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Vol. 4 | No.12 | July 9-15, 2011 | 60 Cents
The South Asian Times
US Affairs 9 Op Ed 19 Spiritual Awareness 30 Lifestyle 27
NEW YORK EDITION
Excellence In Journalism
Parsi community
created modern
India: Amitav Ghosh
Features,
Page 26
Indian-American
broadcaster les age
discrimination suit
National Community,
Page 7
Deadlock over
separate Telangana,
protests hot up
India Newswire,
Page 12
JAINAs 16th
Convention in Houston
a huge success
JAINA Convention,
Pages 16-18
Pakistan turns
new front line
of war on terror
2G scam claims another
minister: Maran quits
Kerala temple
treasure could be
worth $100 billion
New Delhi/Chennai: Union
Textiles Minister Dayanidhi Ma-
ran resigned Thursday following
allegations of involvement in the
2G spectrum scam, becoming the
second DMK minister after A.
Raja to exit the cabinet.
New Delhi: The
valuables found in
the secret cellars of
Keralas famous Sree
Padmanabhaswamy
Temple in Thiru-
v a n a n t h a p u r a m
could be worth Rs
5 lakh crore ($100
Toronto: Pakistan is now the
new front in the war on terror as it
has become a new safe haven for al-
Qaeda, says the Canadian media a
day after the country blacklisted the
Pakistani Taliban and started with-
drawal from Afghanistan Tuesday.
The war on terror has shifted,
and Pakistan is its new front line,
said the daily National Post.
These two events (blacklisting
of the Pakistani Taliban and the
start of withdrawal from Afghani-
stan) encapsulate a shift, not only
for Canada, but for all other na-
tions on the front lines of the war
on terror. For a number of years,
those lines have been shifting
southeast, from Afghanistan to
Pakistan, the paper said.
It said the Tehrik-e-Taliban is
very dangerous as its stated goal is
resistance to the countrys govern-
ment, the draconian imposition of
Sharia law and the waging of war
against NATO forces in Afghanistan.
Because of these militant outts
Pakistan has become the main
staging area for terrorist plots
around the world and - despite the
United States assassination of Osa-
ma bin Laden in Abbotabad - a new
safe-haven for al-Qaeda.
Quoting a study by the New
America Foundation, the paper
said 53 percent of terror plots
worldwide since 2004 involved
jihadists trained in Pakistan, com-
pared to six percent in Yemen and
three percent in Iraq. Pakistani ji-
hadi groups have directed 44 per-
cent of the terror plots since then,
according to the paper.
War on terror continued on page 4
While the government and the
Congress party did not comment on
the big political development, an
emboldened opposition described
it as too little too late and sought
resignation of Home Minister P.
Chidambaram, who they alleged
showed complicity in the scam.
Thursdays turn of events is
likely to impact both the shape of
impending cabinet shufe and deli-
cately poised relations between the
Congress and the DMK.
2G scam continued on page 4
Union Textiles Minister Dayanidhi Maran is second DMK minister to exit
Manmohan government in the spectrum scam.
53 percent of terror plots worldwide since 2004 involved jihadists,
like Tehrik-e-Taliban and LeT cadres, trained in Pakistan.
Only ve of the six secret cellars of Padmanab-
haswamy Temple have been opened, yielding
Gold idols, ornaments and other valuables.
billion), believes former chief sec-
retary of Kerala CP Nair.
As per a report, Thursday, the
former bureaucrat claims that the
estimated market value of the trea-
sures unearthed from the temple
makes it the richest temple in the
world.
Kerala treasure continued on page 4
CommuniIy 15
TheSouIhAsianTimes.inlo May 14-20, 2011
PSG College ol Technology, CoimbaIore
celebraIes diamond jubilee in New |ersey
T
he Diamond Jubilee
Celebrations oI PSG
College oI Technology,
Coimbatore, India was held at
Chutney Mary restaurant in
Monmouth Junction, New Jersey
on Saturday May 7, 2011. The
gathering was attended by 50
alumni Irom various Iields oI PSG
College oI Technology. The alumni
came Irom Boston, Virginia,
Pennsylvania, New York and New
Jersey. Included were, the oldest
graduate Mr. Shanmugam Irom
1959 batch and the youngest grad-
uate Irom 2010 batch.
The meeting was presided by
visiting dignitaries oI PSG
Management Mr. G. Rangaswamy-
Managing Trustee, Mr. C. R.
Swaminathan - the ChieI
Executive, Dr. R. Rudramoorthy
Principal PSGCT, Dr P.
