Tag: Row

  • ‘Muslims have to decide..’: Telangana Cong chief on quota row

    ‘Muslims have to decide..’: Telangana Cong chief on quota row

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    Hyderabad: Telangana Congress president A Revanth Reddy on Wednesday slammed both the BJP-led centre and the BRS-led state government.

    His remarks in Adilabad come after union home minister Amit Shah’s recent remarks in Chevella vowing to scrap the Muslim reservation in Telangana just like how the BJP-led state government did in the state of Karnataka.

    “BRS cheated in the name of increasing Muslim reservation to 12 per cent from 4, BJP says they will remove even the existing one. It is the Congress who delivered on the Muslim reservation. Muslim brothers have to decide which side they want to go to,” he said.

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    Backward Muslims in Telangana enjoy 4 per cent reservation in education and jobs. This was introduced by the Congress government in undivided Andhra Pradesh about 15 years ago.

    The state’s incumbent Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS)-led government has promised to increase the Muslim quota to 12 per cent. A resolution to this effect was passed in Telangana Assembly and sent to the Centre five years ago but the proposal has been rejected by the BJP-led government.

    Revanth expressed confidence that Congress will form the government in 2024. He promised to fill over 2 lakh government job vacancies immediately once in power.

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    #Muslims #decide. #Telangana #Cong #chief #quota #row

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Cong targets Kejriwal after row over Rs 45 cr spend on ‘beautification’ of Delhi CM residence

    Cong targets Kejriwal after row over Rs 45 cr spend on ‘beautification’ of Delhi CM residence

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    New Delhi: As reports of spending of Rs 45 crore on “beautification” of Delhi chief minister’s official residence here surfaced, Congress leader Ajay Maken on Tuesday raised questions on Kejriwal’s right to remain in his position as a public servant.

    Maken said Kejriwal allegedly spent Rs 45 crore of public funds on his luxurious bungalow, including extravagant items like Dior polish, Vietnam marble, expensive curtains, and high-end carpets.

    However, before his election, the AAP leader distributed printed copies of a sworn affidavit in his New Delhi Legislative Assembly constituency, dated June 7, 2013, in which he made seven promises.

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    Listing out the first promise made by Kejriwal, Maken said he claimed not to use a car with a red light, or request additional security beyond what is necessary for a common citizen and refuse a large bungalow and instead live in an ordinary house like a common man.

    “Despite naming his party ‘Aam Aadmi Party’ (common man’s party) and making these pledges, Mr Kejriwal spent a fortune on his bungalow when the people of Delhi were desperately seeking oxygen cylinders during the COVID pandemic.

    “Moreover, there are more than 6 lakh households living in slums in the city. This raises questions about his right to remain in his position as a public servant and whether he has upheld the other promises mentioned in the distributed sworn affidavit, especially considering the urgent needs of the citizens,” the Congress leader tweeted.

    The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) earlier claimed that about Rs 45 crore was spent on the “beautification” of the Delhi chief minister’s official residence in the city’s Civil Lines area and demanded his resignation on “moral” grounds.

    While no official reaction was available from the Delhi government, the ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) hit back at the BJP.

    Senior AAP leader Raghav Chadha said while speaking to Times Now that Kejriwal’s residence was constructed 75-80 years ago in 1942. The Delhi government’s Public Works department (PWD), after an audit, had recommended its renovation, he said.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Roger Waters wins legal battle to gig in Frankfurt amid antisemitism row

    Roger Waters wins legal battle to gig in Frankfurt amid antisemitism row

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    Roger Waters, the former Pink Floyd frontman, has won his legal battle to perform a concert in Frankfurt after attempts to ban the event amid accusations of antisemitism.

    Magistrates acting on behalf of the German city had instructed the venue two months ago to cancel the concert on 28 May, accusing Waters of being “one of the most widely known antisemites in the world”. Waters, who has always denied accusations of antisemitism, took legal action against the decision.

    Frankfurt’s administrative court has now declared his right to go ahead with the event. While acknowledging that aspects of his show were “tasteless” and obviously lent on symbolism inspired by the Nazi regime, it cited artistic freedom among its main reasons for the decision.

    The city has the right to appeal against the ruling.

    City authorities in Frankfurt and elsewhere in Germany had objected to the concert on the grounds that a previous tour had featured as part of the stage show a balloon shaped like a pig depicting the Star of David and various company logos.

