Indian News Queensland – March 2022 – Vol 4 Issue 12

Page 1

Web: indiannewsqld.com.au Email: info@indiannewsqld.com.au

Phone: 1300 859 066 fb : @indianewsaustralia

Feb 7, 2021 - Vol 4, Issue 11

Brookwater is only 10 minutes from major shops, multiple schools, the Mater hospital and University.

More on Page 32

Russian paratroopers have landed in Kharkiv World will hold Russia accountable for unprovoked At least 17 people were killed just as air raid sirens were in Kharkiv on Tuesday, and starting to sound in Kharkiv and attack on Ukraine: US President dozens wounded, according to the surrounding region. Al Jazeera

The statement adds that the Russian troops attacked a regional military hospital, and that fighting is ongoing, BBC reported. Kharkiv has been the epicentre of much of the violence seen in Ukraine in recent days. New Delhi, March 2 (IANS): The Ukraine military says Russian paratroopers have landed in its besieged second-largest city Kharkiv, BBC reported. Russian troops have parachuted into Kharkiv stepping up an attack on Ukraine's second-largest city which saw dozens of civilian killings in bombings Tuesday. According to the Ukrainian military, the aerial assault began

On Tuesday, a missile struck the local government headquarters of Ukraine's second-largest city around 08.00 local time, sending a massive fireball into the sky and burning cars and nearby buildings. Another strike occurred later on Tuesday in one of Kharkiv's residential neighborhoods. Ukrainian President Zelensky later called the attack a war crime.

emergency officials.

Some pundits have speculated that the artillery strikes on residential communities could be an effort by Russia to weaken the Ukrainian resolve to fight, BBC reported. The smaller southern city of Kherson has also fallen to Russian forces, local Ukrainian officials say. The frontline cities of Kharkiv, Sumy and Mariupol are still holding out against the Russian invasion. Meanwhile, the huge convoy of Russian armoured vehicles is now about 15 miles north-west of the capital Kyiv

J&K gives approval to transfer of land for various public purposes

IANS

Jammu, February 23 (IANS): The J&K Administrative Council (AC) which met under the chairmanship of Lieutenant

Governor, Manoj Sinha on February 23 approved the proposal of Revenue Department to transfer various parcels of land for public purposes. The Administrative Council approved the transfer of land measuring 63 Kanal four Marla in favour of the Higher Education Department for construction of a new Government Degree College in village Firsal, District Kulgam. The decision aims to provide quality higher education opportunities to students of the

region and boost employment of teaching and non-teaching staff through various recruiting agencies.

Moreover, approval was given to the transfer of land measuring two Kanal and five Marla in favour of the Health and Medical Education Department for construction of a health centre at Jawaharpora in District Pulwama. Once completed, the institution will provide modern medical facilities to the people of the area. Continued on Page 3

Indian MEA inaugurates Buddhist projects linked to ASEAN, east Asia countries IANS

New Delhi, February 23 (IANS): The Indian Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) on February 23 celebrated "Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav" by inaugurating projects reflecting Buddhist linkages with ASEAN and East Asian countries. According to the MEA officials,

www.indianews.com.au

the event was graced by Minister of State for External Affairs RajKumar Ranjan Singh. The dignitaries present on the occasion unveiled books of Jataka Tales translated into Thai, Korean, Vietnamese and Chinese languages.

Continued on Page 3

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

Washington, February 24 (IANS): US President Joe Biden on February 24 called his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin's announcement of a military operation in Ukraine as "an unprovoked and unjustified attack" and that the "world will hold Russia accountable" for the subsequent developments.

In a statement issued by the White House, Biden said that "Putin has chosen a premeditated war that will bring a catastrophic loss of life and human suffering". "Russia alone is responsible for the death and destruction this attack will bring, and the US

Australian delegation at IITGuwahati for discussions Guwahati, February 23 (IANS): An Australian delegation led by the country's High Commissioner in India Barry O' Farrell on February 23 discussed several projects of mutual cooperation in various domains with the Director and top officials of Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati, officials said.

IIT sources said that the Australian delegation discussed several projects of mutual cooperation in various domains including academics, scholarships, strategic research, trade and commerce, governance, disaster management, cultural exchange, water conservation and clean energy. Continued on Page 3

Maitri initiatives and T20 World Cup to woo Indians Down Under

A

s Australia reopens its international borders to fully vaccinated tourists and business travellers from February 21, it is looking at India - its fastestgrowing source of international visitors - to revitalise its tourism industry, especially during the T20 Cricket World Cup later this year.

IANS

Over 800,000 fans are expected to attend the ICC T20 cricket extravaganza, which Australia will host for the first time in October. Such has been the buzz surrounding the event, in particular to see one of the world cricket's biggest rivalries, that the general ticket allocations for

India vs Pakistan encounter at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on

Continued on Page 3

1


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

EDITORIAL TEAM Dr Ram Mohan, Chairman Dr Ashutosh Misra, Editor-in-Chief Ms Priyadarshini Rana, Bureau Chief, Victoria EDITORIAL BOARD Professor Prasad Yarlagadda, Queensland University of Technology Dr Uttam Kumar Sinha, Senior Fellow, Nehru Memorial Museum & Library, India Mr Shaun Star, Director, Centre for Australia India Studies, Jindal Global University, India

Hayden calls for pay cut of players missing matches for Australia

More than 9,500 militants surrender, peace restored in NE: Amit Shah

Page 6

News from India

Page 9

Bicycle rally held by High Commission of India

INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND TV Mr Karthik Pratap Singh, News Director Mr. Agastya Yeturi, Cinematographer Mr Nishit Chandan, Special Correspondent WRITERS Mr Devashish Chakraborty Ms Deepika Banerjee Mr Rabindra Mukherji

WORLD THIS WEEK

Page 14

Community

Indian Dental firm bags award at EBA 2021

Page 17

Putin’s deceptive war plans

Page 22

PUBLISHING & DISTRIBUTION Star Promotions

WEB: www.indianews.com.au FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

www.indianews.com.au

Page 24

Page 26

Sports

For comments, queries, and submission of articles please write to info@indianews.com.au. For advertisement please write to sales@indianews.com.au or call at 1300 859 066

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

Special Feature Shannon K: Beyond being Kumar Sanu’s daughter

Russia’s No 1 tennis player Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova urges end to war with Ukraine

DESIGNER Reetu Yadav, Cosmos Media

ADDRESS INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND Unit 49, 391, WICKHAM TERRACE, Ground Floor, Spring Hill, Brisbane, QLD – 4000

Editorial

Community News Ten ways Ukraine crisis has impelled India’s intervention

INSTITUTIONAL PARTNERS Institute for Australia India Engagement Australia India Business Council WEBSITE DESIGN & MANAGEMENT Cosmos Media www.cosmosmedia.info

News from Queensland

Page 35

Entertainment

INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND GROUP is looking for Interns with an interest, expertise or skills in journalism, information technology, video editing, copy editing and social media management. If interested please write to

2


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

J&K gives approval to transfer of land for various public purposes

Continued from Page 1

The Administrative Council further approved the transfer of land measuring five Kanal in favour of the Revenue Department for construction of a police post at Newa at village Malawari, District Pulwama. The new police post in the local area will keep a check on illegal activities, security-related incidents, and will allow the

police to respond to any law and order situation and natural disaster in a timely manner. Another parcel of land measuring 148 Kanal situated in village Dambra, Tehsil Mahanpur, District Kathua was transferred in favour of Prisons Department for construction of High Security Prison in the district along with the transfer of State land measuring 160 Kanal four Marla

COVER STORIES

Australian delegation at IITGuwahati for discussions Continued from Page 1

IANS

situated at village Dambra, Tehsil Mahanpur, District Kathua as Shamlat Deh (Mehfooz Kahcharai) in lieu of the land proposed for High Security Prison. The construction of High Security Prison for lodging treasonous and insurgent criminals aims at meeting the security requirements of the region and strengthening national security.

World will hold Russia accountable for unprovoked attack on Ukraine: US President

Continued from Page 1

and its Allies and partners will respond in a united and decisive way," he said. Biden said that he would be monitoring the situation in Ukraine and would meet his G7 counterparts on February 25 morning after which further actions will be taken. Just three days after declaring the rebel regions of Donetsk and Luhansk in eastern Ukraine as

independent states, Putin on February 24 morning announced a military operation in the Donbas region, asking Ukrainian troops to lay down their weapons and return home. Unfazed by the numerous economic sanctions imposed by the international community against Moscow, Putin said Russia did not plan to occupy Ukraine, but warned that Moscow's

response would be "instant" if anyone tries to take on Russia. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dymtro Kuleba said in a tweet that "Putin has just launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Peaceful Ukrainian cities are under strikes. This is a war of aggression". "Ukraine will defend itself and will win. The world can and must stop Putin. The time to act is now."

Indian MEA inaugurates Buddhist projects linked to ASEAN, east Asia countries Continued from Page 1

A comprehensive video of e-ITEC courses offered by the Ministry on Buddhist teachings was played during the event while the Minister inaugurated the interactive Coffee Table E-Book on Buddhist linkages with ASEAN and East Asian countries. The digital exhibition titled "Bodhicitta: Interweaving

Buddhist Art Traditions from India Across Asia" curated by National Museum was displayed during the celebration. The Ministry presented an "Interactive Template" for use by Missions for orientation visits by school, college students to Cultural centers, Missions for better understanding of India's

Buddhist linkages. "Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav" is an initiative of the Government of India to celebrate and commemorate 75 Years of progressive India and the glorious history of its people, culture and achievements", the MEA said in a statement on February 23.

IIT, Guwahati Director Prof T.G. Sitharam made a presentation on the Australia India Water Centre, Global Centre for Transdisciplinary Research in Water (Tri-Water), and various initiatives which are taken under their auspices such as the development of Master of Sustainable Water Futures programme, Water Matters for India - Delivering an Innovative Young Water Professional Training. He added that such collaborations are crucial for meeting sustainable development goals, and also addressing the emerging challenges due to climate change. He also highlighted the major strides taken by IIT, Guwahati in global rankings and stressed the importance of the liberal arts programme. Australian Consul-General in Kolkata Rowan Ainsworth

said that there is an immense opportunity for collaboration in the areas of disaster management, trade and economics, the Indian Ocean, and development of the northeast region of India. Working together on the world's most important resource, water -- The Australia-India Water Centre -- is a great example of research collaboration between the two countries, she pointed out. The High Commissioner highlighted the importance of cooperation in multidisciplinary areas, especially through the 'MAITRI' scholarships and fellowships, strategic areas of collaboration, liberal arts, cultural exchange, research grants, skilled academic cooperation and governance with many more possibilities with other Australian Universities.

Maitri initiatives and T20 World Cup to woo Indians Down Under Continued from Page 1

October 22 were sold within five minutes of going on sale.. "Hosting the T20 cricket World Cup this year will be a fantastic opportunity to encourage more Indian tourists and business travellers to visit Australia," Dan Tehan, the country's Minister for Trade, Tourism and Investment, said following extensive meetings with India's Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal in New Delhi. The Australia-India Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on Tourism Cooperation was renewed recently as both ministers also launched the Australia India Infrastructure Forum. The renewed MoU will promote travel between the two markets and advance cooperation on tourism policy, data sharing, training and industry engagement. Pre-pandemic, India was Australia's fastest-growing source of international visitors. In 2019, almost 400,000 visitors from India visited Australia and spent a combined total of $1.8 billion.

www.indianews.com.au

Tehan said that Australia will strengthen its tourism links with India to further increase visitor numbers and support local jobs and business by growing one of its largest and most valuable tourist markets. Both governments will also work with airlines and airports to boost aviation capacity between Australia and India.

objectives with a new $5.8 million Bay of Bengal Connectivity Partnership expanding the work to other countries in the region.

As Goyal and Tehan held negotiations on India-Australia Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA), Canberra said the Indian visitor market had huge potential for Australia.

Earlier, the Scott Morrison government detailed the new initiatives between the two countries, calling India "one of Australia's most important partners in the Indo-Pacific region".

"Our countries also share important people-to-people links, with around 750,000 people of Indian origin calling Australia home. Australia is working with India to strengthen our ties in many areas, and it's timely to include tourism as Australia reopens its international borders to the world," remarked Tehan. The Australia India Infrastructure Forum will serve as a hub to promote two-way investment in infrastructure. It will also support broader trade and investment

These initiatives, Australia said, reflect the two nations' shared commitment to cooperation and exchange, as set out in the Australia-India Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, agreed in June 2020.

The $11.2 million Maitri Scholarships Programme will attract and support high achieving Indian students to study at Australian universities. It will showcase Australia's globally renowned academic and research institutions, particularly in science, technology, engineering, mathematics and health, the Australian Foreign Ministry detailed. The $3.5 million Maitri Grants and Fellowships Programme will build links between future leaders,

supporting mid-career Australian and Indian professionals to collaborate on strategic research and shared priorities. The $6.1 million Australia-India Maitri Cultural Partnership will boost the role of creative industries in economic and people-to-people ties. This partnership will also promote artistic talent and cultural exchanges in two countries' world class visual and performing arts, literature, film, television and music industries.

It revealed that, following meetings between External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne in Melbourne, three Maitri (friendship) initiatives have been launched to foster AustraliaIndia cooperation, creativity, understanding and exchange. The series of new initiatives support education, community, tourism and investment links, adding to the growing bilateral relationship.

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

3


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

COMMUNITY NEWS

2022 IABCA Award finalists announced A

fter yet another highly contested year, IABCA unveiled finalists for the 9th annual IABCA Awards across a diverse range of sectors, including new categories such as Excellence in Partnerships and Trade & Investment. With over 200 capable entrants across the eleven award categories from India and Australia, the IABCA Jury shortlisted 93 finalists. The India Australia Business & Community Alliance (IABCA), is the largest platform that strengthens the India-Australia

relationship while contributing to its development. "Year on year the Jury is increasingly impressed by the quality of applications for our award categories, with the Australia India Impact Award positioned as a highly contested category. "Congratulations to our carefully selected 2022 finalists that were deliberated by our independent IABCA Jury for their valuable contributions to the IndiaAustralia relationship through fields of science, research,

technology, business, innovation, trade, and community service," read a statement from the organisation. The 2022 IABCA Showcase will kick off on Friday, 29 April, 2022 at The Star Events Centre, Sydney. The IABCA Showcase will once again comprise of a sell-out IABCA Global Leaders Forum and the IABCA Awards Ceremony, where winners for the above categories will be honoured internationally.

IABCA Young Professional of the Year

IABCA Community Services Excellence Award (Individual) This award acknowledges the achievements of an individual that has enhanced community spirit through initiatives that empower communities including/ or through the promotion and integration of arts and culture in Australia and/or India.

This award recognises outstanding achievements of a young professional in middle or senior management who has built a successful career and is under 35 years of age.

IABCA Business Leader of the Year This award recognises outstanding achievements of a business leader, professional or researcher in middle or senior management who has built a successful career and is over 35 years of age.

www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

IABCA Excellence in Trade & Investment

This award recognises the accomplishments of organisations and projects who have generated new trade and investment opportunities between India and Australia.

4


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

COMMUNITY NEWS

IABCA Managing Director of the Year

This award recognises outstanding achievements of a CEO or managing director who has built a successful career and is over 35 years of age.

IABCA Australia India Science, Research & Development Award Central to the purpose of this award is the recognition and support of outstanding contributions to the advancement of science, technology and research made by an organisation or an individual.

IABCA Australia India Impact Award (Individual)

IABCA Australia India Impact award recognises the contributions of an individual, (living or working across our two nations) OR an organisation or project that adds value to the bilateral relationship. The category celebrates projects and organisations that have expanded from Australia to India or India to Australia.

IABCA SME of the Year Small-to-medium enterprises - defined as economic groups with turnover of $2 million and up to $250 million. This award recognises outstanding achievement and contribution made by an SME.

www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

5


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

NEWS FROM INDIA

More than 9,500 militants surrender, Hijab ruling to have effect on constitutional morality, peace restored in NE: Amit Shah IANS

the Congress regime, he charged. Highlighting Modi's vision for the development of the northeastern region, the Home Minister said that the Prime Minister, unlike his predecessors, visited the region more than 40 times. Referring to the feats of Olympians -- Indian boxing legend M.C. Mary Kom and weightlifter Mirabai Chanu, Shah said that India's first Sports University was being set up in Manipur and the state would be made a sports hub of the country.

Imphal, February 23 (IANS): Union Home Minister Amit Shah on February 23 said that with the initiative of the Prime Minister Narendra Modi led government over 9,500 militants of various outfits in the northeastern region have surrendered to the government and peace has been prevailing in Manipur and other northeastern states.

government. Instead of arms and ammunition, the former militants now carry laptops, keys of industrial enterprises, bikes and vehicles," Shah asserted. "For the first time in 45 years after the BJP government came to power in Manipur peace has been restored in the state, he said."

"Over Rs 800 crore worth projects have been undertaken for the development of sports in Manipur and Khelo India centres would be set up in all the 16 districts. International standard sports complex would also be developed in the state," he added. Highlighting the benefits to lakhs of people in PM-Kisan, Ayushman Bharat and Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana, the Home Minister said that an "Atmanirbhar Manipur" would be made and it would be developed into a model state by the BJP government.

"In Assam, the historic Bodo accord was signed. A large number of Bodo militants and extremists in Karbi Anglong district have surrendered to the

Slamming the 15 year-rule of the Congress in Manipur, Shah said that the culture of instability, inequality and insurgency was turned into infrastructure, innovation and integration in Manipur by the BJP government led by Chief Minister N. Biren Singh. Shah added that the blockade and bandh culture changed into a growth mission. Besides bandhs and blockades, arms trafficking, insurgency, corruption, drugs trade in both the plains and mountainous areas were the order of the day during

Mumbai, February 23 (IANS): In a massive jolt to Maharashtra's Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) government, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) on February 23 arrested serving Minister Nawab Malik in connection with an alleged money-laundering case linked with a shady land deal case.

As he was escorted out of the ED office by police and ED sleuths, a grinning Malik sporting a white kurta-pyjama, was seen raising a fist in the air, and declaring: "Jhukenge nahin, ladenge aur jeetenge (Will not succumb, will fight and win)" to his supporters as he was made to sit in a vehicle.

His arrest triggered hectic political activity with NCP President Sharad Pawar going to meet Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray, Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar, Home Minister Dilip Walse-Patil and other ministers for an urgent meeting this evening.

The development came as a shocker for the MVA as Malik became the first sitting Cabinet Minister to be arrested in such a manner, sending tremors in the political establishment.

The fast-paced developments started with an ED team, accompanied by Central Industrial Security Force personnel, knocking at Malik's home around 4.30 a.m and taking him away a couple of hours later for questioning in the 17-year-old Kurla land deal having a mafia taint, with an alleged moneylaundering angle emerging from it.

Leaders of MVA constituents like Sharad Pawar, Jayant Patil, Supriya Sule, Majeed Memon, Chhagan Bhubal, Vidya Chavan, Sanjay Raut, Kishore Tiwari, Nana Patole, Ashok Chavan and others slammed the ED for the action against Malik saying they would not be "cowed down" by the political vendetta and targeting of opponents and "silencing" them by letting loose central probe agencies on them.

The Home Minister while addressing election rallies in Churachandpur and Kangpokpi, said that the government would hold discussions with the Kuki militant outfits in Manipur and expected to resolve their problems, if any, to bring them back into the mainstream.

Congress leaders including Jairam Ramesh have criticised both the Prime Minister and the Home minister for not talking about the state's fundamental issues including the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act. Polling to the 60-member assembly took place in two phases on February 27 and March 5. Votes will be counted on March 10.

First serving Maha Minister apprehended in money laundering case

In the arrest order, ED Assistant Director Niraj Kumar said the agency had "reason to believe" that Nawab Malik "has been found to be guilty of an offence punishable under the provisions of PMLA Act", and accordingly placed him under arrest at around 2 p.m. Shortly after the formal arrest, Malik was whisked off by an ED team for a medical check-up at the Sir J.J. Hospital, and produced before the designated Special PMLA Court later this afternoon. Additional Solicitor General Anil Desai is representing the ED while eminent lawyer Amit Desai appeared on Malik's behalf, as the Minister's relatives, including sister and daughter Sana Khan reached the court.

www.indianews.com.au

The ED had summoned teams of the CISF and Mumbai Police security for the arrest even as a large number of Nationalist Congress Party workers staged a noisy protest outside the agency's office since morning to protest the proceedings against Malik. Malik, 62, becomes the first sitting minister and second senior NCP leader to be arrested by the ED after former Home Minister Anil Deshmukh on November 2, 2021 in alleged corruption and moneylaundering cases.