Radhakrishnan - Director,
PSGIAS, Dr. R. Nandagopal
Director, PGSIM, Dr. G.
Ranganathan - President, Alumni
Association, Dr R. Nadarajan,
Head/Maths & Computer
Applications, PSGCT, Dr A.
Kandaswamy, Head/Biomedical
Engineering, PSGCT.
The slide show presentation
highlighted various departments in
PSG College oI Technology and its
growth into an University accredi-
tation which will be honored upon
PSG next year. It emphasized the
importance oI PSG Tech Corpus
Fund, which will help in education
oI 200 deserving students every
year. The PSG Trust already helps
250 students each year Ior their
education.
Some oI the alumni honored by
Mr. Rangaswamy were - Mr. Jack
Poola Ior his donations to PSG
Tech, Mr. SampathKumar, Mr.
Marthuchala Moorthy, Mr. Selvam
and Mr. Vijay Ior planning the
meeting in New Jersey.
1he college's Managing 1rustee Mr Rangswamy presenting a plaque
to 1ack Poola (left) in recognition of his donation to PSC 1ech.
Mr C R Swaminathan Chief Executieve (in white) and Dr Radhakrishnan
Past Principal (in blue) with students
Mg 1rustee Mr Rangaswamy presenting a plaque to Sampath Kumar,
organizer of the event
Mg. 1rustee Mr. Rangaswamy presenting a plaque to
Selvam, master of ceremony
Dr Rudramurthy, Principal, speaking. Mg 1rustee and
Selvam are also seen in the picture.
1he alumni at the event
Poll gives thumbs down
to govts Lokpal Bill
Meera Shankar bids
farewell to Washington
Near unanimity in the TOI poll that the PM
and the judiciary should be under the purview
of the proposed Lokpal bill.
TheSouthAsianTimes.info
Vol. 4 | No. 16 | August 6-12, 2011 | 60 Cents
The South Asian Times
Tourism 18 Spiritual Awareness 30 Op Ed 24
NEW YORK EDITION
Excellence In Journalism
Gowda is new
Karnataka
chief minister
India Newswire,
Page 11
Another Tri-Valley:
North Virginia
Univ raided
Tristate Community,
Page 5
Aarakshan is
neither pro- nor
anti-reservation - Jha
Bollywood,
Page 16
First person account
by Sikh girl of
Norway massacre
Eye Witness,
Page 25
New Delhi: Congress president
Sonia Gandhi on Thursday under-
went surgery at New Yorks Me-
morial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center for an undisclosed ailment
which will keep her out of India
for a month.
Congress spokesperson Janard-
han Dwivedi said in Delhi that We
have information that the surgery
was successful and her condition
is satisfactory. He added that in
Sonia Gandhis absence, she had
appointed a four-member group to
handle the day-to-day running of
the party -- including her son Rahul
Gandhi, who is increasingly being
seen as a future prime minister.
The Congress partys announce-
ments caught the country by sur
prise because there was no inkling
New Delhi: By naming her son
and party general secretary Rahul
Gandhi as one of four people who
will oversee the Congress while
she is away from India for almost
that Sonia had travelled abroad.
Tehelka news magazine had-
reported on microblogging site Twitter
that Sonia, 64, was admitted on Thurs-
day to Sloan-Kettering, the worlds
largest private cancer hospital. Re-
nowned oncologist Dr Dattatreyudu
Nori, director of the cancer centre at
the New York Hospital Medical Center
of Queens, was said to be attending on
Sonia. Her daughter Priyanka, besides
Rahul, is with Sonia in the US. Rahul
will fy back soon to India to look after
the affairs of the party.
Italian-born Gandhi is the widow
of assassinated former premier Ra-
jiv Gandhi and widely seen as In-
dias most powerful politician, with
her key power-broking position as
Congress president.
Sonia Gandhi Continued on page 4
New Delhi: On Monday, Team
Anna released the results of a ref-
erendum carried out by it on the
Washington: The celebrated
tenure, in the words of Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton, of Meera
Shankar as the ambassador of India
to the US came to an end July 31
amid a round of receptions.
The U.S. Department of State
Lokpal Bill in the constituency of
HRD minister Kapil Sibal, Chandni
Chowk, Delhi. An overwhelming
85% of respondents, they claimed,
preferred the Jan Lokpal Bill - or the
one drafted by civil society mem-
bers - to the government version.
Hogwash, said the Congress,
claiming that the referendum was
done only among BJP supporters
in Chandni Chowk. Sibal himself
was dripping sarcasm - he thanked
Team Anna for not giving itself a
100% in favor.