    Part of their criticism related to the location of the concert, the Festhalle, in which, during the November pogroms of 1938, more than 3,000 Jewish men from Frankfurt and surrounding areas were rounded up, abused and later deported to concentration camps where many of them were murdered.

    However, the court said that despite the Waters show making use of “symbolism manifestly based on that of the National Socialist regime” – the tastelessness of which it said was exacerbated by the choice of the Festhalle as the venue due to its historical background – the concert should be “viewed as a work of art” and that there were not sufficient grounds on which to justify banning Waters from performing. “It is not for the court to pass judgment on this,” a spokesperson told German media.

    The most crucial point, according to the court, was that the musician’s performance “did not glorify or relativise the crimes of the Nazis or identify with Nazi racist ideology”, and nor was there any evidence that Waters used propaganda material in his show, the spokesperson added.

    Criticism of the decision came from the International Auschwitz Committee, which called it “deplorable”. Christoph Heubner, the committee’s vice-president, said: “It’s not only Jewish survivors of German concentration and death camps who are left sad, bewildered and increasingly disillusioned.”

    A “cause of great concern” for survivors and their families was what he called an “encroachment of antisemitism from various directions” in society.

    Heubner said the court’s declaration – that to hold the concert in the Festhalle was not an offence to the dignity of the Jewish men rounded up there – was “a renewed attack on the dignity of these people and the memories of their families”.

    Josef Schuster, the president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, said he was “baffled” by the court’s decision “that a display of symbols based on National Socialism should have no legal consequences”.

    In Germany, there are strict rules banning displays of Nazi memorabilia and symbols such as the swastika.

    Waters has repeatedly denied accusations of antisemitism and claimed his disdain is towards Israel, not Judaism, accusing Israel of “abusing the term antisemitism to intimidate people like me into silence”.

    He defended his use of the pig symbol, saying it “represents Israel and its policies and is legitimately subject to any and all forms of non-violent protest”. He said the balloon also featured other symbols of organisations he was against, such as the crucifix and the logos of Mercedes, McDonald’s and Shell Oil.

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    #Roger #Waters #wins #legal #battle #gig #Frankfurt #antisemitism #row
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Austrians embroiled in row over Nazi roots of regional anthems

    Austrians embroiled in row over Nazi roots of regional anthems

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    Austria is in the thick of a debate about the origins of the “homeland” anthems that celebrate its federal states after the Nazi allegiances of their composers were brought to light by a group of prominent authors.

    The authors are calling on regional politicians to rewrite some of the anthems and to acknowledge the melodies’ Nazi-era roots.

    According to the group, the anthems of four out of the countries’ nine Länder, or states, are tainted. It has written to the leaders of Upper Austria, Carinthia, Lower Austria and Salzburg, urging them to take action. In some cases it says that whole verses should be erased or that single lines identified as problematic should be dropped and that historical research is carried out on their origins and musical composers.

    The authors, including Robert Menasse, Doron Rabinovici and Gerhard Ruiss, have been accused of “cancelling history” by two local leaders in Carinthia, from the Social Democrats and the far-right populist FPÖ, who are refusing to give in to their demands.

    The authors deny the claims. “In all these cases this is not about cancelling history,” IG Autorinnen Autoren said. “It’s about dissociating ourselves from antisemitism, racism, nationalism and national socialism … ensuring historical political falsehoods are discontinued and ensuring, as would be a worst case, that they are not resurrected.”

    Nazi troops march through Vienna, Austria, in 1938
    Nazi troops march through Vienna, Austria, in 1938, the year in which the country was annexed to Germany. Photograph: Hulton Deutsch/Corbis/Getty Images

    The anthem considered most flawed is that of Carinthia, the text of which was written by Agnes Millonig, considered a fully fledged Nazi, which contains the line: “Where we scribed our borders with blood.” The final line: “That is my beautiful homeland,” is a reference to Germany, to which Austria was annexed in 1938. The authors have called for the line to be scrapped.

    According to historical researchers, the composer of Salzburg’s national anthem, Ernst Sompek, was also a Nazi enthusiast, joining the party when it was still illegal to do so, who composed music inspired by and in the name of the party.

    Upper Austria’s so-called Hoamatgsang or Heimat (homeland) song, was penned in 1874 by Franz Stelzhamer, who was well-known for his antisemitic views, writing in an essay calling for the genocide of Jews, that he wished to “knock off the head of the Jewish tapeworm”. The authors have said the necessity to acknowledge Upper Austria anthem’s origins and the antisemitic diatribe of its author was all the more important because it was the state in which the Nazi leader Adolf Hitler was born.

