Tag: divide

  • BJP hits back at NC’s Abdullah, says his remarks on G20 conspiracy to divide society

    BJP hits back at NC’s Abdullah, says his remarks on G20 conspiracy to divide society

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    Jammu: Jammu and Kashmir BJP chief Ravinder Raina on Monday hit out at National Conference president Farooq Abdullah over his criticism of the government for not holding a G20 meeting in Jammu, saying it was a “deliberate attempt” to divide the society.

    He said Abdullah’s remarks show his frustration as the political ground of the National Conference is slipping fast.

    Earlier in the day, Abdullah attacked the government, saying it is unfortunate that G20 meetings were scheduled in Ladakh and Kashmir but not in Jammu, and slammed BJP leaders for not raising the issue.

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    “A G20 meeting is taking place in J-K which is a welcome decision of the government and the people are thankful to the prime minister for it. Some people do not digest peace, prosperity and development and are feeling pain in their belly as they see J-K marching ahead with people maintaining communal harmony and brotherhood,” Raina told reporters at the party headquarters here.

    “Jammu and Kashmir is a single entity and it does not matter whether the meeting is taking place in Srinagar or Jammu It is a conspiracy to poison the minds of the people and divide the society which will not succeed,” he added.

    Raina said the National Conference ruled J-K for most part of the past 70 years through “divisive politics” and it is not willing to allow people to live in peace and harmony. “They are frustrated as they see their political ground slipping away and such a remark is reflective of their frustration.”

    On Abdullah’s remark about growing incidents of terrorism in Jammu region post the abrogation of Article 370, the BJP leader said he wants to remind the National Conference leader, who was the chief minister for several terms and a union minister as well, that the markets and educational institutions used to remain shut for 10 months every year.

    “There used to be no transport service, tourist influx had stopped and Lal Chowk and other main markets used to wore a deserted look while stone-pelting has become an order of the day with even Muslims apprehensive of visiting mosques for Friday and Eid prayers That time has gone and there is peace and brotherhood, whether in Jammu or Kashmir,” he said.

    Raina said J and K is on the path of development because of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    “Abdullah should hear the voice of his conscience and he will himself see the difference. Modi had pasted balm on the wounds of those who have suffered at the hands of Pakistan and anti-national forces,” he said, adding “Modi is living in the hearts of every citizen of Jammu and Kashmir.”

    He also talked about the benefits of abrogation of Article 370 on the lives of West Pakistan refugees, PoJK refugees, Gorkha community, Valmiki Samaj and women married outside J-K.

    Referring to the historic 100th episode of the prime minister’s Maan Ki Baat’ radio broadcast, Raina said over six lakh residents of J-K listened to the programme together, giving the BJP the confidence that it will emerge a winner in the next assembly elections.

    “Holding of assembly elections is the prerogative of the Election Commission of India but the BJP is ready for the polls and given the support of the people to Modi, we will win the polls with a majority of seats (to form the next government),” he said.

    He thanked the prime minister for always encouraging J-K residents through his Maan Ki Baat’ and said Modi has always heard the “Janta’s Maan Ki Baat” and is keeping them close to his heart and resolving all their issues.

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    #BJP #hits #NCs #Abdullah #remarks #G20 #conspiracy #divide #society

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Dining across the divide: ‘I don’t agree with his overblown fears about what Brexit would unleash’

    Dining across the divide: ‘I don’t agree with his overblown fears about what Brexit would unleash’

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    Nick

    Nick, 30, Bristol

    Occupation Part-time history lecturer, part-time cleaner

    Voting record Grew up in Montana, a Democrat surrounded by conservatives

    Amuse bouche As a teenager and inspired by Tolkien, Nick invented his own language called Hesperian

    Peter

    Peter, 60, Bristol

    Occupation Computer science professor

    Voting record A Labour party member until recently, Peter is no fan of Keir Starmer and sometimes votes Green

    Amuse bouche Once lived in a squat in London. “The police burst in, but we didn’t have any drugs, so they left with their tails between their legs”

    For starters

    Nick He was a lovely man. I could tell he was very much in this for the conversation. He wasn’t quite as into the menu as I was – that was half my motivation. I had paneer tikka and a prawn curry.

    Peter He was smart and thoughtful, able to hold his own but also listen. I could be his father – he’s younger than my daughters – but I can’t say it made any difference. The food was very good, too.

    Nick and Peter

    The big beef

    Nick Peter seems to have this mindset that the young today – Gen Z and millennials – have it uniquely bad, and that this explains what people term the mental health crisis. I see it more as a self-fulfilling prophecy. I guess I see what were formerly just normal conditions of life – things people addressed through philosophy or religion – being medicalised.

    Peter No generation has it easy. But if I was the same age as Nick, I’d be thinking: “I can’t buy a house, rent is really expensive” – and that would make me worry about the future. I’d be concerned about climate change, mass extinction events. That creates a lot of stress for people.

    Nick I accept that a lot of problems like anxiety and depression probably have roots in brain chemistry. But for students worried about doing poorly on tests or not fitting in, it becomes: “I now have anxiety as part of my identity.” It is something they embrace and then don’t really try to overcome. Maybe I’m projecting a bit unfairly.

