TV Guide has come out swinging in response to allegations that publishers ordered more than a little airbrushing to Top Chef host Padma Lakshmi, who appears on this week’s cover of the mag. Guide editors are steaming after PopEater.com published an editorial accusing the publication of digitally-lightening Lakshmi’s rich olive skin tone — similar to [...]
Posts Tagged ‘South Asian’
Padma Lakshmi Skin-Lightening Controversy Sends TV Guide On Defensive
Pak-Iran gas deal is pipedream
NEW YORK – US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has described the group of four countries – India, Brazil, Germany and Japan – as a ‘self-appointed frontrunnersÂ’ for a permanent seat in an expanded UN Security Council, according to classified documents released by WikiLeaks.
ClintonÂ’s cable, which was posted by The New York Times, gave directions to US diplomats to collect information on key issues, including the UN Security Council reform, which is stalled because of rivalries between countries and regions as well as difficult UN procedures.
Earlier this month, President Barrack Obama announced support for IndiaÂ’s bid for a permanent seat on the Security Council, which, at present, has five permanent veto-wielding members – Britain, China, France, Russia and the United Nations – and 10 non-permanent members elected for a two-year term. But most analysts said the process could take years.
The cable asked US diplomats to ascertain deliberations regarding the UNSC expansion among key groups of countries like ‘self-appointed frontrunnersÂ’ for permanent UNSC seats (Group of Four or G-4); Uniting for Consensus group – especially Mexico, Italy and Pakistan – that opposes additional permanent UNSC seats; African Group; and European Union, as well as key UN officials within the Secretariat and the UN General Assembly (UNGA) Presidency.
Meanwhile, Turkey kept India out of a meeting on Afghanistan that Ankara sponsored earlier this year to address Pakistan’s ‘sensitivities’, according to US secret documents released by WikiLeaks.
At a meeting with the US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, William Burns; Rauf Engin Soysal who then was the TurkeyÂ’s Deputy Under-Secretary for Bilateral Political Affairs responsible for the Middle East, South Asia and Africa; said Turkey had not invited India to the Afghan neighbours summit in deference to PakistanÂ’s sensitivities.
President Asif Ali Zardari and Afghan President Hamid Karzai met in Istanbul for a Turkish-sponsored talks to discuss cooperation against extremists in Afghanistan earlier this year.
“He (Soysal) said Turkey had not invited India to the neighbours summit in deference to Pakistani sensitivities; however, he said, Pakistan understands attempting to exclude India from the nascent South Asian regional structures would be a mistake,” says the confidential State Department cable dated February 25, 2010.
Soysal, a former Turkish Ambassador to the Pakistan from 2007 to 2009, and his countryÂ’s Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan in September was appointment by the UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, as the Special Envoy for Assistance to Pakistan.
“He (Soysal) reported Indian Prime Minister (Manmohan) Singh had requested (Turkish) President (Abdullah) Gul’s assistance with Pakistan during the latter’s visit to New Delhi the previous week.
Acting on that request, President Gul had phoned Pakistani President Zardari, who was sceptical of Indian intentions.
“Gul is planning to visit Pakistan later this year,” the cable said.
“Soysal said Iran is proposing a quadrilateral summit, which would include Turkey, Afghanistan and Pakistan, but that proposal had yet to generate enthusiasm,” it said.
Meanwhile, top Israeli and American officials discussed the impact of the possible downfall of then President Pervez Musharraf in August 2007 in a meeting on US efforts to reduce tensions between India and Pakistan, according to a State Department cable leaked by WikiLeaks.
The cable contained record of the meeting between Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns and Meir Dagan, then chief of Israeli spy agency Mossad on a wide range of issues, including the situation in South Asia.
The leaked cable shows Burns detailed US efforts to reduce tensions between India and Pakistan after the Mossad chief alerted the US about MusharrafÂ’s possible downfall.
“Dagan said that President Musharraf is losing control, and that some of his coalition partners could threaten him in the future. The key question, Dagan said, is whether Musharraf retains his commander-in-chief role in addition to his role as president,” the cable reported.
“If not, he will have problems. Dagan observed that there has been an increase in the number of attempts on Musharraf’s life, and wondered whether he will survive the next few years,” it said.
