing stops us from working on that simultaneously.

8. We need #MakeInIndia for intellectual property 

Software and the like. What have we done to help the likes of Zoho? Probably nothing. The next Google or Facebook can be from here. This takes time but we need baby steps. Embracing open source for government work, a free mobile operating system challenge (Elon wants it, China is doing it!), promoting capacity building and many other things can be done with small budgets. That will break the backs of monopolies like Google and Apple and force them to be reasonable. Plus make India a lightning rod for global talent, mindshare and venture capital. I know a lot is already being done but ye dil mange more. We can do it. We have the size and market that the Philippines or Indonesia lacks.

9. Ten forms or you are out

Every minister should ask each senior bureaucrat under him or her to come out with ten forms, returns or filings that they can abolish TODAY. Not after another commission studies it for another ten years. If they can’t find it, fire them. When the first ten is done, rinse and repeat. We have thousands, so it should keep them busy for months. For heaven’s sake don’t compare with the USA. They can build walls and people will jump over them. We need welcome mats for the industry.

10. Crowdsource law drafting

I am not talking about passing laws, that is Parliament’s privilege. But writing new laws. Our laws are written in horrible 19th-century English in the most complicated language imaginable. Our notifications and “clarifications” are worse. They create litigation, harassment, and corruption almost from day 1. Just a simple example: Do we need 3 pages of sections, sub-sections, proviso, “notwithstanding anything contained hereins” to decide who’s tax resident?! And our lordships write 600-page judgements in equally archaic language. We should write laws that are easy to understand. Why not have an open competition for a new Companies Act or IT Act in under 100 sections? I am sure Indians can do it much better than Singapore or Vietnam!

11. Vastly simplify GST 

No, I am not repeating Rahul Gandhi’s nonsensical one-rate for Mercedes and milk idea. But rate slabs must reduce, and nothing needs to be outside of it. Compliance is still tough. I remember filling out the newly introduced Singapore GST form in the early 90s. Just three or four figures to fill out and that’s it! I know reforms are being attempted but giving it a big push will help. We must find ways to empower states in the taxation arena even as they surrender some level of control by signing up for GST. This will also create competition that spurs everyone on. 

Let us hope we can ride this wave and not miss the boat like we did in 70s, 80s and even 90s.