    Peter It’s a spectrum – everyone is physically ill sometimes, and almost certainly slightly mentally ill sometimes as well. In the end, it’s that medics are better able to diagnose it.

    Nick and Peter

    Sharing plate

    Peter We agreed that Brexit had been economically bad. But I think it might be good for the following reason: some people look back at the empire and think Britain is this fantastic leading country, but actually it isn’t. If Brexit teaches humility, that is a good thing, and Britain may then become a good European nation rather than being the bad boy in the room all the time.

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    Nick I view the election of Trump in similar terms. I hate him – there was a legitimate risk he could have subverted democracy. But at the same time it has forced America to reckon with its place in the world. When I was growing up, we were literally told we were so lucky to be born in the most free, wonderful country that God ever created. I don’t think it’s the same here, but imperial nostalgia is confronting reality now.

    Nick and Peter

    For afters

    Nick One of the reasons Peter had for voting against Brexit was that it would unleash a rightwing coup.

    Peter The EU is a neoliberal club, but it is blunted, and that EU club has blunted the neoliberals here. They want to be released from those restraints. I feared a rightwing coup, and that seems to have happened – Johnson coming into power, the Tufton Street cabal, Kwarteng, Truss and so on.

    Nick I think Britain is a more socially democratic country than before, though whether that is because of Covid is another question. I don’t agree with Peter’s overblown fears about what Brexit would unleash. That is partly shaped by his experience of the 80s – he seems like a school of Tony Benn type.

    Nick and Peter

    Takeaways

    Nick So much of the resentment I have towards my own generation is because it’s impossible to have these kinds of broad discussions. It was nice to talk about how societies can be overhauled rather than getting bogged down in identity politics. At the same time, it was a reminder that I’m a bit cloistered in my own attitudes.

    Peter I do like being challenged. It was a very positive experience. We exchanged numbers, so who knows – maybe I’ll invite him and his partner round for dinner. I’m not so good, but my wife is very good at cooking.

    Nick and Peter

    Additional reporting: Kitty Drake

    Nick and Peter ate at Nutmeg in Bristol.

    Want to meet someone from across the divide? Find out how to take part

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    #Dining #divide #dont #agree #overblown #fears #Brexit #unleash
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘Anti-nationals’ are those misusing power to divide Indians: Sonia Gandhi

    ‘Anti-nationals’ are those misusing power to divide Indians: Sonia Gandhi

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    New Delhi:
     Launching a scathing attack on the government on B R Ambedkar’s birth anniversary, former Congress chief Sonia Gandhi on Friday alleged that the regime in power is “misusing and subverting” the institutions of the Constitution, and the people must act to defend the Constitution from this “systematic assault”.

    Penning an article in The Telegraph on the 132nd birth anniversary of Ambedkar, the architect of India’s Constitution, Gandhi said today the real “anti-nationals” are those who are misusing their power to divide Indians against each other on the grounds of religion, language, caste and gender.

    “As we honour Babasaheb’s legacy today, we must remember his prescient warning that the success of the Constitution depends on the conduct of the people entrusted with the duty to govern,” the Congress parliamentary party president said.

    MS Education Academy

    She alleged that today, the regime in power is misusing and subverting the institutions of the Constitution, and weakening its foundations of liberty, equality, fraternity and justice.\

    Gandhi alleged that liberty is “threatened” by misusing the law to harass people rather than to protect their rights and equality is “assaulted” by “favoured treatment to chosen friends” in every sphere, even as the vast majority of Indians suffer economically.

    “Fraternity is eroded by deliberately manufacturing an atmosphere of hatred and polarising Indians against each other. The resultant injustice is amplified by pressuring the judiciary through a sustained campaign,” Gandhi said.

    At this junction in our nation’s history, people must act to defend the Constitution from this “systematic assault”, she said.

    “All Indians wherever they stand political parties, unions and associations, citizens in groups and as individuals must play their parts at this critical time. Dr. Ambedkar’s life and struggle teaches critical lessons which can serve as a guide,” the former Congress president said.

    She said the first lesson is to vigorously debate and disagree, but ultimately work together for the nation’s interest.

    The history of India’s freedom struggle is full of sharp disagreements among Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Ambedkar, Sardar Patel, and many others, she noted.

    These debates naturally attract interest, as they offer many perspectives on serious questions about our future, she added.

    “But we must not forget that ultimately, all the eminent men and women who fought for our freedom worked together for our independence and to shape our nation. Their ups and downs at different times only shows that they were fellow travellers on a common journey, and they were well aware of the fact,” Gandhi said.

    Dr Ambedkar’s conduct as the Chairman of the Constituent Assembly’s Drafting Committee exemplifies this principle, she asserted.

    She said the second lesson to learn is to encourage a spirit of fraternity, the bedrock of the nation.

    “Babasaheb believed deeply in the importance of nurturing a brotherhood of Indians as one people, saying ‘without fraternity, equality and liberty will be no deeper than coats of paint’,” she said.

    In his final speech, he discussed how the caste system strikes at the roots of fraternity and called it “anti-national”, Gandhi recalled.

