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  • Nepal’s map Bill gets full support in upper House

    New map claims the disputed territory of Limpiyadhura-Kalapani-Lipulekh

    The upper House of Nepal Parliament on Thursday passed the Second Constitution Amendment Bill 2077 (Vikram era), with all 59 members voting in favour of the new map that claims the disputed territory of Limpiyadhura-Kalapani-Lipulekh.

    The voting completed the legislative move that grants constitutional status to the map, which was unveiled after the Kalapani territorial dispute intensified in May.

    Nepal Communist Party’s Deputy Chief of Foreign Affairs Bishnu Rijal said the Bill would now be forwarded to President Bidhya Devi Bhandari for her signature, following which the amendment would become part of the Constitution.

    Political map of Nepal released by the country on May 20, 2020.

    The process of passing the Bill, which was cleared unanimously by lower House Pratinidhi Sabha was fast-tracked. The completion of the legislative process means the new map will be part of the national emblem of Nepal. The Parliament secretariat had started using the revised map in all its official letterheads and posters.

    The formal inclusion of the map in the Constitution gives a rare kind of guarantee to the physical territory of the Nepalese state that makes future negotiation on the Kalapani issue difficult. However, Nepal has maintained that it remains open for dialogue.

    Spokesperson of the Ministry of External Affairs Anurag Srivastava had said the amendment amounts to “artificial enlargement of claims that are not based on historical fact or evidence and is not tenable”.

    The ties between the two countries came under strain after Defence Minister Rajnath Singh inaugurated an 80-km-long strategically crucial road connecting the Lipulekh pass with Dharchula in Uttarakhand on May 8.

    Nepal protested the inauguration of the road claiming that it passed through its territory. Days later, Nepal came out with the new map showing Lipulekh, Kalapani and Limpiyadhura as its territories.

    With inputs from The Hindu

  • Ban Restaurants selling Chinese Food: Union Minister

    Restaurants selling Chinese food should be banned. I appeal to people to boycott Chinese food: Union Minister Ramdas Athawale

  • South Kashmir | Another gunfight rages, now in Shopian

    5th Encounter this month in the district

    Srinagar: Gunfight broke out between militants and government forces in Bandpawa village of Imam Sahib in South Kashmir’s Shopian district on Thrusday.

    Reports reaching GNS said that a joint team of Police, Army’s 44 RR and CRPF launched a cordon-and-search-operation Bandpawa.

    As the joint team of forces approached towards the suspected spot, the hiding militants fired upon them. The fire was retaliated by the joint team, triggering off an encounter.

    A senior police officer confirmed to GNS the exchange of fire between the joint team and the militants. As per the sources, two to three militants are believed to be trapped.

    Pertinently 17 militants were killed including some top commanders this month in Shopian district all alone.(GNS)

  • COVID-19: J&K records 7 deaths in 24 hours, toll mounts to 71

    ‘Five people died of virus in Kashmir, 2 in Jammu since Wednesday’

    Srinagar: Jammu and Kashmir has witnessed a surge in Covid-19 deaths as seven people died of the deadly virus in the UT in the past 24 hours, health officials said on Thursday.

    Of the seven deaths, five were recorded in Kashmir and two in Jammu region, taking the total number of COVID deaths in the UT to 71 so far.

    Officials told news agency—Kashmir News Observe (KNO), that the patients who died at SMHS include a 70-year-old man from Baramulla, 65-year-old from Batamaloo, 70-year-old from Budgam, 89-year-old from Nawa Bazar, Srinagar and 65- year-old from Shopian in Kashmir division and who patients who died at GMC Jammu include 65-year-old from Tallab Tillo and 68 year old from Akhnoor.

    Dr Nazir Choudhary, Medical Superintendent SMHS confirmed that five patients, who were tested positive for Covid-19, died at SMHS in last 24 hours.

    He said that all were elderly and were having underlying problems like Hypertension, Pneumonia and respiratory issues.

    Officials from Jammu said that a 65-year-old man from Bohri Talab Tillo was under treatment at isolation ward in GMC Jammu died on Wednesday evening.

    “The person was under quarantine in a paid quarantine facility after his recent return from New Delhi,” officials told KNO

    “He was also showing some symptoms including high fever and his another family member was also positive for Coronavirus,” the officials said.

    The second person who died due to Coronavirus is a man from Kote-Garhi area of Akhnoor in Jammu district.

    “Man was undergoing treatment for some ailments and was tested positive on Tuesday with his treatment was on in hospital where he breathed his last on Wednesday evening,” officials said.

