Why Shruti Haasan Is A Bandra Girl!

Actor-singer Shruti Haasan has several fond memories attached to Bandra in Mumbai.

On Saturday, Shruti took a stroll down memory lane and reminisced the good old days she had spent in Bandra.
“Bandra girl— studied at Andrews stayed in the heart of Bandra played my first bunch of rock n rill gigs ever – through one of the most turbulent times in my life the back streets of Bandra were my haven… this place has my heart always,” she wrote on Instagram.

For the unversed, Shruti, daughter of actors Kamal Haasan and Sarika, was born and brought up in Chennai. She moved to Mumbai when she was just 16-year-old.

A few days ago, she reunited with her dad in Mumbai and shared some adorable photos with him.

“He’s not just my dad he’s my favourite human @ikamalhaasan,” Shruti captioned the Instagram images.

Meanwhile, on the work front, she is waiting for the release of her Tamil film ‘Laabam’ with Vijay Sethupathi. She also has a Hindi web series in the pipeline. (ANI)

Covid Has Deepened India’s Poverty Pit

Stark poverty and hunger is stalking contemporary India but no one wants to see it or talk about it, especially the establishment and its economists. If statistics could tell stories of infinite sorrow, then nothing less than a mass tragedy, devastating, invisible and ghettoized, is currently stalking the inner lanes of an unhappy Indian landscape, and spreading with as much deathly intent as the deadly delta virus. 

First, let us talk of the ‘missing women’. The unorganized sector, with practically no rights for workers, operated by cold-blooded sharks outside official labour laws, with not even job protection for fixed days, or fixed wages, shelter and crèches for children, no maternity and health benefits for women, no provident fund/gratuity/pension, or trade union rights, etc, constitutes more than 90% of the Indian workforce. Barring some states like Kerala, Delhi and West Bengal, workers in the unorganized sector largely don’t have fundamental rights. Half of them are women – and most of them are from the poorest communities – landless Dalits, adivasis, extremely backward castes, Muslims.

The fact is thousands of women seem to have disappeared from the work force since the pandemic. So where have all the women gone?

It’s a fact that majority of domestic helps, working in the gated societies, for instance, lost their meager income since March last year. Many of them were socially ostracized, unceremoniously sacked, not paid their wages, and banned from entering the gated societies. Many were compelled to ‘migrate’ back to their jobless small towns or villages with eternally stagnant economies.

Workers were told by their employers to leave the dingy tenements in urban ghettos, where 5 or more would share a room, because they could not pay the rent. Their children opted out of schools. Many women, and their kids, were seen ‘begging’ outside the posh markets in Noida, even as the rich filled their cars with goodies during the relaxation in curfew hours.

ALSO READ: No Country For Migrant Workers

Many families have been starving, or eating one meal. All of them want to work and earn with dignity; others are afraid to stand in long, crowded food queues because of fear of the virus. For a long period those who did not have Aadhar or ration cards, had no clue how to get food from the public distribution system, even in a city like Delhi.

Consulting firm Dalbert, in a study conducted during March-October last year, reported that women have reduced their food intake because of less income, their rest hours have decreased and ‘unpaid care work hours’ have increased, at least a tenth of the women said that food is in very short supply and they are eating less, 16% had limited or no access to menstrual pads, while 33% of married women had no access to contraceptives as the pandemic disrupted public health outreach programmes. More than 43 per cent women were yet to recover their paid work. While it was terrible last year, the second surge devastated them. The study surveyed 15,000 women and 2,300 men from low-income households in 10 Indian cities.

“If the virus does not kill us, poverty will kill us,” said a balloon seller last winter in Noida. The invisible working class ghetto inhabited by Dalits and extremely backward caste people from Bengal, Bihar and UP, in Noida, surrounded by swanky highways and palatial houses, became jobless overnight on March 24, 2020. The street food vendor found no buyer, rickshaw-pullers no passengers, traffic light sellers no customers, even as thousands of construction workers were rendered jobless as the real estate industry crashed. Workers in the unorganized and small-scale industry, its back broken by demonetisation and GST, found a quagmire beneath their feet – rapidly sinking, and not a straw to hold on.

Stark poverty and hunger has been systematically turned invisible in India in the neo-liberal era, especially in the metros. Therefore, it was disconcerting for the cocooned affluent society when images of thousands of migrant workers suddenly emerged on highways, walking under a scorching sun. Pray, who are these condemned and exiled people?