    Lower Austria’s anthem was written by the Nazi party member Franz Karl Ginzkey. There, the state government has called for a historical study to be carried out on the song, but has insisted no changes need to be made to the text.

    The authors criticised the style of the lyrics for encouraging a “subservient mentality” and for being “kitschy-pathetic pomposity”.

    The authors have signalled their readiness to collaborate with any rewriting.

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    #Austrians #embroiled #row #Nazi #roots #regional #anthems
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘Decide bills as soon as possible’: SC on KCR-Governor row

    ‘Decide bills as soon as possible’: SC on KCR-Governor row

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    New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Monday observed that the Constitution’s Article 200(1) and the words “as soon as possible” have a significant constitutional intent and must be borne in mind by constitutional functionaries, while hearing a plea filed by the Telangana government seeking direction to Governor Tamilisai Soundararajan to clear ten bills passed by the Assembly and awaiting her assent.

    A bench headed by Chief Justice of India D.Y. Chandrachud and comprising Justice P.S. Narasimha said: “Article 200 of the Constitution… the first proviso of Article 200 states that Governor may, as soon as possible, after the presentation of the bill for assent, return the bill, if it is not Money Bill together with the message for reconsideration to the state legislature.”

    The bench said the expression “as soon as possible” has a significant constitutional intent and must be borne in mind by constitutional authorities.

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    As Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, representing the Telangana Governor, submitted that this observation in the order was not necessary, the Chief Justice said: “Mr Solicitor, we have not made this observation about this particular Governor. We said it must be borne in mind by constitutional authorities.”.

    Mehta said: “This was not needed… I can say nothing more… I do not want to vitiate the atmosphere further.”

    Article 200 of the Constitution empowers the Governor to either assent to a Bill passed by the state legislature or to withhold assent therefrom or to reserve the Bill for consideration of the President.

    The top court disposed of the petition after Mehta submitted that he took instructions following a direction and as of now, no bills are pending.

    During the hearing, senior advocate Dushyant Dave, representing the Telangana government, urged the court to pass directions “once and for all” to put the issue at rest and said “your lordships may decide this once and for all. In Madhya Pradesh bills are being assented to within one week, in Gujarat within one month. Telangana is an opposition state….so this is happening.”

    Mehta opposed these submissions and contended that he would not generalise the matter like that.

    Dave then said, “You will not because you’re a law officer appointed by the Central government” and Mehta responded that shouting will not help before this court.

    Dave said, “Did I shout? This is the law officer of India. Every time I appear, he has an allergy to me. I have an allergy to you… He has stooped so low, I haven’t seen this in 44 years!”

    In March, the Telangana government approached the Supreme Court seeking direction from Governor Tamilisai Soundararajan to give her approval to the bills passed by the state legislature. In a writ petition, the state government has brought to the notice of the Supreme Court that 10 bills are pending with Raj Bhavan. While seven bills are pending since September 2022, three bills were sent to the Governor last month for her approval.

    The plea contended that Article 200 empowers the Governor to either assent to a Bill passed by the state legislature or to withhold assent therefrom or to reserve the Bill for consideration of the president and this power is however to be exercised “as soon as possible”.

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    #Decide #bills #KCRGovernor #row

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Eastern Ladakh row: India, China hold 18th round of military talks

    Eastern Ladakh row: India, China hold 18th round of military talks

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    New Delhi: India and China held a fresh round of high-level military talks on Sunday with a focus on resolving the remaining issues in eastern Ladakh as the border row enters the fourth year, people familiar with the matter said.

    The 18th round of military talks took place ahead of Chinese Defence Minister Li Shangfu’s visit to India next week to attend a key meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation being hosted by New Delhi under its presidency of the grouping.

    Sunday’s military talks came around four months after the last round of the dialogue between the senior Army commanders of the two sides.

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    The talks were held at the Chushul-Moldo border meeting point on the Chinese side of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh, the people familiar with the developments said.

    It is learnt that the Indian side insisted on resolving the issues at the remaining friction points of Demchok and Depsang in eastern Ladakh as soon as possible.

    The Indian delegation at the dialogue was led by Lt Gen Rashim Bali, Commander of the Leh-based 14 Corps that takes care of security along the LAC in the Ladakh sector.

    In line with a decision taken at the 16th round of military talks, the two sides carried out disengagement from Patrolling Point 15 in the Gogra-Hotsprings area in September last year.

