~terry
Mon, Jan 19, 1998 (09:24)
seed
India.
~terry
Mon, Jan 19, 1998 (09:26)
#1
Traveling to India
Frances Loden (frako@well.com)
Delhi to Jaipur via airports: I'd been warned about trying to get into town
from Delhi Airport--there is a taxi horror story somewhere in this
conference--but this time it would be unnecessary since we were only
changing planes at Delhi. I'd also been warned that most traffic in and out
of Delhi Airport occurred in the middle of the night for some reason--that
the airport slept during daylight hours and became a madhouse around
midnight. This was true in our case. After our long flight from Narita,
with a multihour layover in Bangkok, we arrived to a midnight cacophony of
horns honking at Delhi Arrivals and mobs of taxi touts and hotel people
waving identifying signs. There was a long, cold 20-minute bus ride to the
domestic terminal around 1 am (the shuttle left from the international
terminal only once an hour, directly across the street from where Arrivals
spill outside). I was shocked at how cold it was in late December, but
rationalized that it was in the middle of the night.
The Delhi international terminal was fairly funky but the domestic terminal
much worse. It was horribly uncomfortable and drafty, with all services
shut down. The "retiring rooms," or overnight accommodations found at
airports and train stations, had filled up hours ago. Along with dozens of
other, mostly Indian passengers, we tried to sleep in plastic chairs until
5:45 am. Unlike us, the Indians were prepared for such waits with cozy
blankets that they draped over every family member. Everybody in Rajasthan,
at least, seemed to have his or her own blanket or shawl. It was comforting
to see whole families cuddled together or folded into every conceivable
position, sometimes upside down, over creaky plastic chairs. Around 6 am,
the Nescafe booth opened to sell oversweetened mud-colored coffee, which was
nonetheless welcome to warm our bones.
Indian airports have a practice I've seen nowhere else. After checkin and
security check and sitting at the gate, you must walk out to the tarmac--one
passenger at a time--to point to your checked bags, at which point they are
loaded onto the cart for the aircraft. This makes the preboarding procedure
drag, since few passengers know what the officials mean and neglect to do it
until the last minute. We made half a dozen domestic flights, and they were
all delayed by from one to four hours as a matter of routine. Usually no
explanation was given for the delay.
Indian (Alliance) Airlines planes are extremely old and have funky
interiors, as if someone had smeared grease all over the tacky paisley-print
walls. Most of our flights within Rajasthan were no longer than 45 minutes,
so the flight attendants were harried even if all they served the passengers
were literally bread and water. The bread consisted of anemic white bread
with a thin layer of cream cheese, a greasy vegetable samosa, or pakora.
Many of the seats were broken, and some overhead bins didn't latch properly.
An extreme contrast to the Thai International plane we had left a few hours
before.
~terry
Sat, Jan 24, 1998 (16:00)
#2
Frances Loden:
Jaipur: After a 20-minute taxi ride (variously costing us 200, 220 and 250
rupees [at 38 rupees to the US dollar, from $5 to $7]), we arrived at the
Mansingh Hotel around 7 am and watched the sunrise from our 5th-floor room.
It was actually the 6th floor, but Indians follow the British practice of
calling the 2nd floor the 1st floor. We sank gratefully into bed, but we
didn't count on the fact that, precisely at 7 am every morning, a wailing
voice and harmonium (a kind of boxy accordion that sits on the floor as you
open and close one wall of it) would start up from a nearby religious school
and continue blaring through the PA system for about an hour. But we were
too excited to sleep for more than a couple of hours. The view out our
window was engrossing enough: rooftop life flourished! As the day began, we
saw families lounging on blankets, young men taking sluice baths from
buckets in their shorts, a woman combing out her long wet hair, a man
banging away on an old typewriter, an old woman watering plants, a dachshund
following his bearded old man around, chillies drying in the sun,
construction workers taking a break on their precarious-looking bamboo
scaffold, a young guy with two textbooks open in front of him, a boy flying
a kite, a girl peering through an open window with her leg hitched up on the
sill, a woman hanging laundry.
Rooftop life is an odd blend of private and public. Most of the buildings
presumably held many families, but I don't know how many of them had access
to the rooftop. Nobody from the ground can see you, but whoever is higher
than you--like us hotel dwellers--can. Throughout Rajasthan, as I guess in
most places, there seemed to be a sensitivity to the status accorded people
who were higher than others. A wealthy man built his house 2 stories higher
than that of the Jaisalmer maharaja, just to insult him. The maharaja
wouldn't stand for it and had the extra floors torn down.
The Mansingh Hotel is a 5-star, one of only two we stay in on our trip. (We
make a practice of staying in nice hotels on entry and exit, just to ease
transitions.) It's pleasant but nondescript, with a very good restaurant,
tolerable coffee shop, exercise facilities and a pool. There's a small
arcade selling overpriced souvenirs, books, and saris. Just standing around
in the lobby, I was whisked into the sari shop and found myself wrapped in
lengths of luscious green silk by a fast-talking man who reassured me that a
woman could do anything easily, especially work, in a sari. The bookstore
sold camera film but had no camera batteries or 8mm videotape. You have to
go to a film processing specialty shop for those things. On the landing
wall of every floor of the service stairs, hotel workers were reminded in
big red letters that "Guest Is Always Right."
Jaipur Puppet Racket: Five minutes out of the hotel, on the road an intense
young man strikes up a conversation with us, and before we know it we're in
his shanty/tent to look at his puppets. He says he's a low-caste gypsy
named Bangali--someone of his caste has only one name--and can't afford to
live in a building, but someday he will buy the building next door. He
clears a charpoy, or bed made of rag strips pulled taut across the frame,
and orders us to sit down on the clean quilt spread there. He shows us
photo albums full of clippings and photos of his performances in
Scandinavia, his brother's performances in Japan, etc. I'm a little more
interested in the kitchen made of clay and what his brother's wife, mother-
in-law and children are doing over in the corner--but they're extremely shy.
Soon they are hustled out and a cloth is draped across the interior for the
puppet backdrop. I watch fascinated as Brother wraps a vivid turban around
his head. The average Rajasthan turban is a colorful oblong scarf about 9
meters long, and it's fun to watch a man wind it rapidly around his head so
that he can remove it like a hat. He shows us a naked puppet with visible
ribs--a "drug addict" for the educational performances. I ask him if they
do stories promoting condom use, and he says some stories are "too
difficult" for the audience to understand.
The performance begins with a sexy female dancer whose shimmy is controlled
by strings. Every movement is signaled by a wheezing sound made by some
whistle in the puppeteer's mouth. Brother plays a harmonium and sings.
Another guy plays percussion. Attracted by the music, scruffy little kids
wander into the tent and Brother yells at them to sit down and not block our
view. I give them some Japanese candy which I fail to tell them is gum, and
worry later that they've digested it. It seems wrong to see these little
kids, ragged and dirty and looking like a "Save the Children" poster,
munching on this awful candy I've given them.