“Under Secretary Burns replied that South Asia has assumed vital importance in American foreign policy since September 11.”
“The US is committed to denying Afghanistan as a safe-haven for Taliban and Al Qaeda activity. The US (government) will continue to support Pakistani President Musharraf, and is seeking to boost his military defensive capabilities.”
Agencies add: According to the revelations made by the WikiLeaks, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi described President Asif Ali Zardari as ‘dirty but not dangerous’ and former prime minister Nawaz Sharif as ‘dangerous but not dirty’.
The revelation is part of a massive dump of more than 250,000 diplomatic cables by the Website WikiLeaks.
The cables provide candid and at times critical views of foreign leaders as well as sensitive information on terrorism and nuclear proliferation filed by US diplomats.
In July 2009, Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed, Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces and de facto defence chief, said Zardari was ‘dirty but not dangerousÂ’. Former prime minister Nawaz Sharif was ‘dangerous but not dirty – this is PakistanÂ’. He said Nawaz Sharif, who heads the main opposition party to Zardari, could not be trusted to honour his promises.
According to leaks, a rail link between Iran and Pakistan would be delayed for the foreseeable future because of unrest from Baloch nationalists in both countries.
Likewise, a natural gas pipeline agreement between Iran and Pakistan, signed with great fanfare earlier this year, is unlikely to bear fruit anytime soon because ‘the Pakistanis don’t have the money to pay for either the pipeline, or the gas’.
Meanwhile, US intelligence believes Iran has obtained advanced missiles from North Korea that could strike Europe. The documents also show frustration among US diplomats who have been pressing for China to block shipments of missile parts from North Korea to Iran, BritainÂ’s Guardian newspaper reported.
US diplomatic cables include remarks from a source in 2009 saying that Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has terminal cancer. The source, a non-Iranian businessman based in Central Asia and travelling often to Tehran, “has learned from one of his contacts that (former president Ali Akbar) Rafsanjani told him Khamenei has terminal stage leukemia and could die in a few months”, according to an August 2009 cable. The document says that Rafsanjani, a critic of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who has expressed sympathies with Iran’s reformist movement, decided on learning of Khamenei’s illness to start preparing himself to be a successor.
Leaked documents also revealed how US officials were ordered its officials to spy on the UN leadership. Britain’s Guardian newspaper said a State Department directive sent in July sought intelligence on UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon’s ‘management and decision-making style’.
The government also asked for credit card numbers, email addresses, phone, fax and pager numbers and even frequent-flyer account numbers for UN officials, the daily added.
Israel discussed its planned war on Gaza with the Palestinian leadership and Egypt ahead of time, offering to hand them control of the strip if it defeated Hamas, US documents released by WikiLeaks showed.
The attempt to coordinate its devastating offensive against GazaÂ’s Islamist rulers was revealed by Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak whose remarks were included in a telegram sent in June 2009 by then deputy US ambassador Luis Moreno.
“He explained that the GOI (government of Israel) had consulted with Egypt and Fatah prior to Operation Cast Lead, asking if they were willing to assume control of Gaza once Israel defeated Hamas,” he said, referring to the Fatah party of Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.
Carrots for India, sticks for Pakistan
NEW DELHI (Agencies) – US President Barack Obama has criticised the pace of Pakistan’s fight against militants within its borders. He said Islamabad was making progress against what he called the ‘cancer’ of extremism but not quickly enough.
“Progress is not as quick as we would like,” he added, noting that many militants were holed up in the rugged northwestern Pakistani regions close to the Afghan border. Obama made it clear that the US would not ‘impose’ itself on Indo-Pak relations.
“There are more Pakistanis who’ve been killed by terrorists inside Pakistan than probably anywhere else,” Obama said.
The US President urged India and Pakistan to talk to resolve their differences as he stressed the need for peace between the neighbours, who are vital for his plans in Afghanistan.
Venturing into the delicate area of relations between the two South Asian countries, Obama insisted New Delhi had the most to gain from a stable Pakistan, while urging Islamabad to do more to address extremism.
“My hope is that, over time, trust develops between the two countries, that dialogue begins perhaps on less controversial issues building up to more controversial issues,” he said on the second day of a three-day trip to India.
