mercredi 30 novembre 2016

Homo Sapiens in creative destruction

Many, if not most, experts believe computers will soon be more functionally intelligent than homo sapiens

Attempts to define intelligence and consciousness have driven philosophers and neuroscientists to despair for millennia. Intelligence can perhaps be described in functional terms, as the ability to learn new skills and solve various types of problems. But consciousness leads into recursive territory, and its definitions involve terms like “self-awareness”, which leads back to consciousness.  In this book, historian-turned-futurist, Yuval Noah Harari asserts that the understanding of intelligence and consciousness and the links between them are no longer just an ...

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Can fast-fashion brands go the sustainable way?

Instead of trendy, disposable clothes, consumers now looking for durability

Apparel chains such as H&M, and Forever 21 conquered the retail world by promising fast fashion: cheap, trendy and disposable.

Yet there’s a growing number of consumers this holiday season who want just the opposite. Data shows that shoppers — especially millennials, the target market for fast- companies — are increasingly looking for clothes made of higher-quality materials or they’re keeping their existing clothes longer. Some are even seeking apparel that’s been reused or recycled.

More than 14 per cent of US consumers looked for apparel and accessories made from natural materials in 2016, up from 12.9 per cent last year, according to a survey. Shoppers looking for clothes that were reused or recycled rose two per cent this year. And more millennials looked for “sustainably produced” apparel and accessories than any other age group.

This shift to so-called sustainable clothing is threatening the underpinnings of a industry that wants consumers to rapidly change styles and move on to the next hot trends.

“Certainly fast- companies are doing a booming business, but there’s also an increased interest in vintage, learning how to sew and weave, and in repair and mending,” said Susan Brown, a expert who serves as associate curator of textiles at the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum. “There’s the Brooklynisation of the world — interest in higher-quality, handmade things that have a narrative story.”

The challenge may come earlier than big retail chains expect. Consumers are more willing to shop at niche, smaller companies this season, according to Deloitte LLP. Some of these retailers tout sustainable premiums for longer-lasting, higher-quality products —think, Zady or Everlane.


“People want to buy trends less and less,” said Jennifer Baumgartner, a clinical psychologist and author of You Are What You Wear: What your Clothes Reveal About You. “It seems they’d rather buy items that are classic and will last a long time. The movement is happening, and it’s been gaining ground in the public eye.”


She said it’s going to be difficult for the fast- concept to use high-quality, eco-friendly fabric and not create “mass waste”.

But fast- companies are trying to respond. In 2013, launched a worldwide garment-collecting initiative encouraging consumers to reuse and recycle their clothes. The chain also sells a “conscious collection,” a clothing line created entirely from sustainable materials. launched its first sustainable line, Join Life, in September. The collection consists of simpler designs and clothing made from recycled wool, organic cotton and Tencel — a fabric that includes regenerated wood.

Can fast-fashion brands go the sustainable way?

Instead of trendy, disposable clothes, consumers now looking for durability

Instead of trendy, disposable clothes, consumers now looking for durability
Apparel chains such as H&M, and Forever 21 conquered the retail world by promising fast fashion: cheap, trendy and disposable.

Yet there’s a growing number of consumers this holiday season who want just the opposite. Data shows that shoppers — especially millennials, the target market for fast- companies — are increasingly looking for clothes made of higher-quality materials or they’re keeping their existing clothes longer. Some are even seeking apparel that’s been reused or recycled.

More than 14 per cent of US consumers looked for apparel and accessories made from natural materials in 2016, up from 12.9 per cent last year, according to a survey. Shoppers looking for clothes that were reused or recycled rose two per cent this year. And more millennials looked for “sustainably produced” apparel and accessories than any other age group.

This shift to so-called sustainable clothing is threatening the underpinnings of a industry that wants consumers to rapidly change styles and move on to the next hot trends.

“Certainly fast- companies are doing a booming business, but there’s also an increased interest in vintage, learning how to sew and weave, and in repair and mending,” said Susan Brown, a expert who serves as associate curator of textiles at the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum. “There’s the Brooklynisation of the world — interest in higher-quality, handmade things that have a narrative story.”

The challenge may come earlier than big retail chains expect. Consumers are more willing to shop at niche, smaller companies this season, according to Deloitte LLP. Some of these retailers tout sustainable premiums for longer-lasting, higher-quality products —think, Zady or Everlane.


“People want to buy trends less and less,” said Jennifer Baumgartner, a clinical psychologist and author of You Are What You Wear: What your Clothes Reveal About You. “It seems they’d rather buy items that are classic and will last a long time. The movement is happening, and it’s been gaining ground in the public eye.”


She said it’s going to be difficult for the fast- concept to use high-quality, eco-friendly fabric and not create “mass waste”.

But fast- companies are trying to respond. In 2013, launched a worldwide garment-collecting initiative encouraging consumers to reuse and recycle their clothes. The chain also sells a “conscious collection,” a clothing line created entirely from sustainable materials. launched its first sustainable line, Join Life, in September. The collection consists of simpler designs and clothing made from recycled wool, organic cotton and Tencel — a fabric that includes regenerated wood.
image

Sarah Very | Bloomber

Business Standard

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Can fast-fashion brands go the sustainable way?

Test to seek superbugs wins top prize

A FIRM based near Banbury has scooped a Longitude Prize Discovery award for developing a test for superbugs. Test to seek superbugs wins top prize

Yuvraj Singh marries Hazel Keech in a low-key ceremony

The wedding was according to Sikh rituals and customs and was attended by close members of the family

ANI  |  Fatehgarh (Punjab) [India] 

Flamboyant Indian cricketer on Wednesday got married to actress in a low profile ceremony at Fatehgarh Sahib Gurudwara in Chandigarh.

Hazel looked beautiful in a maroon lehenga with shades of pink on sleeves.


Yuvraj on the other hand, looked classy wearing the same shade as Hazel as he entered the Gurudwara. The Anand Karaj ceremony comprised four pheras. The couple then did griha pravesh in their new house in Chandigarh.


The was according to Sikh rituals and customs and was attended by close members of the family.

The Punjabi will be followed by a Hindu ceremony in Goa on December 2. A starry reception will take place on December 7 in New Delhi, which will see many from corporate world, politicos and Bollywood attending - or so says the guest list.

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Yuvraj Singh marries Hazel Keech in a low-key ceremony

mardi 29 novembre 2016

American war based 'Band of Brothers' to air in India on Dec 3-4

"Band of Brothers" is adapted from the best-selling book of the same name by Stephen E. Ambrose

IANS  |  New Delhi 

and Steven Spielberg's "Band of Brothers" will air in India next month.

The Primetime Emmy award and Golden Globe winning mini-series will air on HD on December 3 and 4, read a statement from the channel.

The 10-episode mini-series, a real life story of war heroes, stars Michael Fassbender, Tom Hardy, James McAvoy, David Schwimmer, Jimmy Fallon, Tom Hanks' son Colin Hanks, Simon Pegg, Michael Cudlitz, Neal McDonough, Jamie Bamber and Stephen Graham.

"Band of Brothers" is adapted from the best-selling book of the same name by Stephen E. Ambrose.