Often the puppets' heads fly up a foot in the air and come back down. One
puppet is astride a horse, both of his arms in flames. Somehow the
manipulator gets the puppet to fly under his horse and emerge from the other
side without catching everything around it on fire. One puppet is
introduced as "Michael Jackson." Later, after our privileged private
command performance, we return to the hotel and find another troupe out by
the pool also introducing their puppet as "Michael Jackson" and using the
same music, dances and puppets.
Things are winding up, and it's clear that now money is expected. He says
he normally charges 2500 rupees (US$66) for a performance like this, and
we're jolted. Joe says, "With a bigger audience, right?" but the guy is
insistent that he does it for couples alone. Joe pays him 1200 rupees
(US$32), which we think is a lot for just being pulled off the street, and
then the percussionist asks if he and Brother can have "beer money." So I
give a few hundred rupees to the musicians. As we walk out of the tent
feeling a little wrung out, Bangali comes running out holding two of the
puppets as gifts, and says if we don't feel good about what we've paid,
he'll give it back to us. It's a routine that we'll hear incessantly: the
push-and-pull of "I don't want your money" versus "Pay whatever you like, we
are very poor family." He tries to escort us back to the hotel, but I want
to be free of him and we shake him off. Still, we feel so taken and have
spent so many hours in the puppet tent that it's almost dark and we want to
return to the hotel for dinner anyway.
I've been told that you have to identify your luggage before boarding the
plane in Indonesia, but this policy is 20 years old and not done as of 5
months ago.
One other thing about flying domestically in India--you don't get a seat
assignment. So you have to scramble on and grab several seats if you're a
group. I think, however, that tour packages have it taken care of for them.
There was definitely better treatment of tour groups than of independent
travelers in Rajasthan.
Jaipur, continued: City of Jaipur: The next morning we start out afresh,
cheerfully saying "no" to everybody who approaches us to visit their art
school, jewelry store or leather shop. We stumble upon a street filled with
camels, all resting or waiting for their load to arrive. I have never seen
dozens of camels in one place. They look regally past you, heads above it
all, munching meditatively on something. Some wear large beaded necklaces
or macramed cord neckpieces doubling as bridles. Most have a sharp piece of
bone or wood that has pierced the interval between their nostrils and is
connected to reins. Pulling on the rein must be painful to them, as the
camels groan and follow the tug. Their eyes are huge and brown, with
eyelashes that Maybelline would lust after. Their legs are folded amazingly
beneath them, so they look formal and poised. Their rumps have been shaved
to form floral or geometric patterns. Where the head joins the neck their
hide is covered with rich, curly hair. When they walk, their feet widen and
spread themselves like cushions over any hard surface. Nothing seems to
perturb their easygoing, strangely elegant gait.
There are plenty of other animals too. Dogs are everywhere, cuddling in the
sunny dust or hanging hungrily around the cauldrons of milky liquid, or
khoya, being boiled and reduced. (Was that the base for what I was to start
ordering on a daily basis--the lovely saffron-flavored rice pudding called
kheer?) The cows have floppy ears and creamy complexions, with the eyes of
a Bambi. Sometimes the goats are wearing little T-shirts or vests. I watch
an ox being fitted with new shoes--two men are holding it down, and it has
shat all over itself in alarm. We walk through the different bazaars on the
way to the City Palace and the marble district, hearing the marble workers
clinking away at kitschy-looking Western-style statues and big images of
Ganesh the elephant god.
I'm struck by the street stalls selling colorful hair ornaments. Scrunchies
are enormous here. Women wear them more than anything else, it seems. In
South India women wore jasmine flowers, but not here. Coconut oil in the
hair seems nationwide.
I can't tell the difference here between police and military men, who wear
berets or hard helmets and seem to cluster at large intersections. They are
a drab, stern contrast to the women, who all seem to favor chartreuse,
shocking pink or blindingly yellow saris if they aren't dressed completely
in black--a kind of chador that leaves most of their face free. I saw far
more women with heads uncovered in Jaipur, the capital and largest city of
Rajasthan since 1956, than in other cities or the countryside. It seemed
the more west we went, the less visible women's faces became.
When I see lime green and go-go pink together, I will always think of
Rajasthan now. The most common pattern found on shawls men wore was a pink-
and-green check, seen everywhere. In the distance surrounding Jaipur, you
can see the sandy-colored fortifications of nearby ancient strongholds. It
is the color contrast--the sun-baked desert and sand-castle forts as a
backdrop to the brilliant greens and pinks of the people's clothing--that
makes Rajasthan so delicious to the eye. Then there was the pink and green
against a man's dark face and even darker eyes and moustache. I would say
maybe 98% of all men have rich moustaches.
Jaipur itself is called the "Pink City" because in 1876 Maharaja Ram Singh
ordered all buildings in the old city to be painted pink in honor of the
Prince of Wales (Edward VII)'s visit, and thereafter all fa
ades must be of a color that seems more brick-red than pink to me--a reddish
sandstone, I think.
The first thing we visited was the Jantar Mantar, an early 18th-century
astronomical observatory spread out over a spacious grounds, built by Jai
Singh II (1693-1743), the founder of Jaipur. It was fun to watch other
Indian tourists wandering from one huge curious instrument to another,
climbing stairs that led nowhere, peering into concave structures that
measure something of a celestial nature. The site resembles an enormous
deChirico painting.
The current maharaja of Jaipur is now the ambassador to Brunei, but it was
said he was home for the holidays. He would be staying in a section of the
City Palace, which we visited next. The various different palaces contain
exhibits of textiles, costumes, and weaponry. There were plenty of
specimens of "the notorious Rajput scissor-action daggers--when the dagger
enters the body, the handles are released, causing the blades to spread.
The dagger is then withdrawn, virtually disembowelling the hapless victim"
(Lonely Planet, _Rajasthan_). Just the first sign, among many others, that
made me feel I wouldn't have had many Rajput friends back then. The
historical rulers of Rajasthan did seem like a fierce, bloodthirsty,
hardheaded and "honor"-obsessed lot.
Yet their architecture, safely sheltered behind massive ramparts and
imposing gates, could be delicate and fanciful, even psychedelic. I
especially liked one pavilion decorated in a peacock (the state bird) motif,
with shapes infinitely echoing a peacock's graceful neck and feathers.
We were starving, so we bought samosas at a stall and dipped them in a
honeylike sauce. But postcard and hat vendors and beggars would not leave
us alone if we sat down, so we had to get up and move.
We walked on to see the Hawa Mahal, or Palace of the Winds, an elaborate 5-
story facade built in 1799 to allow court ladies to watch life and special
occasions go by without being seen themselves. But we had little peace to
look at this amazing building, since we were being invited by everybody and
his uncle (literally!) to visit the roof of his shop to get a better view.