“I am absolutely convinced that the country that has the biggest stake in Pakistan is India,” he told students at the prestigious St Xavier’s College in south Mumbai. “If Pakistan is stable and prosperous, that’s best for India,” he added.
Answering questions from a gathered crowd of students at St XavierÂ’s College, Obama gave an impassioned defence of US policy in the region.
Obama fielded tricky questions on Pakistan, jihad and disappointing midterm poll results from students at an open forum last event of his Mumbai visit before he headed to New Delhi.
More than 300 students attended the open-air question and answer session, in which the US president answered six questions on various subjects.
Twenty-year-old Anam Ansari, a third year science student asked Obama for his opinion on jihad, setting the tone for the rather scorching afternoon.
Afsheen Irani said she had planned to ask a question about education but changed her mind to ask about Pakistan ‘because I thought he had not spoken about this issue in this visit. It was a diplomatic answer. I had to be satisfied with what I got’.
One student asked him why the US did not declare Pakistan a terrorist state. “We will work with the Pakistani government in order to eradicate this extremism that we consider a cancer within the country that can potentially engulf the country,” said Obama.
Later in the afternoon, Obama landed in New Delhi and greeted the waiting Prime Minister Manmohan Singh with a hug. The Obamas and the Singhs chatted with each other for a few minutes, before the president went for a scheduled tour of a Mughal-era tomb. The leaders were to meet for dinner at SinghÂ’s residence later.
Obama has frequently praised Singh as a leading global statesman, and their mutual regard appeared evident in the smiles and warmth of the often inscrutable Indian premier.
Talks between the two on Monday will look to build on a small but growing trade relationship, with Obama looking for export opportunities, as well as engagement from India politically in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Among other things, Singh is likely to press Obama for a more concrete commitment to support IndiaÂ’s quest for a permanent seat at the United Nations Security Council.
ObamaÂ’s remarks on Pakistan did not break new diplomatic ground for the United States – his government has said before that Pakistan must do more on extremism – but were highly significant given their venue in Mumbai.
US President Barack Obama will discuss Pakistan in the context of regional security and counterterrorism in his speech to the Indian parliament on Monday, a senior administration official said on Sunday.
“The president will definitely discuss Pakistan”, the official said, but declined to go further than that because he did not want to get ahead of the president’s remarks.
The US president arrived in India looking to inject new momentum into a strategic relationship for Washington, while aware of the need to rebuild his reputation at home after a drubbing in mid-term elections.
“The United States does not just see India as a rising power, we believe India is already risen,” the US president said, noting his host’s dynamic economy, youthful population and rising strategic clout in Asia and beyond.
The president also showed evidence of the evolution of his thinking following his Democratic PartyÂ’s electoral defeat back in the United States.
“It requires me to make some mid-course corrections and adjustments,” Obama said, vowing however to stick to the beliefs and ideas that would “move America forward”, including investing in education, clean energy and infrastructure.
Obama started his India visit, the first stop of a four-nation Asian tour, on Saturday, unveiling 10 billion dollars in trade deals designed to bankroll US jobs after voters handed him a severe rebuke in mid-term elections Tuesday.
Commercial agreements included a 7.7-billion-dollar contract for Boeing to supply 30 of its 737 aircraft to IndiaÂ’s SpiceJet airline.
Security is tight for ObamaÂ’s visit. Thousands of Indian and US security personnel are deployed and a US naval warship is on patrol in the waters off the coast of the city.
Obama regretted that the great religion of Islam has been distorted by a few hardliners to justify violence towards innocent people and called for isolating these elements.
Obama also said that people would have to fundamentally reject the notion that violence is the way to mediate differences among them.
“I think all of us have to fundamentally reject the notion that violence is the way to mediate our differences,” he added.
The US president expressed these views when a Muslim student A Ansari lobbed a question asking for his views on ‘jihad’ during his interaction with students of St Xavier’s College in Mumbai.
“I think all of us recognise that this great religion (Islam) in the hands of a few extremists has been distorted to justify violence towards innocent people that is never justified,” he said.
British filmmakers to scout for actors in India
After “Slumdog Millionaire” the makers of another British film are headed to India to look for new South Asian faces for their venture and possibly “find the next star”.
Yugesh Walia, the producer of the yet-to-be-titled film, told IANS the reason for exploring casting possibilities in India is “because of the lack of enough choice in [...]