It follows the story of the exceptional heroes belonging to Easy Company, the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne Division during World War II. The epic mini-series highlights their journey from training to airborne landings in Normandy, the Siege of Bastogne and finally all the way to Hitler's mountain retreat.

American war based 'Band of Brothers' to air in India on Dec 3-4

"Band of Brothers" is adapted from the best-selling book of the same name by Stephen E. Ambrose

"Band of Brothers" is adapted from the best-selling book of the same name by Stephen E. Ambrose

and Steven Spielberg's "Band of Brothers" will air in India next month.

The Primetime Emmy award and Golden Globe winning mini-series will air on HD on December 3 and 4, read a statement from the channel.

The 10-episode mini-series, a real life story of war heroes, stars Michael Fassbender, Tom Hardy, James McAvoy, David Schwimmer, Jimmy Fallon, Tom Hanks' son Colin Hanks, Simon Pegg, Michael Cudlitz, Neal McDonough, Jamie Bamber and Stephen Graham.

"Band of Brothers" is adapted from the best-selling book of the same name by Stephen E. Ambrose.

It follows the story of the exceptional heroes belonging to Easy Company, the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne Division during World War II. The epic mini-series highlights their journey from training to airborne landings in Normandy, the Siege of Bastogne and finally all the way to Hitler's mountain retreat.

image

IANS

Business Standard

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American war based 'Band of Brothers' to air in India on Dec 3-4

Mihir S Sharma: Harry Potter and the unexpected return

J K Rowling's creation is again at the forefront of the public imagination, more than a decade after the last book was released, is different

Mihir S Sharma Often, at times of national crisis, people can turn to literature for inspiration. In the past, they have sought out writers and poets who have described the national condition, or sought to remedy it — or simply written inspirationally of another world being possible.  It’s a little startling, however, that the writer, the work and the world that are most salient at the moment are J K Rowling’s Harry Potter books.  This is not because Ms Rowling has returned to the Potterverse with a screenplay set in the late 1920s, as fascism grew in power. ...

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The end of coconut water? The world's trendiest nut is under threat of species collapse

 

“Orange juice for breakfast is over,” an investor interested in creating large, fair trade plantations recently joked to me. These days, water is king.

For the trendy and the wealthy, including celebrities such as Rihanna, Madonna or Matthew McConaughey, rarest water extracted from the aromatic varieties of the nut, is the “it” drink and even a source of income.

water is being sold by luxury brands, at up to $7 for 33 cl, about the same price as basic champagne.

A booming market

There is no doubt that the market is exploding. water currently represents an annual turnover of US$2 billion. It is expected to reach US$4 billion in the next five years.

In 2007, a 25% stake in Vitacoco, the largest brand for water, was sold for US$7 million to Verlinvest company. Seven years later, another 25% stake in Vitacoco was again sold to Red Bull China for about US$166 million.

Other large players in the water business include Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, but more than 200 brands are now marketing water.

An essential crop

But there’s another side to the story. The is one of 35 food crops listed in Annex 1 of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture and considered crucial to global food security. In 2014, the Food and Agriculture Organization estimated global production to be 61.5 million tonnes.

It is an important livelihood crop for more than 11 million farmers, most of whom are smallholders, cultivating palms on around 12 million hectares of land in at least 94 countries worldwide. The palm is popularly known as the “Tree of Life” – all its parts are useful.

The main products are copra – the dried inner meat of the nut, used for oil – and the husk, which provides a vital source of fibre. More recently, as we’ve seen, there is also high demand for tender water and virgin oil.

Whole mature nuts are exported and sold to factories that produce desiccated and cream. At least half of the coconuts are consumed locally.

Genetic diversity

Over millennia, humans have slowly selected and maintained numerous varieties, used for many purposes.

This has resulted in an extraordinary morphological diversity, which is expressed in the range of colours, shapes and sizes of the fruits. But the extent of this diversity is largely unknown at the global level. The huge amount of work that has gone into breeding by farmers over millennia, and by scientists during the 20th century, remains greatly under-valued.

The rarest varieties, for instance the horned coconut, grown and conserved on the Tetiaroa Atoll and in India, are not even recognised as coconuts by most people, especially Westerners.

conservation

The genetic diversity found in populations and varieties, known by scientists as “germplasm”, is conserved by millions of small farmers.

A number of initiatives have been launched to recognise and support the role of these farmers, and to sustain them by promoting landscape management approaches, such as the Polymotu concept (“poly” meaning many, and “Motu” meaning island in Polynesian.)

The Polymotu concept capitalises on the geographical or reproductive isolation of various species for the conservation and reproduction of individual varieties of plants, trees and even animals.

In a project led by the Pacific Community and funded by the Global Crop Diversity Trust, two small islands in Samoa have been recently replanted with the famous traditional niu afa variety, which produces the largest fruits in the world, reaching more than 40 cm long.

Sadly, the is endangered. One of the main challenges of cultivation is the existence of lethal diseases, which are rapidly expanding and killing millions of palms. These pandemics are known as lethal yellowing diseases.

The diseases ravage countries in Africa (in Tanzania, Mozambique, Ghana, Nigeria, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire), and also in Asia (India), North America (Mexico, the Caribbean, Florida) and the Pacific Region (Papua New Guinea, and probably Solomon Islands).

Diversity under threat

Many varieties that could be crucial for the future of agriculture are disappearing because of the loss of traditional knowledge, rapid transformations of agricultural landscapes, climate change and westernisation.

Due to the fragility of insular ecosystems, the Pacific Region is probably the location where the losses are highest.

During a recent survey in the Cook Islands, we succeeded with considerable difficulty in locating a sweet husk palm, known as niu mangaro locally. This is a rare, highly threatened form of coconut.

The husk of its unripe fruit, which in other species is usually tough and astringent, is tender, edible and sweet. It can be chewed like sugarcane. Once the fruits are ripe, the husk fibres are white and thin.

Our survey was conducted together with a government agricultural officer. During the work, he took a tender and started to chew the husk. Then he stopped, telling me, “I do not want people here to see me eating niu mangaro, because they will say I am a poor man.”

The consumption of traditional varieties being still perceived as socially stigmatising, not embracing a “modern” way of life. On the other hand, the consumption of imported food is considered as a mark of modernity and richness.

During another survey conducted in 2010 in Moorea Island, a Polynesian farmer interviewed about sweet husk varieties, known as kaipoa there, told me:

I had one kaipoa palm in my farm, but I cut it down two years ago … Over ten years, I was unable to harvest a single fruit: all were stolen and eaten by children from the neighbourhood.

So, a traditional variety remains appreciated by the next generation of Polynesians, but the farmer is not aware of the rarity and of the cultural value of the resource.

The social and economic factors affecting conservation have been the subject of discussion at two international meetings organised in 2016 by the Asia and Pacific Community in Indonesia and the Central Plantation Crop Research Institute in India.

Discussions included the constraints and advantages related to biology; links with conservation in institutional field gene banks; farmer’s knowledge regarding the reproductive biology of their crop; socioeconomic dynamics; and policy measures.

Big business, but little money for research

The International Genetic Resources Network (COGENT) now comprises 41 coconut-producing countries, representing more than 98% of global production. Its activities are focused on conservation and breeding of varieties.

germplasm is represented by about 400 varieties and 1,600 accessions in 24 genebanks. Accessions are the basic units of genebanks.