Simultaneously, opposition Bharatiya Janata Party sharpened its swords and intensified efforts to bring down the MVA government before its declared deadline of March 10. BJP state President Chandrakant Patil demanded that since he has been nabbed, Malik should quit as also all other ministers facing various allegations, should resign from the Cabinet immediately, failing which the BJP would launch an agitation on the streets.

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

individual dignity, AG to HC Bengaluru, February 22 (IANS): Karnataka Advocate General Prabhuling Navadgi on February 22 told the High Court that the judicial decision on hijab would be binding on "constitutional morality" and "individual dignity". "When we impose, the element of choice of dress goes away. The woman will be obligated to wear that dress. It becomes compulsory," he said in his concluding remarks before a three-judge bench, headed by Chief Justice Ritu Raj Awasthi, hearing the hijab row. "Women cannot be subjugated to any form of dress code and she can't be made to feel less equal and children of a lesser god. Judicial declaration of every woman of a particular religion to wear hijab, would it not violate the dignity? If it is a compulsion of an attire, it is impermissible on this day. "We propose no ban on hijab, it should be left to the choice of the woman. Right to privacy cannot be enshrined in public. Institutional discipline is paramount. Dignity of women must also be kept in mind in a plural society," Navadagi said. He also quoted a Bollywood song: "Na muh chupake jiyo, na sar jhuka ke jiyo, gamon ka daur bi aaye toh muskura ke jiyo". He argued that it is entirely on the petitioner to prove that the practice of hijab is obligatory in nature and compulsorily followed in Islam. However, they have placed 144 Surahs of Quran to the court's query and there is no record on table to show that the custom is obligatory and it is an element of compulsion which compels a member to be expelled from the community, he added. "Wearing of dress is freedom of speech, as argued by the petitioners as their fundamental right under Article 19 (1) (a). However, Article 19 (1) (a) is subject to public order, decency under Article 19 (2). In the present case, the uniform rule is subjected to institutional restriction and it is subjected to institutional discipline not only in schools but also in hospitals, military establishments and others," the AG submitted. "The rule imposes reasonable restrictions on wearing a headscarf," he said, adding that a uniform is being prescribed till Pre-University as they have "an impregnable mindset". "There is no restriction on campus to wear a hijab. Only during class hours, in the classrooms, it has been not allowed and anything beyond uniforms, irrespective of any religion, is not allowed," he said. As Navadgi mentioned the total ban on hijab by France and Turkey in public spaces, Justice Krishna S. Dixit, who is also on the bench,

intervened and stated that it depends on the constitutional policy of every country. He then said that he only wanted to bring out that there is no prohibition as such in our country.

Reiterating that hijab is not an essential practice of Islam and can't come under the Constitution's Article 25, (Freedom of conscience and free profession, practice and propagation of religion) he sought to bring to the notice of the court that how this has been upheld by various High Courts and Supreme Court judgments. Giving clear indications of an early verdict on hijab row, the bench had directed counsel to complete their arguments soon. Chief Justice Awasthi asked the Advocate General to complete his submissions at the earliest, and he said that he would complete his arguments on February 23 . CJ Awasthi informed all counsel that the bench wants to complete the hearing on the case by this weekend and directed them to keep the arguments brief. "Make positive endeavors to complete within this week only," he said. Senior advocate R. Venkataramani, appearing for teachers who have been made respondents in the case, maintained that there are no hierarchies of religions between teachers and students. "School environment is more important than a public place. There should be a free mind among students and all minds of children should be united for education," he said. "Whatever may be the assertion, if the state is in collision with public order, morality and health, it will stop. The state comes in through Article 25 (2) in the matters of religion and finance, when it comes to regulation. There is public space and qualified public space. School is a qualified public space," he added. Referring to the verdict of the South African court allowing the wearing of 'nose ring' to school there, he stated that the court did not make an emphatic statement of religion in the judgment. "Borrowing from foreign judgments could be problematic here, though we cannot close our eyes on them," he held. Senior advocate S.S. Nagananda, who also appeared for teachers, maintained that there is a fine line of distinction as far as culture and religion are concerned. "It is not possible for Muslims to do fivetime prayers; similarly, it is not possible for a Brahmin to perform Sandhyavandana three times. This practice of wearing hijab is not an essential religious practice. There are some practices, which are required to perform otherwise, they will have consequences," he said.

6


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

NEWS FROM INDIA

Rs 18,000 cr recovered from Mallya, 1981 Behmai case Nirav & Choksi: Centre to SC hearing recommences IANS

Austria (1,036), Hongkong (1,823), Belgium (1,862) and Russia (2,764)".

New Delhi, February 23 (IANS): Solicitor General Tushar Mehta on February 23 informed the Supreme Court that Rs 18,000 crore have been returned to the banks in the case of Vijay Mallya, Nirav Modi, and Mehul Choksi. Mehta, representing the Centre, submitted before a bench headed by Justice A.M. Khanwilkar that the total proceeds of crimes in the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) cases pending before the top court amounts to Rs 67,000 crore. He further added that as on date 4,700 cases are being investigated by the Directorate of Enforcement and the number of the cases taken up for investigation each year in the last 5 years varies from 111 cases in 2015-16 to 981 in 202021. Mehta submitted before the bench that Rs 18,000 crore have been returned to the banks in the case of Vijay Mallya, Nirav Modi

and Mehul Choksi. The top court is hearing a clutch of petitions, challenging the wide scope of powers available to the directorate of enforcement (ED) for search, seizure, investigation, and attachment of proceeds of crime under the law. Mehta submitted before the bench, also comprising Justices Dinesh Maheshwari and C.T. Ravikumar, that during the last five years (2016-17 to 2020-21), only 2,086 cases were taken up for investigation under the PMLA out of registration of FIR of approximately 33 lakh for predicate offences by the police and other enforcement agencies. He added, "very small number of cases are being taken up for investigation under the PMLA as compared to annual registration of the cases under the Money Laundering Act in the UK (7,900), the US (1,532), China (4,691),

IANS

Kanpur (Uttar Pradesh), February 24 (IANS): The hearing into the Behmai massacre, in which 20 people were allegedly shot dead by bandit queen turned politician, Phoolan Devi, on February 14, 1981, has re-started in a special court in Kanpur Dehat.

Mehta emphasized that the measures against moneylaundering have clearly left embryo of drug or terrorism related offences and moved beyond the same. "Further, the efforts against money laundering have consistently advocated to include the widest range of predicate offences in the domestic laws," he added.

It may be recalled that just before the verdict in the case was to be pronounced in January 2020, the hearing was postponed as the original case diary was found to be missing.

Over the past few weeks, a battery of senior advocates, including Kapil Sibal, Abhishek Manu Singhvi, Mukul Rohatgi, Sidharth Luthra, Amit Desai, and others have made submissions before the top court on various aspects related to potential misuse of PMLA provisions introduced by way of amendments to the Act.

Many accused, including Phoolan have died along with all the witnesses, including the plaintiff Rajaram Singh and eye-witness Jantar Singh. The trial has been going on for 41 years. Even after issuing warrants against Vishwanath, Mansingh and Ram Ratan, who have been absconding for nearly 30 years, the police could not arrest them.

The law has been criticised on various aspects: stringent bail conditions, non-communication of grounds of arrest, arrest of persons without supply of ECIR (akin to FIR), broad definitions of money laundering and proceeds of crime, and statements given by accused during investigation made admissible as evidence during trial.

As the arguments in the case began on February 23 in the court of special judge (Dacoity) Sudhakar Rai, the district government counsel Raju Porwal

told the court that the police had recovered 27 cartridges from the spot and several threatening letters left by the dacoits on the terrace of Marjad Singh's house. Porwal also said that the dacoits assaulted 27 people and fired bullets while making them stand in a queue, in which 20 died on the spot. Seven of the injured had saved their lives by hiding among the corpses. During the hearing, an accused Vishwanath was present in the court, while Posa, another accused, could not come from jail. The application for apology to the accused Shyam Babu was given in the court. The next date for hearing was fixed for February 28.

#2022TOGETHER

你好

こんにちは

안녕

Queensland welcomes international students to our community in #2022together. I want to enter Queensland from overseas. Am I fully vaccinated with a TGA approved or recognised vaccine? 

YES

NO

I am fully vaccinated with a TGA approved or recognised vaccine.

I am NOT fully vaccinated with a TGA approved or recognised vaccine.

Have I met all Australian Government requirements  to enter Australia?

Am I not fully vaccinated due to medical reasons?

YES

NO

YES

NO

I have met all Australian Government requirements to enter Australia.

I have not met all Australian Government requirements to enter Australia.

I am unable to receive a COVID-19 vaccination due to medical reasons.

I can enter Queensland with no quarantine requirements and will meet all other Queensland entry requirements. 

Please refer to the Australian Government’s Preparing to travel to Australia from overseas checklist  for guidance.

Can I provide acceptable proof  that I cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons?

I am not fully vaccinated with a TGA approved or recognised vaccine by choice or inability to access one.

Find out more www.studyqueensland.qld.gov.au

YES I have met all Australian Government requirements. I can access the same travel arrangements as a fully vaccinated student and do not need to apply for an individual exemption. For the purposes of entry and quarantine requirements, I will be treated as fully vaccinated in Queensland. I will not be required to quarantine, but will have to meet all other Queensland entry requirements. 

Have I applied for and been granted an individual exemption  from Australia’s Department of Home Affairs?

YES

NO

I can provide acceptable proof that I cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons.

I cannot provide acceptable proof that I cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons.

Have I met all Australian Government requirements  to enter Australia?

Have I applied for and have been granted with an individual exemption  to Australia’s travel restrictions with Australia’s Department of Home Affairs?

NO

YES

NO

I have not met all Australian Government requirements to enter Australia.

I have been granted an individual exemption to Australia’s travel restrictions.

I have not been granted an individual exemption to Australia’s travel restrictions.

Please refer to the Australian Government’s Preparing to travel to Australia from overseas checklist  for guidance.

Have I met all other Australian Government requirements  to enter Australia?

I should not continue with my travel plans as I will not be permitted to board a flight to Australia. Unvaccinated travel to Australia is only possible if I am exempt or have been granted an individual exemption.

YES

NO

I have met all other Australian Government requirements.

I have not met all Australian Government requirements to enter Australia.

I will also need to meet all other Queensland entry requirements , and will be required to undertake a period of quarantine.

Please refer to the Australian Government’s Preparing to travel to Australia from overseas checklist  for guidance.

*Please be aware that these health directives may be subject to change based on further advice from the Australian Department of Home Affairs and Queensland Health. Please also continue to monitor Australia Department of Home Affairs’ and Queensland Government’s websites for the latest COVID-19 updates.

www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

7


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

NEWS FROM QUEENSLAND

Finalists named for Queensland’s Rural Women’s Award who is developing an innovative range of ‘quick cook’ retail-ready family meals with a beef focus; Innisfail AgTech entrepreneur Jennifer McKee who has developed Grower Support, an all-in-one compliance management software platform for the horticultural industry; and Townsville photographer and AgTech champion Fiona Lake who is developing a project to inspire women to adopt AgTech.

Brisbane, February 24: The AgriFutures Rural Women’s Award has returned in 2022 with four Queensland women having a common passion for rural and regional communities vying for the prestigious award. Minister for Agricultural Industry Development and Fisheries and Minister for Rural Communities Mark Furner said the AgriFutures Rural Women’s Award acknowledged and supported the essential role women play in

rural industries, businesses and communities. “The Award provides a platform to inspire and support Australian women to use and develop their skills to benefit their industries and communities,” Mr Furner said. “Our four finalists join a 300-strong alumni that collaboratively works to shape the perception of women in regional and rural Australia and provides a network to support their future

endeavours. “This year’s winner will receive a $15,000 bursary and represent Queensland at the national awards in October where they have the chance to win an additional $20,000 bursary.” The finalists are: Chinchilla child health nurse Rebecca Bradshaw who is delivering online and in person child health support for rural communities; Dalby businesswoman Jilly Tyler

New board members appointed to Screen Queensland Shutterstock

General Manager of Cutting Edge, Kylee Ratz; Director of Planning Bond University, Patricia Alner; Co-Founder and Executive Director of Of One Mind, Cathy Hunt; and Aboriginal filmmaker, Dean Gibson.

Brisbane, February 24: The Queensland Government has appointed four new directors to the Screen Queensland Board — The Honourable Roslyn Atkinson AO, Professor Herman van Eyken, Aaron Fa’Aoso and Dylan Miklashek. The four new directors contribute a diversity of high-level skills with regional representation and experience to the Board, across film and series production, game development, arts, education, law and diversity action. The Honourable Roslyn Atkinson AO was a Justice of the Supreme Court of Queensland for 20 years, Chair of the Queensland Indigenous Justice committee and Chair of the Queensland Law Reform Commission, before which she lectured in Literature, Drama, Film and Australian Studies at the Queensland University of Technology. Professor Herman Van Eyken is an accomplished and internationally awarded film

www.indianews.com.au

director, screenwriter, producer (Ties and Ropes, Achterland) and is currently Professor and Head of Griffith Film School and a member of the Creative Arts Research Institute, Griffith University. A proud Torres Strait Islander producer, screenwriter, actor and director based in Cairns, Aaron Fa’Aoso is Managing Director of Lonestar Productions (Strait to the Plate, Blue Water Empire). With over 25 years’ experience delivering AAA games for popular franchises such as Batman, FIFA and WWE, Dylan Miklashek is the Studio Manager and Managing Director of Gameloft Australia (The Oregon Trail, Ballistic Baseball) and board member of the Interactive Games and Entertainment Association (IGEA). Continuing on the Screen Queensland board will be: Former Attorney-General and Minister for Justice, Linda Lavarch (Chair); President of Village Roadshow Studios, Lynne Benzie; Brisbane

Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said the new board is primed to steer the Queensland screen industry through growth, change and challenges ahead. “The Queensland screen industry will vastly benefit from a board made up of impressive individuals, who between them, share a diverse range of skills, backgrounds and perspectives,” the Premier said. “Together they will inform Screen Queensland’s strategic direction, policies and funding decisions as it continues to forge a successful and profitable path. “I welcome Roslyn, Herman, Aaron and Dylan and thank outgoing directors Patricia Heaton, Morgan Jaffit, Sally Robb and Paul Syvret for their dedicated contributions and expertise, particularly through the hugely successful 2020-21 financial year, which saw the state screen industry generate around $478 m into the economy and create approximately 5,500 jobs.” The board appointments took effect on 24 January 2022, with new board members to serve a three-year term.

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

Westpac Regional General Manager Queensland Peta Ward said the AgriFutures Rural Women’s Award was an outstanding platform that encouraged others to continue to pave the way for diversity across industries and for women to further develop their personal business journey.

“My vision for the Rural Women’s Award is that rural women identify themselves as a movement of leaders who are proud of the role they play in developing and supporting Australia’s rural industries,” Ms Ross said. “I am committed to supporting more innovation around the development of highly nutritional food sources and my aspiration for the rural industry is conservation of the food chain.” Mr Furner said the winner would be announced on 10 March 2022, during Queensland Women’s Week. “Queensland’s 2022 Rural Women’s Award winner will follow in the footsteps of 2020 winner Elisha Parker,” Mr Furner said.

“Women are driving innovation in our regions and Westpac is proud to continue to support the AgriFutures Rural Women’s Award, to further raise awareness and publicly recognise the achievements and leadership of women in our communities,” Ms Ward said.

“Elisha used her bursary for website development for her co-founded Cattlesales.com. au marketing and advertising platform to offer new online services to the Australian stud stock industry to benefit and boost the Australian cattle industry nationwide.

Chair of the Queensland Rural Women’s Award Alumni Committee Ann Ross said every woman had a personal journey, with no two the same.

“Being nominated as a finalist is a great achievement and I congratulate all of this year’s finalists and wish them well for the future.”

Brisbane, February 24: The Senior Judge Administrator of the Queensland Supreme Court has been appointed as the new Chief Justice to the Queensland Supreme Court following the retirement of Queensland’s first woman Chief Justice, the Honourable Chief Justice Catherine Holmes AC.

and has diligently approached the administrative role of the court since that time.

Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk congratulated the Honourable Justice Helen Bowskill on her appointment and thanked Chief Justice Holmes for her years of dedication and commitment to justice in Queensland.

“Since her appointment as Senior Judge Administrator in 2021, Justice Bowskill has shown great leadership and will contribute greatly to the Queensland justice system in her new role, the Attorney said.”

New Chief Justice appointed in Queensland Supreme Court

“Justice Bowskill is well qualified for the top position of Chief Justice and brings a wealth of experience and skills to the role,” the Premier said. “Her Honour, a university medalist in law from QUT, was admitted as a barrister to the Supreme Court of Queensland in 1998. She practised widely in public, administrative and commercial law, with a particular focus on native title law.” Justice Bowskill was later appointed Queen’s Counsel in 2013, appointed to District Court on 10 November 2014 and then appointed a Judge of the Supreme Court of Queensland’s Trial Division in 2017 after more than two and a half years as a Judge of the District Court. Most recently, Justice Bowskill was appointed as the Senior Judge Administrator in August 2021,

Attorney-General and Minister for Justice Shannon Fentiman said Justice Bowskill is widelyrespected within the legal profession, and is renowned for her measured and compassionate approach to the Court.

“Justice Bowskill has recently demonstrated her interest in mental health issues facing the legal profession, presenting papers at the ODPP Crown Prosecutors’ Conference and to Queensland Magistrates in 2021. These presentations have been well received and benefit the broader administration of justice.” The Attorney-General said that Chief Justice Holmes has proved a steadfast leader of the Queensland justice system during her tenure as Chief Justice. “Her Honour has been a trailblazer in the profession for so many women, and her leadership of the court during COVID-19 was commendable, ensuring Queenslanders have continued access to justice during the global pandemic,” the Attorney said.

8


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

NEWS FROM QUEENSLAND

Cheaper kindergartens for Cairns families Brisbane, February 23: More than 1280 Cairns children a year are set to benefit from reduced price or free kindergartens, thanks to a more than $1 billion investment announced by the Palaszczuk Government on February 23.

our annual investment in kindy from $130 million to $211 million per year, which means more than a billion dollars will go into our kindy services over the next 5 years, with ongoing funding after that.

Member for Cairns Michael Healy said the kindergarten program funding overhaul was the most significant reform for the sector in more than a decade.

“Here in Cairns, that means 1285 of kids will get a reduced price kindy, with 531 of those getting it completely free.”

Over five years, the package includes: Free kindy access for 14,000 children a year Reduced fees for a further 26,000 children a year $33 million to expand Kindy Uplift from 400 to 930 services $38.5 million to help remote and regional services attract and retain early childhood teachers $95 million in support for families with children who have a disability “We know that the first few years of a child's life here in Cairns are incredibly important and play a major role in their future,” Mr Healy said. “The Palaszczuk Government knows that kindy counts. “That’s why we are increasing

Member for Barron River Craig Crawford said kindy participation had grown rapidly in the state. “I’m proud that Queensland has seen kindergarten participation grow from 29% in 2008 to 96% today,” Mr Crawford said. “The Palaszczuk Government wants kindy in Queensland to not only be world class, but accessible and affordable too. “This is a significant change for the sector, and we’ll be working closely with providers in the coming months on things like software upgrades, contracts, and consultation with families to ensure they’re ready for the new program in 2023.” Speaker for Queensland Parliament and Member for Mulgrave Curtis Pitt said the package also includes an expansion of the Kindy Uplift

program, and extra funding for children with disabilities.

“We’re thrilled that this increased funding means we can more than double the number of services covered by the successful Kindy Uplift program to 930,” Mr Pitt said. In the Cassowary Coast region, 286 of kids will get reduced price kindy, with 104 of those getting it completely free; at Mareeba, 218 kids reduced price and 111 free; in Douglas Shire 115 reduced price and 28 free, and in the Cook Shire 46 reduced price and 40 free. Member for Cook Cynthia Lui said Kindy Uplift funding means services can invest in personalised programs so children can reach their full potential. “For example, funding could be used to provide a dedicated support worker or professional development for staff,’’ Ms Lui said. “We will also invest more than $19 million per year to enhance support for families with children who have a disability or are developmentally vulnerable, so they can participate in either community or long day care kindies.

“In addition, eligible remote and regional community kindergartens and kindergartens in long day care will receive a funding boost to use on things like accommodation assistance and relocation costs to ensure they can attract and retain a qualified early childhood teacher.” Education Minister Grace Grace said the Palaszczuk Government was proud to be investing in Queenslanders’ early years. “I am proud that this Palaszczuk Labor Government is delivering not only an increase in funding, but funding that is clearly targeted to assist those who need it the most,” Ms Grace said. “We’re investing in our youngest Queenslanders, we’re investing in

our families, and we’re investing in the Far North’s future.” The new kindy funding reform package is in response to the 2019 ‘Optimising outcomes for children: A review of early childhood education funding and arrangements in Queensland’. Total annual investment in kindy from 2023-2024 will be $307 million. This includes the investment from the Australian Government. There are 29 services in the electorates of Cairns, Cook, Barron River and Mulgrave that are currently part of the Kindy Uplift program. An additional 29 services will be invited to join the program, as part of this announcement.