It was awfully cold, even though the sun was shining. We knew it would get
colder as we headed west into the desert, so I bought a heavy woven jacket
for 300 rupees (US$8). Even this would be insufficient. We were beginning
to realize that we had packed too much summer wear for this trip.
~terry
Sun, Jan 25, 1998 (23:09)
#3
And more from the same source:
Jaipur Movie Palaces: To be honest, I was almost more interested in Indian
movie palaces than maharajas' palaces. After all, it's a novelty for an
American to see a country that still has only 1000-plus-seat houses. The
Premprakash Theatre, "Rajasthan's First 70mm Theatre," seemed to have come
down in status. Now it was showing the "Lady Fighter," or Caucasian martial
arts star Cynthia Rothrock, in "Undefeatable," rated "A"--Only For Adults.
Tickets were available for Noble Circle (25R or 66 cents--901 seats), Dress
Circle (20R--334 seats), Upper Circle (16R--77 seats), and Lower Circle
(14R--38 seats), with separate ladies' and gents' ticket windows.
I was pissed not to make it into the Raj Mandir, "Show Place of the Nation,"
a most beautiful pink restored movie theatre where a current hit, "Dil To
Pagal Hai" starring the great favorite Shah Rukh Khan, was playing. Diamond
Box (40R or $1.16--40 seats), Emerald Noble Circle (30R--909 seats), Ruby
Dress Circle (26R--201 seats), and Pearl Lower Circle (17R--36 seats)--all
seats were booked for the rest of the evening. I really wanted to see the
latest hit of this No. 1 box office star of India--posters of him in a black
leather jacket sold next to posters of Krishna and Radha running through the
wilderness.
We were taken to a much grubbier theatre by auto rickshaw. The ticket taker
gave each of us Halls cough drops as we entered the vast auditorium, and the
most expensive balcony seats were as tattered and broken-down as the seats
on the main floor. The movie was "Shapath," with a cast of about 50 men,
all unshaven and pointing and punching at each other. I only recognized the
star, Jackie Schroff, and that was easy because he was tallest and the only
guy who was nice to his mother. After two hours and no hint of the movie's
ending we had had enough, but we couldn't get out of the theatre. We had to
ask the manager to unlock the door and cage and let us out.
Amber Fort: Throughout Asia, we are very careful not to drink tap water and
brush our teeth with bottled water. Luckily I hadn't experienced
significant diarrhea for 6 years. But the next morning at 4:30 the deadly
traveler's syndrome hit me, and by 7 am I was completely wrung out, familiar
with every crack in the tile, and questioning my ability to be driven even
the 20 minutes it took to get to Amber Fort. But with a dose of loperamide
hydrochloride we made it there, although I spent most of the day at the fort
finding sunny, comfortable places to sit and laughing weakly at the antics
of the Hanuman langurs, lanky black-faced primates with incredibly long
tails, who scrambled along the parapets and played leapfrog with each other.
Tourists were being given elephant rides in and out of the fort. It looked
too much like a slow Disneyland ride, and I wasn't interested.
I was impressed by the mazelike structure and all the different levels of a
12th-century fortification. In retrospect, I think it was one of the more
magnificent ones we had seen. It was too crowded, though, and I got tired
of backing up on narrow staircases for oncoming traffic or dodging other
people's viewfinders. Whenever I could escape the crowd I'd sit and look at
the fancy, intricate stone carvings of flowers and butterflies and marvel
that they were still here after all these centuries.
Always at the entrance of any fort or temple complex, several men will offer
to be your guide for a price (usually not agreed upon beforehand, but a tip
ranging from 100 to 200 rupees depending on the number of hours and special
errands). Even if they sport official-looking badges, their English
language ability and level of knowledge are very hit-and-miss. Most of the
time we refused guides because of this and because we don't like repeatedly
having to say "Really!" or even "Hmmmm" when we could enjoy all this
grandeur in silence.
~terry
Sun, Nov 22, 1998 (09:16)
#4
India
The Indian Tourism Development Corporation has launched a new train
package tour traveling to Buddhist pilgrimage sites in Northern India.
The six day tour departs from Calcutta and travels to Varanasi, Rajgir
and Gaya before returning to Calcutta. The cost per person (including
food and accommodation) is US$379 for the ordinary traveler to US$799
for the luxury traveler. Tickets can be obtained from the India Tourism
Development Corporation in New Delhi.
~terry
Fri, Jan 15, 1999 (10:27)
#5
(whiteherne) Tue Jan 5 '99 (12:24) 164 lines
Here are some of my impressions of life in Bangalore:
Bangalore was once known as the Garden City of India, although it does
not feel like one these days. Unrestricted growth, although in �clean�
industries, has led to a large increase in the number of motorized
vehicles, which include cycles, autorickshaws, cars, scooters,
motorcycles, lorries and buses. The odd bullock cart can be seen now
and then, as also hand carts bearing miscellaneous cargo. (The
autorickshaw is a three-wheeled, motorized vehicle. It is sheltered but
open on the sides. It can carry two or three passengers, and has
become the cab of the middle-class, regular taxis having vanished
almost entirely from the streets here.) Unleaded petrol (gasoline) is
still not a requirement in most parts of India, and the higher powered
vehicles use diesel fuel here, resulting in black, noxious emissions.
The roads haven�t been upgraded to deal with all this new traffic and
the main city arteries are always snarled. Frustrated traffic
constables in their ancient uniforms of wide khaki shorts (and now
wearing gas masks) cut a sorry but comical figure on the islands of
five and six-point intersections from where they try to cope with the
mess.
For the Western visitor, the traffic can seem utterly chaotic and
maddening. This is true for me as well, having lived away from India.
There is a sort of law of the jungle at work here: the larger the
vehicle, the more aggressive the driving. (A new Indian SUV with the
appropriate name of �TATA SUMO� has recently made its appearance. Why
someone who lives in the city and drives in crowded, slow-moving
streets needs a gas-guzzling, polluting, road-hogging SUMO beats the
hell out of me.) In general traffic moves slowly, and although drivers
engage in a game of brinkmanship to try to get ahead, there aren�t as
many accidents as one would expect. Lane markers are strictly academic,
and whenever traffic stops at a light, the two-wheelers seem to fill
any available spaces around cars so as to position themselves
favourably for the impending green light.
Since my parents live here, I stay with them. Indian hotels, with the
exception of the best ones, which are outrageously expensive for
Indians, aren�t as good as their American counterparts. The equivalent
of a clean, comfortable, no-frills �Motel 6� that is much cheaper than
a luxury hotel is generally not to be found. One must either fork out
the money for a Hyatt or equivalent, or be terribly disappointed with
the results. Which is why most middle-class Indians, when they travel
on their own nickel to another city end up staying with relations,
friends, or even friends of friends. The way it generally works is that
you make your house available to a wide circle of people, and the
gesture will be reciprocated when you are on the road. But remember to
carry your own soap and towel!