The Times of India decided to fnd
out whether the referendum really
refected the popular mood and de-
cided to do a poll itself on the net.
Lokpal Continued on page 4
Sonia Gandhi undergoes surgery
at Sloan-Kettering in city
Sonia signals that Rahul matters
TheSouthAsianTimes.info
Vol. 4 | No.12 | July 9-15, 2011 | 60 Cents
The South Asian Times
US Affairs 9 Op Ed 19 Spiritual Awareness 30 Lifestyle 27
NEW YORK EDITION
Excellence In Journalism
Parsi community
created modern
India: Amitav Ghosh
Features,
Page 26
Indian-American
broadcaster les age
discrimination suit
National Community,
Page 7
Deadlock over
separate Telangana,
protests hot up
India Newswire,
Page 12
JAINAs 16th
Convention in Houston
a huge success
JAINA Convention,
Pages 16-18
Pakistan turns
new front line
of war on terror
2G scam claims another
minister: Maran quits
Kerala temple
treasure could be
worth $100 billion
New Delhi/Chennai: Union
Textiles Minister Dayanidhi Ma-
ran resigned Thursday following
allegations of involvement in the
2G spectrum scam, becoming the
second DMK minister after A.
Raja to exit the cabinet.
New Delhi: The
valuables found in
the secret cellars of
Keralas famous Sree
Padmanabhaswamy
Temple in Thiru-
v a n a n t h a p u r a m
could be worth Rs
5 lakh crore ($100
Toronto: Pakistan is now the
new front in the war on terror as it
has become a new safe haven for al-
Qaeda, says the Canadian media a
day after the country blacklisted the
Pakistani Taliban and started with-
drawal from Afghanistan Tuesday.
The war on terror has shifted,
and Pakistan is its new front line,
said the daily National Post.
These two events (blacklisting
of the Pakistani Taliban and the
start of withdrawal from Afghani-
stan) encapsulate a shift, not only
for Canada, but for all other na-
tions on the front lines of the war
on terror. For a number of years,
those lines have been shifting
southeast, from Afghanistan to
Pakistan, the paper said.
It said the Tehrik-e-Taliban is
very dangerous as its stated goal is
resistance to the countrys govern-
ment, the draconian imposition of
Sharia law and the waging of war
against NATO forces in Afghanistan.
Because of these militant outts
Pakistan has become the main
staging area for terrorist plots
around the world and - despite the
United States assassination of Osa-
ma bin Laden in Abbotabad - a new
safe-haven for al-Qaeda.
Quoting a study by the New
America Foundation, the paper
said 53 percent of terror plots
worldwide since 2004 involved
jihadists trained in Pakistan, com-
pared to six percent in Yemen and
three percent in Iraq. Pakistani ji-
hadi groups have directed 44 per-
cent of the terror plots since then,
according to the paper.
War on terror continued on page 4
While the government and the
Congress party did not comment on
the big political development, an
emboldened opposition described
it as too little too late and sought
resignation of Home Minister P.
Chidambaram, who they alleged
showed complicity in the scam.
Thursdays turn of events is
likely to impact both the shape of
impending cabinet shufe and deli-
cately poised relations between the
Congress and the DMK.
2G scam continued on page 4
Union Textiles Minister Dayanidhi Maran is second DMK minister to exit
Manmohan government in the spectrum scam.
53 percent of terror plots worldwide since 2004 involved jihadists,
like Tehrik-e-Taliban and LeT cadres, trained in Pakistan.
Only ve of the six secret cellars of Padmanab-
haswamy Temple have been opened, yielding
Gold idols, ornaments and other valuables.
billion), believes former chief sec-
retary of Kerala CP Nair.
As per a report, Thursday, the
former bureaucrat claims that the
estimated market value of the trea-
sures unearthed from the temple
makes it the richest temple in the
world.
Kerala treasure continued on page 4
CommuniIy 15
TheSouIhAsianTimes.inlo May 14-20, 2011
PSG College ol Technology, CoimbaIore
celebraIes diamond jubilee in New |ersey
T
he Diamond Jubilee
Celebrations oI PSG
College oI Technology,
Coimbatore, India was held at
Chutney Mary restaurant in
Monmouth Junction, New Jersey
on Saturday May 7, 2011. The
gathering was attended by 50
alumni Irom various Iields oI PSG
College oI Technology. The alumni
came Irom Boston, Virginia,
Pennsylvania, New York and New
Jersey. Included were, the oldest
graduate Mr. Shanmugam Irom
1959 batch and the youngest grad-
uate Irom 2010 batch.