Disaster assistance extended to even more Hayden calls for pay cut of players missing matches for flooded Queensland communities Australia

IANS

Brisbane, March 2: Minister for Police and Corrective Services and Minister for Fire and Emergency Services

experienced certain loss or damage to electricity, gas, water, sewerage or septic systems as a result of this disaster.

The Honourable Mark Ryan

“Hundreds of families across both these regions are beginning to see the enormous clean-up task ahead of them as the floodwaters go down.

In response to the wide ranging South-East Queensland current flood emergency extends, personal hardship assistance has been extended to include flood affected residents in Gladstone and the Gold Coast. Personal Hardship Grants are available through the jointly funded Commonwealth-State Disaster Recovery Funding Arrangements (DRFA). Federal Minister for Emergency Management and National Recovery and Resilience Senator the Hon Bridget McKenzie said DRFA funding had also been extended to assist with the repair of damaged roads and other public infrastructure to the local government areas of Bundaberg and Western Downs. “Grants of up to a maximum of $900 for a family of five or more and up to $180 per person are available to eligible people in the flood-affected areas of Gladstone and the Gold Coast to eligible people experiencing financial hardship as a result of the floods,” Minister McKenzie said. “Grants for essential services safety reconnection (ESSR) have also been activated, and these are available to eligible residents who are uninsured and have

www.indianews.com.au

“I want to assure these communities the Australian and Queensland governments stand in solidarity with them on their recovery journey to provide support wherever it is needed.” Queensland Minister for Fire and Emergency Services Mark Ryan said this latest activation would also go towards counter disaster operations aimed at public safety and the repair of essential public assets in the Bundaberg and Western Downs local government areas. “The extent of these floods is incredibly wide ranging. From Bundaberg and Gladstone in the north out to Dalby in the Western Downs and down south to the Gold Coast, these floods are eclipsing even those of five years ago during Cyclone Debbie,” Minister Ryan. “It is essential we extend DRFA support to every community that needs it and today’s announcement demonstrates we are listening to communities in the Gold Coast and Gladstone as well as Bundaberg and the Western Downs.

“Flood-affected residents of the Gold Coast and Gladstone are able to access important financial help under the personal hardship assistance scheme, which is already available in Brisbane, Fraser Coast, Gympie, Ipswich, Lockyer Valley, Logan, Moreton Bay, Noosa, North Burnett, Somerset and the Sunshine Coast.

“In total personal hardship assistance is available in 13 local government areas now and DRFA assistance has been activated for a total of 21 local government areas to date and we will not hesitate to extend as necessary,” he said. DRFA assistance is now available in the local government areas of Brisbane, Bundaberg, Fraser Coast, Gladstone, Gold Coast, Goondiwindi, Gympie, Ipswich, Lockyer Valley, Logan, Moreton Bay, Noosa, North Burnett, Redland, Scenic Rim, Somerset, South Burnett, Southern Downs, Sunshine Coast, Toowoomba and Western Downs. For information on Personal Hardship Assistance and Essential Services Hardship Assistance, contact the Community Recovery Hotline 1800 173 349 or visit www. qld.gov.au/community/disastersemergencies. Information on disaster assistance can be found on the Queensland Reconstruction Authority’s website at www.qra. qld.gov.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

Brisbane, Feb 25 (IANS): Former Australia opener Matthew Hayden on Friday called for a pay cut of players who will be missing from the country's matches. Hayden's comments come after Test captain Pat Cummins, opener David Warner, pacers Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood, will be rested for white-ball matches against Pakistan in March. "When players are choosing not to play for their country it is a massive flag of concern for your high-performance set-up. I just don't reckon it passes the pub test. The single biggest thing which ties everything together at that level is that you are all really keen to play for your country and if you haven't got that, I actually question whether you have a high performance culture at all," Hayden was quoted as saying by 'The Australian'. "It just makes it so hard to build all the things you are trying to have like team values, principles, giving a s*** about your mates. I just feel Cricket Australia is being led around by the players lately and that has created a unique set of problems," added Hayden. Out of the rested players, Cummins, Warner and Hazlewood are scheduled to feature in the Indian Premier League (IPL) 2022 season for Kolkata Knight Riders, Delhi Capitals and Royal Challengers Bangalore,

respectively. But the trio will not take part in the tournament till April 6. Hayden, who worked as Pakistan's batting consultant during the Men's T20 World Cup last year in the UAE, feels 'cherry-picking' the white-ball matches is not good. "You shouldn't be able to cherrypick when you want to play for Australia. It doesn't make any sense to me. We all know how important the IPL is and it has its window and I know it can be difficult for players and administrators to operate within the confines of modern schedules, but I still think you can't have your cake and eat it. "If you are unavailable to play for Australia, there has to be some accountability. You shouldn't be paid for work you don't do and should have to salary sacrifice. People will say that I played IPL which is true, but it never had an any effect on my availability playing for Australia. I couldn't wait to play for Australia because I spent seven years where I couldn't get in the bloody team," concluded Hayden.

9


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

NEWS FROM QUEENSLAND

More support for NSW and Queensland flood zones More support is on the way for families, farms and businesses affected by the catastrophic flooding disaster in northern NSW and Queensland as part of an additional package of support from the Morrison Government. As communities continue the recovery and clean-up effort led by Resilience NSW and regional recovery coordinator, Deputy Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon, as well as by the Queensland Government and Major General Jake Ellwood, this further support from the Morrison Government will ensure people get money in their pockets to help get them through. Prime Minister Scott Morrison said his government was focused right now on the pressing needs of communities in NSW and Queensland. “I intend to recommend to the Governor-General to make a National Emergency Declaration covering this severe weather and flooding event across New South Wales and Queensland to ensure all our emergency powers are available and that we cut through any red tape we might face in delivering services and support on the ground,” the Prime Minister said. “I have made this decision today, in consultation with the Premiers, after further briefings from government agencies about the situation in northern NSW and seeing the catastrophe firsthand. We introduced the power to make a National Emergency Declaration after the Black Summer bushfires and it will ensure our Ministers and agencies don’t face any unnecessary bureaucracy as they roll out what communities need. “The feedback we’ve had from communities, state governments and my own ministers who have visited the impacted areas has helped us identify where the gaps are right now, and how we can get support out the door quickly to where it’s needed.” The National Recovery and Resilience Agency and Emergency Management Australia have assessed the flood extent area, the proportion of the populations affected, the latest residential impact assessments and the proportion of population seeking assistance for Disaster Recovery Payments to declare the Richmond Valley, Lismore and Clarence Valley LGAs are the highest impacted areas and in need of additional support. The Prime Minister said those three LGAs were facing catastrophic conditions. “The sheer scale and impact to these areas in northern NSW highlights the need for extra support right now,” the Prime Minister said. “While people in northern NSW aren’t able to work, are still clearing out their homes and businesses, the extra two lots of $1,000 payments we’re rolling out

www.indianews.com.au

to eligible families and individuals will give them some certainty as they start to rebuild their lives. “We can’t underestimate the long term mental health toll so many communities will be facing. As well as the new mental health supports we’re announcing, my government will closely monitor the situation to understand what else people need as they recover from these disasters. “Resilience NSW and Deputy Commissioner Lanyon and the Queensland Government and Major General Ellwood will work alongside the Federal National Recovery and Resilience Agency (NRRA) to identify the priorities for the longer-term recovery under the Disaster Recovery Funding Arrangements. “We’ll work closely with the NSW and Queensland Governments to deliver further funding. It’s crises like this that the Emergency Response Fund was established to help support and it will help as part of the initiatives we deliver so communities across NSW and Queensland get back on their feet.” This next phase of support includes: • An additional two weekly disaster payments for the catastrophe zones in the Lismore, Richmond Valley and Clarence Valley LGAs, automatically paid for those who have already claimed and received the Australian Government Disaster Recovery Payment, at the current rate of $1,000 per adult and $400 per child. These payments will be made from 15 and 22 March. The NRRA will also undertake assessment of possible additional LGAs that also meet the catastrophic impact assessment • Support for Norco in northern NSW on a bespoke business support package, in partnership with the NSW Government, to help restore operations of this key business and employer • $10 million to support the mental health of school-aged children in the Northern Rivers region affected by the recent flood event under the ‘Resilient Kids’ program • $800,000 to extend the Regional Small Business Support Program to include small businesses impacted by the recent flood event in NSW and QLD for two RFCS regions, with a six month extension until 31 December 2022, as well as free and independent case managed financial counselling through the Rural Financial Counselling Service • $5.4 million to boost existing legal assistance services operating within affected communities • $25 million for emergency relief, food relief and financial counselling services • Approximately $6.9 million in support payments of $10,000 to assist early childhood education and care (ECEC) services affected

by the floods where they have been closed for more than seven days. More severely impacted services will also be able to apply for Community Child Care Fund Special Circumstances grants

payments will automatically kick in for AGDRP recipients in the Lismore, Clarence Valley and Richmond Valley local government areas so there is no need for people to re-apply.

• $7 million to expand the Commonwealth’s business recovery and resilience service, Strengthening Business, into at least 30 of the most flood affected regions of northern New South Wales (NSW) and south-eastern Queensland

“Eligible adults in these three LGAs will receive a total payment of $3000 each, plus a total of $1,200 for each child. I’d encourage anyone who has not yet applied for the disaster payment to do so as soon as possible.”

• $31.2 million to deliver immediate and longer term local mental health support services for individuals, families, and communities impacted by the disaster and to support communities to recover and build resilience across the flood affected communities • $4.7 million to ensure the immediate continuity of primary health care services for floodimpacted Australians Minister for Emergency Management and National Recovery and Resilience Bridget McKenzie said the Government was also looking at how to support primary producers particularly in northern NSW. “As people turn their minds to the future, we want them to know they’ve got options and we’ll be there to help them,” Minister McKenzie said. “That’s why we’re working with NSW and Queensland to identify the priorities for the longer-term recovery under the Disaster Recovery Funding Arrangements.” Minister for Government Services Linda Reynolds said the additional $1,000 disaster payments would take immediate pressure off many families and allow them to focus on recovering from this major disaster event. “The catastrophic scale and impact of what we’re seeing in this region of northern NSW is exactly why this extra support is needed,” Minister Reynolds said. “The additional two $1,000

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

The Federal Government has paid $238.9 million in disaster payments to 205,700 individuals impacted in NSW, since the payments opened on 1 March, including $16.5 million to 14,342 individuals in northern NSW. The Government has also paid $146.3 million in disaster payments to 125,200 individuals impacted in Queensland, since the payments opened on 28 February. The Morrison Government has so far deployed more than 4,370 Australian Defence Force personnel to the flood zones, including 2,650 to northern NSW, and this support is expected to increase over coming days, with total deployments expected to reach 6,000 across NSW and Queensland by the end of the week. The ADF are also deploying additional tractors, front end loaders, bob cats, dump and lift trucks into the region, and have been inserted into communities including Evans Head, Coraki, Woodburn and Broadwater by helicopter, and have been on the ground in Wilson’s Creek, Main Arm and Repentance Creek. The latest round of support is in addition to the $434.7 million package announced last week by the Morrison and Perrottet Governments, including: • Demand driven - $75,000 grants to assist primary producers that have suffered direct damage from the recent severe weather and flooding. NSW Government estimate this to initially be $111.5 million.

• Demand driven - $50,000 grants to assist small business and not-for-profit organisations that have suffered direct damage from the event. NSW Government estimate this to initially be $89.7 million. • $210 million to assist affected communities with the clean-up and removal of flood and storm related damage, debris and green waste. This will enable LGAs to work with Resilience NSW and NSW Government agencies to coordinate clean-up activities in their communities. • $1 million grants to impacted councils to assist with their immediate social, built, economic and environmental needs. This list may continue to grow. • $6.5 million to provide Community Recovery Officers to support communities impacted by this event. The Morrison and Palaszczuk Governments announced an initial $558.5 million jointly funded support package for flood affected Queensland communities in need, which included: • Demand driven grants $75,000 for farmers and primary producers • Demand drive grants - $50,000 for affected small businesses and not-for-profit organisations • Demand driven grants $20,000 for sporting and community clubs and associations • Nineteen affected councils will also be helped through a $1 million injection each to assist with urgent clean-up works. People in NSW requiring assistance are urged to contact Service NSW on 13 77 88 or online at: www.service.nsw.gov.au/floods For more information on grants for primary producers, small businesses and nonprofit organisations, phone the Queensland Rural and Industry Development Authority on 1800 623 946 or visit http://www.qrida. qld.gov.au

10


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

COMMUNITY NEWS

IMAQ celebrates International Women’s Day As part of the International Women’s Day marked annually on 8th March, a high tea was organised by the Indian Medical Association of Queensland (IMAQ) recently under the auspices of Dr Neeraj Khanna.

Representatives from White Ribbon Queensland committee were also a part of the event for an important discussion on prevention of domestic violence.

Australian spin master Shane Warne dies at 52 Tributes came pouring in as the sporting world mourned the death of Australian cricket legend Shane Warne in Thailand on March 4 evening. Former England footballer and sports broadcaster Gary Lineker led the tributes on Twitter, writing, “Terribly saddened and shocked to hear the news that Shane Warne has died. The greatest spin bowler of all time. Can’t quite believe it. RIP Shane.” Fellow footballer Stan Collymore

followed Lineker as he tweeted, “My goodness, Shane Warne has died. 52 years old, this is truly awful news. Rest in peace Ledge.” The news has clearly affected the entire sporting world and the loss will undoubtedly be felt by the cricketing community, particularly the Australian cricket community. As per a statement given to Fox News by Warne’s management firm, the leg-spinner passed away in Thailand of a suspected heart

attack. Graeme Fowler, who played in 21 Test matches for England, wrote: “RIP Shane Warne. The greatest spinner ever, and fantastic company. “The brightest lights burn out faster.” Indian Cricket team opener Shikhar Dhawan echoed Fowler’s sentiment, “Sad, speechless, and completely shocked. An incredible loss to cricket. I have no words. Thank you for everything you’ve

done for the sport. “Rest in Peace, Shane Warne. Sending my condolences to his loved ones.” Former Indian cricketer Wasim Jaffer too expressed his sorrow at the news, writing, “Whenever

he came to the wicket, change came over the game of Cricket. My mind just cannot accept that Shane Warne is no more. Gone too soon. Thoughts and prayers with his family and friends...RIP Warnie.”

Defence Industry Seminar conducted by Indian High Commission High Commission of India, Canberra in association with Australia India Business Council (AIBC) organised a Defence Industry Seminar to promote Defence Industry cooperation between India and Australia recently. The event was a curtain raiser for DEFEXPO 22 to be held in Gandhinagar, Gujarat in March.

www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

11


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

Indian High Commission holds virtual meet on organic products

The High Commission of India along with Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority under Ministry of Commerce and Industry, Govt. of India organised a “Virtual Networking Meet on

Among those who were celebrated included, Prof. Chennupati Jagadish, a leading nanotechnology and physics researcher who is acknowledged for his research in semiconductor optoelectronics at The Australian National University’s Department of Electronic Materials Engineering, currently serving as the president of the Australian Academy of Science; Professor Veena Sahajwalla, engineer and

500-year-old stolen statue to be repatriated to India

Organic Products” on Wednesday, 02 March 2022. The event highlighted the vast opportunities that exist in the Australian market and how Indian exporters can meet this demand.

Australia commemorates Indian National Science Day On the occasion of India’s National Science Day, marked every year on February 28, the Indian diaspora in Australia this year celebrated a few of the many Indian-origin people making outstanding contributions to Australia’s science, technology and innovation sectors.

COMMUNITY NEWS

innovator whose pioneering research is transforming waste into a new generation of green material and products, and Dr Nisha Rakhesh from Western Sydney University, who is helping develop collaborative research programs to support the farming industry as it grapples with climate change & food security challenges.

The Chargé d’Affaires Michael Goldman in Canberra recently returned a 500-year old stolen Indian statue to Indian High Commissioner Manpreet Vohra. U.S. Department of Homeland Security and Indian law enforcement agents worked together to recover the statue, which had been looted from a temple in Southern India, sold to Christie’s Auction House in New York, and acquired by a buyer in Australia. Christie’s Auction House and the buyer in Australia were originally unaware of the statue’s

stolen origins, but after being alerted by law enforcement agents, cooperated fully with the U.S.-India law enforcement investigation to recover the stolen artifact. In remarks during the handover ceremony, Chargé d’Affaires Goldman said, “The recovery of this statue represents the breadth and depth of the U.S.-India law enforcement partnership,” adding that “the successful investigation shows the importance the United States places on preserving and protecting cultural heritage.” The Chargé d’Affaires expressed

his appreciation to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and Indian law enforcement agents for their recovery of the looted statue and cooperation to fight illegal trade in cultural artifacts. The statue represents Hanuman, a beloved monkey deity renowned for his courage, power, and faithful, selfless service. After being returned to the Indian High Commission, the statue of Hanuman will be repatriated to India.

Dr Nisha Rakhesh

Professor Veena Sahajwalla

Prof. Chennupati Jagadish

Professor Veena Sahajwalla

Fiji senior citizens celebrate holi Fiji Senior Citizens Association of Queensland Inc (FSCAQ) celebrated holi recently. The vibrant Festival of Colours event included lots of fun

www.indianews.com.au

and frolic along with dance performances on blockbuster songs of the late Bollywood actor Sridevi.

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

12


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

COMMUNITY NEWS

Prince of Wales visits Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral, shows support for Ukraine The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall exhibited their support to members of the Ukrainian community during a visit to the Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral of the Holy Family in London. Alongside Ukrainian Ambassador Vadym Prystaiko, The Prince and The Duchess met guests including leaders within the Ukrainian community and volunteers helping the humanitarian effort. At the altar, Their Royal Highnesses lit a candle and laid sunflowers, the national flower of Ukraine. The Prince of Wales remarked, “Our thoughts and prayers, however inadequate they may be, are with all of you at this most critical of times.”

Rotary Club of Goodna donates essentials to local charity group

SKED marks Shivratri with Rudra Abhishekam event Sri Kamakshi Ekambareswara Dhaam (SKED) recently celebrated the sacred Shivratri event by organising the Rudra Abhishekam ceremony. Despite much uncertainty brought on by floods and road closure, the event was immensely successful. The divine and blissful pooja ceremony was carried out with Manasarovar water and

The Rotary Club of Goodna Inc. recently donated food and other essentials to Goodna Street Life, a 100% tax deductible, not for profit charity setup to help the homeless and those in need. Governor of Queensland Jeannette Young graced the official food unloading event with her presence and was joined by Deputy Mayor Nicole Jonic, Ipswich City Council, as she caught up with the locals to discuss the flood recovery efforts. Rotary Club of Goodna thanked Bunnings Bundamba on their official social media account for their welcome donation of $1600 worth of gas cookers, gas refills, torches, batteries etc to assist residents of Goodna who are still in their flooded homes but

without power or gas. With these necessities the residents will be able to cook the food which was donated earlier by the club. The product will be delivered by Goodna Street Life directly to the locals. Rotary Club of Goodna Thanks Local Firms for Donated Flood Relief Supplies The Rotary Club of Goodna also thanked Woolworths for their welcome donation of $100 to assist the club in its efforts to purchase urgent food supplies for the Goodna Street Life homeless shelter. The shelter has been inundated with locals who have lost housing due to the floods and are in need of emergency accommodation and food supplies to feed their families.

mixed panchamruta abhishekams by the devotees. Bharat Solanki Guruji led the entire pooja ceremony and also delineated the importance and auspiciousness of Manasarovar water, enlightening the devotees how it was a great blessing to offer abhishekam and prayers to Mahadev on Shivratri.

GOPIO’s high tea event marks IWD 2022 celebrations

To celebrate the International Women’s Day 2022, GOPIO Gold Coast organised a high tea event on Sunday, March 6 at Greendays Restaurant and Bar in Bundall, Gold Coast. During the event, the participants celebrated women’s achievements and raised awareness towards bias against women. Veena Goverdhan, newly appointed Southport magistrate, talked about her personal journey and the positive impact this journey has had on her personal development and achievements. The event’s presenter Pallavi Mandke gave insights on what is bias and how to identify and overcome it. The event also helped raise $1247 to support people impacted by the devastating floods. This amount will be donated to GIVIT.

