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  • Was there any intelligence failure, Sonia Gandhi asks government

    She poses questions at all-party meet

    Congress president Sonia Gandhi on Friday said the Opposition was willing to make any sacrifice to ensure that Indian troops were “battle-ready”.

    In her remarks at an all-party meeting convened by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the situation along the Line of Actual Control (LAC), she asked the government to assure the nation that status quo ante would be restored and the Chinese would return to their original position.

    Ms. Gandhi posed a series of questions, including the one on the possibility of an “intelligence failure”, and asserted that 20 Indian soldiers had to die because of a delay in taking up the issue of intrusion at the highest political and diplomatic level of the Chinese leadership.

    “On which date did the Chinese troops intrude into our territory in Ladakh? When did the government find out the Chinese transgressions into our territory? Was it on May 5, as reported, or earlier? Does the government not receive, on a regular basis, satellite pictures of the borders of our country,” she asked.

    “The question is, what next? What is the way forward? The entire country would like an assurance that the status quo ante would be restored and China will revert to the original position on the Line of Actual Control,” she said.

    She lamented that the government had convened the all-party meeting late and assured it of cooperation from the Opposition in taking on China.

    “We would also like to be briefed on the preparedness of our defence forces to meet any threat. In particular, I would like to ask what is the current status of the Mountain Strike Corps, with two mountain infantry divisions, that was sanctioned in 2013? Should the government not treat it with utmost priority? We, in the Indian National Congress and the entire Opposition, unitedly stand by our defence forces and are prepared to make any sacrifice to ensure they are battle-ready,” she said. India should present “a picture of unity and solidarity to the entire world”, she said.

    Ms. Gandhi also urged the Prime Minister to “share with us all the facts and the sequence of events beginning April this year till date”.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • Tone down nationalist rhetoric, says Former PM Deve Gowda

    Former Prime Minister H.D. Deve Gowda, in a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has argued for toning down “nationalist rhetoric” and cautioned against calls for economic boycott in the backdrop of Galwan valley clashes.

    Former Prime Minister H.D. Deve Gowda. File
    Former Prime Minister H.D. Deve Gowda. File | Photo Credit: The Hindu

    In his letter on Friday, Mr. Gowda, while stating that he fully appreciates the Prime Minister’s decision to call for a meeting of Opposition leaders to discuss the India-China situation and to ensure a bipartisan environment for discussions, urged that “nationalist rhetoric should be toned down” in order to ensure that the matter is not escalated.

    Mr. Gowda also warned the government against encouraging “reactionary language of economic boycott” which can have deep implications. “We should here be guided by pragmatism,” he said.

    Speaking of media outlets “spreading fake information and cheap rhetoric”, he said it could end up endangering the lives of soldiers and diplomatic staff. “This is not the time for a language of provocation and revenge,” he said, warning particularly about social media.

    He suggested that a senior serving military officer and a senior serving diplomat make a detailed presentation to Opposition leaders on the ground situation, and the progress of talks. “Only with this information could there be a meaningful exchange of ideas between the government and Opposition leaders. Most of the information that is now available to us is from the media, and it cannot be always trusted as accurate. The demand here is not for classified details, but truthful information,” he said in the letter.

    Mr. Gowda also urged Opposition leaders not to use intemperate language. “This is an hour for cooperation. Domestic politics and national security interests cannot be equated. Having said this, I do not mean we should not question the government. It should be done keeping in mind that there are larger issues at stake.”

    Mr. Gowda said that it is the duty of political leadership to quell anxiety that “we are engulfed by hostile nations” with proper information. “Underplaying certain developments and overstating certain information may be a bad strategy in the long run,” he said.

    The former Prime Minister also warned against the “effort to politicise the armed forces” which he described as “dangerous.” “They should be allowed to remain a professional force. When they remain a professional force, they will advise the government of the day fearlessly and correctly,” he said.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • Russia begins discreet moves to defuse India-China tension

    Russian diplomatic sources say that Moscow has “high stakes” at a global level, in the early resolution of tensions between the two Himalayan neighbours.