Obama asks Pakistan to punish Mumbai attackers
Hours after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh expressed concern over Pakistan’s will to punish those responsible for the terrorist attacks in Mumbai, President Barack Obama asked Islamabad to move against the perpeterators.
A couple of hours after meeting Manmohan Singh, Obama Sunday told Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani that the Indian leader was sincere in improving [...]
Pakistan’s feminist writing reflects violence: Muneeza Shamsie
The shadow of the gun, its impact on society and gender injustice are creeping into contemporary women’s literature in Pakistan, feels Lahore-based writer, critic and journalist Muneeza Shamsie.
“It is boom time for English writing in Pakistan. New writers are talking about changes and tackling urban realities like violence, terror and gender injustice in the society,” [...]
Obama’s ‘directive’ should be no surprise to India
It is hardly surprising that the Obama administration is reportedly stepping up pressure on India to resolve bilateral issues with Pakistan in order to better handle Afghanistan.
The Wall Street Journal reported that President Barack Obama issued a “secret directive in December to intensify American diplomacy aimed at easing tensions between India and Pakistan, asserting that [...]
33rd SAARC Literature Festival March 26-29
The impact of environment on literature will be the focus of the 33rd SAARC Festival of Literature at the India International Centre March 26-29.
Writers, academics, artists, folklorists, historians, greens, and peace and gender activists from eight South Asian countries will discuss how nature and environment have been key constituents of literature as well as visual [...]
Indian owned college collapses in Australia
Hundreds of international students, including many Indians, have been left clueless about their future as a college owned by an Indian collapsed in Australia.
With Sydney-based Austech Institute for Further Studies going for voluntary liquidation late last week, over 750 international students are looking at an uncertain future.
The hospitality college, owned by taxi driver turned entrepreneur [...]
Kashmir, water top agenda: Pakistan
LAHORE – Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir maintained on Wednesday that Pakistan’s agenda for talks with India is open in every respect and Kashmir dispute and water issue will be on top of it during today’s (Thursday’s) parleys in New Delhi as both sides exchanged terse allegations over the disputed territory of Kashmir ahead of the meeting.
“We are optimistic about the dialogue and we will discuss all issues. We should not look into it (dialogue) with the angle of ‘success or failure’ and wait for the best. It is premature to speculate about the outcome at this stage,” Salman Bashir told reporters before departure of his delegation to New Delhi, here at Allama Iqbal International Airport.
According to Bashir, Pakistan wants to move forward the current process of talks and has the desire to hold talks at the foreign minister level between the two countries. He said that to say anything about the outcome of negotiations at this stage would be premature and the situation would be clear after the conclusion of talks between the two countries. He rejected the news reports that any change has been made in the delegation and termed it as ‘misunderstanding’.
Bashir said all major issues would be discussed during talks with Indian counterparts. The major issues to be discussed in the talks include counter terrorism, Kashmir dispute and water issue, Salman Bashir said, adding there is no bar from any side to discuss any other issue.
“Any issue can be raised and discussed,” he said. “World knows Pakistan’s efforts and struggle in counter terrorism and international community has recognised Pakistan’s efforts in this regard and India should also realise that it is a global as well as regional issue,” he said. Responding to a question, he stressed the need for continuing the process of composite dialogue and preparation of a road map for future engagements at foreign office level of both the countries.
When he was informed about the arrest of a 13-year-old boy who inadvertently boarded India-bound train from Lahore and was arrested by the Indian authorities, he said this issue would also be raised in the dialogue besides discussing similar issues which are equally important for both the countries.
He pointed out that at “Sharam el Shaikh “ it was agreed between Pakistan and India that terrorism was a common problem and Pakistan has a clear stand vis-a-vis counter terrorism and it would be productive to bracket it in the dialogue.
Responding to another query, he said that after tomorrowÂ’s (Thursday) dialogue there would be more clarity on important issues.
The Foreign Secretary said all issues would be discussed in these meetings and Pakistan would also raise the issue of Kishan-Ganga dam and other important issues. Analysts say the talks could eventually pave the way for the resumption of the formal peace process, broken off after the 2008 Mumbai attacks.
Recently, Indian officials have admitted that one Abu Jindal, an Indian national and a key figure who taught the ten gunmen to speak Hindi and prepare for the attack, is Syed Zabiuddin Ansari from Aurangabad in Maharashtra.
The disclosure that an Indian played a key role in the fedayeen commando attacks on the countryÂ’s commercial capital also caused deep discomfort to New Delhi and the Prime Minister had blamed Pakistan for the atrocity.
“Both the countries are poverty-hit and inflation-stricken. A great number of people are living below poverty line in India (population wise) as compared to Pakistan. Both the South Asian neighbours should resolve all issues through dialogue to promote peace in the entire region,” Muhammad Azhar, advocate of the Supreme Court of Pakistan said.
Observers on Indo-Pak relations are not seeing any breakthrough in the first round of secretary-level talks between the south Asian neighbours, but believed that it would pave way for the resumption of composite dialogue.
Agencies add: Talking to newsmen at Indira Gandhi International Airport upon arrival in New Delhi, Salman Bashir said he was hopeful of positive outcome of Pak-India talks. He said dialogue was a way forward and Pakistan would hold talks with positive mind.
“It is good to be back,” Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir told reporters. “I have come here to bridge the differences (and) I am hopeful of a positive outcome.”
Responding to a question on whether he would raise the issue of Balochistan during the talks, Bashir said all this was part of counterterrorism and could be discussed.
Issuing a statement on BashirÂ’s arrival, Indian External Affairs Ministry said during his stay, the Pakistani Foreign Secretary is also scheduled to call on minister SM Krishna and National Security Advisor Shiv Shankar Menon.
Meanwhile, on the eve of long-awaited talks, Indian border guards in Kashmir said they came under fire from Pakistan on Wednesday, a claim denied by Islamabad.
The conflicting claims coincided with the arrival of the Pakistani foreign secretary in Delhi for the talks.
“The firing from across the border started early morning. A BSF personnel was injured,” Vinod Sharma, a spokesman for the Indian border guards, told Reuters. But Nadeem Raza, a spokesman for Pakistan’s Rangers, told Reuters: “Our troops were not involved in any firing. There may be some problem on their own side.”
Mullen urges India, Pakistan to refrain from public spats
Washington, Jan.27 (ANI): US Joint Chiefs of staff Admiral Mike Mullen has urged India and Pakistan to restrain themselves from publicly accusing each other and to avoid disputes which could further destabilise the region.
Addressing the third annual US Central Command chiefs of defence conference here, Mullen said issues can be discussed resolved privately without raking [...]
Hasina’s India visit was game-changing: Bangladesh envoy
Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s India tour was a “game-changing visit”, which will turn the two South Asian countries into development partners from adversarial contestants, according to Bangladesh ambassador to India Ahmed Tariq Karim.
“This was a game-changing visit,” Karim told reporters here Friday.
Last week, Hasina and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh signed five agreements, including for [...]
Pakistan should decide on anti-Taliban offensive: Gates
US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said Friday that Pakistan’s leadership has to decide for itself whether the country needed to expand its anti-Taliban campaign along the Afghan border.
Gates, who is visiting Islamabad after discussing the South Asian security situation with India, appreciated the Pakistani security forces’ offensives against Islamist militants in recent months.
“Pakistan is a [...]
Gates’ visit bolsters US-India security ties: US expert
US Defence Secretary Robert Gates’ visit to India on the heels of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s successful visit to Washington last November, will sustain the momentum in US-India ties, according to a US expert.
It would also prepare the way for a potential visit by President Barack Obama to India this summer, writes Lisa Curtis, senior [...]
Hockey India at last pays players Rs 1 crore
The national hockey players and the support staff were Monday given a cheque of Rs.1 crore as match fees and incentive bonus for their performance last year.
The players, who have been in training here for the World Cup, had last week boycotted the national camp, demanding all outstanding payments. They wanted Rs 4.5 lakh each [...]
Anil Kapoor makes debut on ‘24′ Sunday
Bollywood star Anil Kapoor is excited about his debut Sunday on “24″, a popular American TV series depicting a 24-hour period in the life of a government agent fighting fictitious terrorist threats to the US.
The new incarnation of “24″ broadcast by Fox represents a number of firsts for Kapoor. For one “I’ve never played a [...]