In the case of the palm, each accession is generally constituted of 45 to 150 palms, all collected at the same location. They are documented in a Genetic Resources Database and a global catalogue.

COGENT also works on sequencing the genome, in the framework of a collaboration between research organisations in Côte d’Ivoire, France and China.

Despite the upturn in the global market, many farmers remain insufficiently organised, and investment in research is incredibly scarce.

A yearly investment of about US$3 to US$5 million in public international research would be enough to address most of the challenges of agriculture. But private companies benefiting from the market boom are still scarcely involved in research funding.

The is a perennial crop, producing fruit year-round, but it takes a long time to grow. Investors, more interested in rapid profits, remain reluctant to fund the ten-year research programmes that are often needed to efficiently address the challenges of research.

In coconut-producing countries, under-resourced genebanks and laboratories lack the necessary budget, labour, equipment and technical training to conduct the controlled hand-pollinations required for regenerating the germplasm, and to implement other activities such as collecting, characterisation and breeding.

water brands will only make billions as long as coconuts are plentiful and diverse. More importantly, people all over the world rely on the security of this vital crop. Securing its future must be a priority for everyone who farms, eats and profits from the coconut.


Roland Bourdeix, Senior Researcher, Cirad

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

The end of coconut water? The world's trendiest nut is under threat of species collapse

Coconut water is being sold by luxury brands, at up to $7 for 33 cl, about the same price as basic champagne

Coconut water is being sold by luxury brands, at up to $7 for 33 cl, about the same price as basic champagne

 

“Orange juice for breakfast is over,” an investor interested in creating large, fair trade plantations recently joked to me. These days, water is king.

For the trendy and the wealthy, including celebrities such as Rihanna, Madonna or Matthew McConaughey, rarest water extracted from the aromatic varieties of the nut, is the “it” drink and even a source of income.

water is being sold by luxury brands, at up to $7 for 33 cl, about the same price as basic champagne.

A booming market

There is no doubt that the market is exploding. water currently represents an annual turnover of US$2 billion. It is expected to reach US$4 billion in the next five years.

In 2007, a 25% stake in Vitacoco, the largest brand for water, was sold for US$7 million to Verlinvest company. Seven years later, another 25% stake in Vitacoco was again sold to Red Bull China for about US$166 million.

Other large players in the water business include Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, but more than 200 brands are now marketing water.

An essential crop

But there’s another side to the story. The is one of 35 food crops listed in Annex 1 of the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture and considered crucial to global food security. In 2014, the Food and Agriculture Organization estimated global production to be 61.5 million tonnes.

It is an important livelihood crop for more than 11 million farmers, most of whom are smallholders, cultivating palms on around 12 million hectares of land in at least 94 countries worldwide. The palm is popularly known as the “Tree of Life” – all its parts are useful.

The main products are copra – the dried inner meat of the nut, used for oil – and the husk, which provides a vital source of fibre. More recently, as we’ve seen, there is also high demand for tender water and virgin oil.

Whole mature nuts are exported and sold to factories that produce desiccated and cream. At least half of the coconuts are consumed locally.

Genetic diversity

Over millennia, humans have slowly selected and maintained numerous varieties, used for many purposes.

This has resulted in an extraordinary morphological diversity, which is expressed in the range of colours, shapes and sizes of the fruits. But the extent of this diversity is largely unknown at the global level. The huge amount of work that has gone into breeding by farmers over millennia, and by scientists during the 20th century, remains greatly under-valued.

The rarest varieties, for instance the horned coconut, grown and conserved on the Tetiaroa Atoll and in India, are not even recognised as coconuts by most people, especially Westerners.

conservation

The genetic diversity found in populations and varieties, known by scientists as “germplasm”, is conserved by millions of small farmers.

A number of initiatives have been launched to recognise and support the role of these farmers, and to sustain them by promoting landscape management approaches, such as the Polymotu concept (“poly” meaning many, and “Motu” meaning island in Polynesian.)

The Polymotu concept capitalises on the geographical or reproductive isolation of various species for the conservation and reproduction of individual varieties of plants, trees and even animals.

In a project led by the Pacific Community and funded by the Global Crop Diversity Trust, two small islands in Samoa have been recently replanted with the famous traditional niu afa variety, which produces the largest fruits in the world, reaching more than 40 cm long.

Sadly, the is endangered. One of the main challenges of cultivation is the existence of lethal diseases, which are rapidly expanding and killing millions of palms. These pandemics are known as lethal yellowing diseases.

The diseases ravage countries in Africa (in Tanzania, Mozambique, Ghana, Nigeria, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire), and also in Asia (India), North America (Mexico, the Caribbean, Florida) and the Pacific Region (Papua New Guinea, and probably Solomon Islands).

Diversity under threat

Many varieties that could be crucial for the future of agriculture are disappearing because of the loss of traditional knowledge, rapid transformations of agricultural landscapes, climate change and westernisation.

Due to the fragility of insular ecosystems, the Pacific Region is probably the location where the losses are highest.

During a recent survey in the Cook Islands, we succeeded with considerable difficulty in locating a sweet husk palm, known as niu mangaro locally. This is a rare, highly threatened form of coconut.

The husk of its unripe fruit, which in other species is usually tough and astringent, is tender, edible and sweet. It can be chewed like sugarcane. Once the fruits are ripe, the husk fibres are white and thin.

Our survey was conducted together with a government agricultural officer. During the work, he took a tender and started to chew the husk. Then he stopped, telling me, “I do not want people here to see me eating niu mangaro, because they will say I am a poor man.”

The consumption of traditional varieties being still perceived as socially stigmatising, not embracing a “modern” way of life. On the other hand, the consumption of imported food is considered as a mark of modernity and richness.

During another survey conducted in 2010 in Moorea Island, a Polynesian farmer interviewed about sweet husk varieties, known as kaipoa there, told me:

I had one kaipoa palm in my farm, but I cut it down two years ago … Over ten years, I was unable to harvest a single fruit: all were stolen and eaten by children from the neighbourhood.

So, a traditional variety remains appreciated by the next generation of Polynesians, but the farmer is not aware of the rarity and of the cultural value of the resource.

The social and economic factors affecting conservation have been the subject of discussion at two international meetings organised in 2016 by the Asia and Pacific Community in Indonesia and the Central Plantation Crop Research Institute in India.

Discussions included the constraints and advantages related to biology; links with conservation in institutional field gene banks; farmer’s knowledge regarding the reproductive biology of their crop; socioeconomic dynamics; and policy measures.

Big business, but little money for research

The International Genetic Resources Network (COGENT) now comprises 41 coconut-producing countries, representing more than 98% of global production. Its activities are focused on conservation and breeding of varieties.

germplasm is represented by about 400 varieties and 1,600 accessions in 24 genebanks. Accessions are the basic units of genebanks.

In the case of the palm, each accession is generally constituted of 45 to 150 palms, all collected at the same location. They are documented in a Genetic Resources Database and a global catalogue.

COGENT also works on sequencing the genome, in the framework of a collaboration between research organisations in Côte d’Ivoire, France and China.