    A Russia has launched an energetic behind-the-scenes effort to defuse military tensions between India and China, ahead of hosting a trilateral RIC video conference, which includes External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar, and Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi, on Tuesday.

    Russia’s diplomatic activism began on June 17, when Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Igor Morgulov discussed regional security, “including developments on the Line of Actual Control on the border between India and China in the Himalayas,” with Indian ambassador to Russia, D. Bala Venkatesh Varma. The meeting took place in the backdrop of the clash between Indian and Chinese troops in the Galwan valley, in which 20 Indian and an undeclared number of Chinese troops were killed.

    The Russian foreign ministry did not give any further details about the conversation, but Russian diplomatic sources told The Hindu that Moscow has “high stakes” at a global level, in the early resolution of tensions between the two Himalayan neighbours.

    “Good relations between India and China are central to the rise of Eurasia and the emergence of a multipolar world order, which is not dominated by a single pole,” the diplomat said. He pointed to the “centrality” of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), which includes India, Pakistan, Russia and China as well as most of the Central Asian Republics as the anchor of a “post-west” global system.

    “The persistence of tensions between India and China will not only have a huge negative impact on the SCO but also on the rise of the emerging economies under the Brazil Russia India China South Africa (BRICS) grouping,” the source said.

    But the diplomat pointed out that Russia would only like to play a constructive behind-the-scenes role, as both India and China were fully capable of resolving their differences.

    On Wednesday, Dmitry Peskov, press secretary of Russian President Vladimir Putin said reports from the China-India border were “very alarming”.

    “Certainly, we are watching with great attention what is happening on the Chinese-Indian border… But we consider that the two countries are capable of taking necessary steps to prevent such situations in the future and to ensure that there is predictability and stability in the region and that this is a safe region for nations, first of all, China and India,” Mr. Peskov observed.

    The Russian side has also spotlighted the importance of the RIC group, amid speculation that meeting of the three foreign ministers was being postponed on account of the ongoing border friction between India and China.

    “The existence of the RIC is an indisputable reality, firmly fixed on the world map. As for the current stage of the bilateral cooperation , there are no indications that it might be frozen,” Nikolay Kudashev, Russian ambassador to India Tweeted on June 17.

    In a separate Tweet , Mr. Kudashev welcomed “all steps aimed at de-escalation at the LAC, including the conversation between the two FMs (Foreign Ministers) and remain optimistic”.

    Regarding the RIC video conference, Russian foreign ministry spokesperson, Maria Zakharova said on Wednesday that the three foreign ministers will discuss the global political and financial trends following the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the opportunities to overcome the existing crisis.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov had earlier clarified in response to a question on whether the India-China standoff will be discussed at the RIC, that the trilateral format “does not include discussions on bilateral matters”.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • China lays claim to entire Galwan Valley

    It is being seen as an expansion of its previously known territorial claims in the area.

    China’s claims to the entire Galwan valley in Ladakh, attributed on Friday by a Chinese strategic expert to “historical rights” going back to the Qing Dynasty, are being seen as an expansion of previously known Beijing’s territorial claims in the area.

    The claims mark a shift from the past, and suggest China now claims territory west of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) and possibly up to the confluence of the Galwan and Shyok rivers.

    While most Chinese maps show almost all of the Galwan river within Chinese territory, the western edge of the river where it meets the Shyok was not shown as Chinese territory previously in earlier maps.

    On Friday, a leading Chinese strategic expert on border affairs at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), an official think-tank, made the claim to the entire valley in an interview with State media, citing “multiple accounts from the Qing Dynasty” that showed “historical rights”.

    “Multiple accounts from the Qing Dynasty [1644-1911] and Western literature have recorded that the Galwan valley was China’s territory. Based on the principle of ‘historic rights,’ China has jurisdiction over the valley area,” Zhang Yongpan, a research fellow of the Institute of Chinese Borderland Studies at CASS, told the Global Times.

    He referred to India’s construction activity near the Shyok as reflecting an attempt “to break into Chinese land”. “In nearby Shyok river in west Galwan river, India built an airport, constructed bridges, roads and villages. For years, the country has been seeking to break into Chinese land,” he said.

