Indian Foreign Secretary Shiv Shankar Menon met his Pakistani counterpart Salman Bashir on the sidelines of the XVth Non-Alignment Movement (NAM) Summit for a second time on Wednesday.
The meeting was held ahead of meeting between Prime Ministers Manmohan Singh and Yousuf Raza Gilani on Thursday.
Describing India’’s relations with Pakistan as “stressed”, Menon said it [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Mumbai’
India-Pak FS meet again ahead of Manmohan-Gilani pow wow
Salman skips girlfriend Katrina’s birthday?
Just few hours back today on Tuesday July 15th we saw Salman Khan at the Mehboob Studios in Bandra, Mumbai. He was doing the shooting for the making video of his forthcoming film, Wanted. Tomorrow is his girlfriend Katrina Kaif’s birthday and she is in London. So we wondered whether he be flying to London [...]
Shiney Ahuja’’s judicial custody ends today
The judicial custody of Bollywood actor Shiney Ahuja, who was arrested for allegedly raping his domestic maid, ends today.
On July 2, Ahuja was remanded to judicial custody till today by a local Mumbai court.
The DNA test report of Ahuja confirmed that he sexually assaulted the victim. Earlier, medical reports had confirmed that Ahuja’’s [...]
Mumbai placed on alert after IB terror strike warning
Security has been beefed up in Mumbai and neighboring districts following an Intelligence Bureau (IB) terror alert.
According to Maharashtra’s Minister of State for Home, Naseem Khan, vigil has been increased at railway stations and major financial institutions, based on the IB input. IB gives such inputs regularly to the state governments.
It is believed [...]
India and Pakistan discuss terror

The foreign secretaries of India and Pakistan have met on the sidelines of a summit in Egypt to discuss terrorism.
The talks come ahead of a key meeting between the prime ministers of the two countries during the Non-Aligned Movement summit.
Pakistani PM Yousuf Raza Gilani has said he will approach the meeting with an "an open heart and a positive mind".
Relations deteriorated after Delhi said gunmen involved in last November’s Mumbai attacks were from Pakistan.
Ties between the two countries have been strained since the attacks in which more than 170 people died.
Pakistan has rejected Indian accusations that it has not done all it can to pursue those responsible for the Mumbai attacks.
India accused Pakistan-based fighters from the banned militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba of carrying out the attacks.
Pakistan has admitted they were partly planned on its soil.
Reports say that the foreign secretaries of the two countries met late on Tuesday and had a "good detailed discussion on terrorism".
They are believed to have discussed the progress into the Mumbai attacks investigations and the steps taken to combat terrorism.
‘Visible response’
The foreign ministers of the two countries are now due to meet to set out the outlines of Thursday’s meeting between the two prime ministers.
India’s foreign minister SM Krishna has said that India demanded a "visible response" from Pakistan to bring to justice those responsible for the attacks in Mumbai and the bombing at the Indian embassy in Kabul last year.

In order to begin dialogue again on its terms, Pakistan has said it is doing as much as it can to pursue those responsible for the Mumbai attacks.
Pakistan Interior Minister Rehman Malik has said that 15,000 Pakistani citizens had died in terrorist attacks since 2001.
"The terrorist threat in the region knew no boundaries and no-one has been more affected than Pakistan," he said.
Pakistan said the trial of five men suspected of involvement in the attack on the Taj Hotel in Mumbai last November is likely to start next week</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Mumbai news – Mumbai rains disrupt Rail and Air services
Normal life was thrown out of gear in the financial capital, Mumbai on Wednesday by heavy rains that led to waterlogging in several areas and hit movement of air and rail traffic.
The Meterological department has forecasted spells of rain or thundershowers with possibility of heavy showers in various parts of Mumbai and suburbs in next [...]
Sangeet Akademi Awards presentation today
President Pratibha Patil will confer the prestigious Sangeet Natak Akademi Fellowships and Akademi Awards for 2008 at a special ceremony at Vigyan Bhavan today.
The Akademi Fellowship (Akademi Ratna) and Akademi Awards (Akademi Puraskar) are recognized as the highest national honour conferred on practicing artists, gurus and scholars and have come to stay as the most [...]
Pakistan to try Mumbai suspects