Despite the upturn in the global market, many farmers remain insufficiently organised, and investment in research is incredibly scarce.

A yearly investment of about US$3 to US$5 million in public international research would be enough to address most of the challenges of agriculture. But private companies benefiting from the market boom are still scarcely involved in research funding.

The is a perennial crop, producing fruit year-round, but it takes a long time to grow. Investors, more interested in rapid profits, remain reluctant to fund the ten-year research programmes that are often needed to efficiently address the challenges of research.

In coconut-producing countries, under-resourced genebanks and laboratories lack the necessary budget, labour, equipment and technical training to conduct the controlled hand-pollinations required for regenerating the germplasm, and to implement other activities such as collecting, characterisation and breeding.

water brands will only make billions as long as coconuts are plentiful and diverse. More importantly, people all over the world rely on the security of this vital crop. Securing its future must be a priority for everyone who farms, eats and profits from the coconut.


Roland Bourdeix, Senior Researcher, Cirad

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

image

Roland Bourdeix, Cirad

Business Standard

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The end of coconut water? The world's trendiest nut is under threat of species collapse

Google Doodle celebrates Alcott's birthday with 'Little Women'

The Doodle captures the March sisters from Alcott's semi-autobiographical book 'Little Women'

Popular search engine Google on Tuesday paid a tribute to American novelist on her 184th birth anniversary.

Done by artist Sophie Diao, the Doodle captures the March sisters from Alcott's widely acclaimed semi-autobiographical book Little Women.


The doodle portrays the girls from the March family - Beth, Jo, Amy and Meg - as well as Jo's best friend Laurie, their neighbour.

Born on November 29, 1832 in Pennsylvania, Alcott was a feminist and served as a volunteer nurse during the Civil War. She was also the first woman to register to vote in Concord, Massachusetts.


Little Women, published by the Roberts Brothers, is Alcott's most famous novel and is loosely based on her childhood experiences with her three sisters.


The Doodle can be seen across several countries like the US, France, Italy, Australia, India, among others.

Google Doodle celebrates Alcott's birthday with 'Little Women'

The Doodle captures the March sisters from Alcott's semi-autobiographical book 'Little Women'

The Doodle captures the March sisters from Alcott's semi-autobiographical book 'Little Women'
Popular search engine Google on Tuesday paid a tribute to American novelist on her 184th birth anniversary.

Done by artist Sophie Diao, the Doodle captures the March sisters from Alcott's widely acclaimed semi-autobiographical book Little Women.


The doodle portrays the girls from the March family - Beth, Jo, Amy and Meg - as well as Jo's best friend Laurie, their neighbour.


Born on November 29, 1832 in Pennsylvania, Alcott was a feminist and served as a volunteer nurse during the Civil War. She was also the first woman to register to vote in Concord, Massachusetts.


Little Women, published by the Roberts Brothers, is Alcott's most famous novel and is loosely based on her childhood experiences with her three sisters.


The Doodle can be seen across several countries like the US, France, Italy, Australia, India, among others.

image

Press Trust of India

Business Standard

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Google Doodle celebrates Alcott's birthday with 'Little Women'

lundi 28 novembre 2016

Fuel for thought

Rajeev Jayaswal's book covers a crucial period in country's petroleum history when petrol and diesel witnessed decontrol

Jyoti Mukul 

THE LOBBYISTS Untold Story of Oil, Gas and Energy Sector Rajeev Jayaswal Bloomsbury 346 pages; Rs 499 The 10 years of United Progressive Alliance (UPA) rule at the Centre were tumultuous in every respect when it came to the energy sector. From pricing of petroleum products to the controversy surrounding natural gas pricing, petroleum ministers in the UPA government made headlines much too often. In comparison, the National Democratic Alliance’s rule has been muted, with much of the tricky decision-making executed smoothly over an extended period of time with ...

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Fuel for thought

Aamir to seek tax free status for 'Dangal'

The film is the story of Haryana-based wrestler Mahavir Singh Phogat, who trained his daughters Geeta and Babita to become wrestlers

Superstar says he would apply for status for his upcoming film that is based on the life of wrestler Mahavir Singh Phogat.

Usually, the makers of sports films seek status from the government.

"I believe it's a film where the parameters of tax exemption are... I think it does fall in this category. It is not for me to decide (on tax free), it is upto the state government to decide. We will apply for before the release of the film, it's a process and it may happen or may not happen. I can't predict how much time will it take," Aamir told reporters here at an event of Dangal.

A special video of the making of Dangal featuring Aamir and his trainers was shown and how he gained weight for the character and subsequently how he shed it.

The Nitesh Tiwari-directed film is the story of Haryana-based wrestler Mahavir Singh Phogat, who trained his daughters Geeta and Babita to become wrestlers. The biographical sports drama film will release on December 23.

When asked if he is expecting U or U/A certificate for Dangal, Aamir said, "It's a universal film, it is about children, kids, it's the story of a family. Ours will be more of a family film I think it will be a U film."

There were reports that Pahlaj Nilhani of CBFC had asked Aamir to postpone due to demonetisation.

To this, Aamir said, "He has not asked me to do anything, I never got a call from him.

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Aamir to seek tax free status for 'Dangal'

dimanche 27 novembre 2016

Dear Zindagi expected to earn Rs 35 cr over first weekend

Taking to Instagram, the delighted Shahrukh Khan shared a picture of him along with his co-star Alia Bhatt to thank his fans

ANI  |  New Delhi 

Seems like is overwhelmed by the response he got for 'Dear Zindagi' and especially in a time when most of the Friday releases are substantially affected by demonetisation.

Taking to Instagram, the delighted King Khan shared a beautiful picture of him along with his stunning co-star to thank his fans.

He captioned the black and white picture as "Dear Viewers thank u for the special love. Big thx 2 @dharmamovies@redchilliesent for the special release strategy. #DearZindagi."

On a related note, the Gauri Shinde's directorial marked 8.75 crores on the first day of its release and is expected to earn approx. 35 crore over the first weekend.

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Dear Zindagi expected to earn Rs 35 cr over first weekend

Dear Zindagi expected to earn 35 cr over first weekend

Taking to Instagram, the delighted Shahrukh Khan shared a picture of him along with his co-star Alia Bhatt to thank his fans

ANI  |  New Delhi 

Seems like is overwhelmed by the response he got for 'Dear Zindagi' and especially in a time when most of the Friday releases are substantially affected by demonetisation.

Taking to Instagram, the delighted King Khan shared a beautiful picture of him along with his stunning co-star to thank his fans.

He captioned the black and white picture as "Dear Viewers thank u for the special love. Big thx 2 @dharmamovies@redchilliesent for the special release strategy. #DearZindagi."

On a related note, the Gauri Shinde's directorial marked 8.75 crores on the first day of its release and is expected to earn approx. 35 crore over the first weekend.

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Dear Zindagi expected to earn 35 cr over first weekend

vendredi 25 novembre 2016

CashNoCash to Walnut: Dealing with demonetisation through these apps

While some point towards ATMs with cash, others are pranks and ways to pass time while standing in bank queues

Abhik Sen 

A surfeit of apps and websites is offering help in this time of demonetisation. While some point towards ATMs with cash, others are pranks and ways to pass time while standing in bank queues. Yet others claim to help get rid of your unaccounted for money. Abhik Sen lists a few useful ones Walnut Available for Android and iOS, this finance management app shows ATMs with cash in green (and helpfully also mentions whether or not the queue is short). Recently active ATMs are shown in orange (they may or may not have cash), while those in grey are the ones that have been active ...