My parents have been retired for some time and with the attendant
infirmities of age, getting through each day can be an adventure.
There are part-time helpers at home for cooking, cleaning and
gardening. In India help is very specialised, and one person will not
do another�s job. There is a maid who washes the pots and pans, sweeps
and mops the floors daily (a necessity here), and washes the clothes by
hand (my mother refuses to buy a washer or let me buy one for her and
I have given up trying to convince her). The other is a part-time cook
who has now been with her for four years. She is known as the "Cook
Maami". They speak to each other in Tamil. Each one calls the other
"Maami". This is a respectful mode of address to an older lady -- the
universal aunt, if you will -- and their conversation to each other is
always in the exceedingly respectful second person formal, whether they
are joking, arguing or discussing some culinary fine points. On days
that the maid or the cook go AWOL, chaos ensues, as my parents scramble
to make do. It is a very interesting relationship to observe. The
"Cook Maami" is extremely talented and makes the most delectable South
Indian dishes I have eaten, even tastier than my mother 's cooking, and
my mother is a published author of three cookbooks and a lifelong
aficionado of Indian �haute cuisine�. But the cook is very shrewd and
knows this, for she endeavours (in my mother�s opinion) to take
advantage of the situation by extracting various concessions, knowing
that it will be difficult for my mother to find a replacement. Domestic
help is harder to come by these days in India, and although it is
frustrating for my folks, from an economist's point of view, it
illustrates progress.
I watch a little television to get a feel for contemporary Indian
culture. Cable TV has found its way here, and there is something called
Star Plus that beams CNN, BBC and other international programmes from
Hongkong. I notice a new phenomenon. People speak in something called
�Hinglish� here, a mixture of Hindi and English. Hindi and English
sentences are intermingled liberally, and sometimes people switch
tongues mid-sentence. For us it seems most natural, for we have grown
up this way. The television people seem to recognise this and have
tailored their programs accordingly, but this might well confound a
foreign ear.
My brother insists that I see a few films with him. We go to one
called �Hyderabad Blues�, playing in a local cinema. This is an
Indian-made English language film, another relatively new phenomenon.
This was very rare in the past. The film is a romantic comedy about a
person who leaves Hyderabad for the US. When he returns for a holiday,
he finds that he cannot adjust to Indian culture, and finds fault with
everything, except the Indian doctor he falls in love with. But I shan
t say any more and spoil the film for you. Although the film was an
amateur effort made by a youngster and his few friends on a shoestring
budget, it has surpassed all box-office expectations, and everyone is
talking about it. For my part I don�t find the film subtle in the
least. My brother, who enjoys the film very much, argues that a film
made for Indians cannot be subtle.
There is another recent happening in Bombay that makes the front pages
almost daily. It is the extortion racket. Normally placid Bombay seems
to have changed, I am told. Well-heeled people get cold calls
demanding lakhs or crores. (A lakh is 100,000 rupees, and a crore is
100 lakhs. A middle-level manager in a private company might earn 4-5
lakhs a year.) People who refuse to pay up are gunned down, some in
broad daylight. This extortion has now trickled down to the
professional classes. Ostentatious displays of wealth in the form of
lavish banquets at hotels have, for the most part, stopped because
nobody wants to get the dreaded �call�. I wonder why this is taking
place and wonder if people have taken leave of their senses, so I start
to make some enquiries. This is what I learn. For many years, the
Bombay underworld was involved in the smuggling of gold and other
prohibited substances. With the recent liberalization and the
restrictions being removed, a lucrative business for the gangsters has
dried up. So they have now taken to extortion. A new Hindi film, called
�Satya� has been made, and I get the opportunity to watch it on late
night television, where a special nationwide screening is being held.
(Satya is one of those films that is exempt from entertainment tax,
which means that it costs a third less than a regular film at the
theatre. The government usually exempts a few films that are deemed to
have �social value�, so that more people will see it on account of the
reduced price.) Satya is the name of the anti-hero of this film, and it
also means truth. The film is well-made and authentic, depicting the
lives of real people as opposed to the usual fantasy world of Indian
cinema. It shows how a newcomer to Bombay, the tough Satya, who goes
there to make an honest living, falls into a gang, and later becomes
one of the most feared gangsters. Gangsters are getting more efficient,
carrying their cellular telephones everywhere. The papers say that the
leaders have fled the country and are masterminding the operations
from safe havens like Dubai, from where the hapless government is
unable to extradite them.
The newspapers are also full of the controversy regarding the film
�FIRE�. The Shiv Sena (a right-wing Hindu party) wants the film banned
on account of its un-Indian values. I decide I must see it, so we all
troop to town. �FIRE� is another English-language Indian film, and it
has been released abroad earlier. The film is about two brothers and
their wives, living in a joint family arrangement along with their
invalid mother. The elder brother has become celibate in pursuit of
God, while the younger one, who is newly-married, is carrying on an
open extra-marital affair with his old flame, whom he is not allowed to
marry. The two frustrated sisters-in-law fall into a lesbian
relationship, and although the love scenes are not explicit, many
people are upset. This is new ground for Indian cinema, and I applaud
Deepa Mehta, an Indo-Canadian for having the guts to make this film. We
have come a long way, for thirty years ago, even kissing on the lips
was not allowed by the censors in Indian films.
I complete this account with a tale of a Christmas lunch for which we
were invited. Bangalore has a sizeable Christian population (mostly
Roman Catholics), and my parents have good friends among them. Our
hostess has made a number of vegetarian dishes for us, but my brother,
who is a confirmed carnivore, derives immense pleasure from something
called 'Sorpotel'. This is made from a pig as follows: the blood of a
pig is poured on a tray and allowed to dry. When fully congealed it is
cut into squares, and then pickled in a mixture of oil, vinegar and
whole peppers, among other things. I am told that this dish originated
in Goa, originally a Portuguese colony. I wonder if Sorpotel is eaten
anywhere else in the world.
~terry
Wed, Aug 4, 1999 (21:33)
#6
I found this wonderful tour of India purely by an accidental click:
http://www.gurlpages.com/obsess/xtiesue/
~terry
Wed, Sep 26, 2001 (00:31)
#7
You can always count on India for a different take on the state of
the world. Here's an essay on the value of silence:
http://www.timesofindia.com/articleshow.asp?art_id=935263925
~terry
Tue, Oct 16, 2001 (12:02)
#8
http://www.timesofindia.com/articleshow.asp?art_ID=1454238160
India helped FBI trace ISI-terrorist links
MANOJ JOSHI
TIMES NEWS NETWORK
NEW DELHI: While the Pakistani Inter Services Public Relations claimed
that former ISI director-general Lt-Gen Mahmud Ahmad sought retirement
after being superseded on Monday, the truth is more shocking.