The meeting was presided by
visiting dignitaries oI PSG
Management Mr. G. Rangaswamy-
Managing Trustee, Mr. C.R.
Swaminathan - the ChieI
Executive, Dr. R. Rudramoorthy
Principal PSGCT, Dr P.
Radhakrishnan - Director,
PSGIAS, Dr. R. Nandagopal
Director, PGSIM, Dr. G.
Ranganathan - President, Alumni
Association, Dr R. Nadarajan,
Head/Maths & Computer
Applications, PSGCT, Dr A.
Kandaswamy, Head/Biomedical
Engineering, PSGCT.
The slide show presentation
highlighted various departments in
PSG College oI Technology and its
growth into an University accredi-
tation which will be honored upon
PSG next year. It emphasized the
importance oI PSG Tech Corpus
Fund, which will help in education
oI 200 deserving students every
year. The PSG Trust already helps
250 students each year Ior their
education.
Some oI the alumni honored by
Mr. Rangaswamy were - Mr. Jack
Poola Ior his donations to PSG
Tech, Mr. SampathKumar, Mr.
Marthuchala Moorthy, Mr. Selvam
and Mr. Vijay Ior planning the
meeting in New Jersey.
1he college's Managing 1rustee Mr Rangswamy presenting a plaque
to 1ack Poola (left) in recognition of his donation to PSC 1ech.
Mr C R Swaminathan Chief Executieve (in white) and Dr Radhakrishnan
Past Principal (in blue) with students
Mg 1rustee Mr Rangaswamy presenting a plaque to Sampath Kumar,
organizer of the event
Mg. 1rustee Mr. Rangaswamy presenting a plaque to
Selvam, master of ceremony
Dr Rudramurthy, Principal, speaking. Mg 1rustee and
Selvam are also seen in the picture.
1he alumni at the event
Fashion 15
The secrecy about Congress
president Sonia Gandhis
ailment plus the fact that
Sloan-Kettering is a cancer
center gives rise to speculation
that she may have cancer.
Rahul Gandhi has been taking up
more and more responsibility in
Congress party, and is likely to
eventually occupy the prime
ministers chair.
a month, party president Sonia
Gandhi has provided the clear-
est sign of his growing clout
in the countrys oldest political
outft. In a statement she issued
from the US where she is being
medically treated, Sonia Gan-
dhi nominated Rahul and three
long-time loyalists -- Defence
Minister A.K. Antony, her po-
litical secretary Ahmed Patel
and another general secretary
Janardhan Dwivedi.
It immediately struck political pun-
dits and Congress watchers that she
had excluded most of the old guard.
The Sonia decision means that
Rahul, 40, widely seen within and
outside the party as a possible fu-
ture Congress prime minister, will
attend the partys core committee
meetings and those of leaders of
the ruling United Progressive Al-
liance (UPA).
Rahuls selection should not
be a surprise to anyone, political
analyst N. Bhaskar Rao said, add-
ing his importance was known for
years -- at least since he became a
general secretary.
A Congress leader who did not
want to be identifed underlined
that the younger Gandhi was al-
ready discharging important re-
sponsibilities in the party.
Rahul Gandhi Continued on page 4
Finishing her term, Indian ambassador Meera Shankar received
encomiums from Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
hosted a reception to bid her farewell
on 26 July, which was attended by
senior members of the US Adminis-
tration and other key Ambassadors.
Meera Shankar herself also called
on the Secretary of State in her offce.
Meera Shankar Continued on page 4
Anti-corruption crusader Anna
Hazare burns symbolic copies of
the Lokpal bill to denounce the
proposal in its current form.
Tristate Community 3
TheSouthAsianTimes.info August 6-12, 2011
Mangano seeks private
Coliseum developers
IALI to showcase Indian
culture at 21st
Indiafest in Long Island
Kangana Ranaut to be
Grand Marshal at NJ parade
Mineola: County Executive Ed-
ward P. Mangano pressed the reset
button Tuesday on the 77-acre
Nassau Coliseum site, urging pri-
vate developers to pitch redevel-
opment plans in an effort to keep
the Islanders from departing when
the team's lease expires in 2015.
As some potential suitors ex-
pressed interest in luring the Na-
tional Hockey League franchise,
Mangano sought to reframe the is-
sue a day after county voters de-
feated a referendum that would
have permitted borrowing of up to
$400 million to build a new arena
and a minor league ballpark.
Nassau will consider leasing or
selling the land. Mangano called
for preliminary proposals to be
submitted by Aug. 12.