    The Corps Commander-level talks were instituted to resolve the eastern Ladakh row. India has been maintaining that its ties with China cannot be normal unless there is peace in the border areas.

    The eastern Ladakh border standoff erupted on May 5, 2020 following a violent clash in the Pangong lake area.

    The ties between the two countries nosedived significantly following the fierce clash in the Galwan Valley in June 2020 that marked the most serious military conflict between the two sides in decades.

    As a result of a series of military and diplomatic talks, the two sides completed the disengagement process on the north and south banks of the Pangong Lake and in the Gogra area.

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    #Eastern #Ladakh #row #India #China #hold #18th #military #talks

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Gautam Adani meets Sharad Pawar in Mumbai row over Hindenburg report

    Gautam Adani meets Sharad Pawar in Mumbai row over Hindenburg report

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    Mumbai: Industrialist Gautam Adani met NCP chief Sharad Pawar at the latter’s residence in Mumbai on Thursday, party sources said.

    The meeting follows Pawar’s recent statement that he is not opposed to a Joint Parliamentary Committee probe into the charges made by Hindenburg Research against the Adani group, but a Supreme Court committee will be more useful and effective.

    Hindenburg has alleged stock manipulation and accounting fraud in firms belonging to billionaire Adani. 

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    #Gautam #Adani #meets #Sharad #Pawar #Mumbai #row #Hindenburg #report

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Mumbai train blasts: HC quashes death row convict’s plea seeking info under RTI

    Mumbai train blasts: HC quashes death row convict’s plea seeking info under RTI

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    New Delhi: The Delhi High Court on Tuesday dismissed a petition by a death row convict in the 2006 Mumbai train blast case seeking disclosure of information pertaining to the ban imposed on terrorist outfit Indian Mujahideen.

    Ehtesham Qutubuddin Siddique had filed an application under the RTI Act seeking “background notes” of the Centre and reports of state governments of Gujarat, Delhi and Andhra Pradesh in relation to the ban on the organisation, which was stated to have carried out the blast. The outfit was proscribed under the stringent anti-terror law Unlawful Activities(Prevention) Act (UAPA).

    The petitioner challenged in the high court an order passed by the Chief Information Commissioner (CIC) on June 13, 2019 denying him the information on the ground that it was covered under the exemptions provided in the RTI Act.

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    While refusing to interfere with the CIC’s decision, Justice Prathiba M Singh said the information sought by the petitioner has far reaching consequences and has to be seen from the “larger issue of safety and security of the public and the nation”. It said the information Siddique has sought, if provided, will have a bearing on sovereignty and security of the country.

    “A perusal of the information shows that the same has far reaching consequences. The same organisation is stated to be involved in various unfortunate incidents since 2005, some resulting in severe loss of life and property,” said the court.

    It observed that the disclosure of the information sought by the petitioner can “jeopardize the sources” of the government in relation to the ban on Indian Mujahideen and the CIC’s opinion that sharing the information would endanger the sources is “correct and does not require interference”.

    “In view of the above, the writ petition is devoid of merit and is dismissed,” ruled the court.

    Advocate Arpit Bhargava, representing the petitioner, contended the information sought in the RTI application was needed to prove the innocence of the petitioner in the criminal case and there was no further need to maintain confidentiality in relation to the “background notes” and the reports of the states as Indian Mujahideen has already been declared a banned organisation under UAPA.

    The counsel for the Centre said the information in question cannot be disclosed as it is confidential and disclosure will be against public interest.

    Siddique was awarded capital punishment for the July 11, 2006 serial blasts when seven bombs packed with RDX ripped through many western line local trains in Mumbai killing 189 peeople and injuring 829.

    The petitioner, currently lodged in a prison, claimed in his plea he was falsely implicated by the Anti-Terrorism Squad of Mumbai in the train blasts case.

    The trial court’s order of sentence is still pending confirmation by the Bombay High Court and the reports of the state governments and the Centre’s background notes would prove the innocence of the petitioner as well as violation of his human rights, the plea said.

    Last year, the high court had dismissed another petition by Siddique challenging a CIC order denying disclosure of certain information pertaining to the sanction granted by the Maharashtra government for his prosecution under UAPA.

    The high court had earlier this year rejected his petition seeking reports submitted by the Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh governments regarding investigation into the train bombings.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Grooming gangs’ row: British Pakistani group writes to Sunak over Braverman’s remarks

    ‘Grooming gangs’ row: British Pakistani group writes to Sunak over Braverman’s remarks

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    London: A British Pakistani diaspora group has written an open letter to UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, urging him to clarify the remarks of his Home Secretary Suella Braverman which, they say, stigmatised their community in relation to grooming gangs behind child sexual exploitation.