ADVERTISE WITH US

Call us at 1300 859 066 www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

13


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

COMMUNITY NEWS

Bicycle rally held by High Commission of India

T

he High Commission of India in Canberra held a bicycle rally last month as part of the 75th anniversary celebrations of Indian independence and as part of the Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav

activities. The rally was a success for the participants thanks to pleasant weather and good company from fellow Canberrans.

Musical event organised in Canberra

P

rakash and Lalita Deo organised the musical event Ek Rangeen Sham Labasa Ke Naam with their family and friends in Canberra last month.

Saraswati puja held in Melbourne

T

he Shree Shakti Association Victoria held a Saraswati puja in Melbourne's Melton Community Hall in the last week

The occasion drew proud Labasans from all over the state as well as Fiji. Jitend Reddy, who travelled from Fiji, was the chief guest, and the MC was Pt Rohit MP from Fiji.

of February, and it was a huge success. The following are a few images from the event.

$1000 was donated to bush fire assistance and $1000 to the Labasa Golden Age Home during the event.

www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

14


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

COMMUNITY NEWS

IWD 2022: High Commission organises board room session H igh Commission of India in Canberra, in collaboration with Australia India Business Council’s (AIBC) Women in Business Chapter, organised a board room session “Unlocking Australia – India business opportunities in 2022” with eminent participants on the occasion of International Women’s Day.

H.E. Shri Manpreet Vohra graced the event and participated in the fruitful and lively discussion. The event had the support of Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Export Council of Australia, Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India.

www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

15


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

COMMUNITY NEWS

TACA celebrates Pongal at NSW Parliament

O

n February 15, the Tamil Arts and Culture Association Inc (TACA) held its 7th annual Pongal in NSW Parliament, which was a huge success, as evidenced by the large number of community members and high-profile guests who attended. Among the dignitaries, community leaders and representatives of various organisations who joined in the celebration were Dr Geoff Lee MP, Member for Parramatta, Minister for Corrections; Hon. Mark Coure MP, Member for Oatley, Minister for Multiculturalism; Hon. Jonathan O’Dea MP, Member for Davidson, Speaker of the NSW Legislative Assembly; Hon. Chris Minns MP, NSW Opposition Leader; Mr Steve Kamper MP, Member for Rockdale, Shadow Minister for Multiculturalism; Ms Julia Finn MP, Member for Granville; Dr Hugh McDermott MP, Member for Prospect; Mr Guy Zangari MP Member for Fairfield; Mr Edmond Atalla MP, Member for Mt Druitt; Ms Jenny Aitchison MP, Member for Maitland; Mr

www.indianews.com.au

Kevin Conolly MP, Member for Riverstone; Ms Anna Watson MP, Member for Shell Harbour; Mr Jason Yat-sen Li, Member elect for Strathfield; Rev Hon Fred Nile MLC, Member of the Christian Democratic Party (Fred Nile Group); Mr Anthony D'Adam MLC; Mr David Shoebridge MLC, Member of the Legislative Council Member of The Greens; Clr Lisa Lake, Mayor of Cumberland Council; Clr Sameer Pandey, Deputy Mayor - Parramatta Council; Clr Suman Saha, Councillor - Cumberland Council; Clr Karen Pensabene, Deputy Mayor – Strathfiled Council; Clr Sharangan Maheswaran, Councillor - Strathfield Council; Clr Livingston Chettipally, Councillor - Blacktown Council; Clr Usha Domairaju, Councillor - Camden Council; Clr Sreeni Pillmari, Councillor - Hornsby Council; Mr Manish Gupta, Consul General of India, Sydney; Mr Peter Doukas OAM, Chair, Ethnic Communities Council of NSW.

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

16


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

COMMUNITY NEWS

Indian Dental firm bags award at EBA 2021

O

n February 14, Healthy Smiles Dental Group won the Small Business category award at the 32nd edition of the Ethnic Business Awards (EBA). The awards honour migrant and indigenous entrepreneurs who have excelled in their fields. Dr. Ved Berani generously donated the entire $10,000 award to the charity Sikh Volunteers Australia, which gives free meals to the less fortunate. Dr. Berani also spoke about his journey from student to multi-award winning

entrepreneur in a video message. "Dr Ved Berani and Priyanka Sethi Berani have always strived to deliver the best for their customers and winning this award means a lot to all of us at Healthy Smiles," said a statement by the dental firm. "Healthy Smiles has been actively present to provide dental services during the pandemic and will continue to support the Melbourne community with its outstanding customer service in the near future too."

Perth event honours Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj

M

aharashtra Mandal Perth, in collaboration with the Indian Society of Western Australia (ISWA) and the Consulate General of India in Perth, held a Shiv-Jayanti celebration to honour renowned warrior king Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj. Shri Naresh Sharma, Acting Consul General in Perth, presided over the occasion and took part in it.

www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

17


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

ADVERTORIAL

Pramukh Swami Maharaj: Epitome of Compassion His Holiness Pramukh Swami Maharaj (1921-2016) was Bhagwan Swaminarayan’s fifth spiritual successor and the President of the BAPS Swaminarayan Sanstha for over 60 years. Bochasanwasi Shri Akshar Purushottam Swaminarayan Sanstha (BAPS) is a socio-spiritual Hindu organisation with its roots in the Vedas. This year marks Pramukh Swami Maharaj’s centennial birth celebration; therefore, we aim to pay tribute to him through this article series. We will explore Pramukh Swami Maharaj’s life and work that inspired millions across the world to maintain moral and spiritual lifestyles. COMPASSION: A NECESSITY IN SOCIETY

If the entire nation were to take a cue from him and live by those standards, it would solve all of our problems.” Pramukh Swami Maharaj was one of the rare individuals who actually practised this credo while encouraging others to do the same.

Without compassion, society devolves into a state of chaos and brutality, as evidenced through multiple genocides and atrocities throughout human history. Although we seem to be surrounded by people invested COMPASSION BEYOND in their own agendas, the compassion that COMPREHENSION still exists in the souls of many, provides Perhaps the biggest test of this boundless us hope in making the world a better place. compassion was when Swaminarayan AkPramukh Swami Maharaj’s compassion shardham in Gandhinagar, India, fell victim was not due to a life-changing or tragic to a brutal terrorist attack in 2002. In the afincident in his life. His loving and genuinely termath of the incident, people throughout India were very hurt and angry, and the compassionate nature was innate. He lived for the joy of others, for the progress of others and for the good of others. IN THE JOY OF OTHERS...

“In the joy of others, lies our own. In the progress of others, rests our own. In the good of others, exists our own.” These words are not merely a tagline given by Pramukh Swami Maharaj; they were his lifestyle. This mantra also became the guiding principle for his followers. It was not enough to just tolerate and forgive, to merely wish well for others; it was imperative to contribute to their success. This was the message delivered by Pramukh Swami Maharaj at the United Nations Millennium World Peace Summit on 29 August 2000. His remarks were applauded by world and religious leaders alike. When asked why this was remarkable, one religious leader said, “Pramukh Swami Maharaj’s life is an extraordinary example of love and harmony.

Pramukh Swami Maharaj Spiritual Head of BAPS (1971 - 2016)

On his first visit to Akshardham after the attack, he went to the locations where shootings had occurred. He asked to go to where the terrorists had been shot. The volunteers were dismissive of the request. He insisted and said, “Though they attacked us and the innocent pilgrims, we must not allow their hate to overcome our love. Take me there. I want to pray for the peace and redemption of their souls as well.” The profundity of Pramukh Swami Maharaj’s innate forgiving and loving nature is truly unfathomable. Many have been inspired to imbibe these virtues in their lives. If practised sincerely, they transform lives. COMPASSION THAT INSPIRES OTHERS

The depth and breadth of Pramukh Swami Maharaj’s selfless love and compassion span decades and vast geographic distances. Pramukh Swami Maharaj has Swaminarayan Akshardham - Gandhinagar, India created a community of people who strive public’s instinct for retaliation reared its to bring joy to others. head. However, Pramukh Swami Maharaj He is the inspiration for a young made a heartfelt public appeal for peace and gynaecologist in Bryan, Texas, treating stability that echoed around the country and uninsured expecting mothers for free the world. so that they can have access to quality Pramukh Swami Maharaj’s response to this healthcare. He is the inspiration for a terrorist attack has been studied as an ex- professional musician and travel agent in emplary case of peacekeeping and dubbed Chino Hills, California, donating all of his income as a musician to humanitarian and as ‘The Akshardham Response’. spiritual charities through BAPS for the past 20 years. The list of those inspired by him to think and act with compassion for others is endless. EPILOGUE

May all be happy. May all be free from illness. May all see what is auspicious. May no one suffer.

Pramukh Swami Maharaj addressing the UN Millennium World Peace Summit - 29th August 2000

www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

The above is a prayer of compassion from the Upanishads; Pramukh Swami Maharaj was truly the epitome of such compassion — he not only prayed but persevered until his last breath to bring each word of that prayer to life. To learn more about Pramukh Swami Maharaj’s life and work, please visit: www.pramukhswami.org

18


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

Guterres reprimands Russia for violating UN Charter, says world faces 'peril' United Nations, February 24 (IANS): UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has warned that the world was facing a peril unprecedented in recent times and issued a stern rebuke to Russia that it was violating UN principles by recognising Ukraine's breakaway regions of Donetsk and Luhansk as independent countries. "The latest developments regarding Ukraine are a cause of grave concern," he said on February 23 at a meeting of the General Assembly on Ukraine. "Our world is facing a moment of peril. I truly hoped it would not come," he added. Reprimanding Moscow, Guterres said, "The decision of the Russian Federation to recognise the socalled 'independence' of Donetsk and Luhansk regions -- and the follow-up -- are violations of the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine and inconsistent with the principles of the Charter of the United Nations." Russia was also violating the General Assembly's "Friendly Relations Declaration" that affirms "the territorial integrity and political independence of the State are inviolable," the Secretary-General added. Citing "reports of increased ceasefire violations across the contact line and the real risk of further escalation on the ground," Guterres called for a ceasefire and a return to diplomacy. However, one high-level global

diplomacy has been shut down now as the US has called off a meeting between between its Secretary of State, Antony Blinken and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, and withdrew an offer for US President Joe Biden to talk to Russian President Vladimir Putin after Russia recognised the two breakaway regions, signed a security pact with them and announced Russian "peacekeepers" would be sent there. On Moscow's claims of "peacekeeping", the UN Chief said, "We must also be concerned about preserving the integrity of peacekeeping. The UN has a long and recognised experience deploying peacekeeping operations -- which only take place with the consent of the host country." Russia's Permanent Representative, Vassily Nebenza swiftly criticised Guterres. "It is to our great regret that the UN Secretary General, today and a few days ago, has made some statements regarding what is going on in the east of Ukraine that are not in line with his status and his mandate," he said. Nebenza defended his country's action, blaming Ukraine for not respecting the rights of the Russian minority in their country and not dealing with Donetsk and Luhansk as required under international agreements. None of the 24 other countries that spoke in the morning session of the UN General Assembly

supported Russia and most criticised it. (India, which had taken a neutral stand in the UN Security Council on February 21 evening, was scheduled to be the 75th speaker and its turn may not come up on February 23.) Ukraine's Foreign Minister, Dmytro Kuleba said, "I warn every nation in this distinguished chamber, no one will be able to settle down this crisis if President Putin decides that he can move forward with his aggression against your governments. Your people will face painful consequences together with our government and our people." Asking for decisive international action, he said, "We need your help." US Permanent Representative, Linda Thomas-Greenfield appealed to all the countries to join the US and its European allies to impose economic sanctions on Russia. She said, "What we can do together today is make clear that Russia will pay an even steeper price if it continues its aggression. That responsible countries do not bully their neighbours into submission. That former empires cannot lay claim to sovereign and independent nations." Tariq Ahmad, Britain's Minister of State for the UN, warned that a Russian invasion "would take a terrible toll on Ukrainians and Russians alike -- both victims of an unnecessary war of the Kremlin's choosing."

No one will be forced to return from Ukraine: Minister 18,000 students and 2,000 people from India in Ukraine. "All of them have been asked to register at the Indian Embassy there, so if needed, the embassy officials can contact them," added Muraleedharan.

Thiruvananthapuram, February 23 (IANS): Minister of the Indian State of Kerala for External Affairs V. Muraleedharan on February 23 said that Indians in Ukraine will not be forced to return in the light of the developments there.

"One thing that the Modi government assures is the safety, concern of our people there is uppermost, things will be assessed and action will be taken accordingly," said Muraleedharan. He said that there are around

He said that while many anxious parents want their children to return, the general impression from Ukraine is the students are not that keen to return. "We assure all that the Government of India will be at the forefront and if a situation warrants, then there will be timely intervention," said the MoS.

Russia closes airspace on borders with Ukraine, Belarus

Moscow, February 24 (IANS): In view of the latest situation, Russia has closed its airspace to civilian aircraft starting from February 24 on its western borders with Ukraine and Belarus, the Russian aviation authorities announced. The announcement came shortly after President Vladimir Putin authorised a "special military operation" in the conflict-hit

www.indianews.com.au

Donbas region in eastern Ukraine, reports Xinhua news agency.

due to potential hazard for civil aviation". the notice says.

Meanwhile, a Notice to Airmen (NOTAM) posted on the website of the US Federal Aviation Administration Civil said that aviation flights in the Ukrainian airspace are limited in view of potential threats.

According to the Russian Defense Ministry, Russian Armed Forces are destroying "military infrastructure, air defense facilities, military airfields, aviation of the Ukrainian Armed Forces" with high-precision weapons, not targeting Ukrainian cities.

Flights to Kiev, Dnepr, Lvov and Odessa airports "are restricted

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

WORLD NEWS

242 Indian students evacuated safely to Delhi amid UkraineRussia tensions New Delhi, February 23 (IANS): Amid the escalating RussiaUkraine tensions, 242 Indian students returned safely to India at New Delhi's Indira Gandhi International airport late February 22 evening and reunited with their parents after India started evacuation operations of Indian citizens living in Ukraine and its adjoining areas. India has deployed Dreamliner B-787 aircraft for carrying out this special operation under which flights were made operational from Kharkiv in Ukraine to New Delhi. Nirav Patil, a first-year MBBS student studying in Ukraine, said, "The situation is normal around the area where I live. While the university has started studies online so there is not much to worry about as before." Another student Krishna said, "I live 900 km away from the Ukraine-Russia border. There are around five to six students, who are residents of Gujarat. Our parents were getting quite worried. This is why we had to return to India." Several government officials were also sent by the Rajasthan government to the Delhi airport as well as students of Rajasthan who have returned from Ukraine, the state government is busy preparing to send them safely to their home bearing their travel expenses. At present, eight students along with their parents have been asked to stay at the Rajasthan Bhawan. However, there are several Indian students who have not returned to India by an Air India flight. Monika, a resident of Chhattisgarh and a fifth-year MBBS student, first took a flight from Kyiv to Doha and then returned to Delhi. According to her, air tickets were quite expensive due to which she came to India taking other flights. She did not express her opinion on the tense situation in Ukraine as many of her Indian friends are still stuck in Ukraine. She said, "In some places, studies have been made online but in several other places offline studies are still being followed as the norm. My parents were getting quite worried due to which I had to return to India, but the situation in Ukraine is still normal. Now only if our parents ask us to return to Ukraine only then will we return." Air India on February 19 had announced that it would operate flights between India and Ukraine on February 22, 24 and 26. Booking of air tickets is open through Air India booking offices, website, call centres and authorised travel agents. According to the Indian embassy in Ukraine, additional flights

from Kyiv to Delhi will operate on February 25, 27 (two flights) and March 6. At the same time, many students who have returned to India are worried about their studies while some said they had also recently seen a tank used in a war in the city where they lived. Swati, who is a second-year MBBS student, on returning to Delhi, said, "The situation is normal in Ukraine and I was living a completely normal life there. The people residing there are not worried at all about the RussiaUkraine tensions." "The reason for many students like me returning to India is because of my parents. They were quite mentally disturbed and were worried about my wellbeing. Now since I have returned back home, our studies will suffer too. But the university where I was studying will start holding online classes. I have exams scheduled for next year." Another student Tanvi, who is an MBBS student, arrived in Delhi and spoke about the tense situation in Ukraine, saying, "The situation is pretty worse in Ukraine, I am quite distressed. Children studying here are living in fear, every day different kinds of news is coming to fore as one is not able to come to judge which ones to believe. At the same time, air tickets have also become quite expensive." The parents of the students also arrived at the airport to pick up their children, but were angry due to the expensive air tickets. A parent Ratan Singh says, "The situation in Ukraine is absolutely normal, offline studies were being conducted on Tuesday. My son is not worried at all about the overall situation there but most people in India are fast spreading rumours and fear." "I have booked flight tickets worth Rs 60,000, but what will those parents do who can't afford such a huge amount of money? The Government of India has sent several flights but how will we be able to book such an expensive air ticket? Till February 21, flight tickets costing Rs one lakh were being sold but after borrowing some extra money from my relatives, I booked the air ticket and called my child back to India," he added.

19


INDIA NEWS INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

www.indianews.com.au www.indianews.com.au

Nov 1-15, 2021 - Vol4,2,Issue Issue 12 9 Mar 2022 - Vol

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT

20


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

WORLD THIS WEEK

WORLD THIS WEEK

Reuters

Contributed by the National Institute for Advanced Studies, Bengaluru

Compiled by Anu Maria Joseph, Apoorva Sudhakar, Ashwin Immanuel Dhanabalan, Angkuran Dey and Meghna Manoj

The EU- Africa summit 2022: Issues and Challenges of a “special relationship”

Teller Report

to be under European interest rather than shared interests of EU and AU.

Mali: France’s troop withdrawal amid friction with military government What happened?

What happened? On 17 and 18 February, the leaders of the EU and African Union met for the sixth European Union - African Union summit in Brussels. The summit aimed to lay the foundations for a renewed and deeper AU-EU partnership of greater political involvement with mutual trust and understanding. The summit defined a new financial and economic deal, supporting Africa in its post-pandemic recovery policies. The EU reaffirmed its allegiance to providing 450 million vaccine doses to Africa by mid-2022. About 425 million euros will be allocated to ramp up the pace of vaccination. The focus was also given to investment in infrastructure, including transport, energy transition and digital transformation. Besides, the summit also discussed education, culture, mobility, and migration. European Council chief Charles Michel proclaimed, "We are not here to carry on business as usual”. At the opening address, AU's chairman and Senegal's President Macky Sall said: "Our common ambition, Africans and Europeans, for this summit, is to achieve a renewed, modernized and more action-oriented partnership." What does it mean? First, The sixth EU-Africa Summit is significant as Africa is at the centre of geopolitics. China has made a significant influence on the continent through diplomacy and major infrastructure investments. Russia, India, Japan and Turkey also have an increasing interest in the region. Second, the postcolonial view of Africa as a continent in need of European charity has now become outdated. Europe needs Africa as much as Africa needs Europe. However, the summit outcomes are questionable to match the EU’s rhetoric on “partnership of equals”. The EU's initiatives of “prosperous and sustainable partnership” appears

www.indianews.com.au

On 17 February, France and its European and African allies released a joint statement announcing the withdrawal of their troops from Mali. The statement mentioned that the conditions in Mali, including “obstructions” created by the military government, were not suitable to continue their operations. French President Emmanuel Macron said: “Victory against terror is not possible if it’s not supported by the state itself.” Macron maintained that the withdrawal did not signify the failure of France in its mission against the insurgency in Mali and clarified that the military operations will now be headquartered in Niger. Further, Macron claimed that Russia had deployed its private military company Wagner in Mali. France24 quoted Macron: “This is the hiring by the Malian junta, using financing which they themselves will have to explain to the Malian people, of mercenaries who are essentially there to secure their own business interests and protect the junta itself.” On 18 February, Nigerien President Mohamad Bazoum accepted the French proposal to redeploy troops from Mali in Niger. Bazoum tweeted: “Our goal is for our border with Mali to be secure” and reasoned that terrorist groups are likely to expand their influence in light of the latest developments. What does it mean? First, the withdrawal and redeployment of troops are visible signs of increasing challenges that France has to address if it wants to maintain its presence in the Sahel. It also signifies the gravity of the anti-French movement in Mali, which is gradually spreading to neighbouring countries including Niger. Second, if the Russian mercenaries are indeed present in Mali, it would be a positive development for Russia which is building inroads into Africa through military relations. It would also be a testimony to the increasing involvement of private military companies in Africa, as was previously witnessed in Libya, the Central African Republic and Mozambique.