Top sources confirmed here on Tuesday, that the general lost his job
because of the "evidence" India produced to show his links to one of
the suicide bombers that wrecked the World Trade Centre. The US
authorities sought his removal after confirming the fact that $100,000
were wired to WTC hijacker Mohammed Atta from Pakistan by Ahmad Umar
Sheikh at the instance of Gen Mahumd.
Senior government sources have confirmed that India contributed
significantly to establishing the link between the money transfer and
the role played by the dismissed ISI chief. While they did not provide
details, they said that Indian inputs, including Sheikhs mobile phone
number, helped the FBI in tracing and establishing the link.
A direct link between the ISI and the WTC attack could have enormous
repercussions. The US cannot but suspect whether or not there were
other senior Pakistani Army commanders who were in the know of things.
Evidence of a larger conspiracy could shake US confidence in Pakistans
ability to participate in the anti-terrorism coalition.
Indian officials say they are vitally interested in the unravelling of
the case since it could link the ISI directly to the hijacking of the
Indian Airlines Kathmandu-Delhi flight to Kandahar last December. Ahmad
Umar Sayeed Sheikh is a British national and a London School of
Economics graduate who was arrested by the police in Delhi following a
bungled 1994 kidnapping of four westerners, including an American
citizen.
~terry
Tue, Nov 6, 2001 (10:26)
#9
*I've Been Expecting This One: The Poor Man's Cruise Missile *8-(
ISI plans 'toy plane' attacks on Indian VIPs
EW DELHI: Pakistan's ISI has directed the militants operating in Jammu and
Kashmir to use explosive-laden toy planes to hit VIPs in the state and
Delhi, official sources said here.
The sources said following some confessions by arrested militants and
wireless intercepts about the use of "toy plane", intelligence agencies were
making necessary reviews of securities provided to VIPs.
"Toy plane" is the new armoury which has the capacity of carrying 10-15 kgs
of explosive material. The plane takes a trajectory path and can hit the
target within a range of 300 metres and can be operated by a remote control.
Taking a cue from the method adopted by militants during the September 11
attacks, the sources said Jaish-e-Mohammed, which has been carrying out a
series of suicide attacks in Jammu and Kashmir, is reported to be planning
such attacks on VIPs in the national capital.
The intelligence agencies have also flashed messages to various state
capitals in order to gather more information on this novel modus-operandi
besides passing on a word of caution.
Some security measures had already been taken to prevent any such attack,
the sources said, but admitted that more strict vigil needed to be
maintained.
The sources said these novel methods were being used after the ISI conduits
were unable to penetrate the security in any part of the country.
They said some militants, caught at the border, had revealed that the ISI
was desperately trying to cause havoc in Delhi and was adopting such
measures.
The militants disclosed that the new chief of ISI was trying to create some
disturbance in the capital in order to ease the pressure from domestic
criticism, the sources said.
Meanwhile, amidst reports of Pakistan-based militants planning suicide
attacks on important personalities, security agencies had again reviewed
security of Home Minister L K Advani, Defence Minister George Fernandes and
Minister of State for External Affairs Omar Abdullah.
A close watch was being maintained on Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister
Farooq Abdullah as some intercepts suggested that militants might try to
carry out a "massive suicide attack" on him in Srinagar or Jammu.
( PTI )
~terry
Sun, Dec 23, 2001 (14:37)
#10
Lots to catch up on, first the 10 day thing - terry
Will India strike back after 10 days?
MOHUA CHATTERJEE
TIMES NEWS NETWORK
NEW DELHI: To strike or not to strike? The government has given itself 10
days to decide this paramount question. The answer will depend on the
evaluation report which it has sought from the Army and intelligence
sources.
This was decided at the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) meeting on
Friday. According to official sources, the government has sought answers
to
the following queries:
Will a full-fledged war situation emerge if India strikes terrorist camps
in
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK)?
How will the Pakistani army retaliate and is it prepared for a full-scale
war?
These reports will be ready in 10 days.
In an informal briefing before the CCS, the Army has already expressed
its
preparedness for a strike. Furthermore, it has pointed out that a limited
action in PoK could not lead to a large-scale conflagration since
Pakistan's
political situation will not allow its army to undertake a full-fledged
war.
Defence Minister George Fernandes' scheduled four-day trip to the border
areas from Sunday has been cancelled. A Cabinet Committee on Security
meeting has been called on Sunday. The CCS will meet to decide whether
the
government will go ahead with the strike even if Pakistan bans Lashkar-e-
Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed.
Pressure is mounting on Pakistan to ban the outfits since US and UK have
communicated to India that they too have sent diplomatic letters to
Musharraf asking him to ban the LeT and Jaish.
Currently, the government is weighing four military options aimed at
striking terrorist camps in PoK:
Land operation: Mortar, tanks and cannon attacks, which would include the
Bofors guns. Camps within a range of 18 to 20 km can be completely
destroyed
by these means.
Air strikes: Missile attacks can also destroy the camps. The most
effective
will be the Prithvi missiles, which have a strike range of 150 to 200 km.
Mirage-2000 or Sukhoi aircraft can also be used for the strikes.
Crossing the LoC: The Army crosses over, bombards the camps and returns
to
its own territory within 24 hours.
Surface to surface: Surface-to-surface Prithvi missiles, with a range of
175
km, can also be used.
Meanwhile, to prevent a Kargil-type intrusion at this juncture, India has
installed Battle Field Surveillance Radars (BFSR), bought from Israel and
France. The Defence Research and Development Organisation has also
developed
indigenous BF radars, and these are ready for trial. These are
short-range,
portable radars weighing 30 kg, which can spot a crawling man from 500
metres, a walking man from 2 km, and a group of men from 5 km.
Intelligence reports say there is Pakistani troop movement near the LoC,
specifically in the chicken neck belt area. These are Pakistani Special
Service Group men, whose main job is destruction and sabotage
activities. In
the 1971 war, the SSGs had played an active part.
There is also information that Lashkar and Al Badr men, along with the
Pakistani army, have formed a Border Action Team (BAT). They are trained
in
guerrilla warfare and are already stationed at 17 sensitive areas along
the
border.
Indian unmanned spy planes are keeping vigil over Pakistani army
movement.
Satellites are being used to identify camps in PoK and ascertain the
number
of men stationed there.
What about this jerk. - terry
Parliament staffer arrested for selling secrets to Pakistan
NEW DELHI: Amidst a new low in Indo-Pakistan ties, the Delhi Police
arrested
an official of the Parliament secretariat for allegedly supplying to a
Pakistan high commission staffer certain "sensitive" information on
national
security. The police are also probing if Pakistan high commission
officials
were involved in the December 13 terrorist strike on Parliament.