    “This phrase is abused by those in power today, but Dr. Ambedkar explained its true meaning the caste system is ‘anti-national’ because it brings about separation, generates jealousy, antipathy in short, because it divides Indians against each other,” she said.

    “Today, the real ‘anti-nationals’ are those who are misusing their power to divide Indians against each other on the grounds of religion, language, caste and gender. Thankfully, despite the regime’s efforts, the sense of fraternity runs deep in Indians,” Gandhi asserted.

    She cited the example of crores of Indians from all walks of life protesting against religious divisiveness, raising their voices for livelihoods of farmers, and helping each other to their best abilities during the COVID-19 pandemic, saying those instances prove that sense of fraternity runs deep beyond doubt.

    “We must always nurture this sense of brotherhood and defend it from attacks in our households, communities, and organisations,” she said.

    The third lesson from Ambedkar is to always fight for social and economic justice, Gandhi said.

    “Dr. Ambedkar fought for the rights of Dalits, as well as the rights of all individuals and communities who were marginalised. The system in the Constitution for backward classes and minorities is flexible and expansive, and has enabled progressive action for their welfare,” she noted.

    “Today, the challenges of ensuring social justice have taken new forms. The economic reforms of 1991 introduced by the Congress government have increased prosperity, but we now see growing economic inequality,” Gandhi said.

    “Reckless privatisation” of public sector units is narrowing the system of reservation which offered security and social mobility to Dalits, Adivasis and OBCs, she argued.

    The advent of new technologies is threatening livelihoods but also creating opportunities to organise better, and ensure greater equality, she said.

    “The challenge is to learn from Babasaheb Ambedkar and ensure social justice in these changing times, and act on our convictions in our public and private lives,” Gandhi said.

    She also quoted Babasaheb Ambedkar’s last words in the Constituent Assembly “If we wish to preserve the Constitution… let us resolve not to be tardy in the recognition of the evils that lie across our path…nor to be weak in our initiative to remove them. That is the only way to serve the country. I know of no better.”

    These words must be our resolve in the years to come, Gandhi added.

    Ambedkar’s remarkable life remains an enduring inspiration today for all Indians, she said.

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    #Antinationals #misusing #power #divide #Indians #Sonia #Gandhi

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • BJP sharpening communal divide as 2024 general elections approach: Yechury

    BJP sharpening communal divide as 2024 general elections approach: Yechury

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    Kolkata: CPI(M) general secretary Sitaram Yechury on Wednesday alleged that the BJP is sharpening communal polarisation as the 2024 general elections approach.

    He said that clashes between groups of people have been witnessed during the Ram Navami celebrations in some parts of the country.

    “As 2024 (Lok Sabha elections) approaches, sharpening communal polarisation has become mainstay for the BJP for its electoral and political mobilisation,” Yechury said at a press conference here.

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    Stating that there is no history of clashes during the Ramnavami celebrations in the past in many of the places where they occurred, the CPI(M) leader claimed that it was engineered.

    The CPI(M) leader said that the anti-BJP forces in the country have to unite to make sure that the saffron party does not continue to control the reins of the government and state power.

    Yechury said that post the general elections next year, the actual formation of an anti-BJP alliance will take shape.

    He claimed that this combine will form the next government, replacing the BJP-led NDA.

    The CPI(M) leader said each state has its specific political alignments, but the idea is to maximise pooling of the anti-BJP forces.

    “Both in 1996 and 2004, alliances were formed after the elections,” he said.

    He pointed out that the CPI(M) supported the Manmohan Singh government in 2004 despite having fought the Congress in three states West Bengal, Kerala and Tripura.

    He said that the CPI(M) has decided to continue to talk with all the secular, democratic opposition parties.

    “The effort would be, in the coming 2024 elections, in every state to maximise the pooling of patriotic and secular opposition forces so that the BJP cannot take advantage of a division in the opposition,” he said.

    Asked about the possibility of Mamata Banerjee-led ruling party in Bengal being in it, the CPI(M) leader claimed that the Trinamool Congress’ credibility as an anti-BJP force has “always been questionable.”

    Claiming that politics is not just about arithmetic and adding numbers, he said that it has to be seen who is a consistent ally.

    “If the entire purpose of the Trinamool and the BJP is to isolate the Left and the Congress and the other secular forces, then the point is what in the future they will do together,” he asked.

    In the past a number of opposition parties uch as DMK, the Left, RJD, JD(U) and NCP have held meetings to forge an understanding ahead of the 2024 general elections. However, the Trinamool Congress at that time had indicated it would like to remain equidistant from both the Congress and BJP.

    Nevertheless, after Congress leader Rahul Gandhi’s disqualification, the TMC Supremo Mamata Banerjee tweeted her condemnation and the party started sending its representative to various opposition programs.

    Yechury termed as “peculiar” the Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s assertion that if their lives “are difficult or made difficult with the support of the State”, would the Indian Muslim population be growing.

    “This very argument is completely unacceptable,” he said.

    The Left leader claimed that the real wages in India have remained stagnant over the last eight years of the Narendra Modi government.

    “With inflation soaring, if the real wages are stagnant, that means people’s consumption are declining, which means poverty levels are increasing,” he said.