ALSO IN NEWS China: PM Scott Morrison urges Beijing to denounce relations with Moscow On 15 February, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison urged China to denounce Russia amid the growing tensions in Ukraine. Morrison's comments came from increasing ties between Moscow and Beijing. He said: "I do note that the Chinese government, together with the Russian government, have been banding together on this issue and that the Chinese government has not denounced what is occurring in Ukraine." Morrison also called on global federal lawmakers to join the Australian government to push China to respond appropriately through the UN rather than support Russia. Taiwan: Taipei backs WTO case levelled against China On 15 February, Taiwan joined the US and Australia as a third party under the WTO's dispute resolution mechanism for backing the EU trade case levelled against China over the alleged trade curbs placed on Lithuania. This comes after the EU had launched a challenge in the WTO, accusing Beijing of discriminatory market practices that it says would threaten the integrity of the EU's single market. Taiwan's Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Joanne Ou stated: "Our country will cooperate with like-minded partners such as Lithuania and the European Union to maintain a rules-based international trading system." Japan: IAEA team reviews plan of discharging treated radioactive wastewater On 18 February, a team from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) visited the Fukushima nuclear plant site to safely release a million tons of treated radioactive wastewater into the Pacific Ocean. The release plan has come under sharp criticism from neighbouring countries, leading to Japan seeking assistance from the IAEA for ensuring that the discharge meets international standards. IAEA's Director General and Head of the Department of Nuclear Safety and Security, Lydie Evrard, said: "The IAEA taskforce made significant progress in its work this week to get a better understanding of Japan's operational and regulatory plans for the discharge of treated water." Indonesia: Dutch PM apologizes for state's excesses in the Indonesian War of the 1940s On 17 February, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte issued a formal apology after an inquiry

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

revealed widespread ill-treatment and extrajudicial killings during the 1945-1949 Indonesian War of Independence. After the publication of the inquiry, Rutte stated: "I make a deep apology to the people of Indonesia today for the systematic and widespread extreme violence by the Dutch side in those years and the consistent looking away by previous cabinets." The government-funded inquiry was undertaken over four and a half years and presented a challenging perspective on the Dutch East Indies. Australia: The UK to commit USD 46 million to the Indo-Pacific On 17 February, the government in the UK announced that it would be committing USD 46 million towards strengthening its security pact with Australia in the Indo-Pacific. On a video call, UK's Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison discussed the peace and stability of the region. Further, they also talked about the possibility of Russia invading Ukraine. The funds pledged by the UK would strengthen resilience in cyberspace, state threats, and maritime security. While discussing the importance of maritime freedom in the South China Sea, the two leaders said they were opposed to: "any unilateral actions that could escalate tensions and undermine regional stability and the international rules-based order, including militarisation, coercion, and intimidation." India: New Delhi signs a trade pact with Abu Dhabi On 18 February, New Delhi signed a comprehensive bilateral treaty with Abu Dhabi in a virtual summit. The Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) targets more investments from the UAE into Jammu and Kashmir. The treaty is also aimed at creating more trade opportunities and connectivity to push the collective interests of India, Israel, and the US. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi commented: "This agreement will herald a new age in our financial relations. Our trade in the next five years will increase from $60 billion to $100 billion". The trilateral relations aim to improve the sectors of technology, innovation, and finance in the upcoming years. India: Singapore's High Commissioner to New Delhi summoned by the MEA On 17 February, India's Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) summoned

Singapore's High Commissioner to India for Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong's criticism. Loong had mentioned: "While Nehru's India has become one where, according to media reports, almost half the MP's in the Lok Sabha have criminal charges pending against them, including charges of rape and murder. Though it is also said that many of these allegations are politically motivated." India: Concerns about Afghanistan raised in the UNSC On 17 February, India's Permanent Representative to the UN, TS Tirumurti, drew the UNSC's attention to the threat of increased international terrorism and drug trafficking. His comments highlighted the crisis in Afghanistan and its wider ramifications in Central Asia. Tirumurti commented in the UNSC debate that was held for "Cooperation between the United Nations and the Collective Security Treaty Organization." He also called on the international community and sub-regional organizations to take cognisance of Central Asia's concerns on Afghanistan. Sri Lanka: India delivers 40,000 metric tonnes of fuel On 15 February, India delivered 40,000 metric tonnes of fuel amid the ongoing energy crisis in Sri Lanka. The Indian High Commissioner to Sri Lanka Gopal Bagay handed over the Indian Oil Company Limited (IOCL) consignment to the Sri Lankan Energy Minister Udaya Gammanpila at the Colombo port. The fuel consignment came after Sri Lankan Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa's visit to India, where he discussed the economic relief package for the island nation. The Indian High Commission assured Sri Lanka that it would continue this partnership to ensure energy security for its island neighbour. About the Authors Anu Maria Joseph is a Postgraduate scholar in the Department of Political Science at Madras Christian College. Apoorva Sudhakar is a Research Associate at the National Institute of Advanced Studies. Ashwin Immanuel Dhanabalan is a Research Assistant at the National Institute of Advanced Studies. Angkuran Dey and Meghna Manoj are Postgraduate scholars at the Center for South Asian Studies at Pondicherry University. The report has been modified by INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND due to space considerations.

21


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

Putin’s deceptive war plans By Asad Mirza

T

he Russian strategy in the ongoing Ukrainian crisis is aimed at not allowing NATO to accept Ukraine as its member. In reality, the war clouds have thickened due to the American and British stance and verbosity. The ongoing war of nerves and escalating tensions between the US and Russia over Ukraine has entered its fourth month after the Russian forces started their buildup in areas near the Ukrainian border in November 2021, but the genesis of the conflict goes back to 2013 or even to 2008, when Ukraine applied for NATO membership. Historically, Ukraine was a part of the Soviet Union until 1991 and is currently a country lodged between Russia and Europe. After 1991 even its polity seemed to be under Moscow's influence and its foreign policy over the years has wavered being either pro-Russia or pro-European Union. But the current crisis owes its genesis to a rather vital source of energy, i.e. natural gas, which both the Russians and the Americans have not clearly mentioned in their talks or given out as a reason for the conflict. Genesis of the crisis If we try to decode the crisis, we find that it is basically about energy and how it will shape-up regional and global geopolitics. It is a fact that in spite of various global initiatives and campaigns to replace fossil fuels, we still do not have any viable source of sustainable technology, which could provide low-cost and dependable power on a massive global scale. In this scenario, natural gas, the least polluting fossil fuel, has become more and more critical as a viable energy source. Russia, which is the world's largest exporter of natural gas, currently supplies about 35 percent of Europe's demand. In reality at the heart of the current conflict lies the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline which will link Russian gas fields directly with Germany - the largest European economy, resulting in Western Europe becoming more dependent on Russian gas.

Nord Stream is a labyrinth of offshore natural gas pipelines in Europe, running under the Baltic Sea from Russia to Germany and then further on to Western Europe. The Nord Stream projects have been fiercely opposed by the United States and Ukraine, as well as by other Central and Eastern European countries, because of concerns that the pipelines would increase Russia's influence and bargaining power in Europe. In the past, older Russian pipelines carrying gas to Europe passed through Ukraine. These gas pipelines generated revenue for Ukraine, as they passed through its land. But Russia in 2010 launched the Nord Stream 1 bypassing Ukraine through under sea pipelines in the Baltic Sea, Nord Stream 2, targeted to go onstream by the middle of this year, follows the same route and will double the gas supply through the network to 110 billion cubic metres per year. Further, the US advisors think that Vladimir Putin will be able to use Nord Stream 2 for strategic leverage as he'll be controlling a vital energy source to many European countries. And this may impact the American influence in the region. Russia-Ukraine Ties Historically, Ukraine has always acted as a natural buffer zone between Russia and Europe. It has always given enough lead-time to the Russian army to prepare and strategies while the enemy forces pass through the vast steppes of Ukraine.

Why India needs to pursue neutrality over Ukraine

A

s pictures of wounded women, bombed buildings, rolling tanks, fighter jet strikes and desperate civilians in Ukraine flood the TV screens and social media, India was expected to condemn the perpetrator. After all, India continues to suffer because of the expansionist policies of China and Pakistan.

case of Ukraine becoming a NATO member, NATO boots would be much nearer to Russia. In the latest episode, the American and British reactions, after Russia started to build up its military presence at the Ukrainian border in November 2021, were very hysterical and during the last two months the American leadership has predicted a Russian attack is imminent, but so far nothing has happened on that front. Biden's first statement on the conflict avowed that the US would not allow Nord Stream 2 to go on-stream if Russia invaded Ukraine. He also warned Russia of strict international sanctions. Meanwhile, to complicate matters further, Russian-backed rebel leaders in eastern Ukraine have announced plans for military mobilisation amidst increasing tensions. Denis Pushilin, leader of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic, said he had issued a decree for "general mobilisation"recently, while another separatist leader, Leonid Pasechnik, signed a similar decree for the self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic.

After losing Crimea, Ukraine applied for NATO membership with more vigour. Putin cautioned NATO that it would face consequences if Ukraine were accepted as a member.

But Putin knows quite well that a full-scale invasion of Ukraine will be enormously costly for the US and West European countries. No one could predict Putin's next action but the real intention behind all this brinkmanship is that he is insistent on keeping Ukraine as a buffer zone and could go to any extent to thwart the US plus UK and western European countries' effort to allow Ukraine in their and NATO's camp and influence. So far, he has been able to achieve this through intimidating tactics and not war, as he also knows how costly that scenario would be for Russia. And if Germany were forced to cancel its Nord Stream 2 contract then the economic cost of a war would be a financial catastrophe for Russia, which it is ready to avoid.

The danger, upper most in the Russian generals’ view, is that in

(Asad Mirza is a political commentator based in New Delhi)

However, even after the breakup of the former Soviet Union in 1991, Russia has tried to control Ukraine, through installing puppet governments. But since the early 2010s, most of the regimes in power in Ukraine have shown pro-US tendencies. To warn such regimes, Putin annexed the Crimean region from Ukraine in 2014.

In 2021 Germany whose 13.3 per cent energy needs were met by nuclear energy needs Nord Stream 2 gas supply really quickly, as it is committed to shut down its nuclear plants by the end of this year. Though Germany has invested massively in wind and solar power generation, yet it can't be sure about their final gestation. One of Germany's largest trade partners Russia hopes to meet Germany's energy demands through Nord stream 2.

Diplomacy, though, is not ruled by emotion or moral pressure; it is more about strategy and longterm prospects. India abstained from voting on the US-sponsored UN Security Council resolution that deplored in "strongest terms" Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The move did not come as a surprise. Maintaining a balance between the US-led front and Russia has always been the foremost part of India's diplomacy. And it rightly followed this tradition. India articulated the reason for the abstention in the Explanation of Vote by T.S. Trimurti, India's Permanent Representative to the UN. The note expressed "deep concerns at the turn of events in Ukraine", and said that dialogue was the only solution. Laying emphasis on dialogue rather than military action, India has reinforced its diplomacy that made it clear that pressure won't work on its age-old policies. Even on January 31, India abstained on a procedural vote on whether to discuss the issue of Ukraine, and had then put forth its "legitimate security interests". India has its own concerns and knows well who the time-tested friends are and understands the politics of the fair-weather ones. This is all the more relevant in these times of continuing standoff with China in eastern Ladakh or Arunachal Pradesh. Although the US has supported New Delhi over the Ladakh impasse, India can never run the risk of annoying a dependable ally such as Russia, which is the main supplier of its defence weapon systems. But the changing geo-politics after the imposition of sanctions against Russia may present a grim situation for the Modi government. The embargos may affect much-needed defence supplies to India from Russia, whether these are missile systems, or Kalashnikov AK203 assault rifles, spares and components, or stealth frigates and submarines. Although India has been buying weapons from the US as well, a balance has always been maintained between purchases from Moscow and Washington. The balance will be put to test now. With India abstaining from voting against Russia in the UNSC, the risk of projecting a neutral stance may be challenging. The emerging situation in Ukraine may have put India's diplomacy to test, but so far New

Nord Stream

www.indianews.com.au

EDITORIAL

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

Delhi has not shown its ambiguity on choosing fronts. After the invasion, Ukraine has been seeking a much more proactive role from India in de-escalating the tension. Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky, knowing fully well the good chemistry between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russian President Vladimir Putin, made an appeal to Modi to help his country. Zelensky had a telephone conversation with Modi, wherein he sought all support. Zelensky tweeted on Saturday around 6.20 p.m. (IST): "Spoke with Prime Minister @ narendramodi. Informed of the course of (Ukraine) repulsing (Russian) aggression. More than 100,000 invaders are on our land. They insidiously fire on residential buildings. Urged (India) to give us political support in Security Council. Stop the aggressor together!" Before Zelensky's tweet, the Russian Embassy in New Delhi appreciated India's stance in the UNSC. The embassy's Twitter account 'Russia in India' noted: "Highly appreciate India's independent and balanced position at the voting in the UNSC on February 25, 2022. In the spirit of the special and privileged strategic partnership Russia is committed to maintain close dialogue with India on the situation around Ukraine." Today, Ukraine is seeking help from India, but its relationship with India was not all that rosy in the past. Ukraine was one of the countries that opposed India's nuclear tests in 1998. It also pushed for UN intervention on Kashmir after the Modi government abrogated Article 370 in 2019. Ukraine has also been a regular arms supplier to Pakistan, despite India telling the world that Pakistan supports terror activities against India. In the present scenario, India has chosen to maintain a strategic diplomatic silence. With Zelensky openly seeking India's help, however, India can play a major diplomatic role between Ukraine and Russia. As the US and its allies are attempting to pound Russia with sanctions and providing arms and ammunition to Ukraine, it is India that can play the peacemaker in the given situation. India has much experience after dealing with aggression from Pakistan and China. Both the neighbouring countries have been threatening and trying to intrude into India's territory from time to time. India very well understands the tragedy of forcibly thrust wars. India has never been the aggressor or the intruder. Its policy has been to help democracies thrive and live peacefully.

22


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

ADVERTISEMENT

Shop #2, 493, Ipswich Road, Annerley QLD 4103

GET YOUR INDIAN BUSINESS

LISTED FOR JUST

$50 PER YEAR Tired of searching all over the internet over and over again for your favourite Indian stores shops and services? Not anymore! IndBiz is here. With IndBiz, you can browse for your preferred Indian stores & services with ease and convenience from your mobile and tablet.

ADVERTISE WITH US Call us at 1300 859 066 www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

23


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

SPECIAL FEATURE

Ten ways Ukraine crisis has impelled India’s intervention

By Swaran Singh

I

ndia has finally decided to become proactive in Ukraine crisis by first allowing Ukrainian Ambassador Dr Igor Plikha over 15 minutes of air time on national television this Thursday to make his appeal to both India’ leaders as also Indian people. This was followed same evening by prime minister Narendra Modi having a phone conversation with President Vladimir Putin and India’s foreign minister talking to his counterparts in all the neighbouring nations of Ukraine. What is it that has triggered this proactive engagement of India? While some of the issues will continue to unfold by the hour, one can begin by outlining the major ten drivers of this proactive engagement of Modi government. First and foremost Ukraine had lately come to be home for over 20,000 people of Indian original, mostly Indian citizens, and mostly students doing medicine. About 4,000 of them have existed since the crisis began and India has to keep being engaged with both Ukraine and Russia to ensure their safety and, in case conflict continues to escalate, ensure their safe return home. Second, and what has become most visible impact is how stock exchanges around the world including in India have tumbled leading to downwards evaluations of several major firms thereby majorly hitting investors and investor confidence. This has also raised deeper questions about globalisation and free market template that makes developing countries vulnerable to great power contestations. Third, and more specifically commodities like gold and oil — both major import commodities of India —have seen uptick in prices. Especially import price

of oil, which is least optional, has crossed $100 per gallon and is expected to reach as far as $130 a gallon. This will not only result in sharp rise in petrol prices in India but, with rise in cost of transportation, will have spill effect on all consumer items including essential consumables.

Fourth, will be ever increasing pressure on India’s foreign policy and its engagement with the conflict as such. Starting with the United States, then Russia and now Ukraine, every country has been increasingly pushing India to clarify its policy stance beyond just urging restraint on use of force, ensuring security of all and starting dialogue to resolve this crisis with enduring solutions. Each of these stakeholders wish India to endorse their position which seems impossible for India as it has historically desisted from being part of military blocs, which carries the cost of harming India’s strong bilateral relation with each of these powers. Fifth, continued escalation by Russia clearly implies that world will stay focused in Europe. This is already being described as Europe’s biggest crisis since World War II and at time of writing no prospects of its early termination or even de-escalation are in sight as yet. This continued military confrontation would clearly mean India’s defence procurements from Russia, including its S-400 missiles and AK203 rifles as also overall pace of joint Indo-Russian research, development and production in defence sector, will come under stress. Six, this continued focus on European theatre would also mean major powers getting distracted away from their recent preoccupation with the Indo-Pacific region and China, thereby making China freer in

pushing on with its wolf warrior diplomacy with its neighbours. With November China-ASEAN summit speech of President Xi Jinping finally endorsing concept of Indo-Pacific by endorsing ASEAN Outlook on Indo-Pacific, it could further thicken ASEAN partnership with Beijing, something that had triggered thoughts on creating a Quadrilateral Security Dialogue of major regional powers that aim to restrain China’s uncontested expansion in this region.

Seven, this could also enhance other interesting templates of regional alignments. Just like China, Russia has been the other resident power of IndoPacific region that has stayed as an outlier in most Indo-Pacific narratives and initiatives. Ukraine crisis have clearly been pushing Russia further into China’s fold. The 4th February joint statement from Beijing between Presidents Xi and Putin had talked of no limits to their partnership and also endorsed each other’s position on Ukraine and Taiwan. Russia being India’s most time tested defence partner this clearly has implication for India. Eight, as an offshoot of growing bonhomie between China and Russia, Pakistan has emerged as major beneficiary as seen in prime minister Imran Khan choosing to visit Moscow in the midst of Ukraine crisis. Clearly he was cautioned both by his well wishers at home and his largest economic partner nations like the United States and other members of the European Union, and his team insisted on cancelling this visit at last minute. Since their defence cooperation agreement of 2016 and regular joint military exercises, especially now in the backdrop of American exit from Afghanistan, President Putin’s increasing indulgence with

Pakistan is again likely to keep India’s foreign policy pandits awake at night.

Nine, Ukraine crisis have also meant that China is no longer the main and constant target of American trade and technology wars. This provides China with breathing space to recalibrate its strategies of constantly expanding its influence. Especially postpandemic China — that claimed 2.6 per cent positive growth compared to US economy shrinking by almost 5 per cent and its GDP crossing 100 trillion yuan figure ($16trillion) — feels especially emboldened and empowered to unfold its ‘new era’ with direct implications for India’s core interests. By now 14 rounds of Core Commanders talks and half a dozen other interministerial communications have not been able to resolve ChinaIndia border tensions of last two years. Finally, India also carries the burden of exceptions for being seen as world’s largest democracy, sixth largest economy, and major emerging nation and currently, for eighth time, non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, which has recently held two back to back sessions

to discuss Ukraine crisis. Here again, following its tradition India continues to avoid taking clear sides but has clearly come to stand with those victims of this military confrontation. Just like India is supplying humanitarian aid to Afghanistan without waiting for Taliban to come true on its well publicised benchmarks, India is trying for major powers to be awake to the sufferings being inflicted on people. This unique approach from a major power India could perhaps produce some positive outcome and also set an example for others to join India now and in similar future crisis situations. Prof Swaran Singh teaches at Jawaharlal Nehru University (New Delhi) and is president of Association of Asia Scholars (asiascholars.in)

Hijab is not about the freedom of choice

T

he row over hijab has been raging for over a month now. The fact that young women are protesting to assert their right to wear the hijab is interesting.

This is the 21st century and India's 75th year of Independence, so if young women who have grown up in a society that allows free flow of information and an active social media are seeking to go back in time, it is something that should disturb all. The controversy flared up when six students of a state government-run pre-university college in Udupi, who were wearing the hijab, were asked to leave the campus on January 1. The students addressed a press conference and the matter snowballed into a major issue. More Muslim students joined the protest, and to counter this, Hindu students started donning saffron scarves. Muslim students petitioned the Karnataka High

www.indianews.com.au

Court on January 31, seeking the right to the wear hijab in classrooms under Articles 14, 19 and 25 of the Constitution.

The court heard the case for the first time on February 8 and in its interim order restrained all students from wearing the hijab, saffron shawls, scarves and religious flags inside the classrooms. It is pertinent to mention here that the principal of the Udipi college, Rudre Gowda has said: "The institution did not have any rule on wearing the hijab because no one wore it to the classroom in the last 35 years. The students who came with the demand had the backing of some outsiders." The hijab row may have political and religious connections. It may be a part of a strategy for those trying to create a wedge in the society or a sinister activity to corner the country on the international stage as was

evident after Pakistan and the Organisation of Islamic Countries latched on to it. The timing of the controversy is also being questioned as Assembly elections in five states are on, with the Uttar Pradesh polls being regarded as the most critical of the five. The timeline of the controversy does point to some planned activity behind the scenes. And the fallout is that the controversy is gradually becoming a 'my religion-your religion' issue. The bracketing of the issue as being sought by the protesting Muslim students can be detrimental to the cause of women and their security. It is this that the courts, the government and the civil society need to understand. Making girls wear the hijab and burqa in schools and colleges is an attempt to further deepen the narrative that 'women / girls have to be wrapped up' and that

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

'covering' them up is for their own 'safety'. Does wrapping up prevent crimes against women? They don't. Crime statistics have repeatedly proven this.

patriarchy.