With their worn out clothes, sacks and plastic bags, mothers holding their children, often barefoot, hungry and thirsty, with absolutely no relief from the central government, they were escaping the stark social/economic uncertainty after a lockdown was suddenly declared by the Centre. Among many enduring images of this Indian reality was the image of a dead mother at the Muzaffarpur Railway Station, her little child tugging at her sari. She was a migrant worker trying to go ‘home’ – from Ahmedabad to Bihar.

ALSO READ: Covid Ruined My Life – Financially

Delhi is classified as the most urban state (98%) in India. According to the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), Delhi reported the lowest labour force participation rate (LFPR) for women during the pandemic. Female LFPR was as low as 5.5% compared to the male LFPR of 57. Unemployment among women was 47%, compared to 21 among men.

As many as 10 crore people reportedly lost their jobs during the nationwide April-May 2020 lockdown. While in the pre-election scenario in 2019, India marked the highest rate of unemployment in 45 years, a reality the Modi-led government tried to fudge, currently, it is estimated, approximately 140 million people are jobless, and this includes the corporate sector. The jobless figures are hazy; unemployment has shot up to 11.7 %, last year it was 8. Job losses have been higher in Maharashtra, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh and Delhi, due to the impact of Covid.

A new Pew Research Center study states that consequent to the ‘deep recession’ in 2020, the middle class has shrunk by 32 million. This substantiates the speculation that millions of middle class households have been pushed into low income groups. The 32 million listed by Pew accounts for “60 per cent of the global retreat” in the number of people in the middle-income tier (defined here as people with incomes of $10-20 a day).

The number of people who are poor in India (with incomes of $2 or less a day) has increased by 75 million because of the COVID-19 recession. This factor also accounts for 60% of the global increase in poverty.

According to the Pew study, only 19% women remained employed and a high 47% suffered a permanent job loss, not returning to work even by the end of 2020. That is, almost half of the women workforce has effectively ‘disappeared’.

The study reported: “Prior to the pandemic, it was anticipated that 99 million people in India would belong in the global middle class in 2020. A year into the pandemic, this number is estimated to be 66 million, cut by a third. Meanwhile, the number of poor in India is projected to have reached 134 million, more than double the 59 million expected prior to the recession…”

Surely, there are millions of micro cases spread like unwritten stories of infinite inequality and economic/social discrimination across the remote rural terrain and in urban ghettos. They need to be documented, filmed, and written. The scale of this human tragedy could be epical.

Indeed, Mamata Banerjee made a cryptic point recently in Delhi: she said that it’s high time we have ‘sachche din’ in India –we already have had an overdose of ‘achche din’.

Weekly Update: ‘Corrupt’ Afghans; Anti-National Corporates

Saintly Americans, Corrupt Afghans?

The week’s international news is all about the motley army of Taliban sweeping across Afghanistan crushing one of the best trained armies in full fatigues and sophisticated weaponry, like a house of Cards. Allegedly no one expected it. The USA, having invested $1 trillion, 20 years and over 2,000 American lives, has been left dumbfounded. The only chat talk everywhere in the West is the blame game. The one topping is ‘corruption’ in the Afghan government and Army.

On the face of it, it sounds credible that the blame must be with the Afghans. With so many American Army Generals and Senior Commanders, providing years and years of training to the Afghan National Army, preparing them for withstanding modern forces such as China or Russia, it just doesn’t make sense the way it folded in front of rugged men with inferior weapons. It seems to have no will to fight. On the other hand the Taliban have waged a relentless war for 20 years with victory in their sight.

From ex Generals to diplomats and war journalists, there seems to be a common allegation that the Afghan National Army and the Government were corrupt to the boot. That all the money was going down a black hole of a few pockets. But there is a bit of the pot calling the kettle black.

American firms have been milking the American taxpayer both in the Afghan war and the Iraq wars. Plenty of unnecessary equipment has been sent at inflated prices. Plenty of mercenaries, ‘experts’ and ‘think tanks’ have made a fortune. Even NGOs have had part of the $1 trillion spent there.

Is it a wonder that the Afghans who became part of the power structure funded by Sugar Daddy nexus also decided to make a bob or two while the going was good. Money was being thrown at warlords and drug barons to join the war against the Taliban. These were warlords whose fortunes came from wars, kidnapping, protection money etc. It’s difficult to see how they were going to become born again good Samaritans. And drug lords are hardly the beacon of upright citizens. For them nothing changes. If the Americans won’t provide they can deal with Taliban albeit with lesser profits. Their lifestyles are not going to change much.