    Yechury claimed that in the last 10 years, two India’s have emerged – shining India and suffering India, with the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer.

    Alleging misuse of the ED, CBI and governors, he also claimed that the democratic system in the country is being destroyed.

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    #BJP #sharpening #communal #divide #general #elections #approach #Yechury

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Bruising budget battle in New York deepens Democratic divide

    Bruising budget battle in New York deepens Democratic divide

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    At a moment when many are looking to Hochul to unite Democrats in New York, fearing disaster in 2024, the governor is having the opposite effect. Progressives from New York City, who largely control the state Legislature, feel emboldened to push a left-leaning agenda after a decade of strong-arm tactics from ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo. And Hochul, long a moderate, is struggling to advance priorities that include tough-on-crime policies and making the state more affordable.

    It’s a volatile mix that’s left the governor with limited political capital and her party as splintered as it has been in years.

    “I wish she would listen to the voters and not the high rollers,” state Sen. Jessica Ramos (D-Queens), a leading progressive and chair of the Senate Labor Committee, said in an interview, adding that Hochul is being influenced by corporate interests who helped her raise a state record $50 million for her election.

    Hochul still has the power to shape budget negotiations in coming days and weeks since she holds the purse strings ahead of the April 1 start of the fiscal year. New York lawmakers typically wrap most major legislative proposals into the state budget each year, so winning support for her agenda will be her highest priority as discussions wrap, likely in April if a deal isn’t reached in the next few days.

    Hochul has struggled all year to get traction in the Legislature. She got rolled by Democrats in the state Senate last month when they resoundingly rejected her pick, Hector LaSalle, to be the state’s top judge — a first-of-its-kind rebuke by lawmakers who deemed him too moderate for their taste.

    Hochul’s trying a new tactic this month by aligning herself with former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg, who is pumping $5 million into ads and mailers in lawmakers’ districts to boosther priorities. While the move will certainly put pressure on lawmakers worried about how their constituents will view the messages, it’s also serving to anger fellow Democrats who think the mailers cross a line.

    “What’s she’s doing is weaponizing her identity and allowing billionaires to use her to continue the same old Albany politics,” Assemblymember Ron Kim (D-Queens) said at a news conference last week referencing Hochul’s status as the first woman governor.

    Hochul appears ready to dig in on her priorities, looking to beat back opposition to toughening bail laws on violent suspects and making the high-cost state more affordable by forcing new housing in the suburbs.

    She also wants to show that she’s got a firm grip on her office as she looks to set the tone at the Capitol for her four-year term and takes the reins of a divided state Democratic Party after succeeding Cuomo, who resigned in 2021.

    Democratic values get “clouded” when “people from the socialist side” say they represent what the party stands for, Hochul said.

    “My job is to bring it together, instill confidence in voters in the Democratic Party and go forth into a whole new era,” the governor said earlier this month, when asked by POLITICO about the party’s future.

    Some New York City Democrats are still calling for the resignation of state party chairman Jay Jacobs, who lost all four House seats in his Long Island backyard and is fighting with liberals by blasting them as too far left for the state as a whole.

    “There is a concerted, clear and definite unrelenting effort by folks from the far left to unseat moderate, progressive incumbents,” Jacobs said in a recent interview. “And it’s all about power.”

    Jacobs said that, if the Legislature keeps pushing the party further left, it will alienate moderate voters in the suburbs and upstate — which, he said, was the reason Republicans flipped four House seats on Long Island, in the Hudson Valley and upstate.

    “The people who abandoned the Democratic Party, for the most part, abandoned the Democratic Party because they felt that our party has moved too far to the left,” he continued. “The more we continue to do that, the more voters in these areas we will lose.”

    So far, Hochul has stood by Jacobs, but his presence continues to irk liberals. Some groups said Hochul needs to make New York a progressive capital in the nation to counter Republicans in Washington and in red states.

    “The governor in the last election struggled to communicate most directly with voters, and now this is a movement in the budget to say: message received,” said Sochie Nnaemeka, the director of the labor-backed Working Families Party.

    Some Democrats said it’s important that the party find common ground heading into 2024, when all 26 House seats and 213 state legislative seats will be on the ballot again.

    “We have to take back the House in 2024. We need to make Leader [Hakeem] Jeffries … Speaker Jeffries, and in order to do that, we have to figure out what didn’t go so great and what did well and how we do more of that,” Sen. Jamaal Bailey, the Bronx Democratic Party chairperson, said.

    The tension at the Capitol is almost palpable. And it was apparent as soon as the six-month legislative session started in January.

    “In a lot of areas, the governor was a drag on the ticket. That’s just a fact. So how much does that contribute to what we’re seeing now? I don’t know. I think the people who are most aggrieved aren’t here anymore. They lost,” said Sen. James Skoufis, a Hudson Valley Democrat and part of the conference’s more moderate faction.

    “But it’s clear, regardless where it comes from, there is tension between a lot of the Legislature and the governor.”

    How does it end up?

    “There are two paths forward,” Skoufis surmised in the wake of the LaSalle rejection. “The place proverbially blows up for session, and the other is we hit a reset button. Obviously, I hope it’s the second.”