What is needed is the sensitisation of society so that the right and respectful treatment of women is ingrained in every young man. And to achieve this end, schools and colleges are the best places to make a start.

For millions of women across the country, the 'right to hijab' row is not about religious beliefs but is reflective of a deeper tussle within. It is about a conflict over whether to integrate or to stand out, whether to cover up or be attired as one wishes to be, and whether to wrap up every inch of the skin or just be decently dressed.

The uniform is a concept that brings a sense of equality, surpassing class, religious and social divisions. Any deviation in this is bound to create a sense of division in budding minds. Isn't it important to teach young people to respect the other gender? Now, if girls are wrapped up in the hijab, burqa or purdah, gender inequalities will only get deeper and reinforce the age-old belief that women are meek and need to be protected. For many, the hijab or burqa are symbols of

The fears are far too deeply embedded and the hijab controversy has in some way touched the raw nerve of women.

The conflict is between the freedom to express and the overwhelming sense of fear of being objectified by the other gender. It is about a tussle which has its roots in the thought that a woman's physiology is not about expressing it freely, but about 'sharam' (shame) and 'lehaaz' (manners).

24


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

$774 bn revenue opportunity for India from healthcare by 2030: Report New Delhi, February 23 (IANS): India has the potential to generate a staggering $774 billion revenue in the healthcare sector by 2030, suggests a new report on February 23. The report by Aspire Circle, a social impact leadership champion and advocate, showed that with an investment of $217 billion, the country can create 12 million jobs in healthcare and allied sectors, which can impact 1.5 billion lives by 2030. "Indian healthcare will become the second most attractive investment sector this decade, behind food, agri and agriTech but ahead of BFSI, financial inclusion & fintech," said Amit Bhatia, Founder of Aspire Circle

& Creator - Impact Future Project, in a statement. "Covid-19 has thrown open India's health infrastructure faultlines and both entrepreneurs and investors are on an epic mission to convert the crisis into an investment opportunity," he added. The report also spells out India's top ten outstanding investment ideas, being shaped by newage technologies, innovative business models, delivery platforms and regulatory environment: preventive and primary healthcare; pharma, drug, and vaccine manufacturing; screening, diagnostics, and testing; affordable healthcare and operational efficiency;

medical tourism; e-healthcare and telecare; health insurance and innovative impact financing; e-pharmacies; medical workforce education and skilling; and gene therapy. According to Bhatia, the top 10 ideas in the research can lead annual investment growth from $52 to $179bn between 2020 and 2030 and grow related revenues from $183 to $610bn. "These top 10 ideas will serve and impact 1.5 bn Indians, create 12 million cumulative jobs and grow the overall sector to a colossal USD 774 billion by 2030 - an incredible promise worth nurturing," he said.

Act of intimidation: Australian PM condemns Chinese navy

IANS

from a People's Liberation Army Navy vessel illuminated a P-8A Poseidon surveillance aircraft last Thursday when the Chinese ship was sailing east through the Arafura sea, the report said. On Sunday, Morrison characterised the episode as "a reckless and irresponsible act that should not have occurred".

New Delhi, February 20 (IANS): Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has declared a laser incident involving a Royal Australian Air Force aircraft last week is an "act of intimidation" by China, the Guardian reported. Australia's defence department reported a laser emanating

The February 17 incident in waters to the north of Australia followed days of domestic political contention about national security. Morrison said Australia would be "making our views very clear" to the Chinese government through defence and diplomatic channels. Morrison said China needed to

provide an explanation "as to why a military vessel in Australia's exclusive economic zone would undertake such an act – such a dangerous act", the report added. "I can see it no other way than an act of intimidation, one that was unprovoked, unwarranted," Morrison told reporters on February 20. "Australia will never accept such acts of intimidation." With a federal election looming, Morrison is attempting to paint his political opponents as being weak on national security, and has declared the authoritarian regime in Beijing wants opposition Labor to replace the Coalition in the coming contest.

HEALTH

Global Covid caseload tops 429.4 mn Washington, February 24 (IANS): The global coronavirus caseload has topped 429.4 million, while the deaths have surged to more than 5.91 million and vaccinations to over 10.42 billion, according to Johns Hopkins University.

In its latest update on February 24 morning, the University's Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) revealed that the current global caseload and the death toll stood at 429,415,033 and 5,916,373, respectively, while the total number of vaccine doses administered has increased to 10,424,448,190. The US continues to be the worsthit country with the world's highest number of cases and deaths at 78,730,899 and 941,890, according to the CSSE. The second worst hit country in terms of cases is India ( 42,867,031 infections and 512,622 deaths),

followed by Brazil (28,493,336 infections and 646,714 deaths).

The other countries with over 5 million cases are France (22,638,153), the UK (18,867,578), Russia (15,566,425), Germany (14,093,398), Turkey (13,762,181), Italy (12,603,758), Spain (10,914,105), Argentina (8,868,188), Iran (6,998,975), the Netherlands (6,242,767), Colombia (6,054,307), Poland (5,602,680), Mexico (5,436,566) and Indonesia (5,350,902), the CSSE figures showed. The nations with a death toll of over 100,000 are Russia (340,872), Mexico (316,492), Peru (209,808), the UK (209,808), Italy (153,764), Indonesia (147,025), Colombia (138,364), France (138,502), Iran (138,502), Argentina (125,775), Germany (121,963), Ukraine (112,173) and Poland (112,173).

India logs 14,148 fresh Covid-19 cases, 302 deaths

New Delhi, February 24 (IANS): India reported 14,148 fresh Covid-19 infections in 24 hours, the Union Health Ministry said on February 24 morning. A total of 302 new Covid-related fatalities were also recorded in the same time span taking the death toll to 5,12,622.

Meanwhile, the active Covid cases have reduced to 1,48,359 which constitute 0.35 per cent of the country's total positive cases. The recovery of 30,009 patients in 24 hours has increased the cumulative tally to 4,22,19,896. Consequently, India's recovery rate stands at 98.46 per cent, said the Ministry. Also in the same period, a total

of 11,55,147 tests were carried out across the country. India has so far conducted over 76.35 crore cumulative tests.

Meanwhile, the weekly positivity rate currently stands at 1.60 percent while daily positivity rate has risen to 1.22 percent. With the administration of over 30.49 lakh vaccine doses in 24 hours, India's Covid inoculation coverage reached 176.52 crore as of February 24 morning. This has been achieved through 2,01,49,530 sessions. More than 10.79 crore balance and unutilised Covid vaccine doses are still available with the states and UTs, according to the ministry.

NSW and Victoria scrap most curbs Australia's Covid cases continue to rise ahead of border reopening IANS

hospitals soon.

Premiers from both states have also flagged that the recommendation to work from home will be lifted, with masks mandates to be removed shortly.

In NSW, 9,243 new Covid-19 cases were recorded on February 18, with 1,381 hospitalisations and 92 people in intensive care. Victoria recorded 6,935 new Covid-19 cases on February 18, a significant drop from 8,501 new cases on February 17.

Sydney/Melbourne, February 18 (IANS): New South Wales (NSW) and Victoria, two of the hardest hit states in Australia by the Covid-19 pandemic, have eased most of the restrictions on February 18 as new cases continued to drop. In Victoria, from 6 p.m. on February 18, density limits at hospitality and entertainment venues were removed, dance floors can reopen and QR code check-ins will no longer be

www.indianews.com.au

required in retail settings, schools and many workplaces, reports Xinhua news agency. In NSW, from 12.01 a.m. on February 18, singing and dancing were back across most venues; the density limits were scrapped, and QR check-ins are now only required for nightclubs and music festivals with more than 1,000 attendees. Non-urgent elective surgery will also return across all NSW public

The hospitalisation has grown by 50 to 451, but compared to the previous numbers, hospitalisations remained below 500. Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews said the state's Omicron wave had passed its peak, allowing residents to begin moving "back to normal". "We have to wait and see if the numbers continue to fall, in terms of the number of people in hospital, we want the trend to be maintained," he said.

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

Canberra, February 20 (IANS): Australia reported more than 15,000 new Covid-19 cases and 33 deaths on February 20, one day before the country's borders reopen to fully vaccinated tourists almost after two years since the onset of the pandemic.

IANS

Australia's strict border restrictions were set to ease from February 22 at this point, allowing international tourists to enter the country for the first time since March 2020, reports Xinhua news agency.

were expected to land in Australia within 24 hours of the border reopening.

Prior to the coronavirus pandemic, tourism was worth about A$60 billion ($43 billion) a year to the Australian economy, employing more than 650,000 people.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on February 20 the number of arrivals would increase as a result of a A$40 million Tourism Australia advertising campaign.

The industry has been hit hard by the pandemic, with international visitor numbers falling by about 99 percent. More than 50 international flights

International arrivals will have to prove that they are either fully vaccinated against COVID-19 or have a valid medical exemption.

"I know the tourism industry has been getting ready. I know the airlines have been getting ready. So all the readiness puts us in a strong position to go forward from tomorrow," he said.

25


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

Russia's No 1 tennis player Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova urges end to war with Ukraine IANS

cannot justify violence, this takes away the future not only from us but also from our children - I am confused and do not know how to help in this situation," she said. "I'm just an athlete who plays tennis, I am not a politician, not a public figure, I have no experience in this, I can only publicly disagree with these decisions taken and openly talk about it - stop the violence, stop the war."

London, Feb 28 (IANS): Russia's highest-ranked women's singles tennis player, Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova has called for an end to her country's war amid the continued invasion of Ukraine. The 30-year-old, who won a gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics last year, wrote a long post, clarifying her stand on the ongoing dispute between the two countries. "I've been playing tennis since I was a kid, I have represented Russia all my life, this is my home

and my country - but now I am in complete fear, as are my friends and family," the world No 14 wrote in a post on her Twitter page. The winner of 12 singles titles on the WTA Tour and five singles titles on the ITF Circuit, has categorically said that personal ambitions or political motives cannot justify violence. "But I am not afraid to clearly state my position, I am against war and violence, personal ambitions or political motives

The sports world has vehemently condemned the military action in Ukraine and governing bodies have been addressing their own position, with even individual players making their own stand against the war including Daniil Medvedev, Andrey Rublev and now Pavlyuchenkova. The 30-year-old won a gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics last year, as did Rublev as they competed in the mixed doubles together, but they couldn't do it under their official flag as Russia was banned from the tournament, instead, they represented the Russian Olympic Committee.

Sophie Devine slams century as New Zealand Women thrash Australia by nine wickets in warm-up

IANS

Alana King (1/48) claimed the only wicket for the Aussies, removing Suzie Bates (63), who had already set the chase up for the White Ferns with her captain. Devine was joined by Amelia Kerr (92 not out from 75 balls), as the tournament hosts smashed an astonishing 48 boundaries. Earlier, Hannah Rowe's 4/49 ruined Australia's middle-order charge in the death overs. Rowe removed Tahlia McGrath for a duck, and curtailed Ash Gardner's charge, albeit after making 60 from 32 balls. Australia fell three balls short of batting their allotted overs, posting 321.

Lincoln (New Zealand), March 1 (IANS): Sophie Devine smashed a 117-ball unbeaten 161 as New Zealand Women made a huge statement, defeating six-time ICC Women's World Cup champions Australia by nine wickets with 41 balls to spare in a warm-up game at the Bert Sutcliffe Oval here on Tuesday. The White Ferns top-order had the Meg Lanning-led Australia

rattled at Lincoln Green, with skipper Devine leading the way in a chase of a mammoth 322. Devine sent an ominous warning to the rest of the field, finishing with an unbeaten 161 from just 117 balls, chasing down the massive target inside 44 overs. While Lanning tried nine of her bowlers, no one was able to stem the flow of runs.

Six of Australia's bowlers went for over a run a ball, as New Zealand coasted to victory. Brief scores: Australia Women 321 in 49.3 overs (Alyssa Healy 64, Meg Lanning 87, Beth Mooney 55, Ashleigh Gardner 60; Hannah Rowe 4/49, Sophie Devine 2/44) lost to New Zealand Women 325/1 in in 43.1 overs (Suzie Bates 63, Sophie Devine 161, Amelia Kerr 92) by nine wickets.

Russia-Ukraine war: FIDE moves Chess Olympiad out of Russia

Chennai, Feb 26 (IANS): Owing to the deteriorating geopolitical situation, the International Chess Federation or FIDE has decided to move the 44th Chess Olympiad and all other official competitions planned from Russia. The other events that are moved away from Russia are the first chess Olympiad for People with Disabilities and the 93rd FIDE

www.indianews.com.au

Congress, FIDE said.

This year, the Congress should also include an electoral procedure, since the first term of the current FIDE President Arkady Dvorkovich is coming to an end. Dvorkovich was elected in Batumi (Georgia), in September 2018. The decision was taken at FIDE's

extraordinary meeting held on February 25. The Chess Olympiad, in which teams from approximately 190 countries compete for two weeks, was supposed to take place in Moscow from July 26 to August 8. FIDE is already working on finding alternative dates and locations for these events.

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

SPORTS

It is India's moment to host Chess Olympiad: GM Nigel Short, FIDE VP Chennai, Feb 27 (IANS): With Prime Minister Narendra Modi greeting Indian chess players on their achievements and young Grandmasters (GM) emerging at regular intervals, it is high time India hosts the Chess Olympiad, said a senior official of International Chess Federation (FIDE). He was referring to India's interest to host the 44th Chess Olympiad that has been moved out of Russia owing to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. "Several other countries too have shown interest in hosting the Olympiad. It is too early to say anything on the possible successful bidder," British GM and FIDE Vice President Nigel Short told IANS. According to him, it is the right moment for India to make a successful bid and host the biennial team chess event. "India hosting the Olympiad will be good for several reasons. It is a major chess power with about 75 GMs. Prime Minister Modi congratulates young Indian GM Praggnanandhaa on his win against world chess champion Magnus Carlsen and the Indian team on their achievements," Short added. "The All India Chess Federation (AICF) is bidding to host the 44th Chess Olympiad that has been moved out of Russia. The event's budget will be about Rs 75 crore," Bharat Singh Chauhan, secretary, told IANS. India at some point of time will be hosting the Olympiad and why not now, Short added. "One of the areas that India lacks is quality GM tournaments. The Open tournaments that are held in Chennai, Delhi, Mumbai, Goa, Bhubaneswar,Ahmedabad and others get GMs having a rating in the range of 2500 ELO points. What we need is tournaments like the Tata Steel Open that is held annually in Kolkata," International Master and Secretary of Chess Players Forum V.Saravanan told IANS. He said many top Indian players have expressed their desire to participate in round-robin tournaments among themselves. "We had not had a single tournament in this country with regular time control where former world champion V. Anand played with Harikrishna, Vidit Gujrathi, Praggnanandhaa, Adhiban, Sasikiran, Nihal Sarin and others. That is what we need to popularise the sport and give quality tournaments to our own GMs," Saravanan said. Terming AICF lacking vision he said, the Indian federation has a policy of harming the game by not holding round-robin tournaments in India.

IANS

According to Saravanan, the sport can be popularised only by giving publicity and making our elite players as showpieces. "If you do things like the Olympiad hopefully, the quality participation which is a must from all countries will make the game very popular. The CPF (Chess Players Forum) will be very happy if that happens," Saravanan said. While Short is silent on the other countries that are showing interest in hosting the Olympiad, it is learnt some Arab nations have expressed interest. The Chess Olympiad is a biennial team event, in which teams from approximately 190 countries compete for two weeks. "Around 2,500 persons -- chess players, coaches, team managers, chess officials from different countries, journalists and others -- will arrive at the city where the Chess Olympiad is held," Short added. With star hotels starved of guests due to Covid-19 ban, the Olympiad will be a God sent for the Indian hoteliers to beef up their room occupancy, food and beverage revenue. If India wins the bid, then the Chess Olympiad will be the second major global chess competition that will be held in the country after 2013. In 2013, the World Chess Championship was held between the then defending champion India's V. Anand and the then Challenger Magnus Carlsen from Norway. While FIDE has been holding online Chess Olympiads after Covid-19 kicked in, the physical chess Olympiad was supposed to take place in Moscow from July 26 to August 8. However, on Friday, the International Chess Federation or FIDE decided to move the Chess Olympiad and all other official competitions planned from Russia owing to the deteriorating geopolitical situation. The other events that have been moved away from Russia are the first chess Olympiad for People with Disabilities and the 93rd FIDE Congress, FIDE said. This year, the Congress should also include an electoral procedure, since the first term of the current FIDE president Arkady Dvorkovich is coming to an end. Dvorkovich was elected in Batumi (Georgia), in September 2018.

26


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

3rd T20I: India beat Sri Lanka by 6 wickets, complete 3-0 sweep

IANS

After winning the toss and opting to bat first, a fighting fifty from skipper Dasun Shanaka (74 not out off 38) helped Sri Lanka post 146/5 in 20 overs. The likes of Avesh Khan (2/23), Mohammed Siraj (1/22), Harshal Patel (1/29), Ravi Bishnoi (1/32) picked wickets at regular intervals to keep Sri Lanka on the backfoot before Shanaka played a solid knock to help his post a fighting total. In reply, Shreyas Iyer continued his sizzling form and smashed third consecutive fifty (73 not out off 45) of the series while the likes of Ravindra Jadeja (22 not out off 15), Deepak Hooda (21 off 16), Sanju Samson (18 off 12) also contributed well with the bat as India chased down the target in 16.5 overs. Lahiru Kumara (2/28) was the most successful bowler for Sri lanka. Dharamsala, Feb 27 (IANS): India produced a clinical all-round performance to beat Sri Lanka by six wickets in the third T20I to complete the 3-0 clean sweep, at

the picturesque HPCA Stadium, here on Sunday. With this win, India extended their winning streak to 12 matches in T20Is.

Brief scores: Sri Lanka 146/5 in 20 overs (Dasun Shanaka 74 not out, Dinesh Chandimal 25; Avesh Khan 2/23) lost to India (Shreyas Iyer 73 not out off 45, Ravindra Jadeja 22 not out; Lahiru Kumara 2/28) by 6 wickets

Nikhat, Nitu clinch gold medals at 73rd Strandja Memorial Boxing IANS

start and looked in a complete control in the remaining part of the bout as she landed some sharp scoring punches before completing a convincing win. Earlier, Nitu, who hails from Haryana, made a cautious start and took time to settle down. She maintained distance and tested the strength of Italy's young boxer Prisciandro. There was hardly any power-hitting but the contest was more engaging in the close second round with both the boxers exchanging the punches.

New Delhi, Feb 27 (IANS): Indian boxers Nikhat Zareen and Nitu clinched gold medals at the 73rd Strandja Memorial Boxing Tournament in Sofia, Bulgaria on Sunday. According to information received here, Nikhat bagged her second gold medal at the Europe's oldest international boxing tournament with a 4-1 win in the women's 52kg final. She had previously won the Strandja Memorial title in 2019. Nitu outpunched the reigning Youth World Championships bronze medallist Italy's Erika Prisciandro 5-0 without breaking a sweat in the women's 48kg final. With Nandini also finishing on the podium in the +81kg category and signing off with a bronze medal, the Indian contingent concluded

www.indianews.com.au

their campaign with three medals at the tournament, which was part of India's first exposure trip this year. Up against Ukraine's Tetiana Kob, Nikhat did not have the best of starts to the match as her experienced opponent went aggressive from the word go. The 34-year-old former World Championships bronze medallist Kob used all her experience to push Nikhat on the back foot. But as the bout progressed, the Indian grew in confidence and fought back well to secure a 4-1 lead in the opening round. The 25-year-old Telangana boxer Nikhat, who has been in a red-hot form in the tournament and beat Tokyo Olympics silver medallist Turkey's Buse Naz Cakiroglu in the semi-finals, made a strong

High on confidence, the twotime youth world champion Nitu, who sent the former world championships silver medallist Hanna Okhota of Ukraine packing in the last encounter, was more aggressive between the two and surprised her Italian opponent with a combination of punches and her speed. Having titled the first two rounds in her favour, Nitu made Prisciandro work hard for a point in the last three minutes and secured the gold medal comfortably, winning a lop-sided bout by unanimous margin. The prestigious tournament, the first from the Golden Belt Series and a testing event for International Boxing Association's World Boxing Tour format, witnessed thrilling action taking place in the presence of top boxers from 36 countries around the world, including strong boxing nations such as Kazakhstan, Italy, Russia and France.