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CashNoCash to Walnut: Dealing with demonetisation through these apps

Meet Satjeet Singh Bedi, the man who offers 'chhotus' for ATM queues

Bookmychotu was initially a platform where helpers could be hired for housekeeping and odd jobs

It hasn’t taken companies long to cash in on the demonetisation move in the country. From radio channels allocating entertainers to ATM queues and music apps such as Saavn creating special ATM playlists and food delivery websites encouraging people to order online, the currency ban has been given many tongue-in-cheek spins. But the queues remain, as does the hassle of waiting for hours to get cash. Enter Bookmychotu, a 10-month-old start-up that can provide “chhotus” (helpers) to stand in the ATM queue for you till your turn comes. Founded by Satjeet Singh Bedi, ...

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Meet Satjeet Singh Bedi, the man who offers 'chhotus' for ATM queues

Dealing with demonetisation

While some point towards ATMs with cash, others are pranks and ways to pass time while standing in bank queues

Abhik Sen 

A surfeit of apps and websites is offering help in this time of demonetisation. While some point towards ATMs with cash, others are pranks and ways to pass time while standing in bank queues. Yet others claim to help get rid of your unaccounted for money. Abhik Sen lists a few useful ones Walnut Available for Android and iOS, this finance management app shows ATMs with cash in green (and helpfully also mentions whether or not the queue is short). Recently active ATMs are shown in orange (they may or may not have cash), while those in grey are the ones that have been active ...

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Dealing with demonetisation

Asus ZenBook 3: MacBook clone and then some

The ultraportable notebook is a sharp challenger to Apple's MacBook, writes Abhik Sen

Abhik Sen 

Is that a Rose Gold MacBook? Like the one we saw at the store? You better not tell me you bought it!” This is how my wife reacted when she came home to see me tinkering on another new notebook. While I hadn’t bought it, thank heavens she didn’t know how much the Asus ZenBook 3 cost: a neat ~123,990. Yes, that’s far more than a MacBook! But I just couldn’t get enough of it. Weighing a shade below a kg, this super svelte notebook has a smart Asus logo on the back and its chamfered edges and the colour-coordinated keyboard ooze class. But all that jazz ...

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Asus ZenBook 3: MacBook clone and then some

Horror of horrors

Babak Anvari's Under The Shadow is a supremely scary movie set in the 1980s when the Iran-Iraq war was at its raging best

J Jagannath 

In terms of the world order, the last couple of weeks have been unreal to say the least. Looking at the way Donald Trump is cramming in white supremacists in his cabinet, can cinema or any other art form live up to the potential dystopia that the Rust Belt states have wrought upon rest of the world? But then, I get reminded of Nietzsche who said “we have art in order not to die of the truth.” I found two thrillers to find succour in while Trump is busy assembling his depression-inducing Cabinet full of people who are racist, homophobic and Islamophobic. Babak ...

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Horror of horrors

Educating rural India

One of India's largest NGOs has adopted a unique programme to enable better learning in some of the country's most backward areas, writes Geetanjali Krishna

Sounds of laughter and excitement emanate from the government school classroom in a village in Bhadohi, Uttar Pradesh. I watch from a window as two little children circle a jumble of alphabet strewn on the ground. The facilitator calls out a letter and the two children scrabble about madly to find it. The winner proudly holds up the letter, uses it in a word, writes it on the blackboard and then identifies it once again on a chart. “We find that this simple game enables students to learn the alphabet and numbers much better than any book would do,” says the ...

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Educating rural India

Lambani and Co

Using traditional needlework, women of the once nomadic tribe of Karnataka have become cultural ambassadors for their craft, writes Nikita Puri

Nikita Puri 

Every morning in Sandur, in Karnataka’s Bellary district, Thippavva sits down with a heap of cowrie shells. One by one, she cracks every shell just enough for a needle to pass through. If it’s not cowrie shells, her hands are busy with strips of coloured thread that she uses to make tassels.  Some believe Thippavva’s 85, others say she’s 90. Either way, as one of the oldest women in her village, Thippavva doesn’t need to come in every day to the work sheds run by a non-profit organisation called Sandur Kushala Kala Kendra. But she does because it ...

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Lambani and Co

Alok Chandra: South African safari

Few people know that South African wines are today the fourth-largest selling overseas wines in India after Australian, French and Italian wines

Think of South Africa and you normally get images of lions and elephants and wildlife safaris, the famous table mountain, and perhaps the more recently famous Sun City resort. Few people know that wines have been produced there for 350 years, not long after the Dutch settled around Cape Town in 1652: wine was as integral a part of European lifestyle then as it is now, and supply ships could never get enough wines to this far-away port. Constantia Estates, the first vineyard and winery in South Africa (set up on a mere 1,900 acres), was established in 1685 and its successors live on ...

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Alok Chandra: South African safari

Winter Vogue

Metallic jackets, printed scarves, kitten heels or white sneakers - make a chic style statement as the chill sets in

(Click on picture for details) Metallic jackets, printed scarves, kitten heels or white sneakers — make a chic style statement as the chill sets in.

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Winter Vogue

CHESS#1228

The title match is tied 1-1 and headed into a photo-finish with just two classical games left at the time of writing. Sergey Karjakin won an error-filled fight in Game 8

The title match is tied 1-1 and headed into a photo-finish with just two classical games left at the time of writing. Sergey Karjakin won an error-filled fight in Game 8. Magnus Carlsen equalised by winning an equally error-filled  Game 10. There must be fair chances of a rapid/ blitz playoff.  Game Seven marked the halfway stage and colours switched over. Karjakin was on the white side of a Queens Gambit Accepted. He got nothing, until Carlsen played mildly inaccurately to drop a pawn and bail out into a drawn opposite bishops endgame.  Game Eight was one of ...

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Bruce Springsteen: Natural born rocker

Bruce Springsteen's greatest gift was to distil the American working class experience, writes Vir Sanghvi in this review of the rock star's autobiography

Vir Sanghvi 

The second significant thing about the choice of song was that it was also hideously inappropriate. Trump had got want hewanted. Against the odds he had become president of the United States. So why play a song called You Can’t Always Get What You Want? For many people the sight of a cynical reactionary politician ripping off the music of a rock singer and twisting its meaning recalled a famous precedent. The first rock star to have his music appropriated for a cause he did not like was Bruce Springsteen. Ronald Reagan stole Born In The USA for his presidential ...

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Monster toaster

In a world of increasingly connected gadgets, even a smart toaster can turn on you. That's the risk of the phenomenon called Internet of Things

The internet was literally designed to withstand nuclear weapons. But, as Jeff Jarmos of Salesforce once pointed out, it is vulnerable to toasters! Irony apart, this is literally true. The internet stayed functional through 9/11 and tsunamis but it can be taken down by malware delivered via smart toasters.  The potential danger of an attack targeting the Internet of Things (IoT), or devices that work unsupervised, is immense. Avinash Chugh, technology principal at ThoughtWorks, a software consultancy, says: “An IoT attack could bring down a city’s power supply, ...