Senior executive assistant in Parliament secretariatUs question cell Ajay
Kumar was caught on Saturday supplying a bag containing documents
relating
to defence, atomic energy, nuclear research, railway security, ship-
designing, and technology upgradation to Pakistan high commission staffer
Mohammed Sharief Khan, the police said in a statement.
During interrogation, Kumar revealed that Khan had several times in the
past
asked him about the security arrangements around Parliament House and he
had
arranged a pass for him (Khan) to watch Parliament proceedings. Kumar had
also informed Khan that parliamentary security staff, when on duty,
remain
unarmed.
"It is being probed if there is involvement of Pakistan high commission-
based information officers in the recent (December 13) attack on
Parliament," the statement said.
Kumar told the police that he had been working for Pakistan-based
intelligence operatives for the past couple of years and was getting paid
for it.
It said Kumar used to provide information about locations of various
defence
units and their movements on the basis of his personal observation and
pass
on "sensitive" documents, which he had access to because of his official
position.
Earlier in a statement, India described as "completely false" IslamabadUs
allegations that the Pakistan high commission staffer was "kidnapped" and
"tortured" by Indian intelligence officials here.
Ministry of external affairs sources said the staffer was "caught red-
handed" while collecting documents from his contact and was handed back
to
the Pakistan high commission.
The laptop! - terry
Terrorists posed as tourists to take snaps of Parliament
NEW DELHI: It may sound like a replay of a Bollywood film or a subtle spy
plot of James Bond but the investigations into the December 13 attack
have
so far revealed that conspirators had posed as tourists and taken
pictures
of the Parliament House with a digital camera while carrying out the
recee
of the area.
Commissioner of Delhi Police, who is now looking after the intelligence
unit, R S Gupta had said the terrorists had used the television snaps to
generate a visual topography of the Parliament, investigations have found
that militants had used as many as 22 exposures from highly sophisticated
digital camera for framing their plan of action.
Informed sources said that the pictures from memory card of the digital
camera had been fed into the laptop and an analysis of the security
arrangements at various gates of the Parliament was undertaken.
The sources said the shots were taken mainly between 10.30 and 11.30
hours
when the VVIPs including Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Home
Minister L K Advani used to visit the Parliament for Question Hour.
Some of the shots were taken minutes before the Prime Minister was to
arrive
at the House to ascertain how the barricades were removed to facilitate
hassle free entry.
To a question how terrorists managed to do all this, an investigative
officer said that "Mohammed Afzal, Shaukat Hussain and Mohammed posed as
tourists near Vijay Chowk and used to click the pictures."
These pictures were later fed into the laptop for a detailed study of
presence of armed guards at various times in the Parliament.
However, the informed sources said that other crucial details from the
laptop were yet to be decoded and the help of experts from various
agencies
were being used for the purpose.
The sources said that some exposures of the diplomatic enclave at
Chanakya
Puri and that of Old Secretariat in Delhi Assembly were also used by the
suicide squad for analysing.
The digital camera was compatible with the laptop, the sources said.
About the mobile phones recovered from the killed militants, the sources
said the analysis of the SIM card had shown that several phone calls were
made by the suicide squad to the port-city of Karachi in Pakistan, Dubai
and
Germany.
The sources said that the militants were under clear instructions not to
call Pakistan directly and that is why they re-routed their telephone
conversation either from Dubai or Germany. A similar modus operandi was
used
by militants during the IC-814 hijacking case.
( PTI )
Dust this website under the carpet. - terry
Lashkar deletes Pak address from website
NEW DELHI: The Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba, which has been charged
with
the December 13 attack on Parliament and whose assets have been frozen by
Washington and Islamabad, has "changed its address".
Its official website, which till recently, gave its address as 5
Chamberlane
road, Lahore, now no longer mentions it. Instead, the contact leads one
to
the e-mail address of the Markaz-e-Dawa, the political wing of the
terrorist
outfit which last week changed its name to Pasban-e-Ahle-Hadith.
According to retired itelligence officer B Raman, Lashkar in their
propaganda literature and official websites, projected themselves as
Pakistan-based organisations.
"They also gave their addresses and telephone/fax numbers in Pakistan and
particulars of Pakistani banks in which their accounts are held and to
which
their supporters should send their contributions," Raman has written in a
new book, 'A Terrorist state as a Frontline Ally.'
Interestingly, even as US President George Bush has described Lashkar as
a
Kashmir-based organisation, the Herald, a prestigious monthly journal of
the
Dawn group, described it as "Pakistan's largest so-called jehadi
organisation."
( PTI )
~terry
Wed, Jan 2, 2002 (14:27)
#11
World Trade Center Down, Buddhist Statues Blown Up,
Taj Mahal Next On List *8-/
Lashkar threatens to blow up Taj Mahal
LUCKNOW: A Pakistan-based Kashmiri militant group, who New Delhi blamed for
an attack on its Parliament last month, has threatened to blow up the Taj
Mahal, an Indian official said on Wednesday.
Security around the 17th century marble monument had been tightened
following an e-mail threat from the Lashkar-e-Taiba, a senior government
official in Agra said.
"They have threatened to blow up the Taj Mahal, some other monuments and
important government buildings in Lucknow," the official, who did not want
to be identified, said.
"We have enhanced security in and around the Taj Mahal which was mentioned
among Lashkar-e-Taiba's main targets in the e-mail sent to the chief
minister," the official said.
India has blamed the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad
groups for the December 13 attack on its Parliament in which 14 people,
including five attackers, dead. Both groups have denied involvement in the
attacks.
The official said Lashkar had also threatened to blow up a makeshift temple
built at the site of the Babri masjid in Ayodhya.
( REUTERS )
~terry
Wed, May 22, 2002 (14:04)
#12
KUPWARA, India India's prime minister told soldiers on the tense Kashmir frontier Wednesday to prepare for a "decisive battle" against Pakistan-supported Islamic insurgents, sending a warning to its nuclear-armed neighbor.
A Pakistani Foreign Office spokesman called for negotiations to ease tensions between the rivals, who have fought two wars over the disputed Himalayan region, but said his nation too was prepared for war.
Cross-border shelling in the last week has killed dozens and reignited fears of a conflict.
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee addressed more than 600 soldiers at an army base near the cease-fire line that divides Kashmir between India and Pakistan.
Vajpayee told the soldiers "to be ready for sacrifice. Your goal should be victory. It's time to fight a decisive battle."
Vajpayee said that India has been forced to fight a proxy war with Pakistan, which New Delhi accuses of training and arming the Islamic militants who have waged a battle for Kashmir's independence or merger with Pakistan for 12 years.