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

SPORTS

Mandhana's 66 powers India Women to 81-run win over West Indies in warm-up Rangiora (New Zealand), March 1 (IANS): India batting stalwart Smriti Mandhana compiled a 67-ball 66 in the second warm-up game ahead of the ICC Women's Cricket World Cup as the last edition's runners-up defeated West Indies Women by 81 runs here on Tuesday. After a narrow two-run win against South Africa on February 27, India thrashed the West Indies on Tuesday, with Deepti Sharma (51), skipper Mithali Raj (30) and Yastika Bhatia (42) coming good to compile 258 in the allotted 50 overs.

Tried at No.5 after opening in the first fixture, Yastika Bhatia made another start of 42, with captain Mithali Raj compiling 30. After her century in the first fixture, Harmanpreet Kaur was rested from batting.

Stafanie Taylor tried a number of options, also finishing with figures of 0/27 from five overs. Cherry-Ann Fraser, Karishma Ramharack and Hayley Matthews finished with a pair of wickets each.

Pooja Vastrakar then scalped three wickets while Meghna Singh got two as the Stafanie Taylor-led West Indies were restricted to 177/9 in the warm-up game.

After playing their last match at Lincoln Green, the West Indies found going tough with the new ball on a tricky surface. Jhulan Goswami caused headaches (0/14 from eight overs), though tied up the West Indies top order as wickets fell at the other end.

Mandhana seemed to have recovered from the blow she suffered on the head in the first warm-up game as she sizzled with a polished half-century which came with the help of seven boundaries and at a strike rate of nearly 100.

Pooja Vastrakar (3/21) led the way with the ball, as the likes of Meghna Singh, Deepti Sharma and Rajeshwari Gayakwad collected a pair of wickets each. Hayley Matthews (44) looked in good touch as Shemaine Campbelle passed fifty.

Showing no inhibitions of the head-knock just two days earlier at the same ground, the left-hander played a composed innings as she set the platform for the middle order, with Deepti Sharma also reaching fifty. Seemingly set to keep the No.3 spot, Sharma ticked things over in spite of hitting just the solitary boundary.

Brief scores: India Women 258 in 50 overs (Smriti Mandhana 66, Deepti Sharma 51, Mithali Raj 30, Yastika Bhatia 42; Hayley Matthews 2/47, Cherry-Ann Fraser 2/24) beat West Indies Women 177/9 in 50 overs (Hayley Matthews 44, Shemaine Campbelle 63; Pooja Vastrakar 3/21, Meghna Singh 2/30, Rajeshwari Gayakwad 2/39, Deepti Sharma 2/31) by 81 runs.

Chennai, Feb 26 (IANS): The Indian chess federation is bidding to host the 44th Chess Olympiad that has been moved out of Russia, said a senior official of All India Chess Federation (AICF).

IANS

India bidding to host Chess Olympiad 2022 "We are bidding to host the Chess Olympiad this time. The event budget will be about Rs 75 crore," Bharat Singh Chauhan, Secretary, AICF told IANS. If India wins the bid then the Chess Olympiad will be the second major global chess competition that would be held in the country after 2013. In 2013 the World Chess Championship was held between the then Defending Champion India's V. Anand and the then Challenger Magnus Carlsen from Norway. The Chess Olympiad is a biennial team event, in which teams from approximately 190 countries compete for two weeks. The physical chess Olympiad was supposed to take place in Moscow from July 26 July to August 8. However, on Friday, the International Chess Federation or FIDE decided to move the Chess Olympiad and all other official

competitions planned from Russia. The other events that are moved away from Russia are the first chess Olympiad for People with Disabilities and the 93rd FIDE Congress, FIDE said. This year, the Congress should also include an electoral procedure, since the first term of the current FIDE President Arkady Dvorkovich is coming to an end. Dvorkovich was elected in Batumi (Georgia), in September 2018. FIDE is already working on finding alternative dates and locations for these events.

27


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

CULTURE

from across 'Devotee' Christians in Dancers India to take part in Kerala begin Easter lent 41st Natyanjali festival IANS

Thiruvananthapuram, Feb 28 (IANS): Traditional Christians - the ones who belong to the yesteryears culture and tradition have begun to observe the Easter lent, starting from Sunday. According to Census report, of the 33.4 million Kerala population, Christians number 61.41 lakh (29.94 lakh males and 31.47 lakh females). Of this the Catholics constitute around 50 per cent, followed by almost a dozen Churches practising various rights and for all the observing of the Easter lent is more or less the same. The most Orthodox among the Christians observe the generally accepted 50 day lent when they turn vegan and the lent ends on April 17, with the Easter celebrations. "Gone are the days when the lent was strictly observed when people used to even forego milk in their morning bed coffee/

tea and even the humble curd was also not taken. In my younger days, meat, fish and egg never used to be there on the dining tables," said 85-year-old Annamma Mathew. Consequent to the arrival of the Covid pandemic since March 2020, the previous two years, Easter prayers were a low key affair.

"We all wish with the Covid numbers coming down and the Kerala government lifting the Covid protocols, all are waiting to return to the Churches as at some Churches there are prayers sessions -- everyday as part of observing the Easter lent," said retired teacher Susan Thomas. But middle aged homemaker and mother of 2 teenagers, Gloriamma is not that pleased the way the new generations approach towards Easter. "The world has changed rapidly in all spheres and divinity has become a casualty. I seriously doubt if the new generation is really serious in observing rituals. I feel, my generation will perhaps be the last where rituals are observed the way my parents and their generation observed rituals," said Gloriamma.

A 25 year old Christian youth made no bones of his outlook towards rituals.

IANS

"Personally, I feel and what I have been observing are those in my age group have a lot of questions to ask when it comes to observing the traditional rituals. It increased, especially in the past two years, when the pandemic ruled the roost, when even places of worship remained locked for months, reducing religion to be nothing but a myth. The world is changing, so I don't think anyone needs to be blamed as it's not an easy task to be chained to age old customs," said the youth. However, what Kerala Christians have witnessed is while there may not be much enthusiasm to undertake the entire 50 day lent, the recent phenomenon is most of them makes sure that they observe the rituals during the Holy Week (which is believed to be Jesus Christ's last week and ends with his resurrection which is celebrated as Easter) which this year starts from April 10. The important days during the week includes Monday Thursday, Good Friday and Easter Sunday, when the non-vegetarian dishes return to the dining tables.

Chennai, Feb 27 (IANS): The 41st edition of the annual Natyanjali festival where dancers from across the country will participate will be held in Tamil Nadu's Chidambaram from March 1, a statement said. The festival will be held on the premises of Rajah Sir Annamalai Chettiar Trust in Chidambaram, the Secretary of Natyanjali trust said in a statement, adding that dancers from across the country would participate and

present classical dance forms like Bharatnatyam, Kuchipudi, Mohiniattam, and Kathak. The event will commence with devotional music, followed by a dance performance by Anusha Raj of Mysuru. On Maha Shivratri day, the programme will begin at 6.15 p.m. and go on till 11 p.m. About 500 artistes including solo dancers and dance troupes will participate in the festival, the statement said.

Hunar Haat provided employment opportunities to 8 lakh artisans Hyderabad, Feb 27 (IANS): Hunar Haat has provided employment opportunities to about 8 lakh artisans and craftsmen in different parts of the country during the last seven years, Union Minister for Minority Affairs Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi said here on Sunday. He along with minister for culture, tourism and development of north eastern region, G. Kishan Reddy inaugurated the 37th Hunar Haat here. More than 700 artisans and craftsmen from more than 30 states and union territories are participating in the Hunar Haat being organised at NTR Stadium, Indira Park. The fair will continue till March 6. Naqvi claimed that Hunrat Haat has proved to be a reliable brand of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's vision of self-reliant India, swadeshi to self-dependence and vocal for local. He said Hunar Haat has become a valuable partner in preservation and promotion of the heritage of artisans and craftsmen. He claimed that for the first time since independence the government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi is working in a mission mode to promote swadeshi heritage. As a result, traditional arts and crafts were revived, lakhs of families dependent on them got an opportunity to display and sell

www.indianews.com.au

their products and thus they were linked to the market. As part of Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav, Hunar Haats will also be organised in New Delhi, Mysuru, Guwahati, Pune, Ahmedabad, Bhopal, Patna, Mumbai, Jammu, Chennai, Chandigarh, Agra, Prayagraj, Goa, Jaipur, Bengaluru, Kota, Sikkim, Srinagar, Leh, Shillong, Ranchi, Agartala and other places in the coming days. Kishan Reddy said Hunar Haat reflects unity in diversity as artisans and craftsmen from various parts of the country come together to showcase their products. Stating that small artisans were worst hit by Covid-19 pandemic during the last two years, he said Hunar Haat will be a great help to them.

Uttarakhand, West Bengal, Manipur, Goa, Puducherry, Chhattisgarh, Telangana, Chandigarh and Haryana are participating in the Hunar Haat in Hyderabad. These artisans and craftsmen have brought with them rare handmade indigenous products made of clay, wood, iron, brass, marble, glass etc.

Mahalakshmi Iyer, Jr. Mahmood, Mohit Khanna, Bhupinder Singh Bhuppi, Rekha Raj, Upsana Singh, Nooran Sisters, Priya Mallick, Gunjan Saxena, Rani Indrani, Ankita Pathak, Ritesh Mishra will

perform in the Hunar Haat. Telangana's home minister Mohammed Mahmood Ali, MP Suresh Reddy, MLA Raghunandan Rao and others attended the inaugural ceremony. IANS

Traditional dishes from different regions of the country, circus and different cultural and musical programmes of renowned artists of the country are major attractions of Hunar Haat. It is also showcasing the history and the role played by great freedom fighters of the country. Renowned artists of the country such as Pankaj Udhas, Altaf Raja, Sudesh Bhosle, Suresh Wadekar,

He said he was glad to learn that Hunar Haat will be organised in 75 major cities across the country as part of Azadi ka Amrit Mahotsav. Claiming that Covid vaccination drive is continuing at a rapid pace across the country, he said this has improved economic activity and people are able to carry on with their business and routine activity. Artisans and craftsmen from Assam, Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Gujarat, Ladakh, JammuKashmir, Punjab, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Jharkhand, Nagaland, Meghalaya, Delhi, Maharashtra,

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

28


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

BOOKS & LITERATURE

From hero to anti-hero: The fictional transformation of Vladimir Putin I n his initial stint in power, he was lauded for stabilising his country and restoring its great power status after the chaos and drift of the 1990s. Later, Russian President Vladimir Putin ended up facing criticism for the same reason. People may adulate him or despise him following his recent actions in Ukraine, but they cannot ignore him.

Initially perceived (in the Western world at least) as a reliable partner shoring up Russia -- an acknowledged power across two continents and still influential across the world -- he began to be seen, from one side of the political spectrum, as a defiant maverick, an autocrat, then a tyrant, and now, following the Ukraine invasion, as a warmonger. Others may see him as a prominent figure resisting the hegemony of the sole superpower, and its allies, who are seeking to impose their own values in a disparate world. Putin's depiction in fiction, mostly of the English-speaking world, has seen him move from a valuable support/mentor figure to a spy-turned-political mastermind, who, if not evil, is cold-blooded and definitely not nice as the Cold War seems certain to make a comeback with Russia striding back on to the world stage. In some Russian literature, subsequently translated into English, the references are wide-ranging, ranging from prophetic to the fantastic. Dissident, exiled writer Vladimir Voinovich's "Moscow 2042" (1986; English translation, 1987), which came out in the days when the Soviet Union showed no signs of its collapse a few years ahead, was uncannily prophetic in depicting a future "shrunken, post-Soviet Russia run by a former KGB spy who had been stationed in Germany". Putin, however, first appeared in accomplished US spy novelist Robert Littell's "The Company: A Novel of the CIA" (2002). The novel, which chronicles the

Cold War from its beginning down to its winding down (a brief hiatus only, as we would learn subsequently) in the aftermath of the Soviet collapse, through some of the key episodes -- the spy games in Berlin, the Bay of Pigs episode, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, and the 1991 coup against Mikhail Gorbachev, among others -- all from the American viewpoint, and featuring a legion of real-life characters, brings him on stage in the end. As some of the American operatives gather in Moscow to forestall the coup, and make sure it cannot recur, he is referred to as an up-and-coming politician. He appears in one scene -- silent and unsmiling -- and is tipped for support in his rise. Putin reappears in Henry Porter's "Brandenburg" (2005), a gritty espionage tale set in East Germany in the months before the fall of the Berlin Wall. East German art historian (and former spy) Rudi Rosenharte is hauled back into service by the Stasi to contact his former lover (now working for NATO) for some information. Our hero, who is a double agent, knows it is a ploy by his other masters -- MI6 and CIA -- to contact him for their needs, and as he juggles between his alliances, the Soviets get into the game too. A seemingly non-descript KGB lieutenant colonel, heading his service's Dresden base, makes an appearance, helping Rosenharte in various ways -- protecting him, giving him key information, and even intervening to free him from jail. If the description and designation were not enough, he is even identified as the future Russian leader. This Putin is also present at a seminal event -- the evening press conference where an East German minister jumped the gun on easing travel restrictions, triggering the massive crowds on both sides of the Berlin Wall that, in a few hours, brought down the nearly three-decade-old barrier. Subsequent appearances are not very complimentary.

IANS

Set in Russia of 2005, Martin Cruz Smith's "Stalin's Ghost" (2007) repeatedly refers to Putin, who was then beginning his second term, though he does not make an appearance himself. The book, part of the investigator Arkady Renko series, focuses on the country's faultlines -- war crimes in Chechnya, criminal elements in security agencies, and the rise of undesirable sentiments -- "under the former spy in the Kremlin". Charles Cumming's "The Trinity Six" (2011) swings the other way. Based on the premise that there was a sixth man in the infamous Cambridge spy ring -- five highly-placed MI6 officials spying for the Soviet Union -- it sees the hero, a Cold War historian, trying to expose the last traitor. Ranged against him are the Russian regime, headed by President "Sergey Platov", and British intelligence. Why does Platov want to keep this sixth man hidden? Because something -- which would not look too good on his record -happened between the two in East Germany, where he once served as a mid-ranking KGB officer! David R. Stokes' "Camelot's Cousin" (2013, 2nd edition) is based on a quite similar premise, except that here the hidden spy is from an Oxford version of the Cambridge ring -- and was a close adviser to President John F. Kennedy at various key moments, including the Cuban missile crisis.

to stop the name from coming out. Mayhem ensues. "Red Sparrow" (2013), by ex-CIA operative Jason Mathews, is a riveting account of the no-holdsbarred clandestine struggle between the CIA and SVR (the KGB's successor) -- reminiscent of the Cold War at its height -- as the Russians strive to unearth an American mole and the CIA tries to save him. Appearing a handful of times -- including bare-chested in the middle of a strenuous exercise (in line with his projected macho image) -- the omniscient Putin is not only fully aware of the activities of his spies, who, as ruthless as they may be, are on tenterhooks in his presence -quite like in Stalin's time. Putin is shown actively directing the covert operations and, in the end, arranging the brutal but effective contingency plan to ensure the traitor does not escape. He reappears in the sequels -"Palace of Treason" (2015), where the heroine comes under his gaze, and "The Kremlin's Candidate", where he orchestrates a plan to eliminate a high-ranking US official so that a Russian mole can fill the ensuing vacancy. Two books -- in 2006 and 2013 -- seemed to foretell the coming Ukraine crisis.

Naturally, but a little implausibly, the Russians, under Putin -- who, as an ex-spy, wants a secret to remain one -- will go to any end

In fact, "Third Empire: Russia Which Should Be" (2006), by Russian politician Mikhail Yuriev (who subsequently emigrated to the US), is set in 2054, when following World War III, early in the 21st century, there are five political entities left, including the Third Russian Empire,

convince many authors, especially from abroad to come down to Jaipur, in face of the Pandemic, Dalrymple, adds, "But I am quite surprised as there a lot of them willing to travel. We have a fantastic lineup of writers from India and abroad."

tour when everyone was forced to stay indoors. An author's worst enemy is the temptation to go to the different literary festivals, but they did not take place. I was therefore forced to work hard and now it is time to sit down and write this book."

The author, who wrote the evergreen 'City of Djinns: A Year in Delhi' is now heading towards the end of research for his forthcoming book 'The Golden Road'. He says, "Initially, it was not able to get to Cambodia and other places owing to the Pandemic, but ultimately it happened. During the lockdowns, many writers managed to do more than they had done in 10 years. I was back from 'The Anarchy'

Talking about narrative history, a space much unexplored here before he came in, Dalrymple remembers, "When I started 30 years ago, there was a weird absence. In other places like Britain and the US, non-fiction sells just as good as fiction unlike here. While people were winning major prizes in fiction not much was being done on the historical non-fiction side. That has changed now and we have

covering all of what was the Soviet Union, as well as all of Europe and Turkey, Israel, Lebanon, and Jordan too. This is due to the reign of "Vladimir II the Restorer", under whom Russia has emerged victorious over the US and NATO after a tumult in Ukraine, which, as a result of a "rebellion against the pro-Western government", has to separate its south and eastern part, which asks to become a part of Russia. The remaining part is also taken over, leading to a new Cold War, which sees Russia leave all international organisations and agreements, including the ones for nuclear non-proliferation. US thriller writer Tom Clancy, known for his Jack Ryan series, seemed to have anticipated the coming crisis too. In the posthumously-published "Command Authority" (2013), Russia, which had even joined NATO (!) to forestall Chinese aggression in "The Bear and the Dragon" (2000), returns to its Cold War villain status under ex-KGB president Valeri Volodin, who to regain control over ex-Soviet states provokes a crisis in first Estonia, and then a bigger one in Ukraine. There are more like Michael Honig's "The Senility of Vladimir P" (2016), set two decades in the future, where the eponymous leader is pensioned off to a dacha on the outskirts of Moscow and sporadically recalls his stint in power. Given the present happenings, the Russian leader is likely to appear in more works of fiction -- and not in a positive light.

Democracies must stand together on Ukraine: William Dalrymple A

uthor William Dalrymple has stressed on the need for all the democracies to stand together on war-torn Ukraine. "And we all thought colonialism was over... I am not an Indian nor can I tell anyone what to do, but it seems short-sighted when there is not a single word of condemnation from here on the invasion of Ukraine. It is extremely important for democracies to stand up. Who knows what is next? Russia may not afford a prolonged war but China can definitely," Dalrymple tells IANS. Author of 'The Anarchy', 'Return of a King', 'The Last Mughal' and the 'White Mughals' among others, Darlymple, who is the co-founder

www.indianews.com.au

and co-director of the Jaipur Literature Festival ( JLF) which returns to its physical avatar in March feels digital can never substitute any festival on the ground.

"Half the fun of any such festival is in meeting people, enjoying the weather, those parties in the evening and interacting with the speakers first-hand... something we all have missed immensely. Of course, one can still get an awful lot out of the digital as a speaker and as an attendee. It's obviously something that has blossomed over the last few years. This time, JLF will be seen in a hybrid avatar, offering the best of both the worlds." Admitting that it was not easy to

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

some wonderful new writers -there is a thirst for non-fiction. From leftists, right wingers to centralists, everyone is writing."

29


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

TRAVEL

Odisha paving the way for eco retreats in India

C

limate change in recent years has been extreme with harsh winters being extended to extremely hot summer weather. It's also inspiring to see people taking the initiative to make the world a better place to live by making a conscious decisions.

Odisha’s bountiful historical and architectural heritage.

Creating an opportunity to live in an environmentally friendly manner, Odisha paves the way for eco-retreats in India, for an environmentally friendly lifestyle.

“Odisha’s eco-retreat is about more than just ancient monuments and landmarks; it’s also about outdoor living on the beach, water sports, and making conscious decisions. Internal discussions have been taking place to replicate the eco-retreat in the market in India,” said Samit Garg, Founder, E Factor Experiences Ltd.

The state has set up an eco resort on the idyllic Ramchandi Beach for some great glamping (glamorous camping). Fall asleep to the sounds of waves and wake up to a panoramic view of the ocean. The glam camp promises more enthralling experiences of

While camping is already quite environmentally friendly, there are ways to make it even more so. The eco-retreat in Konark made certain that their camping equipment designs were eco friendly. From cleaning supplies to personal care bamboo

toothbrushes, and dry grass dustbin the sustainable options were all around.

including adrenaline-inducing water sports, ATV rides, beach volleyball and archery.