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Monster toaster

M Balamuralikrishna: People's balladeer

Sunita Budhiraja recounts her encounters with the maestro whose soulful music touched the lives of people across the social spectrum

One of the very few artistes who regarded Carnatic and Hindustani music as just music and not separate streams was M Balamuralikrishna. I had attended a number of his concerts, listening to his electrifying, soulful and effortless voice for years together, not knowing that one day I would get to know this person pretty closely.  I was working on a coffee table book, Gangavaram Se, for Vizag Steel Plant in 1993. Since Balamuralikrishna was a doyen of Carnatic music from Andhra Pradesh, it was imperative that I meet him and write about him. Seeking an appointment was not ...

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Satjeet Singh Bedi, the man who offers 'chhotus' to stand in ATM queues

Bookmychotu was initially a platform where helpers could be hired for housekeeping and odd jobs

It hasn’t taken companies long to cash in on the demonetisation move in the country. From radio channels allocating entertainers to ATM queues and music apps such as Saavn creating special ATM playlists and food delivery websites encouraging people to order online, the currency ban has been given many tongue-in-cheek spins. But the queues remain, as does the hassle of waiting for hours to get cash. Enter Bookmychotu, a 10-month-old start-up that can provide “chhotus” (helpers) to stand in the ATM queue for you till your turn comes. Founded by Satjeet Singh Bedi, ...

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Satjeet Singh Bedi, the man who offers 'chhotus' to stand in ATM queues

Dear Zindagi: Lengthy life lessons sans drama

Gauri Shinde's movie is a youth-centric cathartic film, which gives you a glimpse of how they deal with life

IANS 

Gauri Shinde's "Dear Zindagi" is a youth-centric which gives you a glimpse of how they deal with life, relationships and the issues that bog them down. Perhaps, it is only the youth who will relate to — the heartaches, seeking their dream job, problems with parents, et al.

Kaira aka Koko (Alia Bhatt) is a 25-year-old Mumbai-based cinematographer, who is independent, busy shooting ad films and longing to shoot her first full length feature. Carefree, happy-go-lucky, she is in and out of relationships, some unrequited, others unfulfilled.


She cringes at the very mention of Goa where her parents live as she does not enjoy a great relationship with them. A heartbreak leads her to the couch of a therapist Dr Jehangir Khan (Shah Rukh Khan) and her life changes.

Alia as the free-spirited, emotional youngster, craving love shines all the way. The film belongs to her and she does full justice to her character, emoting effortlessly, making the audience empathise with her highs and lows. Whether it is venting her pent-up pain or playing kabaddi with the waves on a beach, she is a treat to watch.


In fact, she almost single-handedly carries the film with a weak plot on her fragile shoulders.


as Dr Jehangir Khan aka Jug, the "Dimaag-ka-Doctor", lights up the screen with his charisma and persona, in an immensely likeable character he portrays, but has limited scope. He is still and not the character on screen and his dialogue delivery still remains very Shah Rukh Khanesque.

Yashaswini Dayama and Ira Dubey, as Kaira's friends are lively and make their presence felt with their portrayals.


Kunal Kapoor as Raghuvendra, one of Alia's love interests in the film, is lacklustre and there is a feeling of deja vu watching him on screen.


Ali Zafar as a musician too looks every inch his part, strumming the guitar and belting out romantic numbers, but is nothing more than that.


The film lacks drama and is stretched to over 2.5 hours on a wafer-thin plot, making for tedious viewing. Humour comes in the form of some light-hearted moments but is not enough to give respite.

The second half of the film drags endlessly, although the pieces of the jigsaw puzzle of her life fall into place as she makes peace with life.

Amit Trivedi's music too fails to make an impact and is almost lost. The film expectedly has good production values and the ethos of Goa is beautifully captured through the lens of Laxman Utekar.


"Dear Zindagi" could have been a lively, fun film albeit with life lessons, rather than the long-winded slice of life it is.

Film: "Dear Zindagi"; Director: Gauri Shinde; Cast: Alia Bhatt, Shah Rukh Khan, Kunal Kapoor, Angad Bedi, Yashaswini Dayama, Ira Dubey, Aditya Roy Kapur; Rating: **1/2


Dear Zindagi: Lengthy life lessons sans drama

Gauri Shinde's movie is a youth-centric cathartic film, which gives you a glimpse of how they deal with life

Gauri Shinde's movie is a youth-centric cathartic film, which gives you a glimpse of how they deal with life
Gauri Shinde's "Dear Zindagi" is a youth-centric which gives you a glimpse of how they deal with life, relationships and the issues that bog them down. Perhaps, it is only the youth who will relate to — the heartaches, seeking their dream job, problems with parents, et al.

Kaira aka Koko (Alia Bhatt) is a 25-year-old Mumbai-based cinematographer, who is independent, busy shooting ad films and longing to shoot her first full length feature. Carefree, happy-go-lucky, she is in and out of relationships, some unrequited, others unfulfilled.


She cringes at the very mention of Goa where her parents live as she does not enjoy a great relationship with them. A heartbreak leads her to the couch of a therapist Dr Jehangir Khan (Shah Rukh Khan) and her life changes.


Alia as the free-spirited, emotional youngster, craving love shines all the way. The film belongs to her and she does full justice to her character, emoting effortlessly, making the audience empathise with her highs and lows. Whether it is venting her pent-up pain or playing kabaddi with the waves on a beach, she is a treat to watch.


In fact, she almost single-handedly carries the film with a weak plot on her fragile shoulders.


as Dr Jehangir Khan aka Jug, the "Dimaag-ka-Doctor", lights up the screen with his charisma and persona, in an immensely likeable character he portrays, but has limited scope. He is still and not the character on screen and his dialogue delivery still remains very Shah Rukh Khanesque.

Yashaswini Dayama and Ira Dubey, as Kaira's friends are lively and make their presence felt with their portrayals.


Kunal Kapoor as Raghuvendra, one of Alia's love interests in the film, is lacklustre and there is a feeling of deja vu watching him on screen.


Ali Zafar as a musician too looks every inch his part, strumming the guitar and belting out romantic numbers, but is nothing more than that.


The film lacks drama and is stretched to over 2.5 hours on a wafer-thin plot, making for tedious viewing. Humour comes in the form of some light-hearted moments but is not enough to give respite.

The second half of the film drags endlessly, although the pieces of the jigsaw puzzle of her life fall into place as she makes peace with life.

Amit Trivedi's music too fails to make an impact and is almost lost. The film expectedly has good production values and the ethos of Goa is beautifully captured through the lens of Laxman Utekar.


"Dear Zindagi" could have been a lively, fun film albeit with life lessons, rather than the long-winded slice of life it is.

Film: "Dear Zindagi"; Director: Gauri Shinde; Cast: Alia Bhatt, Shah Rukh Khan, Kunal Kapoor, Angad Bedi, Yashaswini Dayama, Ira Dubey, Aditya Roy Kapur; Rating: **1/2


image

IANS

Business Standard

177 22

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Dear Zindagi: Lengthy life lessons sans drama

Mitali Saran: Demonetisation PTSD

I dimly remember the days when my money was mine

Mitali Saran I have trouble flying—hate it, avoid it. But if your country is going through demonetisation hell, and you’re among the privileged, it’s your duty not to clog up ATM lines unnecessarily. It’s your duty not to stress small businesses by buying on credit (except cigarettes, because, hello). It’s your duty to damn well get on a plane and visit family in a foreign country that feels like home in that there, too, your money is useless. It’s been 16 years since I was last in Hong Kong, and I’d forgotten how awesome it is. Mountains and sea! Public ...

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jeudi 24 novembre 2016

Trade and the wealth of nations

'Waves of Prosperity' traces this global ebb and flow of trade over the centuries, building the story around the fortunes of the shipping industry

WAVES OF PROSPERITY Greg Clydesdale Robinson, UK  432 pages; Rs 599 Ibn Khaldun would have been surprised by Donald Trump’s anti-trade tirade. The 14th century north African scholar had grasped the key role of global trade in ensuring prosperity, a concept that appears to have eluded the President-elect of the United States of America.  For Donald Trump, the Arab historian could have also explained the logic in simple terms: “With regard to the amount of prosperity and business activity in them, cities and towns differ in accordance with the ...

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Pope Francis likely to visit India next year: Joseph Kalathiparambil

Kalathiparambil is set to take over as the Archbishop of Latin Archdiocese of Verapoly in Kerala on December 18

Pope Francis, Head of the Roman Catholic Church, is likely to visit India next year, a senior Catholic priest here said on Thursday.

Archbishop-designate Joseph Kalathiparambil, who returned from on Thursday, said an indication in this regard was conveyed to him when he visited the Pope at his residence.

"What I understood is that the Pope wishes to visit India next year. An indication in this regard was given to me when I visited him at his residence at Santa Marta in Vatican," he said.

Kalathiparambil is set to take over as the Archbishop of Latin Archdiocese of Verapoly in Kerala on December 18.

Earlier, there were reports that would "almost certainly" visit India but no dates were specified.

Kalathiparambil said he requested the Pope to visit Kerala and Verapoly Archdiocese, and his response was positive.

Pope John Paul II is the only Pope to have visited Kerala, where the Catholic community has a strong presence. He had visited India for the first time for 10 days in 1986, and again in November 1999, his 89th Apostolic visit outside Italy, for the occasion of solemnly promulgating in the Post Synodal Apostolic Exhortation "Ecclesia in Asia", in New Delhi.

During his India visit in 1986, Pope John Paul II had visited the state to beatify Sister Alphonsa and Kuriakose Elias Chavara popularly known as Chavara Achen.

Prior to appointment as the archbishop, Kalathiparambil was serving as the Secretary of the Vatican's Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People after being called for the assignment by Pope Benedict XVI in February 2011.

The 64-year-old bishop replaces Archbishop Francis Kallarakal, who has retired.

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Pope Francis likely to visit India next year: Joseph Kalathiparambil

mercredi 23 novembre 2016

Pakistan's jihad makers

The narrative of the ISI reads like a saga of medieval conspiracies, blackmail, briberies, betrayals and assassinations

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Faith, Unity, Discipline

The Inter-Services-Intelligence (ISI) of Pakistan

Hein G. Kiessling

HarperCollins 

Pages 307, Rs 599

Although we have had some good on various aspects of Pakistan's history, politics, armed forces and national ethos, the German scholar has done a great service to South Asian studies by providing us with this excellent work devoted to the history, leadership, and political and intelligence activities of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency, the clandestine organisation that has single-mindedly waged war on India, promoted jihad across the region and subverted the democratic order at home.

The ISI plays a major role in domestic politics, deciding the ascension and downfall of civilian governments, subverting parliamentarians and judges through blackmail and intimidation, cowing the media, and even physically eliminating critics of the service.

The ISI was set up in 1948 by an Australian military officer, Major General Walter Cawthorne. After he retired, he returned to Pakistan as the Australian High Commissioner in 1954. The ISI was not just meant to promote better coordination among the various wings of the armed forces; it was, as the author says, also meant to promote British interests in central and west Asia.

With the death of Muhammad Ali Jinnah in 1948 and the assassination of Liaquat Ali Khan in 1951, there was a dearth of competent politicians in Pakistan, which enabled the armed forces to take control of national politics, beginning with martial law in 1958. From that point onwards, the ISI became involved with manipulating domestic politics to subserve army interests and to initiate anti-India activity by backing militant groups in the north-east.

But the emergence of the ISI as the influential national force it is today began with the presidency of Zia-ul-Haq (1977-88), who used this organisation against political opponents at home and gave it a central role in organising the "global jihad", holy war, in Afghanistan through the ISI's powerful Afghanistan Bureau. Weapons worth billions of dollars were received by the ISI, which alone handled their distribution, ensuring that Islamic extremist groups were given preferential treatment. Observers believe that 15 to 40 per cent of the resources delivered by the United States remained in Pakistan and were later used in Kashmir or were sold in the black market; suspicions remain that almost all the top generals enriched themselves, including the ISI chief and his president.

Besides corrupting the body politic, the shaping of the Afghan struggle as a jihad had its impact on the Pakistani political ethos as well: large sections of the national population and the armed forces, including the officer cadre, became what Kiessling calls "born-again Muslims". General Javed Nasir, who became ISI chief in 1991, actively promoted the participation of Pakistani jihadis from home-grown jihadigroups and Al-Qaeda in terrorist activity in Bosnia, Kashmir and later in Mumbai in 1993. Not surprisingly, a group of officers, in association with Islamic groups, attempted a coup d'etat in 1994 to overthrow the political and military leaderships and set up a joint "Pakistan-Afghanistan caliphate".

Mr Kiessling provides a detailed account of the ISI's anti-India activity in Kashmir, the north-east and Punjab. Though he fails to note that ISI had already begun the indoctrination and training of jihadis for Kashmir during the Afghan jihad, he does point out that the mobilisation included battle-hardened Afghan veterans and young recruits from Kashmir and Pakistan's Punjab and North West Frontier Provinces provinces, who then joined the various jihadi organisations set up by ISI, such as: Harakatul Mujahedeen, Lashkar-e-Tayyaba and Jaish-e-Mohammed.

The Punjab saga is equally sordid: Here ISI had a three-point plan to promote alienation, subvert state machinery and perpetrate a reign of terror in the state. With supply of AK-47 rifles and modern explosives, Mr Kiessling says, the ISI "contributed to the high number of fatalities in Punjab", estimated at 21,500 by Indian sources. In the north-east, too, the ISI generously armed and trained the militant groups, creating new bodies and encouraging communal tension.

The Mumbai attacks mark the apogee of ISI-directed assaults on India; Mr Kiessling asserts that the operation was carried out with the full knowledge of the ISI and the armed forces leadership. He quotes the report of David Headley, who did the reconnaissance of the targets, that the Lashkar operatives were in regular contact with ISI "at each and every stage of the operation", and that Lashkar leaders avoided the participation of more experienced Al-Qaeda personnel in the Mumbai project since they saw it "as a marketing opportunity for their brand of terrorism", and thus to obtain increased financial assistance and more new recruits.