    This followed a statement on Tuesday made by People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) Western Theatre Command spokesman Colonel Zhang Shuili that “China always owns sovereignty over the Galwan valley region”.

    That was said a day after Monday’s clash in the area that claimed the lives of at least 20 Indian soldiers in the worst violence on the border since 1967.

    MEA: untenable claims

    Reacting to the PLA statement, India’s Ministry of External Affairs described the claims as “exaggerated and untenable”.

    The LAC runs east of the Galwan-Shyok confluence, and Monday’s clash was thought to have taken place in the area between the confluence and the LAC, on India’s side of the line. While the LAC has never been demarcated and there are differing perceptions in at least a dozen spots along the LAC, this was not among them, according to officials, and had not seen incidents in the past.

    M. Taylor Fravel, an expert on the Chinese military at MIT, told The Hindu earlier, “Chinese maps that I have seen show almost all of the Galwan river as lying within the territory China claims in the area. The one discrepancy would be the western tip of the Galwan river as it meets the Shyok. Here, the last few kilometres of the Galwan river are often depicted as lying beyond China’s border. How one defines the parameters of the valley itself might be different than the river, however.”

    While there is some ambiguity on where the extremities of the valley may be defined, recent statements from China suggest their claim now goes beyond the current LAC.

    The immediate trigger for the tensions that erupted last month in the Galwan area is thought to be a bridge and some feeder roads built by India east of the confluence of the rivers, but on India’s side of the LAC.

    Opening of road

    China’s moves may have been triggered by last year’s opening of the vital Darbuk-Shyok-Daulet Beg Oldie (DSDBO) road, which runs parallel to the LAC providing key all-weather access to the post at Daulet Beg Oldie, one of the northernmost points in Ladakh, observers have said. China may also be seeking access to areas closer to the confluence, from where it could neutralise the strategically important DSDBO road.

    The report on Friday said the recent clash “has brought the past flashpoint Galwan valley into the spotlight.” It stated, “Chinese experts stressed China owns sovereignty over the area, and warned them not to be blind to history and mislead the public.” It added, “Whether judging from China’s historic rights to the land and the Line of Actual Control, established to create a demarcation line and to ease tensions between the nations after the 1962 war, there is no dispute over the valley’s sovereignty.”

    Mr. Zhang of CASS said the valley, which was also a flashpoint in 1962, was of “strategic importance for both India and China.” “Maybe India thinks it could provide abundant water resources and is an important channel connecting China and South Asia,” he said. “India’s actions in the region also suggest that it intends to strengthen its control over Ladakh and Kashmir. India’s actions proved that it wants to enhance strength against Pakistan and China, and gain favourable geographical advantages”.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • COVID19 | 1,50,000 new cases globally in a single day; World in a new and dangerous phase: WHO

    Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus says the world is entering a ”new and dangerous phase’.

    Reuters

    Geneva: The coronavirus pandemic is accelerating, with Thursday’s 1,50,000 new cases the highest in a single day and nearly half of them in the Americas, the World Health Organization (WHO) said.

    “The world is in a new and dangerous phase,” Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a virtual briefing from WHO headquarters in Geneva. “The virus is still spreading fast, it is still deadly, and most people are still susceptible.”

    More than 80.53 lakh people have been reported infected by the novel coronavirus globally and 4,53,834​ have died, a Reuters tally showed as of 1900 IST on Friday.

    Tedros, whose leadership of the WHO has been severely criticized by U.S. President Donald Trump, urged people to maintain social distancing and “extreme vigilance.”

    As well as the Americas, a large number of new cases were coming from South Asia and the Middle East, Tedros added.

    ‘DRIVEN BY DATA’

    With many nations easing restrictions but fearful of a second wave of COVID-19 disease, WHO emergencies expert Mike Ryan urged a gradual and scientific approach.

    “Exiting lockdowns must be done carefully, in a step-wise manner, and must be driven by the data,” he said.

    “There is no specific definition of a second wave,” he added, saying new clusters did not necessarily mean a second wave while “second peaks” were also possible in one wave.