Islamabad says it has no control over the militants and only supports the ideology of the "freedom fighters."
Vajpayee said his morale booster for the troops should indicate to Pakistan that India is prepared for war.
"Whether our neighbor gets that signal or not, whether the world keeps record of that or not, we will write a new chapter of victory," he said. "Our neighbor has found a new way of fighting, through a proxy war."
Vajpayee said the attack last week on an army camp on the outskirts of Jammu, the winter capital of India's Jammu-Kashmir state, by suspected Islamic militants posed a new challenge. The assault killed 34 people - mostly soldiers' wives and children.
India blamed Pakistan and Islamic militants based there for the attack, expelled the Pakistani ambassador and reorganized maritime and ground forces under the military. An additional 3,000 soldiers were sent to the frontier Tuesday.
"The challenge has been thrown at India and we accept it," he told the soldiers who were sitting cross-legged on a field.
In Islamabad, Foreign Office spokesman Aziz Ahmed Khan told The Associated Press that Pakistan was also prepared for war.
"Pakistan wants to resolve all outstanding issues with India through peaceful talks and negotiations, but our armed forces are also fully prepared to face any aggression," he said.
Indian Defense Minister George Fernandes, who also addressed the troops, said the soldiers appeared ready for war.
"Everywhere I go, soldiers ask me when will we get an opportunity to attack," Fernandes said.
Gen. V.G. Patankar, the officer who commands the troops in Kashmir, said the leaders' visit had raised troop morale.
"We have a desire to die," Patankar said. "We have a resolve to wage war."
Neither Vajpayee nor Fernandes talked about the steps India would take to fight the "proxy war." The tough talk by India and Pakistan in the last week is typical of the longtime enemies who often threaten war.
However, the 1 million troops dispatched by both countries to their border is the biggest military buildup since their last war in 1971. They have already fought wars in 1948 and 1965 over the Himalayan province.
"We know how to respect our enemy, but let this not be regarded as our weakness," Vajpayee said. "Do not think that our limits of patience will just go on stretching."
Still, many analysts believe that with the U.S. military presence in neighboring Pakistan and Afghanistan and Washington's efforts to defuse tensions, war may not be imminent.
"In the immediate future, we are not going to launch an operation," said J.N. Dixit, former foreign secretary and ambassador to Pakistan. "Of course, public opinion and our soldiers are tired of all this. They want the government to do something. But there are many factors."
Dixit said he expected the government to wait for the visits of U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage and British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw later this month before taking a final decision on a course of action.
Straw said the potential for war had grown too strong.
"The possibility of war between India and Pakistan is real and very disturbing," he said. "This is a crisis the world cannot ignore."
Shortly after Vajpayee arrived in Kashmir on Tuesday, masked gunmen assassinated a leading Kashmiri peace advocate during a ceremony marking the murder of another independence leader 12 years ago.
Abdul Ghani Lone, a moderate, soft-spoken Muslim separatist leader, had sought dialogue with India to bring self-determination to Kashmir, the only Muslim majority state in predominantly Hindu India.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Lone's murder, and the assailants got away.
The Kashmir Valley was on strike Wednesday, with public transportation, shops and businesses shut down in protest of the killing and Vajpayee's visit. The shutdown was organized by a political group that favors independence for Kashmir.
KUPWARA, India India's prime minister told soldiers on the tense Kashmir frontier Wednesday to prepare for a "decisive battle" against Pakistan-supported Islamic insurgents, sending a warning to its nuclear-armed neighbor.
A Pakistani Foreign Office spokesman called for negotiations to ease tensions between the rivals, who have fought two wars over the disputed Himalayan region, but said his nation too was prepared for war.
Cross-border shelling in the last week has killed dozens and reignited fears of a conflict.
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee addressed more than 600 soldiers at an army base near the cease-fire line that divides Kashmir between India and Pakistan.
Vajpayee told the soldiers "to be ready for sacrifice. Your goal should be victory. It's time to fight a decisive battle."
Vajpayee said that India has been forced to fight a proxy war with Pakistan, which New Delhi accuses of training and arming the Islamic militants who have waged a battle for Kashmir's independence or merger with Pakistan for 12 years.
Islamabad says it has no control over the militants and only supports the ideology of the "freedom fighters."
Vajpayee said his morale booster for the troops should indicate to Pakistan that India is prepared for war.
"Whether our neighbor gets that signal or not, whether the world keeps record of that or not, we will write a new chapter of victory," he said. "Our neighbor has found a new way of fighting, through a proxy war."
Vajpayee said the attack last week on an army camp on the outskirts of Jammu, the winter capital of India's Jammu-Kashmir state, by suspected Islamic militants posed a new challenge. The assault killed 34 people - mostly soldiers' wives and children.
India blamed Pakistan and Islamic militants based there for the attack, expelled the Pakistani ambassador and reorganized maritime and ground forces under the military. An additional 3,000 soldiers were sent to the frontier Tuesday.
"The challenge has been thrown at India and we accept it," he told the soldiers who were sitting cross-legged on a field.
In Islamabad, Foreign Office spokesman Aziz Ahmed Khan told The Associated Press that Pakistan was also prepared for war.
"Pakistan wants to resolve all outstanding issues with India through peaceful talks and negotiations, but our armed forces are also fully prepared to face any aggression," he said.
Indian Defense Minister George Fernandes, who also addressed the troops, said the soldiers appeared ready for war.
"Everywhere I go, soldiers ask me when will we get an opportunity to attack," Fernandes said.
Gen. V.G. Patankar, the officer who commands the troops in Kashmir, said the leaders' visit had raised troop morale.
"We have a desire to die," Patankar said. "We have a resolve to wage war."
Neither Vajpayee nor Fernandes talked about the steps India would take to fight the "proxy war." The tough talk by India and Pakistan in the last week is typical of the longtime enemies who often threaten war.
However, the 1 million troops dispatched by both countries to their border is the biggest military buildup since their last war in 1971. They have already fought wars in 1948 and 1965 over the Himalayan province.
"We know how to respect our enemy, but let this not be regarded as our weakness," Vajpayee said. "Do not think that our limits of patience will just go on stretching."
Still, many analysts believe that with the U.S. military presence in neighboring Pakistan and Afghanistan and Washington's efforts to defuse tensions, war may not be imminent.
"In the immediate future, we are not going to launch an operation," said J.N. Dixit, former foreign secretary and ambassador to Pakistan. "Of course, public opinion and our soldiers are tired of all this. They want the government to do something. But there are many factors."
Dixit said he expected the government to wait for the visits of U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage and British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw later this month before taking a final decision on a course of action.
Straw said the potential for war had grown too strong.
"The possibility of war between India and Pakistan is real and very disturbing," he said. "This is a crisis the world cannot ignore."