Pakistan says the trial of five men suspected of involvement in the attack on the Taj Hotel in Mumbai last November is likely to start next week.
Interior Minister Rehman Malik said investigations were complete for these suspects and named another 12 men still wanted in connection with the case.
The charges show Pakistan is serious in pursuing suspects in the case despite Indian claims to the contrary, he said.
More than 170 people died in the attacks, including nine gunmen.
India has accused Pakistan-based fighters from the banned militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba of carrying out the attacks.
Pakistan has admitted they were partly planned on its soil and the two countries have suffered seriously strained relations.
Timing
Mr Malik blamed India for any delay in bringing the charges.
He said Pakistan had sent India a list of questions on 12 February but only received answers on 9 June. This had enabled them to put a case together against five suspects already in custody.
There was no immediate response to the claims from Delhi.
Mr Malik said that after seeing how this investigation had been pursued, no-one should be in any doubt that Pakistan was serious in pursuing those responsible for the attacks.
"We are pretty sure that based on the evidence which our investigators have collected, the culprits will be punished," he said.
He said that he wished India had given as much co-operation in finding those responsible for killing Pakistanis when a cross-border train was blown up in February 2007.
The dossier detailing the charges against the five suspects for the Mumbai (Bombay) attack has been handed to the acting Indian high commissioner in Islamabad.
The BBC’s David Loyn in Islamabad says politically this development could not have come at a more opportune time for Pakistan.
The foreign ministers and prime ministers of Pakistan and India will meet next week during the summit of non-aligned nations in Egypt.
In order to begin dialogue again on its terms, Pakistan is eager to counter Indian accusations that it has not done all it can to pursue those responsible for the Mumbai attacks.
Mr Malik said that 15,000 Pakistani citizens had died in terrorist attacks since 2001.
"The terrorist threat in the region knew no boundaries and no-one has been more affected than Pakistan."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Mumbai revisited
Despite India’s economic success, it is still home to millions of the world’s poorest people. Martin Buckley lived in Bombay, as it was known, in the 1980s. He recently went back and found, as he walked about after sunset, that the essential character of the city remains unchanged.

Bombay by night. It is hard to think of three words more expressive of history, exoticism, and empire.
And I do not begrudge the "new" name, Mumbai (the city was renamed in 1995).
The city’s presiding goddess is Mumba-Ai, and I spent a chunk of the 1980s living close to her temple in the heart of the city.
It was my first job after university, working on a magazine called Business India. Very few foreigners worked in Bombay then.
Pre-boom India was still locked into its Soviet-style command economy.
Paid local rates, I lived in a succession of seedy rooms in downtown Bombay.
We sometimes put the magazine to bed at 0300 local time, and I would walk home.
On the pavements were string beds, where men lay, totally abandoned in sleep.
I never felt threatened for an instant.
Slum living
We have heard a lot lately about Mumbai’s slums, so I thought it would be interesting to revisit my old haunts.

Mumbai is a long, thin city, and on its northern fringes, residential suburbs are mushrooming.
I went to visit Dharavi, the slum made famous by the film Slumdog Millionaire, which is nearer the city centre on land the developers would love to get their hands on.
This "slum" has electricity, workplaces, temples and mosques.
I asked a street trader selling school exercise books if he had heard of Slumdog Millionaire.
"Of course," he said, adding that tourists had been turning up in droves to see where the film was shot.
But he said they should go home, as no-one wanted them there.
I felt no danger in Dharavi, at least, not from people.
Stepping on a sleeping dog – an actual "slum-dog" – was far more of a worry.
‘Light beatings’
The next night, a hot, sticky evening, my first stop was at a downtown police station in central Mumbai, to interview a police inspector.

He was a sleek character, with manicured nails, dyed hair and an expensive-looking Swiss watch.
Sipping sweet tea from an improbably refined china cup, I sheepishly asked about the brutal police torture shown in Slumdog Millionaire.
"Ridiculous," he replied, though he did admit that what he called "light beatings" were routine. And no, I could not visit the cells.
He moved hastily on to more comfortable territory, showing me his CCTV screens, and declaring how modern forensics had transformed criminal investigation.
His biggest task, he stressed, was managing tensions between Hindus and Muslims.
Doggedly, I asked about police corruption and drugs mafia, but received peremptory replies.
Prostitution he claimed, was sharply down, but not through policing. Rather, he claimed it was because people were terrified of catching Aids.
Decomposing facades
Physically, central Mumbai has changed far less than I expected.
There are some elevated highways from which, I am told, motorcyclists periodically plunge.

But the great tenements still rise in terraces draped with washing, their Victorian or art deco facades slowly decomposing.
Few of the 1960s-style Fiat taxis have been replaced by newer cars.
There are bullock carts toting jute bales, tiny shops with colonial interiors, hawkers selling fruit from trolleys, men sitting cross-legged in the street selling shoes, basket-weavers working and living on the pavements.
Markets sell everything from metal ware to fresh fish, and as 2200 approached, I could still see live mullet writhing in baskets.
Nearby were the entrepots of Mumbai’s thriving dockyards, with the seedy, raffish air of a Conrad novel. And it is much easier to buy a beer in contemporary Mumbai than it was in my day.
Religious tensions have worsened, but I passed Hindu and Muslim traders working side by side.
Decay and ambition
In Bhuleshwar, in the old heart of Mumbai, I visited the city’s presiding Hindu goddess.
The pillars of Mumba-Ai’s tiny temple were entwined with flowers to resemble an indoor forest, and people urgently jostled for a glimpse of the deity.
By midnight I had reached Falkland Road, Mumbai’s infamous red light district.
Women stood around gloomily, their faces showing none of the flirtation that is supposed to be their profession’s stock in trade.
Mumbai’s sex industry caters to millions of poor men, and its squalor and joylessness are all too evident.
A pimp was hanging onto my arm. I asked him if it was true that client numbers were down. He became aggressive. Was I there to spend money or ask nosy questions
I flagged down a taxi, and slid on to the back seat. Through the open window, the air was now pleasantly cool.
The essential character of the great city I had known and loved 25 years ago, seemed to me unchanged, and it was still a Dickensian canvas of decay, ambition, and exploitation.
But Mumbai is pragmatic. It looks chaotic, but it works.
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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.