The soldiers and bureaucrats of the Afghan Army and administration come from same backgrounds as Taliban, largely the Pashtuns. There are relatives on both sides. Traditions and Clan loyalties are usually stronger than promises to foreign governments among Pashtuns. The culture they belong to is the same on both sides of this conflict.

An idealism exported by the West and run with financial inducements in the hope of converting the locals was a bit of fairyland strategy. People don’t change within a generation. Even if a small percentage of Afghans did really believe in Uncle Sam’s recipe for ‘progress’, they spring back into the culture they have known, when politics changes. Those who joined the American enterprise, probably had no passion in it. Even if women had some equality in jobs in cities administered under western gaze, they were most likely unequal in the home of soldiers that were meant to uphold the bold new Afghanistan in the image of the west.

The fact is that the war has been profitable for many except the American tax payer the British Taxpayer, the average Afghan, the injured and the relatives of the dead.  The big players have made money on all sides. The Taliban paid for their war by flooding the west with heroin and many drug barons in the drug Train have enriched themselves with the help of Taliban.

Biden probably decided that the show must stop. It has no happy ending and never had a happy ending. A few mad men in the multiple ‘think tanks’ and ‘strategy teams’ probably continued to see a success to the crusade if only…. They are leading the blame on Afghans without looking at their own country’s corruption and ill thought interventionism. That’s the problem with ‘idealists’. Their blindness to reality is what lands human beings in the mess that Afghanistan is in now. It’s not corruption in Afghan Army that gave the Taliban the edge, it is that the Taliban believe in their cause more than the Afghan Army does in western idealism.

Now Corporates Are Anti-national!

https://www.thehindu.com/business/Industry/industrys-practices-are-against-national-interest-says-piyush-goyal/article35902835.ece?homepage=true

Bitterness and envy has been characteristic of the Hindutvawallahs. If Muslims show some happiness, there soon follows a ‘riot’ and a put down. If some Left wing individuals dare dream about a different India, they get thrown into prisons as ‘terrorists’. If farmers take democratic protests as a right, they are called secessionists and Communists. Its only Hindu, Hindu, Hindu that can be celebrated and even then, a particular type of Hinduism, as sanctioned by the Hindutva proponents. Pluralist Hindus are betrayers pro-Pakistan or simply anti-national according to Hindutva democracy. Not content with that, the bile has now been vented against the industrialists.

Piyush Goyal called Tata and like as ‘not acting in the national interest’. Giving a speech that might have better suited a Pakistani businessman with pretensions to be as big as Tata, the Union Commerce and Industry Minister let out a tirade of unprovoked and unsolicited diatribe against businesses like Tata and Sons. It was bizarre and revealing about the thinking of some of the leaders of the BJP.

TATA is a business. Like all businesses it concentrates on profits and expansion. If the opportunity is there, it will buy raw material cheap and sell products at a profit. That’s what business is all about. Goyal accused Tata of buying raw material from anywhere in the world, where it can save even ten paisa, rather than from India. ‘Korean and Japanese firms wouldn’t do that,’ he said. Try selling your products there, he said!

A little fact that he failed to say is that despite everything, Japanese industry has some degree of protectionism and subtle assistance from the State. It is not surprising that some key industries pay back. In India, the BJP has ‘favourites’ that it allegedly supports. Perhaps TATA hasn’t given the party enough money.

The bile came out when Goyal said, ‘A company like yours, perhaps you bought a foreign company. Is the importance of that company greater than national interest?’

He accused the industry of “Me, Myself, My Company!” and extoled, “We all need to go beyond this approach”, which in coded language means, support BJP.

PM Modi and others distanced themselves from this, realising the damage such remarks could do to India’s desire to attract inward investments. Goyal’s final statement was much changed when officially released. But the video exists of his tirade.

India has joined the free market economy. It wants international investments. But it seems it wants industry to be free only to be flag bearers of Hindutva.

Sonia To Hold Meeting With Opposition Leaders On Aug 20

As part of efforts to take forward the opposition unity displayed during the monsoon session of parliament, Congress chief Sonia Gandhi has called a virtual meeting of like-minded opposition leaders on August 20, sources said.

The meeting will be held at 4 pm.
The sources said that West Bengal Chief Minister Mamta Banerjee, Maharashtra Chief Minister Udhav Thackrey, Jharkhand Chief Minister Hemant Soren and Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin are among the leaders who will take part in the meeting.