The ISI’s fingerprints are apparent in almost every major terrorist activity in recent years. After promoting the Taliban in Afghanistan, ISI operatives facilitated the participation of Pakistani and other cadres in jihad in Bosnia, Kosovo, Chechnya, Dagestan and even Nagorno-Karabakh. Mr Kiessling concludes that, through the operative Omar Saeed Sheikh, ISI had a connection with the 9/11 attacks, as also the kidnapping and subsequent killing of the journalist Daniel Pearl. The ISI was, of course, the guardian of Osama bin Laden at Abbottabad and of Mullah Omar in Quetta.

The past few years have not been good for the ISI or the Pakistani army: the jihadis it spawned have turned their guns on their sponsors, attacking ISI and army targets with considerable frequency. The ISI, however, continues to control the Kashmir, Afghanistan and nuclear files, while its anti-India agenda also remains intact, as affirmed by the recent upsurge of violence in Kashmir.

The narrative of the ISI reads like a saga of medieval conspiracies, blackmail, briberies, betrayals and assassinations, with this organisation corrupting venal politicians and eliminating opponents, even as the generals themselves remain corrupt, backstab each other with tedious regularity and wreak murder and mayhem in the region. Its activities have made South Asia the most crisis-prone area in the world, while Pakistan itself lies broken and at war with itself. It is difficult to see how Pakistan’s interests have been served by this murderous and self-serving organisation.

(The reviewer is a former diplomat)


Pakistan's jihad makers

The narrative of the ISI reads like a saga of medieval conspiracies, blackmail, briberies, betrayals and assassinations

The narrative of the ISI reads like a saga of medieval conspiracies, blackmail, briberies, betrayals and assassinations

Faith, Unity, Discipline

The Inter-Services-Intelligence (ISI) of Pakistan

Hein G. Kiessling

HarperCollins 

Pages 307, Rs 599

Although we have had some good on various aspects of Pakistan's history, politics, armed forces and national ethos, the German scholar has done a great service to South Asian studies by providing us with this excellent work devoted to the history, leadership, and political and intelligence activities of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency, the clandestine organisation that has single-mindedly waged war on India, promoted jihad across the region and subverted the democratic order at home.

The ISI plays a major role in domestic politics, deciding the ascension and downfall of civilian governments, subverting parliamentarians and judges through blackmail and intimidation, cowing the media, and even physically eliminating critics of the service.

The ISI was set up in 1948 by an Australian military officer, Major General Walter Cawthorne. After he retired, he returned to Pakistan as the Australian High Commissioner in 1954. The ISI was not just meant to promote better coordination among the various wings of the armed forces; it was, as the author says, also meant to promote British interests in central and west Asia.

With the death of Muhammad Ali Jinnah in 1948 and the assassination of Liaquat Ali Khan in 1951, there was a dearth of competent politicians in Pakistan, which enabled the armed forces to take control of national politics, beginning with martial law in 1958. From that point onwards, the ISI became involved with manipulating domestic politics to subserve army interests and to initiate anti-India activity by backing militant groups in the north-east.

But the emergence of the ISI as the influential national force it is today began with the presidency of Zia-ul-Haq (1977-88), who used this organisation against political opponents at home and gave it a central role in organising the "global jihad", holy war, in Afghanistan through the ISI's powerful Afghanistan Bureau. Weapons worth billions of dollars were received by the ISI, which alone handled their distribution, ensuring that Islamic extremist groups were given preferential treatment. Observers believe that 15 to 40 per cent of the resources delivered by the United States remained in Pakistan and were later used in Kashmir or were sold in the black market; suspicions remain that almost all the top generals enriched themselves, including the ISI chief and his president.

Besides corrupting the body politic, the shaping of the Afghan struggle as a jihad had its impact on the Pakistani political ethos as well: large sections of the national population and the armed forces, including the officer cadre, became what Kiessling calls "born-again Muslims". General Javed Nasir, who became ISI chief in 1991, actively promoted the participation of Pakistani jihadis from home-grown jihadigroups and Al-Qaeda in terrorist activity in Bosnia, Kashmir and later in Mumbai in 1993. Not surprisingly, a group of officers, in association with Islamic groups, attempted a coup d'etat in 1994 to overthrow the political and military leaderships and set up a joint "Pakistan-Afghanistan caliphate".

Mr Kiessling provides a detailed account of the ISI's anti-India activity in Kashmir, the north-east and Punjab. Though he fails to note that ISI had already begun the indoctrination and training of jihadis for Kashmir during the Afghan jihad, he does point out that the mobilisation included battle-hardened Afghan veterans and young recruits from Kashmir and Pakistan's Punjab and North West Frontier Provinces provinces, who then joined the various jihadi organisations set up by ISI, such as: Harakatul Mujahedeen, Lashkar-e-Tayyaba and Jaish-e-Mohammed.

The Punjab saga is equally sordid: Here ISI had a three-point plan to promote alienation, subvert state machinery and perpetrate a reign of terror in the state. With supply of AK-47 rifles and modern explosives, Mr Kiessling says, the ISI "contributed to the high number of fatalities in Punjab", estimated at 21,500 by Indian sources. In the north-east, too, the ISI generously armed and trained the militant groups, creating new bodies and encouraging communal tension.

The Mumbai attacks mark the apogee of ISI-directed assaults on India; Mr Kiessling asserts that the operation was carried out with the full knowledge of the ISI and the armed forces leadership. He quotes the report of David Headley, who did the reconnaissance of the targets, that the Lashkar operatives were in regular contact with ISI "at each and every stage of the operation", and that Lashkar leaders avoided the participation of more experienced Al-Qaeda personnel in the Mumbai project since they saw it "as a marketing opportunity for their brand of terrorism", and thus to obtain increased financial assistance and more new recruits.

The ISI’s fingerprints are apparent in almost every major terrorist activity in recent years. After promoting the Taliban in Afghanistan, ISI operatives facilitated the participation of Pakistani and other cadres in jihad in Bosnia, Kosovo, Chechnya, Dagestan and even Nagorno-Karabakh. Mr Kiessling concludes that, through the operative Omar Saeed Sheikh, ISI had a connection with the 9/11 attacks, as also the kidnapping and subsequent killing of the journalist Daniel Pearl. The ISI was, of course, the guardian of Osama bin Laden at Abbottabad and of Mullah Omar in Quetta.

The past few years have not been good for the ISI or the Pakistani army: the jihadis it spawned have turned their guns on their sponsors, attacking ISI and army targets with considerable frequency. The ISI, however, continues to control the Kashmir, Afghanistan and nuclear files, while its anti-India agenda also remains intact, as affirmed by the recent upsurge of violence in Kashmir.

The narrative of the ISI reads like a saga of medieval conspiracies, blackmail, briberies, betrayals and assassinations, with this organisation corrupting venal politicians and eliminating opponents, even as the generals themselves remain corrupt, backstab each other with tedious regularity and wreak murder and mayhem in the region. Its activities have made South Asia the most crisis-prone area in the world, while Pakistan itself lies broken and at war with itself. It is difficult to see how Pakistan’s interests have been served by this murderous and self-serving organisation.

(The reviewer is a former diplomat)


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Talmiz Ahmad

Business Standard

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Pakistan's jihad makers