    With seven more deaths, the death toll in J&K has reached to 71 including 62 from Kashmir division and nine from Jammu division.

    Srinagar district with 17 deaths has the highest fatalities followed by Baramulla 12, eight each in Kulgam and Shopian, six each in Anantnag, five in Kupwara, three in Budgam, two in Pulwama and one in Bandipora in Kashmir division while as in Jammu division, 6 are from Jammu district and one death each has been reported from Doda, Udhampur and Rajouri—(KNO)

  • Trump sought Chinese President Xi Jinping’s help to win re-election, reveals Bolton’s book

    The U.S. president had expressed a willingness to halt criminal probe to give “personal favors to dictators he liked,” says the former national security adviser

    Reuters

    In a withering behind-the-scenes portrayal, President Donald Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton accused him of sweeping misdeeds that included explicitly seeking Chinese President Xi Jinping’s help to win re-election.

    Mr. Bolton, a longtime foreign policy hawk who Mr. Trump fired in September over policy differences, also said that the U.S. president had expressed a willingness to halt criminal investigations to give “personal favors to dictators he liked,” according to a book excerpt published in the New York Times.

    The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on excerpts from “The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir” published on Wednesday in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times and the Washington Post.

    The accusations are part of a book that the U.S. government on Tuesday sued to block Mr. Bolton from publishing, arguing it contained classified information and would compromise national security.

    Together, they portray a U.S. President mocked by his top advisers who exposed himself to far more extensive accusations of impropriety than those that drove the Democratic-led House of Representatives to impeach Mr. Trump last year.

    The Republican-led Senate acquitted Mr. Trump in early February. Mr. Trump was accused of withholding U.S. military aid last year to put pressure on newly-elected Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelensky to provide damaging information on Democratic political opponent Joe Biden.

    “Had Democratic impeachment advocates not been so obsessed with their Ukraine blitzkrieg in 2019, had they taken the time to inquire more systematically about Mr. Trumps behavior across his entire foreign policy, the impeachment outcome might well have been different,” Mr. Bolton wrote, according to excerpts of his book published in the Wall Street Journal.

    Critics of Mr. Bolton note he declined to testify before the House inquiry when his disclosures could have been critical, adhering instead to White House guidance.

    Representative Adam Schiff, the California Democrat who led the prosecution of Republican Mr. Trump, slammed Mr. Bolton for saying at the time that “he’d sue if subpoenaed.”

    “Instead, he saved it for a book,” Mr., Schiff said on Twitter. ”Mr. Bolton may be an author, but he’s no patriot.”

    Still, Mr. Bolton’s allegations provide new ammunition to critics ahead of the Nov. 3 presidential election, including his behind-the-scenes accounts of Mr. Trump’s conversations with China’s Xi – which, in one case, broached the topic of the U.S. vote.

    “Mr. Trump then, stunningly, turned the conversation to the coming U.S. presidential election, alluding to China’s economic capability and pleading with Mr. Xi to ensure he’d win,” Mr. Bolton wrote, in the most in-depth, damaging portrayal by a Mr. Trump administration insider to date and just days after former defense secretary Jim Mattis accused the President of trying to divide America.

    Mr. Biden said in a statement: “If these accounts are true, its not only morally repugnant, its a violation of Donald Trump’s sacred duty to the American people.”

    U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said in Senate testimony that Mr. Bolton’s account was “absolutely untrue.”

    “I was at the meeting. Would I recollect something as crazy as that? Of course I would,” Mr. Lighthizer said. “This never happened in it for sure. Completely crazy.”

    Mr. Trump ‘eroded’ Presidency

    Although Mr. Trump’s administration had been strongly critical of China’s mass detention of mostly Muslim Uighur minority and other Muslim groups, Mr. Trump gave Mr. Xi a green light in that same meeting, Mr. Bolton said.

    “According to our interpreter, Mr. Trump said that Mr. Xi should go ahead with building the camps, which Mr. Trump thought was exactly the right thing to do,” Mr. Bolton wrote, adding another top White House official said Mr. Trump made similar comments during his November 2017 trip to China.

    Mr. Bolton cited an innumerable number of conversations in which Mr. Trump demonstrated “fundamentally unacceptable behavior that eroded the very legitimacy of the presidency.”

    A former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and Fox News television commentator, Mr. Bolton’s hawkish approach had worn on a president weary of foreign military entanglements, officials say.

    Mr. Trump would sometimes chide Mr. Bolton in meetings, introducing him to visiting foreign leaders by saying, You all know the great John Mr. Bolton. Hell bomb you. Hell take out your whole country.