Offering an unparalleled experience, visitors are treated to cultural performances, guided tours to nearby destinations of nature, culture, historic and architectural importance, and other recreational activities

“Travelers must visit the Sun Temple, Konark Museum, Baulkham Sanctuary, and the Golden Beach in Puri which has been recently re-certified as a Blue Flag Beach. Guests interested in art and crafts can

Reigniting travel recovery efforts in India and South Africa IANS

W

The campaign celebrates a community of achievers and reinforces the brand's commitment to guests' holistic sense of well-being around the clock by using the unifying line "We are All Risers."

he emotion and spirit of adventure, is a sentiment unique to every individual. For some, adventure may mean jumping off the highest commercial bungee in the world at Bloukrans Bridge or going shark-cage diving in KwaZuluNatal, whereas for another it could be the thrill of a scenic road trip across the stunning Garden Route or a night of stargazing in beautiful Knysna. To still some, it could be about discovering the origin of humans by exploring the Cradle of Mankind, interacting with indigenous tribes like the Zulus and learning about their culture or retracing Nelson Mandela's life journey. Well-timed with the easing of international travel restrictions in India, the "More & More"

www.indianews.com.au

campaign is expected to increase summer outbound traffic to South Africa and contribute to the recovery of tourism sectors in both countries. Localized for Indian audiences, the campaign aims to highlight the variety and diversity of experiences that South Africa has to offer, ranging from 3000+ adventure activities to exciting culinary experiences and more, across its 9 provinces. The campaign is crafted to speak to every type of traveller including millennials, families, solo explorers, active lifestyle seekers and couples. South African Tourism, Hub Head – Middle East, India and South-East Asia, Neliswa Nkani said, “Having a constant finger

on the pulse of Indian travellers has made us sure of one thing – when on vacation, they want to experience it all! They could be wine connoisseurs one day, and history buffs the next. South Africa is a perfect match since we offer the best of the world in one place. From shark-cage diving and glamping to serene wellness retreats, we want Indian thrillseekers to keep coming back for More & More.” Prior to the pandemic, India was the 8th largest international market for South African Tourism. India remains a core market for South African Tourism globally and holds much promise in the coming years, especially given that Indian travellers are the international largest consumers of adventure in South Africa.

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

IANS

Travel with a focus on wellness estin Hotels & Resorts, a member of Marriott Bonvoy's international portfolio of 30 extraordinary hotel brands, launched a wellnessfocused campaign, Let's Rise, to encourage both locals and travelers to regain control and improve their well-being while travelling.

T

visit Saharanpur, a heritage crafts village where every household is an art gallery in itself. This luxurious retreat by the beachside is surely an indulgent holiday space, away from the hustlebustle of the city life to rediscover yourself,” says Sachin R Jadhav, Director Tourism, Govt. of Odisha.

The video focuses on three of the brand’s six wellness pillars, Move Well, Eat Well, and Sleep Well, with the goal of lifting the pandemic-weary spirits, bodies, and minds through the power of dynamic movement, restful sleep, and balanced nutritious meals. Kareena embraces a holistic well-being lifestyle with Westin’s signature brand programmes in the video, with the stunning backdrop of The Westin Mumbai Garden City, by staying active at the WestinWORKOUT® Fitness studio, revitalising the body and mind with restorative sleep Heavenly® Bed and Heavenly® Bath, and enjoying the nourishing offerings from the Eat Well menu. Kareena Kapoor Khan said of her collaboration with Westin, “In this crazy world we live in, I’ve tried to create a balance for myself and my family.” I strive to live an active lifestyle, eat a healthy

IANS

diet, and give my mind and body adequate rest and respect so that I can always put my best foot forward in everything I do. That’s why I’m honoured to be the face and voice of Westin’s ‘Let’s Rise’ campaign, a concept that resonates with me. “I’m looking forward to the collaboration.” The signature Heavenly Bed, which is uniquely designed to revitalise the body and mind, awaits guests at The Westin Sohna Resort & Spa. The resort also offers signature brand amenities like the Sleep Well Lavendar Balm and a thoughtfully chef curated Sleep Well Menu with dishes that help enhance the quality of sleep. There is an on-site yoga practitioner who can help with relaxation and meditation techniques to reduce insomnia and promote uninterrupted sleep. The Westin “Let’s Rise” Campaign video is now available online, and it will be distributed across nine Westin properties in India, as well as the brand’s website and social media.

30


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

TRAVEL

Destinations Indians can travel to without an RT-PCR test A

ccording to Agoda’s recent ‘India-genous Travel’ survey, 39 percent of Indians anticipate travelling internationally in 2022, while its Return to Travel survey found that their biggest concern to travel internationally was understanding restrictions and vaccination or quarantine requirements. Countries are now taking tentative steps to reopen borders, easing their entry restrictions and opening their doors to international tourists, including Indians. Fully vaccinated passengers flying to these select countries are no longer required to present a negative RT-PCR test upon arrival at the airport. So, what are you waiting for? It’s time to pack your bags and set out for that much-needed vacation. Here’s a list of exciting off-beat destinations that will come in handy when planning your itineraries. Egypt – The Gift of the Nile Travellers vaccinated with Covishield or AstraZeneca can now fly to Egypt without an RTPCR test. All you need to do is fill out a health declaration form and you’re all set. While visiting the land of the Great Pyramid of Giza, don’t forget to also check out the Mediterranean and the Red Sea, and the famous Khan el-Khalili market. Sailing down the Nile River on a felucca, a traditional wooden sailboat, and the hot air balloon ride at Luxor are also must-dos. Travellers can also visit the Sahara el Beyda, the white desert national park, or travel to Hurghada to experience Egypt’s expansive underwater marine life – you can take a submarine ride or even opt to go scuba diving. If you want to soak in some of the intricate cultures of the country, you should definitely visit the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. While in Egypt, travellers can choose from a host of Agoda accommodation to stay at: Concorde El Salam Hotel Cairo Kempinski Nile Hotel Al Masa Hotel Bahrain - The Middle East’s Best

www.indianews.com.au

Kept Secret This island country situated on the Persian Gulf is now allowing tourists to enter without a predeparture PCR test irrespective of their vaccination status. There are so many exciting things for travellers to see and do in Bahrain. Visit the famous and ancient Al Jasra House and Al Bahrain site museum to indulge in the rich history and civilization of this place, wander through Manama Souq for some amazing spices, souvenirs and delicious sweets, and try out traditional Bahraini cuisines such as Machboos, meat or fish served with fragrant rice cooked in a spicy broth or Muhammar sweet rice with dates, across the island. Do spare some time to dive into the world’s largest underwater theme park, Dive Bahrain, and for kayaking and other water sports at Nurana islands. While in Bahrain, travellers can choose from a host of Agoda accommodation to stay at: Panorama Hotel Atiram Jewel Hotel Bahrain Gulf Hotel Bahrain Convention and Spa Lebanon - Small in size, big in adventure Fully vaccinated travellers do not require a pre-departure PCR test to fly to Lebanon if they received their second jab at least six months before travelling. All you need to do is upload your vaccination certificate on the Ministry of Health’s website. Lebanon has so much to offer with its geographically diverse country that offers you mesmerizing panoramas, rich history and architecture, and delectable cuisine that will make your trip a truly memorable one. Explore one of the best-preserved Greco-Roman temples, Baalbek – the temple of Bacchus, the famous cedars of Lebanon in the Chouf, on Mount Barouk, and the Beiteddine Palace that dates back to the eighteenth century. Go on a boat tour at Byblos to enjoy the sunset in the birthplace of the Phoenician civilization,

hike the beautiful QADISHA valley to explore old churches and monasteries and separate yourself from the outside world. Don’t miss the Batara Gorge waterfall that drops 255 metres down into the Balaa Pothole, a cave of Jurassic limestone. While in Lebanon, travellers can choose from a host of Agoda accommodations to stay at: BURJ ON BAY Hotel Lancaster Raouche Hotel Le Commodore Hotel France – The land of wine and love From 12th February, France decided to scrap the requirement of the RT-PCR test for fully vaccinated travellers. While visiting one of the most romantic destinations in the world, you will without a doubt visit the Eiffel Tower, go cruising down the Seine River, pilgrim to Mont-Saint-Michel, or wander around the Old Quarters of Paris. However, there is so much to experience in France beyond this. Run across the Lavender fields in Provence, take a helicopter ride over French Alps, take a stroll in Dijon – a walking city where cars are not allowed, explore vineyards in Burgundy, taste exquisite Champagne in Champagne, and explore Lyon city, recognised for its delightful cuisine.

pools of Pamukkale lake, the pure white travertine terraces cascade down the slope looking like an out-of-place snowfield amid the green landscape; explore one of the oldest cities of the world, Konya, which has been inhabited since the 3rd millennium BC, and Kaymakli – an underground city in the Central Anatolia Region of Turkey; take a hot air balloon ride to experience the surreal, swooping rock valleys of Cappadocia; and unwind with a traditional Hamam (Turkish bath) experience. Travellers can choose from a host of Agoda accommodation to stay at in Turkey: The Marmara Taksim Hotel Bricks Hotel Istanbul Hotel DeCamondo Galata Norway – The land of the midnight sun Travellers vaccinated within nine months of their arrival do not need an RT-PCR test to enter Norway. In case the final dose has exceeded the period, you will

need a booster shot. If you’re planning a trip to Norway, chasing the Northern Lights and seeing the Arctic circle will definitely be at the top of your itinerary. Apart from this spectacular sight in the skies, this Scandinavian country houses majestic mountains, glaciers, museums, and a whole bunch of activities to do on your travel. Travellers can hike to Mount Floyen, a 399-meter summit which will get you the best view of the city, explore the Geirangerfjord region, a UNESCO World Heritage Site known for its icy Norwegian scenery, marvel at the beautiful architecture of the Arctic Cathedral, and even visit the world’s most powerful whirlpool, Saltstraumen Maelstrom. Travellers can choose from a host of Agoda accommodation to stay at in Norway: Radisson Blu Plaza Hotel Oslo Hotel Continental Clarion Hotel Oslo IANS

While in France, here are some Agoda accommodations you can stay at: Villa Opera Drouot Hotel Victoria Palace Hotel The Hoxton - Paris Turkey – The land of four seasons People vaccinated across the globe are welcomed in Turkey without an RT-PCR test. Travellers only need to fill out a health form 72 hours prior to their arrival. Turkey is the perfect destination to resume your travel post-pandemic. It has the right blend of cultural influences from Asia, Europe, and the Middle East paired with unforgettable natural wonders throughout the Turkish landscapes. Relax at the Thermal

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

31


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

WHAT’S ON

32


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

WHAT’S ON

33


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

ENTERTAINMENT

Pic from 'Gangubai Kathiawadi' premiere Top actresses release goes viral, fans call it dream cast wedding song 'Siragai' from Brinda's 'Hey Sinamika' Instagram

#Gangubai Kathiawadi. In the picture, the director is wearing a black kurta while the three actresses are draped in white sarees.

Instagram

Fans have been calling the pairing of the three actresses in the picture as the dream cast for the future Sanjay Leela Bhansali film. Bhansali's next would be 'Heera Mandi', a project that he will design for the streaming giant Netflix. The film is said to be based on Lahore's red-light area.

A

n unseen picture from the premiere of the Sanjay Leela Bhansali directorial 'Gangubai Kathiawadi' recently made its way to the Internet and has gone viral since then. The picture in question has the director posing

with actresses Alia Bhatt, Rekha and Deepika Padukone. Sudeep Chatterjee, the cinematographer of 'Gangubai Kathiawadi' shared the image on Twitter with the caption, "Happiness" followed by the

'Gangubai Kathiawadi', which released last Friday received positive response with critics singularly praising Alia's performance along with the film's scale and direction. The film, which is based on Hussain Zaidi's book 'Mafia Queens of Mumbai', tells the story of Alia's titular character inspired by the real-life sex worker Gangubai, who rose to be a mafia queen in Mumbai.

Yami Gautam ties up with NGOs to support victims of sexual assault A

Instagram

ctress Yami Gautam has joined hands with two NGOs -- Majlis and Pari (People Against Rape in India) -- to support victims of sexual assault and to work for their rehabilitation. "Today with great pride I would like to share that I have joined hands with two NGOs who are constantly supporting and working towards the rehabilitation of victims of sexual assault," Yami said. She elaborated that women's safety still has a long way to go and her association with the NGOs for the cause emanates from this very subject. "The need to work on these issues stems from the women's safety issues which still exist. While some progress has been made, there's a long way to go still," she said. "My association with the NGOs is just the beginning and in the near future, I would like to contribute further in helping to procure better resources to protect and support women from all walks of life," she added.

T

op actresses Trisha, Sai Pallavi, Tamannaah, Rakul Preet Singh, Manju Warrier and Keerthy Suresh on Tuesday released 'Siragai', a wedding song from director Brinda's upcoming film 'Hey Sinamika', featuring actors Dulquer Salmaan, Kajal Aggarwal and Aditi Rao Hydari in the lead. The north Indian classical music based wedding song, featuring both Kajal and Aditi, has been penned by Madhan Karky and is set to music by Govind Vasantha. It has been rendered by Keerthana Vaidyanathan and Sai Prabha. Sources close to the unit say that Brinda Master was looking for a set to shoot a grand song which needed the lavish feel and decor of a north Indian wedding sangeet celebration. The song location needed a north Indian flavour, but a big crew could not travel because of Covid restrictions. Sources say that the team scouted several locations in Mumbai and Hyderabad. However, nothing was to the director's satisfaction. Finally, it was art directors Murthy and Senthil who came to the rescue. They suggested a set in Chennai itself and finally settled down on a rundown set, famously known as 'Aranmanai'. At first look, the location could pass for a haunted house but

Murthy and Senthil magically transformed it into a stunning palace set for the weddingthemed song in just five days, sources said and added that the ethereal lighting by cinematographer Preetha Jayaraman took the entire look of the set up several notches. Talking about the number, director Brinda says, "This song 'Siragai Siragai' comes at a crucial juncture in the film when the two leading ladies set eyes on each other for the first time and what follows is an elaborately choreographed dance number performed beautifully by Kajal and Aditi. I wanted to have the perfect backdrop for this key moment in the film. Having searched for locations all across, art directors Murthy and Senthil helped us find an apt place in Chennai itself. The set looks very striking, further complimented by my cinematographer Preetha's lighting." Brinda further adds, "If this set spoke aloud of the skill of the art director, the rest of the sets in the film blended into the story and never looked out of the place extravagant, which is a true hallmark of the art director." 'Hey Sinamika', which marks the directorial debut of acechoreographer Brinda master, is all set to hit screens on March 3.

Tamil actress Akila Narayanan joins US Army as lawyer

I

ndian-origin Tamil film actress Akila Narayanan has made history by enrolling herself as a lawyer with the United States armed forces.

months. After having successfully completed the training, the actress has now joined the US Army as a lawyer.

Akila Narayanan, who made her debut with director Arul's horror thriller 'Kadampari' last year, has now enrolled herself with the US Army.

The actress of Indian origin who resides in the US made her debut in acting last year with 'Kadampari', which had music by Prithivy and cinematography by V.T.K. Uthayan.

Sources say that Akila had to undergo the US Army Combat Training to enter the armed forces that ran into several

Interestingly, Akila had also been running an online school of music called the Nightingale School of Music.

www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

34


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

Shannon K: Beyond being Kumar Sanu's daughter Instagram

Debuting as a playback singer with Himesh Reshammiya's song 'Duggi' for the movie 'Happy Hardy And Heer', besides lending her voice for the scores of the movie 'Khalibali' and the web series 'The Casino', the actorsinger who has been collaborating across musical genres feels that it is a great way to merge various styles and create something novel.

ENTERTAINMENT

Rashmika Mandanna: 'I don't want to be categorised as an actor' Instagram

"It is always beneficial for everybody involved to reach out to a newer audience who may have never heard of their music before. You get to learn and share a lot. Of course, when it comes to expressing one's own personal thoughts, it makes sense that the song is solely yours," she adds. Talk to her about how being Kumar Sanu's daughter can be an enormous pressure and she smiles that she always has to think of the consequences of her actions -- professionally and in personal life.

S

he studied music from the Royal Music Of London and acting at the prestigious Lee Strasberg Theatre & Film Institute in the US. Los Angeles based singer and actor Shannon K has also finished filming a movie 'The Big Feed' in the US and 'Chaal Zindagi' here. The fact that she is playback singer Kumar Sanu's daughter can wait, for she insists -- "I started my career by singing at cafes and restaurants. I remember getting rejected many times in auditions and coming back home crying from meetings by highly demeaning behaviour people in the industry. "So, it hasn't been easy for me. I didn't get up one day and was offered projects. Time and again, I have had to prove myself," she says.

Of course, being surrounded by music forever did warm her up to the art form as she remembers asking her father to take her along to the studio even as a child. "When I decided to make it my career, it was made clear that considering it was my decision, I would have to deal with all the hurdles and fetch work just like any other newcomer," Shannon tells IANS. Believing that training may be instrumental for understanding the theory of music in-depth and grasping the technical side of it, she feels that it is not really imperative. "Now, dad is not classically trained, his passion for the art form has been the driving force. It depends on the kind of effort you put into your work, it is about that thirst for learning."

"It certainly is a huge pressure of carrying forward your parent's legacy ahead. Sometimes it's to a disadvantage as people don't value you or see you as an individual. You are somehow stuck under your parent's shadow and to come out of that and make a name for yourself is a big deal. There surely was some discrimination which I had to face every time I went looking for work." Remembering her time at Lee Strasberg, one of the finest acting schools in the world where she learnt not just method acting but also other technical aspects of the craft, Shannon says: "Also, I have learnt a lot while filming in India." In her final year of studying business management and looking forward to graduating early next year, the artist is looking at finishing some fashion projects. "I have sung multiple songs for different projects, they should be releasing next year," she concludes.

'Meri Jaan Meri Jaan' from 'Bachchhan Paandey' tugs at the heartstrings Instagram

M

eri Jaan Meri Jaan', the romantic song from the Akshay Kumar-starrer 'Bachchhan Paandey' was launched recently. The song, composed by Jaani, has been sung by B Praak with Jaani doubling up as the lyricist, tugs at the heartstrings of the music lovers. 'Meri Jaan Meri Jaan' presents the sparkling chemistry between Akshay Kumar and Kriti Sanon amidst the picturesque locations in Rajasthan with choreographer Ganesh Acharyaa designing the steps for the melodious track.

www.indianews.com.au

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

A

ctress Rashmika Mandanna, who will next appear in the movie 'Aadavallu Meeku Johaarlu', stated that she doesn't want to get categorised as a North or South actress, but only wants to do content-rich movies. The 'Sarileru Neekevvaru' actress, who spoke to the media said, "I don't want to be categorised in any industry like North or the South. I want to be an actor with a pan-India appeal." The actress who has two bigticket Hindi flicks, 'Mission Majnu' and 'Good Bye', starring Amitabh Bachchan, said that she is open to acting in any good movies, without considering the language barriers. Rashmika, though, subscribes to the fact that her appearance in South Indian movies like 'Pushpa' and 'Geetha Govindam' has given her great visibility in Hindi.

"People call me Srivalli (from Pushpa) or Geetha (from Geetha Govindam), etc. So the audiences remember my characters, which means they are watching all our content," she says. As Rashmika gears up for her next release titled 'Aadavallu Meeku Johaarlu', she said she learned to conduct herself by seeing senior actresses working on the sets of the Sharwanand-starrer. "To see women like Radikaa, Khushbu, and Urvashi on the sets, knowing that they are such great actors, taught me how to conduct myself on the sets and how to treat others on the team," Rashmika said. Rashmika Mandanna and Sharwanand will be seen together in Kishore Tirumala's upcoming family entertainer. 'Aadavallu Meeku Johaarlu' will hit the screens on March 4.

ADVERTISE WITH US Call us at 1300 859 066

35


INDIAN NEWS QUEENSLAND

Mar 2022 - Vol 4, Issue 12

Brookwater is the premier address in the Western Corridor.

www.indianews.com.au

ADVERTISEMENT

Located in the heart of one of Australia’s fastest growing regions, Brookwater is Brisbane’s best kept secret for luxury living. Crafted around the Greg Norman designed golf course, Brookwater provides a rare combination of prestige golfside living and natural bushland beauty. With the first stage of Brookwater completely sold, we are pleased to introduce the next stage of this exclusive community — your own architecturally designed piece of paradise — Dress Circle, only 15 minutes from Mount Ommaney. Life on Brookwater’s Dress Circle is close to everything you need — public transport, schools, childcare centres, a university, a private hospital, shopping centres and a thriving commercial precinct. We welcome you to experience Brisbane’s best kept secret when it comes to luxury living, and choose from our leading architectural collaborators to design your dream home — complimentary with your Dress Circle land purchase.

facebook.com/indianewsaustralia

36


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.