    The British Pakistani Foundation (BPF), which claims to represent 18,000 Pakistani diaspora members, called on Sunak to ask his Cabinet minister to withdraw her “irresponsible words” as it would be perceived as normalising bigotry against the community.

    Similar letters have also been issued by other Pakistani diaspora groups, all calling for the Indian-origin Cabinet minister’s comments to be withdrawn.

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    In a series of television interviews earlier this month ahead of the launch of a new Grooming Gangs Taskforce, Braverman said that the perpetrators of such crimes are “groups of men, almost all British Pakistani”.

    “We are writing to you to share our deep concern and disappointment at the Home Secretary’s recent comments and for you not speaking out against them,” reads the open letter issued on Tuesday.

    These comments singled out only the involvement of British Pakistani males in so-called grooming gangs’ and holding cultural values totally at odds with British values’, it said.

    “Words have consequences by stigmatising an entire community, and making it the face’ of child sexual exploitation, the Home Secretary’s remarks will detract attention from perpetrators who don’t meet her stereotypes, harming the very victims the Home Secretary ostensibly set out to protect but also further perpetrating violence against minorities,” it reads.

    The letter references a report commissioned by the UK Home Office in 2020, entitled The characteristics of group-based child sexual exploitation in the community’, which had concluded that despite some high-profile cases, links between ethnicity and this form of offending cannot be proven.

    It also references the most recent conviction of 21 men and women of “white British ethnicity”, who were last week found guilty of sexually abusing young children in Walsall in the West Midlands region of England over a decade.

    “The divisive and dangerous way in which the Home Secretary is seeking to portray all British Pakistani males and insinuating that the community is complicit in their actions is reprehensible,” the BPF open letter notes.

    “We, therefore, ask you to immediately clarify the Home Secretary’s claims and ask her to withdraw her remarks. We also ask for your prompt engagement with the British Pakistani community, and others, on this issue to ensure that the Home Secretary’s irresponsible words, and a government led by you, are not seen as encouraging and normalising bigotry targeted at British Pakistanis,” it concludes.

    Earlier this month, Sunak had condemned the political correctness which prevented action against “vile” criminals as he unveiled his new taskforce to go after grooming gangs.

    “The safety of women and girls is paramount. For too long, political correctness has stopped us from weeding out vile criminals who prey on children and young women. We will stop at nothing to stamp out these dangerous gangs,” he said at the time.

    Led by the police and supported by the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA), Downing Street says that data analysts will work alongside the new Grooming Gangs Taskforce using cutting edge data and intelligence to identify the types of criminals who carry out these offences, including police recorded ethnicity data.

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    #Grooming #gangs #row #British #Pakistani #group #writes #Sunak #Bravermans #remarks

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Karnataka: After row over Muslim-owned stalls last year, temple decides on no stalls

    Karnataka: After row over Muslim-owned stalls last year, temple decides on no stalls

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    Mangaluru: A temple in coastal Karnataka has barred vendors from setting up shops in the shrine area during the ongoing annual temple fair that got underway on April 5.

    The decision comes a year after a controversy had broken out when a banner was displayed outside Bappanadu Sri Durgaparameshwari Temple at Mulki in Mangaluru taluk asking the temple authorities not to allow Muslim vendors to set up stalls for the temple fair.

    Speaking about the management committee’s decision to prohibit the stalls from being put up for this year’s festivities, temple hereditary trustee N S Manohar Shetty on Sunday said the temple stands as a symbol of communal harmony and thousands of people from different faiths, including Muslims, revere the deity.

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    “We were pained by last year’s development. The committee decided not to have any stalls in the temple area for the ongoing temple fair. We want the fair to go in a harmonious manner and did not want any controversy,” he said.

    Shetty said vendors are free to erect stalls in the private property adjacent to the temple land if the owner agrees. A committee of volunteers is looking after the shops on the private land and a part of the money collected by the committee for allotment of shops is given to the temple, Shetty further said.

    He denied the charge made by some Muslim vendors that they were not allowed to erect stalls for the fair, while adding that the management committee members have made it clear that no vendor belonging to any faith will be permitted to open shops on the temple land.

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    #Karnataka #row #Muslimowned #stalls #year #temple #decides #stalls

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )