Selflessdoubt’s Weblog

South-East Asian Politics through the eyes of an Indian

All I can say is, “wait, what?” May 14, 2008

Filed under: India — selflessdoubt @ 11:31 am
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This story is even hard to imagine. ” In a ritual that would terrify most mothers, Indian villagers have cheered as screaming babies were dropped from a 50-foot temple tower.” I have lived in India for 17 years, and yet I’ve never heard of it, but I’m niot surprised. People go through great lenghts to “bless” their babies. Villagers still hold onto tradtions that are “rooted in religion”, but clearly is ridiculous to anyone who is educated. However, that is the problem. Most of the people in villages are not educated and don’t have enough money or time to get one. They are more interested in earning money inb order to survive. This particular ritual is harlful to a child’s safety and it must be banned by the Indian governement. I’m surprised that I’ve never heard of it before. Maybe it’s one of those things the government does not want you to hear.

 

Update to Sri-Lanka May 14, 2008

Filed under: Rest of South-East Asia — selflessdoubt @ 11:31 am
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The Tamil tigers kill 100 Sri-Lankan troops. Thousands of Sri-Lankan troops have been killed so far. The Tigers are fighting for their own seperate state in the North-East portion of the country. The conflict started because the Tamils demanded equal rights as the Sri-Lankans. They were marginalized, and thus sought to violence in order to gain attention to their cause.

Since then, it has been a bloody affair. Violence is not the solution, but this contention will take more decades to reduce. I do not think the Tigers will stop at anything less than a new state, even though the Sri-Lankan government vows to eliminate them by 2009. I do not understand rebels who move to a new country and expect a new state. They should have stayed with their home country.

 

More killings in Sri-Lanka April 27, 2008

Filed under: India, Rest of South-East Asia — selflessdoubt @ 8:33 pm
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The Tamil tigers kill 100 Sri-Lankan troops. Thousands of Sri-Lankan troops have been killed so far. The Tigers are fighting for their own seperate state in the North-East portion of the country. The conflict started because the Tamils demanded equal rights as the Sri-Lankans. They were marginalized, and thus sought to violence in order to gain attention to their cause.

Since then, it has been a bloody affair. Violence is not the solution, but this contention will take more decades to reduce. I do not think the Tigers will stop at anything less than a new state, even though the Sri-Lankan government vows to eliminate them by 2009. I do not understand rebels who move to a new country and expect a new state. They should have stayed with their home country.

 

Indian trains-unsafe April 24, 2008

Filed under: India, Rest of South-East Asia — selflessdoubt @ 1:26 am
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“More than 20,000 people have been killed on Mumbai’s notoriously overcrowded train system over the past five years — many of them crushed, run over, or electrocuted — according to official data.” This is a sad state of Indian transportation because the public cannot even expect basic safety. These large number of tragedies occur because the trains are over-crowded. People are hanging outside the compartments. The Indian government should establish a limit on the number of people allowed in each cart. However, this will take time because of the large number of people who are dependent on trains for their daily transportation. But, if China can do it, so can India.

 

Bangladesh resestablishes links to India April 18, 2008

Filed under: India, Rest of South-East Asia — selflessdoubt @ 1:54 pm
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The first direct train between Bangladesh and India in more than four decades has been resumed. “The inaugural train — decorated with garlands and festoons — started off Monday amid performances by traditional musicians from Dhaka’s Cantonment Railway Station”. This is a positive step in repairing the relations between Bangladesh and India. It also gives people from both countries to reunite with their relatives and friends. Hopefully, this train will continue without much interference by militant and activist groups. We will have to wait and see.

 

Protests in Bangladesh’s capital April 14, 2008

Filed under: Rest of South-East Asia — selflessdoubt @ 7:11 pm
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Islamic rights and women rights clash in Dhaka in Bangladesh. People of the Islamic Constitution Movement threw stones at the police over a new draft advocating for equal inheritance rights for women and men. It just goes to show how women’s rights are still considered secondary to that of men in Bangladesh. It is incidents like these that gives Islam a negative image. The protestors said the law was against the Koran.

I think that religion plays a major role in today’s conflict, and holy books are used as a go-to for everything. Unfortunately, they are being interpreted negatively, thus playing with people’s and especially children’s minds.

 

Out of a Hollywood movie April 10, 2008

Filed under: Rest of South-East Asia — selflessdoubt @ 2:03 am
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Robbers escaped with $1million from Malyasia’s international airport. They shot and wounded six people on Wednesday. They opened fire at two currency exchange workers and two security guards that accompanied them.

It seems like a situation right out of a hollywood movie. It just goes to show that no matter how much security you have; people will find ways to breach the security if they want to. This article brings out various points. The security of currency workers are threatened because of the amount of cash that they deal with. Also it shows that security check is not enough because people could be carrying weapons before they reach that point, or even as visitors.

 

China entering Sikkim? April 9, 2008

Filed under: India — selflessdoubt @ 10:09 pm
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China has been recently intruding the borders of Sikkim in the Eastern Himalayas. This region borders TIbet. “There have already been already as many as 40 “intrusions” by Chinese troops across the 206-km border between Sikkim and Tibet since January this year, say top sources”.

It is bothersome as to why China would be engaging in such activities. It is really surprising that China chooses to continue to probe into Eastern India, especially after it has been a part of India officially for over sixty years. ” Even a comprimise formula was worked out by prime-minister Atal BIhari Vajpayee in 2003 when he visited China.”

However, some officials feel that this is part of China’s game plan to use Sikkim as leverage in its policy of exerting relentless pressure on India over the Tawang tract in Arunachal Pradesh.” China has been trying to gain India’s Eastern states for a while by claiming that the inhabitants are more Chinese than Indian. China should learn to mind its business and stick to improving its government. It is not the time to acquire states especially when they belong to a democratic country.

 

 

 

Indian students feel unsafe in the US April 5, 2008

Filed under: India — selflessdoubt @ 8:41 pm
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Insecurity grips Indian students in the US as four students have been killed in the past year, which started with the Virginia Tech incident. The two most shocking incidents for me were of the two Louisiana State students who were found murdered in their apartment, and of the Indian student who was shot in Duke. I am rather surprised that a reputed college like Duke is unsafe. I’m flabbergasted that a certain student paid tens of thousand of dollars to come to college to kill someone else. The psyche of such a person seems askewed.

I am unsure whether their ethnicity and background has to do with the murder, but it is still rather shocking especially since I am an Indian student studying abroad. Security in American colleges has been flailing ever since Virginia Tech. I think the problem with the number of shootings in America is the lack of gun control. It is rather easy for American citizens to obtain a gun. I agree guns are sometimes needed if there is a threat to personal security, but I think they should not be available to everyone. The procedure for an application should be based on the location of a person and whether he/she is facing imminent threat.

“Shootings that left six students, including the gunman, dead at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb on 14 February shocked NIU master’s student Ravi Kiran. Things like this don’t happen in India, says Mr Kiran. ” This is because not every common joe has a gun or can get a gun. In India, you need to be rich, under threat, or have mob connections, and most of us don’t.

 

No painkiller for being under the rubble. April 3, 2008

Filed under: India — selflessdoubt @ 8:46 pm
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A 22-year-old migrant labourer has not been given painkillers even though he has been terribly injured after a flat collapsed in Uttar Pradesh, India. “Hospital authorities say they prefer to give little medicine in such cases. ‘‘Unless he or she is bleeding, we try to treat injury patients without medicine,” says medical superintendent Ashok Bangotra.

I cannot even imagine the pain he is going through. I think that the doctors refuse to treat him well because he is a Dalit or someone from a lower caste. If a celebrity was injured, or maybe even someone from a middle-class family, the first thing the doctor would have done is to give the person a painkiller.

 However, Singh’s only gotten ivy. I think the doctors  probably assume that someone from the lower caste would not be able to pay his bill, so they do not want to give him any ’special treatment’. It is sad that our medical profession has also become a way of emphasizing one’s status and class.