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    #Bruising #budget #battle #York #deepens #Democratic #divide
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • China Select Committee hearing highlights partisan divide on Beijing-countering strategy

    China Select Committee hearing highlights partisan divide on Beijing-countering strategy

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    Pottinger spiced up his testimony with a video of quotes by China’s paramount leader Xi Jinping that suggested hostile intentions toward the United States. Pottinger accused the Chinese government of waging “information warfare” on the U.S. and likened it to a series of magicians, calling the Chinese Communist Party “the Harry Houdini of Marxist-Leninist regimes; the David Copperfield of Communism; the Chris Angel of autocracy.” McMaster echoed that assessment and argued that some of the blame lies with leaders in academic, industry, finance and government who’ve exercised “wishful thinking and self-delusion” about China’s intentions.

    But the hearing revealed stark differences in how GOP and Democratic committee members perceive the U.S.-China rivalry and the strategies to approach it.

    Committee chair Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) laid out a GOP vision of an external facing “existential struggle” against China’s “ideological, technological, economic and military threat.” Democratic committee members countered with a more domestic-focused approach hinged to bolstering U.S. democracy and backed by government funding for an industrial policy that ranking member Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.) said could thwart China’s challenge “through investments in technologies of the future, workforce improvement and by fixing weaknesses in our economy.”

    And Democratic members made implicit reference to Rep. Lance Gooden’s (R-Texas) statement on Fox News on Feb. 22 in which he questioned Rep. Judy Chu’s (D-Calif) loyalty or competence — a sign of the divides that could undermine the committee. “Calling into question the loyalty of Chinese Americans, as a member of Congress recently did, is as dangerous as it is deplorable,” said Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.). Neither Chu nor Gooden are members of the committee.

    Gallagher and Krishnamoorthi have also rejected Gooden’s comments. Still, the divisions on display at the hearing suggest they face serious challenges from day one in delivering on their commitment to keep the committee’s focus on China rather than GOP-Democratic bickering.

    “Just because this Congress is divided, we cannot afford to waste the next two years lingering in legislative limbo or pandering for the press,” Gallagher said in opening remarks. And he warned that a failure by the U.S. to respond decisively to the Chinese government’s threat means “a world crowded with techno-totalitarian surveillance states where human rights are subordinate to the whims of the Party.”

    That tone captures the growing congressional concern about China following the discovery and subsequent destruction of a Chinese spy balloon over the continental U.S. in February. Biden administration warnings that the Chinese government is considering providing lethal weaponry to Russia in its war against Ukraine have only fanned those fears. And a Department of Energy report leaked on Sunday that concluded that a laboratory leak in Wuhan, China sparked the Covid pandemic has renewed congressional anger toward China’s role in a pandemic that has killed more than a million Americans.

    Bipartisan antagonism toward the Chinese government led the House Financial Services Committee to approve 10 bills on Tuesday aimed to rein in Beijing’s economic power. That legislation included measures that would target Chinese manufacturing of synthetic drugs, and commission a Treasury Department report on the global economic risks associated with China’s financial sector.

    But while GOP China committee members focused mainly on well-trod U.S-China hot button issues, including the role of Chinese-sourced precursor chemicals in the U.S. opioid overdose epidemic, concerns about Chinese purchases of agricultural land and the plight of Muslim Uyghurs in Xinjiang, Democratic members called for domestic policy initiatives to offset challenges from China.

    Reps. Ro Khanna (D-Calif) and Haley Stevens (D-Mich.) called for the U.S. to develop an industrial policy that would fund the development of manufacturers to supplant China’s dominance of global supply chains in areas including the supply of semiconductors for consumer products. “It provides dividends not only to our economy, but to our national security, to invest in R&D and invest in our manufacturing sector,” Stevens said.

    There were no takers among GOP committee members. “The United States should not mimic the Chinese industrial policy and should not copy the Chinese command and control system. … We should not try to counter China by becoming more like China,” said Rep. Andy Barr (R-Ky.)

    Democratic members argued, meanwhile, that facing down China’s authoritarian threat required a concerted effort to bolster what they described as America’s ailing democracy. Rep. Jake Auchincloss (R-Mass.) described the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection as a propaganda gift to Beijing. That day “was Xi Jinping’s best day in office,” said Auchincloss. “I hope the bipartisan spirit of competing with the Chinese Communist Party overseas extends to defending democracy here at home.”

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    #China #Select #Committee #hearing #highlights #partisan #divide #Beijingcountering #strategy
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Geopolitical power shifts divide the world into three groups

    Geopolitical power shifts divide the world into three groups

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    New Delhi: The geopolitical distribution of power will see a fundamental shift as a result of the war in Ukraine, GIS Reports said. Traditional political alignments will harden.

    Rudolf G Adam, a former vice president of Germany’s Federal Intelligence Service wrote in GIS Reports that the world will remain divided into three groups that face each other with suspicion and open hostility:

    • Western liberal democracies (US, Canada, EU, UK, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand)
    • Russia, Belarus, Iran, Syria, Venezuela and North Korea, with China staying close. Regimes in these countries despise legal constraints both in dealing with other international actors or with their own subjects
    • Developing nations of the South Asian subcontinent, the Arab world and South America

    Adam said international institutions like the United Nations or the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) are paralyzed; regional associations will gather strength. Pressure for reform of the Security Council will rise but will have even lesser chances of success than 20 years ago.