    In excerpts published in the Washington Post, Mr. Bolton writes that Mr. Trump said invading Venezuela would be “cool” and that it was “really part of the United States.”

    The U.S. government has publicly said it does not favor using force to topple Venezuela’s socialist President Nicolas Maduro.

    The book also exposed the sometimes dim view that Mr. Trump’s advisers have of him. During a 2018 meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, Mr. Bolton says he got a note from Secretary of State Mike Pompeo mocking Mr. Trump.

    “He is so full of shit,” Mr. Pompeo’s note said, according to a Mr. Bolton excerpt in the Washington Post.

    Although Mr. Trump is publicly critical of journalists, Mr. Bolton’s book quotes the U.S. President making some of his most alarming remarks to date. In a summer 2019 meeting in New Jersey, Mr. Trump allegedly said journalists should be jailed so they have to divulge their sources: “These people should be executed. They are scumbags, according to another excerpt in the Post.

  • PM Modi launches auction process for privatization of 41 coal blocks for commercial mining

    PTI

    New Delhi, June 18 (PTI) Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday launched the auction process for 41 coal blocks for commercial mining, a move that opens India’s coal sector for private players, and termed it a major step in the direction of India achieving self-reliance.

    Launching the auction of mines for commercial mining, that is expected to garner Rs 33,000 crore of capital investment in the country over next five to seven years, the Prime Minister said India will win the coronavirus war and turn this crisis into an opportunity, and the pandemic will make India self-reliant.

    The launch of the auction process not only marks the beginning of unlocking of the country’s coal sector from the lockdown of decades , but aims at making India the largest exporter of coal, the Prime Minister said.

    Presently, despite being the world’s fourth largest producer, he said India is the second largest importer of the dry-fuel.

    “Allowing private sector in commercial coal mining is unlocking resources of a nation with the world’s fourth-largest reserves,” he pointed out.

    Major scams had taken place in coal auction earlier, but the system has been made “transparent” now, PM said lambasting past policies of keeping the sector closed.

    The PM said that this auction process will result in major revenues to states and create employment besides developing the far-flung areas.

    The commencement of auction process of these blocks, part of the series of announcements made under ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan’, is likely to contribute Rs 20,000 crore revenues annually to the state governments.

    In line with the Prime Minister’s self-reliance call, the aim behind the auction process is to achieve self-sufficiency in meeting energy needs and boosting industrial development.

    The government has taken an important decision to open up coal and mining sector to competition, capital and technology, he said.

    Coal and Mines Minister Pralhad Joshi, who was also be present during the launch event, said Rs 50,000 crore is being invested in the sector to jack up India’s coal output to 1 billion tonne.

    With a view to achieve self-reliance in the coal sector, the Ministry of Coal in association with FICCI launched the process of auction of 41 coal mines under the provisions of Coal Mines (Special Provisions) Act and Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act.

    Upon attainment of peak rated capacity of production of 225 million tonnes (MT), the government said, these mines will contribute about 15 per cent of the country’s projected total coal production in 2025-26.

    It will also lead to employment generation for more than 2.8 lakh people — direct employment to approximately 70,000 people and indirect employment to approximately 2,10,000 people, as per the government.

  • Delhi govt caps rate of COVID-19 test at Rs 2,400

    PTI


    New Delhi
    : The Delhi government has decided to cap the rate of COVID-19 RT-PCR test at Rs 2,400, Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia said on Thursday.

    “Delhi govt decided to cap the rates for Covid RT-PCR (reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction) test @ Rs 2400/- inclusive of all charges,” Sisodia tweeted.

    On Wednesday, the Ministry of Home Affairs had announced that the price of COVID-19 test in Delhi has been fixed at Rs 2,400 as suggested by a high-level committee set up by Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Sunday and now tests will be done via Rapid Antigen methodology.

    The ministry’s spokesperson had said that to improve contact mapping in Delhi’s containment zones, health surveys have been started on Shah’s directions, and out of a population of 2,30,466 people in 242 containment zones, survey of 1,77,692 people was conducted between June 15 and 16.

    The remaining will be covered by June 20.

  • Pakistan Army says 4 civilians killed in firing by Indian forces along LoC

    PTI


    Islamabad
    : The Pakistan Army has said that at least four civilians were killed in alleged firing by the Indian security forces along the LoC.

    Spokesperson of the Pakistan Armed Forces. Major General Babar Iftikhar, said that the firing targeted the civilian population in Nikial and Bagsar sectors along the Line of Control.

    Indian Army troops initiated unprovoked CFV (ceasefire violations) in Nikial & Bagsar sectors along the LoC targeting civilian population, he said in a statement.

    Four civilians including a woman in Ratta Jabbar and Lewana Khaiter village were killed while another was injured, the officer said.

    The spokesman further said that the Pakistan Army troops responded effectively to the Indian firing .

  • Sena wants Galwan valley standoff details to be made public

    PTI

    Mumbai: The Shiv Sena on Thursday said it is “shocking” that a detailed account of the standoff in Galwan Valley has not been public and if it is true that the Chinese intruded into the Indian territory, then it is an attack on the country’s sovereignty.

    An editorial in Sena mouthpiece ‘Saamana’ said in the last six years, there has been a “propaganda” that India has become strong under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s rule.

    “But in this period, Pakistan, Nepal, and now China have directly attacked us. We don’t have good relations with our neighbours and it is surprising that claims are made by our politicians of winning the world,” it said.

    “Pakistan’s attitude is the same even after surgical strikes. China can’t be trusted and is known for deception.

    But, if Nepal also takes an anti-India stand, the position of our country is not good,” the Marathi daily said.

    Nobody wants tension on the borders, specially in the present times, but should the sacrifices of 20 soldiers be allowed go waste? it asked, and said “if there is no retaliation, Modi’s image will take a beating”.

    Twenty Indian Army personnel, including a colonel, were killed in the clash with Chinese troops in the Galwan Valley in eastern Ladakh on Monday night, the biggest military confrontation in over five decades that has significantly escalated the already volatile border standoff in the region.

    The Sena claimed government sources have quoted that a Chinese commanding officer and 30 to 40 of their soldiers have been killed.

    “Should we be happy and clap over this? If it is true that the Chinese intruded into our territory, it is an attack on our sovereignty. It is shocking that even after our 20 soldiers laid down their lives, a detailed account of the developments has not yet been made public,” it said.

    Earlier in 1975, the Chinese intruded into Arunachal Pradesh and four Indianjawans were then killed in the firing, the former NDA constituent said.

    “Now if there is so much damage even without the use of any weapon, gun, missile or tanker, then why manufacture security-related equipment andnuclear bombs. We are taking each others lives in physical fights,” it said.

    The Sena further said the US and China are fighting over the spread of COVID-19 pandemic, but USA “doesn’t come in the range of Chinese missiles”.

    “We shouldn’t forget that China is our neighbour,” the Uddhav Thackeray-led party said.

    Pandit Nehru, Indira Gandhi and (Atal Bihari) Vajpayee tried to keep the borders calmbecause the country has to pay a price when there is tension on the borders, it pointed out.

    “It is easy to say tensions with China are due to the failed foreign policy of Nehru regarding the neighbouring country, but it is the duty of the Modi government to stop the killing of our soldiers on the Chinese border,” the Sena said.

    Before he became PM, Modi would say the problem is not on the borders, but in Delhi and the Centre is weak because of which the enemy is attacking India, it claimed.

    “When the Chinese president came to Ahmedabad and sat on a swing with Modi eating dhokla, we had warned that don’t trust the Chinese. Nehru was betrayed and the same would happen again. Unfortunately,what we said was proved true,” the Sena said.

    It is easy to threaten Pakistan and derive political mileage with surgical strikes, but China has a place of its own in the world order which confronts a superpower like USA.

  • ‘Scrap Chinese firm’s contract for Metro project’; Maharashtra NCP Minister to Centre

    PTI

    Mumbai: In the wake of the killing of 20

    Indian soldiers in a violent clash with Chinese troops in Ladakh, Maharashtra NCP minister Jitendra Awhad has asked the Centre to scrap the Delhi-Meerut Metro work contract bagged by a Chinese firm.

    “After the talk of Atmanirbhar Bharat (self-reliant India), the contract has been awarded to a Chinese company.

    Who gave the contract? Under whose jurisdiction the Railways comes? Is it not the Centre?” Awhad asked in a tweet on Wednesday, while demanding that the contract be scrapped.

    “On June 12, the Delhi-Meerut Metro project work was given to Chinese firm Shanghai Tunnel Engineering Company, by sidelining the Indian company L&T. Then on June 15, the Chinese killed our 20 jawans. What kind of a foreign policy is this?” the minister wondered, and sought that the Centre “teach a lesson” to China.

    Incidentally, the Maharashtra government on Monday signed MoUs collectively worth over Rs 5,000 crore with three Chinese companies, according to an official statement.