The opposition parties forced repeated adjournments during the monsoon session of parliament on their demands including a probe into allegations of surveillance through Pegasus spyware and repeal of farm bills. The session was adjourned sine die on Wednesday, two days before its scheduled conclusion.

Mamata Banerjee visited the national capital in the last week of July and discussed opposition unity with Sonia Gandhi as part of efforts to build momentum against the Bharatiya Janata Party-led government which has completed two years in office in its second term. (ANI)

Police Intensifies Security Arrangements Ahead Of Independence Day

Ahead of Independence Day celebrations, Delhi Police have intensified security arrangements in the national capital by deploying police forces and commandos across Delhi according to a security plan chalked out with the coordination of State governments and security agencies.

Delhi Police spokesperson Chinmoy Biswal while speaking to ANI over the security arrangements said, “There are certain preparations that we do as per various inputs. Apart from that, the Delhi Police with the cooperation of State governments and security agencies has made a security plan and forces have been deployed.”
“I would also like to mention that our force has been deployed and barricades have been placed at all the borders of Delhi, not only those where people are protesting but also all the motorable, non-motorable roads, highways and other routes in the national capital,” said Biswal while responding to a question on what arrangements have the Delhi Police made to avoid any untowardly incident similar to the one which took place last year amid the farmer’s protest.

“We are frisking all the persons, vehicles entering the national capital. No anti-social, anti-national elements shall be allowed to enter the capital city,” said the Delhi Police spokesperson.

He informed that an interstate coordination meeting was held with the police forces of neighbouring states and all security arrangements have been beefed up with their coordination.

Biswal further said, “We also take into consideration all the inputs that we get from social media and other related platforms. Even if any incident takes place in other parts of the country, we include that too in our security calculations and formulate security plans and arrangements accordingly and try to improvise them as much as possible and stay alert.”

Responding to a question on drone attacks in Kashmir and their preparations to handle similar threats, Biswal said, “All aerial vehicles, balloons or other such objects have been prohibited from flying in the sky for which the police had issued a notice and it has been circulated through advertisements on various mediums. Also, kite-flying in the national capital is not allowed till the time the Independence Day function takes place.”

“We have deployed well-trained commando forces at various locations across Delhi to tackle any threats. We are prepared to leave no room for any suspicious activity,” he added.

Meanwhile, a high-level meeting of top officials of Delhi Police is underway to discuss a new intelligence alert about miscreants who could try to infiltrate the security at the Red Fort on August 15.

Yogi Adityanath Conducts Aerial Survey In Ghazipur, Meets Flood Victims

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath conducted an aerial survey of the flood-affected areas of Ghazipur district in Uttar Pradesh on Friday.
CM Yogi interacted with flood-affected people in Ghazipur and assured all possible help from the government.
“The flood has affected 24 districts of the state under which 600 villages are badly hit. We have deployed State Disaster Response Force (SDRF), and National Disaster Response Force and a nodal officer for each flood-hit area by the state government,” said CM Yogi in a press conference.

The Chief Minister also reviewed the flood situation in Bhadohi, Chadauli and Mirzapur. Talking about the security of women, the CM said women constables are deployed in each relief camp.

Yogi instructed the district administration to seek the cooperation of public figures in the distribution of relief materials. The water levels of the Ganga and Yamuna rivers have crossed the danger mark at several places in Uttar Pradesh. In Varanasi, the Ganga River was flowing at the level of 72 centimetres after eight years in Varanasi.

Meanwhile, NDRF has been conducting rescue operations for flood victims.

Earlier on Wednesday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had a detailed conversation with the Varanasi administration regarding the flood-related situation. The Prime Minister assured all possible support while taking stock of the situation. (ANI)

RS Ruckus: Decision Likely On Action Against Oppn MPs For ‘Unruly Behaviour’

Rajya Sabha Chairman M Venkaiah Naidu is likely to decide on an action to be taken in the matter of alleged unruly behaviour of Opposition MP’s in Rajya Sabha, said sources on Friday.

Sources informed ANI that Vice President Naidu is looking into the precedents and actions in similar matters.
“The matter either to be handed over to privilege committee or formation of a new committee is also under consideration,” said the source.

Two security officials on Thursday submitted a written complaint about the behaviour of opposition members during their protest in the well of House. They complained that the security officials deployed for duty in the House did not misbehave with any of the members during the commotion, and instead were manhandled by several of them.