    The main beneficiaries of Russia’s war are China, India, Turkey, Iran and North Korea. They exploit trade opportunities that Western sanctions open for them. They profit from Russian oil at discount prices, Adam said.

    China’s bilateral trade with Russia grew to a record $ 190 billion in 2022, comparable to its trade with Germany. Last year’s China-U.S. trade, meanwhile, also grew to a record $ 691 billion. Chinese exports of finished industrial products rose by almost 40 percent.

    Russia’s protracted war on its western front presents additional opportunities for China to improve its position vis-a-vis Russia’s Far East. China profits most as the two superpowers weaken each other and U.S. attention is diverted from the Pacific to the Atlantic, Adam said.

    India has been quick in buying cheap Russian fuel and in benefitting from supplying what Moscow can no longer obtain directly from the West.

    Turkey is mediating in this war. Communication channels with both sides remain open. Russia’s entanglement in Ukraine has strengthened Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s hand in Syria. Turkey is the only NATO country that has shot down a Russian combat aircraft (in 2015) and is enjoying a privileged position vis-a-vis Moscow, having bought the Russian air defense system S-400 and having its first nuclear power station built by Rosatom.

    Iran and North Korea have assumed a crucial role in weapon supplies. Russia is bound to honour their support at a critical juncture with political (and perhaps technological) support, Adam said.

    Oil-exporting Arab states will see their political influence strengthened in the short term. In the long run, they expect their influence to wane as a sustained turn to renewables will undermine their position as oligopolists of fossil fuels – a strong argument to maximize exploitation of their bargaining power as long as they still have it. OPEC’s recent decision not to expand oil production despite a formal U.S. request is a harbinger of things to come.

    The energy crunch will accelerate a renaissance of nuclear power, with Russia, China, France and the U.S. as leading nations in building and servicing nuclear power plants, Adam said.

    Elsewhere in the Global South, the Ukraine war exposed raw nerves. Most non-Western capitals joined in UN General Assembly votes against Russia’s aggression. But few have condemned Putin publicly or imposed sanctions. Many have reason — trade, mostly, but also historical ties or reliance on Kremlin-linked Wagner Group mercenaries — not to break with Moscow, International Crisis Group said in a report.

    They see picking a side or incurring costs for a war many believe is Europe’s problem as against their interests. Frustration with the West plays a role too, whether over COVID-19 vaccine hoarding, migration policy or climate injustice. Many see a double standard in outrage over Ukraine given the West’s interventions elsewhere and colonial record. Many Global South leaders also believe, particularly when it comes to sanctions, that Western governments have put fighting Russia over the global economy, the report said.

    For China, the war has been mostly a headache. Despite Chinese President Xi Jinping’s public embrace of Putin and continued trade between the two countries that has helped Russia weather sanctions, Beijing’s material support has been lacklustre. Xi has not sent weapons. He appears disturbed by Putin’s travails and nuclear bluster. Beijing does not want to undercut Moscow and is unlikely to compel Putin to reach a settlement. But neither does it wish to provoke Western capitals by abetting the invasion, International Crisis Group said.

    It watches warily as U.S. allies in Asia bolster defences and seem even keener to keep Washington around, even as they still want access to Chinese markets. The war has heightened fears of a Chinese assault on Taiwan. But an invasion that seemed too risky for Beijing in the near term even before the war seems — at least for now — even less likely. The massive sanctions imposed on Russia are not lost on China. Nor are Moscow’s battlefield failures, the report said.

    Russia and Iran have formed a partnership of convenience against Western powers for decades, but that relationship has historically been tinged by an undercurrent of distrust and wariness, experts said, Foreign Policy reported.

    The war in Ukraine may be changing all that, pushing Moscow to embrace Iran as one of its top foreign partners in a bid to secure sorely needed military supplies from Tehran and find lifelines for its sanctions-battered economy — even if that partnership stays below the level of a full-fledged formal alliance.

    “The war in Ukraine changed how Russia viewed its ties with Iran,” said Emil Avdaliani, director of Middle East studies at Geocase, a Georgian think tank, Foreign Policy reported. “Before 2022, bilateral relations were characterized by ambivalence: high talks but little substance. With the war, however, Russia’s turn to Asia has become complete and Iran’s support is now seen as critical in (the) Kremlin.”

    Deepening relations between Moscow and Tehran could end up prolonging the bloody war in Ukraine, U.S. officials and regional experts said, as Iran provides more military support and resources to Russia. At the same time, it could also endanger U.S. allies in the Middle East that oppose Iran if the Russian government delivers new forms of military technology and high-end weapons systems to the heavily sanctioned Middle Eastern power, the report said.

    For Russia, the partnership has yielded Iranian-made drones after Russian officials in the late fall of 2022 quietly clinched a deal with Iran to supply hundreds of weaponized drones to batter Ukrainian cities and civilian infrastructure. (Iran has also reportedly sent military trainers to occupied Crimea to train and advise the Russian armed forces on how to use the drones.) Top Russian officials, including Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev, have reportedly visited Iran in recent months to finalize a deal to purchase Iranian ballistic missiles, Foreign Policy reported.