    Ryan praised Germany, China and South Korea for their handling of the pandemic.

    WHO epidemiologist Maria van Kerkhove said easing of lockdowns had to be accompanied with good public health measures. “It is about being able not only to lift these measures carefully but being able to reactivate them,” she added.

  • Pakistan violates ceasefire in Tangdhar sector of J-K

    PTI

    Srinagar: Pakistani troops violated ceasefire along the Line of Control in Tangdhar sector of Jammu and Kashmir by firing mortar shells towards Indian positions on Friday, Army officials said.

    “On 19 June 2020, in the evening hours, Pakistan initiated an unprovoked ceasefire violation (CFV) along the LoC in Tangdhar sector by firing mortars and other weapons,” the officials said.

    They said the Indian Army gave a befitting response to the violations.

    There were no reports of casualties in the incident.

  • ‘China did not enter our borders, no posts taken’: PM at all-party meet on Ladakh clash

    PTI

    New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday denied any Chinese intrusion to Indian terrioty and said that “Neither has anyone entered our border, nor have any of our posts been occupied by anyone.

    “Addressing the all-party meeting on the LAC situation, PM Modi said neither have the Chinese intruded into India’s territory nor has any post been taken over by them.

    “20 of our jawans were martyred, but those who dared Bharat Mata, they were taught a lesson,” PM Modi was quoted as saying by ANI.

    The Prime Minister said that Indian armed forces are doing what they have to do to protect the country, whether it is deployment, action or counter-action.Highlighting India’s potential, the PM said no one can take even an “inch of the land”.

    “Today, we possess the capability that no one can eye even one inch of our land. India’s armed forces have the capability to move into multiple sectors at one go,” said the prime minister.

  • 700 Kashmiris Stranded in Dubai Disposed from services facing worst hit of Pauperism

    Though India has initiated an enormous rescue operation , using all the ways ragging from national carrier, Air India, and its naval ships even all manpower to bring home overseas citizens .
    However, 700 Kashmiris have been left on high and dry , their voices turned unheard and have facing the pressure-cooker situations. Their money is gone thus forced them to bear the brunt of pauperism and mendicancy which further appeals for them most ignominious syndrome.

    At a time when Hundred of thousands of Indian could be repatriated by the time , with the human bazooka ethos but the stepmother’s treatment is evident when talking about Kashmiris stranded in UAE , from the pre pandemic and are still starving for their voices to be heard.

    The bolt from the blue for these stranded people came when they found themselves into streets disposed from their jobs are now living the life if misery. No celebrity, no politician , no social organization ever heard their wailings.

    These stranded people have approached Indian Embassy but borne no fruit “ We’ve approached the country’s Embassy many times but failed to win their attention, their tall promises turned out to be the torn water “ Wrote to Wilayat Times, a Stranded who is roaming under the scorching sun to be helped.

    Hundreds of thousands of Kashmiri have registered with embassies for repatriation. Many of them have lost jobs. Others are simply unable to fly back any other way, with the airspace virtually closed.

    Some need to come back to earn a living, or to help a sick relative. And as colleges and universities have shut across the globe, hundreds of thousands of young Kashmiris have been left stranded, far from home.

    Their remaining money has gone with mounting psychological distress thus throwing their lives on stake , in an unknown land these people are feared least they will die before reaching home.

    “Majority among us have gone out of job , our visas are cancelled besides many health questions and concerns are adding the petrol to our simmering situations, we’ve been caught between the wall and rock “ said another youth to Wilayat Times with shattered hopes.

    Insofar, Indian government claimed to have launched “VBM” Vandha Bharat Mission With much fanfare but for these stranded people it is a flop-show , it claimed to provide four Flights but played the philander role with lofty expectation of people, now instead of daily basis, they flights can be hardly seen even now in months scheduled to pluck Indians out of places like Kerala, Assam and other States.

    Moreover, this launched service is only meant for Kerala , which is now called as Vandha Kerala Mission by the People who didn’t avail this service.

    The stranded even sought the attention of charity based air services , but they can’t make it to Kashmir , as their service for Kashmir is barred .

    “We request the government of India and JK Administration to rescue us from our stranded places to make our ways to home, and arrange at least three flights in a week, so that everyone reaches home at the earliest.” Wrote a group of youths to Wilayat Times.

    “We have approached for chattered flights, unfortunately they don’t get landing permission in Kashmir. When as 2 or 3 chattered flights took off for Kerala and other parts of Country but for Kashmir, the services are barred with unknown reasons “mailed another stranded man.

    Now, the stranded have appealed , the Indian government to evacuate them from their stranded plights, , they also appealed to the charity based air services to rescue them at the earliest before, health and other s social scourge will make triumph over them.

    “We request the government of India and JK Administration to rescue us from our stranded places to make our ways to home, and arrange at least three flights in a week , so that everyone reaches home at the earliest.” Wrote a group of youths to Wilayat Times

    With inputs from Wilayat Times

  • Malala Yousafzai, who was shot for going to school, now Oxford graduate

    London: Malala Yousafzai, the youngest Nobel Peace Prize winner who once took a bullet for campaigning for girls’ education in Pakistan, was over the moon on Friday after completing her degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics at Britain’s prestigious Oxford University.

    Ms Yousafzai, 22, who attended Oxford’s Lady Margaret Hall college, took to Twitter to share two pictures that show her celebrating the milestone with her family.

    “Hard to express my joy and gratitude right now as I completed my Philosophy, Politics and Economics degree at Oxford,” she said in the tweet, accompanied by two pictures – one showing her sitting with her family in front of a cake that says, ”Happy Graduation Malala”, and the other in which she is covered with cake smiling for the camera.

    In the tweet, the famed human rights activist also revealed her plans for the immediate future – Netflix, reading and sleeping.

    “I don’t know what’s ahead. For now, it will be Netflix, reading and sleep,” she wrote.

    Ms Yousafzai was shot in the head by the Taliban terrorists in December 2012 for campaigning for female education in the Swat Valley in northeastern Pakistan.

    Severely wounded, she was airlifted from one military hospital in Pakistan to another and later flown to the UK for treatment.

    After the attack, the Taliban released a statement saying that they would target Malala Yousafzai again if she survived.

    At the age of 17, Ms Yousafzai became the youngest recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize for her education advocacy in 2014 when she shared the coveted honour with India’s social activist Kailash Satyarthi.

    Unable to return to Pakistan after her recovery, she moved to Britain, setting up the Malala Fund and supporting local education advocacy groups with a focus on Pakistan, Nigeria, Jordan, Syria and Kenya.

    The Taliban, who are against girls’ education, have destroyed many schools in Pakistan. (PTI)

  • COVID-19 recovery rate reaches over 53% in the country

    Srinagar: The Union Government Friday said that the recovery rate has reached to 53.80 per cent in the country and a total of two lakh four thousand 711 people affected with Coronavirus have been cured so far.

    “During the last twenty four hours, 10 thousand 386 people have recovered from COVID-19. Presently, the total number of active Corona cases in the country is one lakh 63 thousand 248”.

    According to news agency Kashmir Indepth News Service (KINS), Health and Family Welfare Ministry said, “A total of 13 thousand 586 new cases of COVID-19 were reported in the last 24 hours taking the total number of cases to three lakh 80 thousand 532. This is the highest number of cases registered in a single day since the outbreak of COVID-19 in the country. In one day, a total of 336 deaths were reported taking the nationwide toll to 12 thousand 573. With this, the case fatality rate reached to 3.30 per cent in the country”.

    Meanwhile, Indian Council of Medical Research, ICMR said that a total of one lakh 76 thousand 959 tests of Corona virus samples were conducted by the various laboratories in the country within 24 hours. This is the highest number of tests conducted by the laboratories in a single day. So far, 64 lakh 26 thousand 627 tests have been conducted.

    ICMR is continuously scaling up its testing facilities for COVID-19 by giving approval to government and private laboratories.
    As of now, total 960 laboratories across India have been given approval to conduct the test for COVID-19 including 703 government laboratories and 257 private laboratories’ chains. (KINS)