The report said that as soon as the General Insurance Business (Nationalisation) Amendment Bill, 2021 was introduced in the Rajya Sabha for consideration and passing, opposition members stormed into the well of the House and attempted to climb the on the Table of the House and to tear the papers placed on it.

As per the directions from the Chair, officials of the Parliament Security Service had already positioned themselves around the Table of the House to prevent potential damage to the items placed.

As opposition members started tearing the papers and throwing them towards the Chair, it was decided to rush in additional security officials to prevent the MPs from causing any hurt during the commotion.

The report mentions that security officials strengthened the cordon around the Chair and Table of the House and a Congress MP first pushed a Shiv Sena MP towards security officials and subsequently pulled him back.

Opposition members could not breach the cordon of security officials and some security officials were manhandled. The bill was subsequently passed.

The report said security officials prevented any potential damage. They said only security officials from Parliament Security Service of Rajya Sabha and Lok Sabha Secretariats were called and there was no misbehaviour with members.

In the CCTV footage of the ruckus that emerged on Thursday, Opposition MPs can be seen jostling with marshals in the Upper House.

In the video footage, marshals can be seen forming a human shield to block Opposition MPs from going towards the Chairman’s podium.

Both Houses of Parliament were adjourned sine die on Wednesday, two days before the scheduled end of the session.

All through the session that began on July 19, opposition members forced adjournments in both Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha over their various demands including a probe into allegations of surveillance through Pegasus spyware and repeal of three farm laws. (ANI)

Janhvi Remembers Mother Sri Devi On Her Death Anniv

Remembering her late mother Sridevi on what would have been her 58th birth anniversary, Bollywood actor Janhvi Kapoor shared a priceless throwback picture from her family album on social media.

Taking to Instagram, Janhvi posted an adorable candid picture with the late legendary actor that captures both of them sharing a hearty laugh.

“Happy birthday Mumma. I miss you. Everything is for you, always, every day. I love you,” the ‘Dhadak’ actor captioned the post with a red heart emoticon.

The heart-touching post was flooded with comments as fans and fellow celebrities from the film industry paid tribute to the iconic star.

Sridevi breathed her last on February 24, 2018, in Dubai, where she had gone to attend a family wedding.

Born as Shree Amma Yanger Ayyapan in 1963, she was known for her iconic roles in Hindi movies like ‘Chandni’, ‘Lamhe’, ‘Mr India’, ‘Chaalbaaz’, ‘Nagina’, ‘Sadma’ and ‘English Vinglish’ among many more.

The Padma Shri awardee had also made a mark with her extraordinary performances in Tamil, Telugu, Hindi, Malayalam, and Kannada films. Her last film was ‘Mom’, for which she also received the Best Actress National Award, posthumously. (ANI)

Kinnaur Landslide: Death Toll Mounts To 15

The death toll in the Kinnaur landslide rose to 15 after two more bodies were recovered from the incident site as search and rescue operations resumed in the early morning today.

However, the rescue operations have been halted due to shooting stones.
Chief Minister Jai Ram Thakur on Thursday announced an ex-gratia of Rs 5 lakh to the kin of the deceased.

13 persons have also been safely rescued from the site and sent for medical treatment. However, the number of people missing has yet not been confirmed.

The bulletin also informed that the vehicular movement at National Highway-5 has been resumed.

A 30-seater Himachal Road Transport Corporation (HRTC) bus, a truck, and four cars were among the vehicles that came under the rubble, as the landslide hit the Reckong Peo-Shimla Highway in Kinnaur district on August 11. (ANI)

J-K: LeT Terrorist Killed By Security Forces

One terrorist of Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) was killed during an encounter in Jammu and Kashmir’s Kulgam, Inspector General of Police (IGP) Kashmir, Vijay Kumar said on Friday.

“One terrorist has been killed so far. A complete search of building yet to be completed,” said the IGP.
On Thursday, two security personnel and two civilians were injured in firing by LeT terrorists during an encounter in Jammu and Kashmir’s Kulgam.

“Two terrorists of LeT are still trapped. Exchange of fire is underway. Two security personnel and two civilians are injured in the firing by terrorists,” Kumar said.

According to IGP, terrorists open fire upon a BSF convoy in Kulgam earlier in the day.

“Senior officers of police, CRPF and Army are present at the spot,” the IGP had said. (ANI)