    “It’s hard to come up with an example of another country that has provided as much support willingly to Russia as has Iran,” said Anna Borshchevskaya, senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Foreign Policy reported.

    On the economic front, both countries are busy building extensive new trade networks aimed at circumventing Western sanctions, including supply routes that can send military equipment from Iran into Russia through river and railway links as well as through the Caspian Sea.

    “If they’ve always been hand-in-glove politically, they’re putting way more emphasis into their economic relationship now,” said Gabriel Noronha, an expert with the Jewish Institute for National Security of America think tank and former U.S. State Department official who worked on Iran issues during former U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration, Foreign Policy reported.

    Russia continues to lose influence around the world, above all in the post-Soviet space. The Russian-dominated Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) seems to be the last instrument available to the Kremlin to preserve at least some of the allies in Moscow’s geopolitical orbit, Lowy Institute reported.

    Belarus is the only CSTO member that openly supported Russia’s so-called special military operation in Ukraine. Other Moscow’s nominal allies — Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan — have either taken a neutral stance on the Russian invasion or have started distancing themselves from the Kremlin.

    By invading Ukraine, Vladimir Putin sought to strengthen Russia’s geopolitical standing and spread the country’s influence across the globe.

    In reality, it backfired, Kyiv Independent reported.

    Due to Russia’s unprecedented aggression and its heavy defeats on the battlefield, the Kremlin became much weaker, losing allies in the process.

    Russia’s influence among the former Soviet countries decreased as sharply as it did worldwide.

    The countries on whose support Putin counted the most — many of its former Soviet allies, as well as China, India, and Turkey — are playing both sides, leaving Russia at the table with several rogue states under similar heavy Western sanctions – North Korea, Eritrea, Iran, Syria, and Belarus, Kyiv Independent reported.

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    #Geopolitical #power #shifts #divide #world #groups

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Dining across the divide: ‘I think it’s an oversimplification to say the British empire was all wrong’

    Dining across the divide: ‘I think it’s an oversimplification to say the British empire was all wrong’

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    Oliver

    Oliver, 54, Birmingham

    Occupation Natural language processing engineer

    Voting record Oliver, who now has dual German/British nationality, has yet to vote in a general election in this country. He’s a member of the Green party and describes himself as: “Not a Corbynista, but left of Starmer.” In Germany, he voted for the Social Democratic party.

    Amuse bouche When visiting Madame Tussauds, Oliver was mistaken for a waxwork. “Someone came up to me and looked for a label, then got a bit of a shock when I moved.”

    Peter

    Peter, 58, Birmingham

    Occupation Software engineer; also runs an alternative clothing company

    Voting record Has voted for all three main parties, and the Monster Raving Loony party. In the next general election he’ll probably vote Labour, “on the basis that the Conservatives are inept”.

    Amuse bouche Peter has 11 children (three acquired by marriage), ranging in age from 19 to 42, and 11 grandchildren. “Names I can manage; birthdays, I have to keep a calendar.”

    For starters

    Peter We did a bit of small chat – what do you do, where are you from? He seemed quiet and reserved, but as soon as we started talking he relaxed. It was funny we were both in software.

    Oliver It was Indian street food, really nice. We shared starters – aubergine fritters and onion bhajis – then I had a dosa and he had grilled chicken.

    Peter and Oliver

    The big beef

    Peter The royal family was a clear area of disagreement. For me, it’s a positive. I like the tradition, the consistency, the fact that even though they don’t have direct executive power I’m sure they influence politicians. They are good diplomats and bring in tourist business.

    Oliver I’m a republican – the monarchy should be abolished. I don’t believe someone should be in a position of power by accident of birth. The Queen was very popular and probably did a reasonable job, but if you had someone totally unhinged as king or queen, there’s nothing you could do. Andrew is still eighth in the line of succession – if the others fell under a bus, would the royalists be happy with that?

    Peter I don’t think an elected head of state would work well – look at Trump.

    Oliver In Germany, the two chambers of parliament appoint a group to elect the president. You don’t get extremists because compromise is involved.

    Peter and Oliver

    Sharing plate

    Oliver He’s against Brexit, otherwise we would have had a screaming match. Leaving the EU has caused so many problems – it’s a no-brainer to be part of the biggest trade and political union.

    Peter I started with an open mind, but nobody could give me a reason for doing it that actually stood up to scrutiny. And it’s been an absolute car crash.

    Oliver My suspicion is that Russia had a hand in Brexit: splitting us off from the rest of Europe can only be of interest to someone like Putin. My parents don’t visit us any more because they don’t have passports.

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    Peter It was based on misleading populism. My clothing business was crashed by Brexit. I’m 100% against it.

    Peter (left) and Oliver

    For afters

    Oliver I feel that all ex-imperial countries – pretty much every country in Europe – have done horrendous things and they should apologise.

    Peter I would apologise if I – not my ancestors – had done something wrong. The idea that Britain should apologise for something that happened 200 or 300 years ago doesn’t compute.