Shortly after Vajpayee arrived in Kashmir on Tuesday, masked gunmen assassinated a leading Kashmiri peace advocate during a ceremony marking the murder of another independence leader 12 years ago.
Abdul Ghani Lone, a moderate, soft-spoken Muslim separatist leader, had sought dialogue with India to bring self-determination to Kashmir, the only Muslim majority state in predominantly Hindu India.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Lone's murder, and the assailants got away.
The Kashmir Valley was on strike Wednesday, with public transportation, shops and businesses shut down in protest of the killing and Vajpayee's visit. The shutdown was organized by a political group that favors independence for Kashmir.
KUPWARA, India India's prime minister told soldiers on the tense Kashmir frontier Wednesday to prepare for a "decisive battle" against Pakistan-supported Islamic insurgents, sending a warning to its nuclear-armed neighbor.
A Pakistani Foreign Office spokesman called for negotiations to ease tensions between the rivals, who have fought two wars over the disputed Himalayan region, but said his nation too was prepared for war.
Cross-border shelling in the last week has killed dozens and reignited fears of a conflict.
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee addressed more than 600 soldiers at an army base near the cease-fire line that divides Kashmir between India and Pakistan.
Vajpayee told the soldiers "to be ready for sacrifice. Your goal should be victory. It's time to fight a decisive battle."
Vajpayee said that India has been forced to fight a proxy war with Pakistan, which New Delhi accuses of training and arming the Islamic militants who have waged a battle for Kashmir's independence or merger with Pakistan for 12 years.
Islamabad says it has no control over the militants and only supports the ideology of the "freedom fighters."
Vajpayee said his morale booster for the troops should indicate to Pakistan that India is prepared for war.
"Whether our neighbor gets that signal or not, whether the world keeps record of that or not, we will write a new chapter of victory," he said. "Our neighbor has found a new way of fighting, through a proxy war."
Vajpayee said the attack last week on an army camp on the outskirts of Jammu, the winter capital of India's Jammu-Kashmir state, by suspected Islamic militants posed a new challenge. The assault killed 34 people - mostly soldiers' wives and children.
India blamed Pakistan and Islamic militants based there for the attack,
continuted at
http://www.iht.com/articles/58567.html
~terry
Wed, May 22, 2002 (14:06)
#13
http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/holnus/02222207.htm
New Delhi, May 22. (PTI): Even as Prime Minister Vajpayee warned of a
decisive battle against terrorism, Pakistan army is reported to have
stepped up efforts to infiltrate militants across the Line of Control
(LOC) in Jammu and Kashmir.
The Army during the past 24 hours detected and foiled two major attempts
to push in militants in Uri sector in Kashmir valley killing two Pakistani
mercernaries. "There may have been a number of more such attempts which
went undetected," officials here said.
With the melting of snow, these were the first two major attempts which
came to light and both the bids made during early morning were foiled,
officials said.
They said for the past several months, army patrols had witnessed a new
pattern in the infiltrations bids, with the militants being pushed in
being all Pakistani or Afghan nationals.
"Unlike in the past attempts are now made to push in smaller groups, as
against groups of 20 to 40 militants earlier," officials said adding that
the infiltrators were now very lightly armed indicating that they were
being provided heavier weapons inside Jammu and Kashmir.
~terry
Fri, May 24, 2002 (06:45)
#14
Things seem to be cooling down a bit, from the reports I read yesterday. It's up the Pakistanis to agree to the Indian Prime Ministers requests at this stage. Can they do it in time?
~terry
Thu, Aug 15, 2002 (08:41)
#15
SHANWA, India (AP) -- It comes in the night, a flying sphere emitting red and blue lights that attacks villagers in this poor region, extensively burning those victims it does not kill.
At least that's what panic-stricken villagers say. At least seven people have died of unexplained injuries in the past week in Uttar Pradesh state.
"A mysterious flying object attacked him in the night," Raghuraj Pal said of his neighbor, Ramji Pal, who died recently in Shanwa. "His stomach was ripped open. He died two days later."
Many others have suffered scratches and surface wounds, which they say were inflicted while they slept. In the village of Darra, 53-year-old Kalawati said she was attacked last week and displayed blisters on her blackened forearms.
"It was like a big soccer ball with sparkling lights," said Kalawati, who uses only one name. "It burned my skin."
"I can't sleep because of pain," she said.
Doctors dismiss the stories as mass hysteria.
"More often than not the victims have unconsciously inflicted the symptoms themselves," said Narrotam Lal, a doctor at King George's Medical College in Lucknow, the state capital.
The police have another explanation: bugs.
"It is a three-and-a-half-inch-long winged insect" that leaves rashes and superficial wounds, Kavindra P. Singh, a superintendent of police, told the Press Trust of India news agency.
Police drew this conclusion after residents of one village found insects they had never seen before.
Villagers are unconvinced. In the most affected area, the Mirzapur district, 440 miles southeast of New Delhi, people have stopped sleeping outdoors despite the sweltering heat and frequent power outages.
Villagers also have formed protection squads that patrol Shanwa, beating drums and shouting slogans such as, "Everyone alert. Attackers beware."
Some accuse district officials of inaction and failing to capture the "aliens." One person died Thursday in nearby Sitapur when police fired shots to disperse a 10,000-strong crowd demanding that authorities capture the mysterious attackers.
"People just block the roads and attack the police for inaction each time there's a death or injury," said Amrit Abhijat, Mirzapur's district magistrate, who claims he has captured the UFO on film.
"It's scary stuff", commented Koti Nandipati.
~terry
Thu, Aug 15, 2002 (12:37)
#16
India UFO attacks 'are coloured lightning balls'
A scientist claims the 'UFOs' behind a series of attacks on Indian villagers are just balls of lightning.
Professor Ravindra Arora says the coloured balls ranging from tennis to football size are caused by dry weather.
Villagers in Uttar Pradesh claim they're being attacked by flying spheres emitting red and blue lights.
At least seven people have died of unexplained injuries and others have suffered scratches and burns in the last week.
Police say a 9cm-long winged insect may be responsible for the attacks while doctors think the wounds are self-inflicted.
Professor Arora, of the Indian Institute of Technology-Kanpur, told Rediff.com: "I have sufficient reason to believe that the burn injuries on the faces of victims were caused by nothing other than these lightning balls.
"Dry spells increase the soil resistance while decreasing its conductivity, and in the process attract lightning balls that emit different colour lights - mostly blue, green, yellow or red.
"There is constant evidence of these balls over the ages. In all cases, people can see a ball-like object travelling sideways in the air that can produce up to 100 watts of current."
One Uttar Pradesh villager, who claims to have been attacked, said: "I can't sleep because of the pain. It was like a big soccer ball with sparkling lights."
Professor Arora says the problem should disappear once heavy rains arrive in the region.
Story filed: 13:03 Thursday 15th August 2002
on ananova