The plans must address job cre-
ation, revenue and quality of life,
he said.
"This is a call to action,"
Mangano said. "If you have pro-
posals, bring them forward. The
county will be moving forward."
His remarks came as NHL Com-
missioner Gary Bettman ex-
pressed hope that the Islanders can
remain on Long Island.
Islanders owner Charles Wang,
who said Monday night he was
"heartbroken" by the defeat of the
referendum, has said that if a new
Coliseum isn't built, he would
move the team after its lease
expires.
Melville, NY: The India Association
of Long Island (IALI) will host a
day-long cultural program on Aug. 7
at the Huntington Hilton Hotel in
Melville, Long Island. The 21st In-
diafest 2011, a showcase for India's
culture, will include classical, folk
and Bollywood dances and songs; a
fabulous fashion show by designer
Sushma Patel; arts and crafts ven-
dors, designer clothes and jewelry,
various types of delicious foods,
games for children and raffles with
exciting prizes, as well as Mehndi
demonstrations.
The organizers also said in a press
release that Manu Narayan, lead ac-
tor of the Broadway show Bombay
Dreams is scheduled to make a spe-
cial appearance and give a perform-
ance.
About 10,000 persons are expect-
ed to visit this event. Attendees can
get free health screenings, meet so-
cial and political leaders and partic-
ipate in honoring Indian-American
community leaders.
Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano and New York Islanders owner
Charles Wang (background) after the referendum to build a new Nas-
sau Coliseum did not pass Aug. 1.
The 7th India Day Parade on Oak Tree Road, NJ, will be held on next
Sunday, August 14, by the Indian Business Association with the support
of New Jersey Federation of Indian Associations and other associa-
tions. Bollywood actress Kangana Ranaut, known for her gritty roles in
films like Fashion will be the Grand marshal. After the parade, a cul-
tural program will be staged at St Cecelia Church parking Lot at Oak
Tree Road, in the area called the Little India.
Indian American actor Manu
Narayan is scheduled to make an
appearance at the event.
19 Indians indicted for
$60 mn medical fraud
Washington, DC: US Federal
prosecutors have charged 26
people, including 19 Indians,
with participating in a scheme
to defraud government
Medicare and Medicaid servic-
es for the elderly of nearly $60
million in unwarranted pre-
scriptions.
An indictment unsealed in
Detroit accuses Babubhai 'Bob'
Patel, 49, a Canton Township
pharmacist, of using his owner-
ship in more than 20 Michigan
pharmacies to facilitate the
fraud, according to Detroit
News.
Prosecutors allege that Patel
used kickbacks and other in-
ducements to convince physi-
cians to write prescriptions that
were filled at his pharmacies
'without regard to the medical
necessity of those prescriptions
and services'.
Since 2006, prosecutors al-
lege that Patel Pharmacies
wrongly billed Medicare for
more than $37.7 million in pre-
scriptions and Medicaid anoth-
er $20.8 million.
'Health care fraud steals
funds from programs designed
to benefit patients, and we all
pay for it,' US Attorney Bar-
bara McQuade said in a state-
ment.
In addition to the pharmacists
and doctors, those charged in-
clude a psychologist, an ac-
countant and several business
associates from the area.
According to prosecutors,
Patel allegedly also used re-
cruiters to find patients who, in
exchange for kickbacks, would
allow the pharmacies to bill
their insurance for drugs and
other services.
The pharmacies were in De-
troit, Dearborn, Southfield,
Warren, Taylor, Berkley, Ponti-
ac, Troy, Hazel Park, Oak Park,
Waterford, Livonia, Commerce
Township, Roseville, Bay City,
Saginaw and Kalamazoo.
All of the defendants were
charged with conspiracy to
commit health care fraud and
23 of the 26 were charged with
conspiracy to distribute con-
trolled substances.
In addition to Patel, those
named in the 34-count indict-
ment include physician Paul
Petre, pharmacists Dineshkmar
Patel, Anish Bhavsar, Ashwini
Sharma, Pinakeen Patel, Kartik
Shah, Viral Thaker, Hiren Pa-
tel, Miteshkumar Patel, Lokeh
Tayal, Narendera Cheraku and
Chetan Gujarathi.
Arpitkumar Patel, Sumanray
Raval, Harpreet Sachdeva,
Ramesh Patel, Rana Naeem,
physician Mustak Vaid, psy-
chologist and patient recruiter
Sanyani Edwards and business
associate Komal Acharya have
also been named in the
indictment.
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4 National Community
August 6-12, 2011 TheSouthAsianTimes.info