    Oliver I feel strongly about this from a German perspective. I’m not responsible for the Holocaust – I was born 30 years after it happened. I am responsible for making sure it doesn’t happen again. I think Britain is very bad at dealing with its past. In Germany, some people say it’s going too far – digging out everything that went wrong and feeling guilty about it – but if you don’t, things will just get repeated.

    Peter I think it’s an oversimplification to say the empire was all wrong and we are all evil scum. Those countries benefited as well. We took our system of law into the world and the world is a better place for it.

    Peter (left) and Oliver

    Takeaways

    Oliver It was mostly details we disagreed on. It was interesting to talk about things you wouldn’t normally talk about with someone you don’t know. We got on well – we are both tolerant.

    Peter I get involved in online discussions, but they tend to be shouting: “You’re wrong.” So, I really enjoyed the chance to kick ideas around with someone who was intelligent and well read and prepared to argue his point.

    Peter (left) and Oliver

    Additional reporting: Kitty Drake

    Oliver and Peter ate at Zindiya in Birmingham.

    Want to meet someone from across the divide? Find out how to take part

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    #Dining #divide #oversimplification #British #empire #wrong
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Pawan Kalyan warns against demands to further divide Andhra Pradesh

    Pawan Kalyan warns against demands to further divide Andhra Pradesh

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    Amaravati: Jana Sena Party (JSP) President Pawan Kalyan on Thursday warned leaders against speaking for separate statehood to North Andhra and Rayalaseema regions of Andhra Pradesh.

    The actor-politician said that if someone speaks in separatist tones to split the state further, they would not see another extremist like him.

    In his address at the Republic Day celebrations at the party office near Mangalagiri in Guntur district, he warned the leaders that if they speak of dividing the state further, this would have serious consequences.

    Pawan Kalyan said it was unfortunate that Revenue Minister Dharmana Prasada Rao proposed statehood for the North Andhra districts while former minister Byreddy Rajasekhar Reddy wanted a separate Rayalaseema state.

    He asked these leaders to introspect what they had done for their respective regions, and explain how new states would help in achieving development.

    The JSP leader alleged that the YSR Congress Party (YSRCP) was stoking regional feelings to achieve its political objectives.

    He exhorted people to raise a banner of revolt against the “draconian” government of the YSRCP by drawing inspiration from the youth of Telangana who had fought for separate state and achieved it in spite of many difficulties.

    The actor told the partymen that he had not entered politics to become Chief Minister overnight. Stating that he has an ideology for the next 25 years, he made it clear that it will not change once in five years for elections.

    He observed that the people of Andhra Pradesh were apparently obsessed with their castes more than the common good, which was the reason for other states stealing a march on it.

    He alleged that law and order deteriorated due to the inefficiency of the government. He said the government ensured that no one dared to question its policies and actions by implicating people, mainly leaders of the opposition parties, in false cases.

    He alleged that YSRCP cadres were behind the arson that had taken place in Amalapuram over the naming of Konaseema district after B.R. Ambedkar. It was a conspiracy to derive political mileage by driving a wedge between various castes, but nobody knew about the fate of this case, he said.

    Pawan slammed Chief Minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy for having no confidence in the state police. He said nothing has so far happened in the Y.S. Vivekananda Reddy murder and the infamous ‘Kodi Kathi’ case.

    Vivekananda Reddy, a former minister and uncle of Jagan Mohan Reddy, was murdered just before the 2019 elections.

    ‘Kodi Kathi” case relates to the attack on Jagan Mohan Reddy at Visakhapatnam Airport in 2018 by a youth with a knife used in cockfights.

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    #Pawan #Kalyan #warns #demands #divide #Andhra #Pradesh

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Siddaramaiah slams BJP for not banning SDPI ‘to divide votes’

    Siddaramaiah slams BJP for not banning SDPI ‘to divide votes’

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    Bengaluru: Congress leader and former Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Sunday alleged that the BJP-led government at the Centre did not ban the Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI) with an intention to divide votes.

    The Centre banned only the Popular Front of India (PFI) but spared its political wing SDPI to ensure that the votes get divided, Siddaramaiah, who is Leader of the Opposition in the Assembly, said while addressing the ‘Prajadhwani Yatra’ of the Congress in Udupi.

    Siddaramaiah likened the PFI to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and the SDPI to the BJP.

    He also termed as baseless the allegations by the BJP that that the Congress government led by him had released PFI or SDPI activists involved in criminal activities or communal violence from jail.

    Terming Congress the only secular party in the country, he stated that Nathuram Godse who killed Mahatma Gandhi was the first terrorist. Congress leaders Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi were victims of terrorism, he added.

    The Congress leader also alleged that the RSS and the BJP which promoted Hindutva did not believe in the Constitution. “None of the RSS or the present BJP leaders participated in the freedom struggle,” he said.

    Siddaramaiah cautioned the youth in the coastal belt against falling prey to the communal designs of the BJP and the RSS.

    He said that while Hindus believed in humanity, the supporters of Hindutva opposed it.

    Vinayak Damodar Savarkar is the founder of Hindutva. The BJP and the RSS revered Godse and Savarkar, he said.

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    #Siddaramaiah #slams #BJP #banning #SDPI #divide #votes

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )