News Watch Wednesday, 07 Jan 2009

HEAD LINE:

LEAD:

Mere information, and not credible evidence, had been provided by India to Pakistan on the Mumbai terror attacks, Pakistani foreign secretary Salman Bashir claimed on Tuesday as PM Manmohan Singh said that 26/11 "must" have had the support of Pakistan's "official agencies". Bashir's remarks, which came a day after India passed on "material" linking 26/11 to "elements in Pakistan", seem to have dashed hopes of any meaningful cooperation from Islamabad in probing the attacks. Pakistan, the foreign secretary said in Islamabad, needed credible evidence to proceed with the investigation into 26/11. In New Delhi, a tough talking Singh launched a verbal volley at Pakistan while addressing the CMs' conference on internal security blaming Islamabad and its intelligence agencies for fomenting terror in India. "The more fragile a govt, the more it tends to act in an irresponsible fashion. Pakistan's responses to our various demarches on terrorist attacks is an obvious example," Singh said in his comments, which drew an equally high-decibel response from Islamabad. Charging Pakistan with whipping up "war hysteria", Singh said: "Terrorism...is largely sponsored from outside our country, mainly Pakistan, which has utilised terrorism as an instrument of state policy" In a sharp riposte, the Pakistani foreign office accused India of launching a "propaganda offensive", which will "ratchet up tensions" and "destroy all prospects of serious and objective investigations" into the Mumbai attacks. (HT)

BJP

BJP leader Venkaiah Naidu has charged the UPA govt with inaction on the terror front and called for strict laws to deal with the issue. Terrorism was the biggest challenge for the country, Mr. Naidu said adding that it would clearly be the main election issue for the BJP. The laws passed recently were still inadequate to deal with terrorism, Mr. Naidu said at a press conference here on Tuesday. The party is gearing up for the coming Lok Sabha elections with a series of meetings in each constituency and a national council in Nagpur from February 6 to 8. It also plans a month-long programme from January 16 to prepare for the elections. Mr. Naidu said the govt should walk the talk and explain what it had done after the terror strikes in Mumbai. There was no point in replacing CMs, but political will was necessary to tackle terrorism. People were asking what the govt had done? While war was not the answer, the govt should share its actions with the people, he said. (HINDU)

CONGRESS

All-India Congress Committee leader M. Veerappa Moily wants to contest the coming Lok Sabha elections from his home state Karnataka, reports our special correspondent. He is perhaps the first Central official wanting to fight the polls. Parliamentary affairs minister Vayalar Ravi has also made it clear to fight the electoral battle. It is not known how many AICC officials will be asked to face the general election this time. (AA)

LEFT PARTIES

Preparations for Lok Sabha election, including poll strategies, and the emerging economic situation in the country in the wake of the global crisis, will come up for discussion at a three-day meeting of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) that start on Thursday. For the first time in four decades, a stand-alone meeting of the Central Committee is being held in Kochi, Kerala. Other than a Central Committee meeting ahead of the party congress, the last time this body met in Kerala was at Kozhikode (then Calicut) in 1967. The committee members will hear about the proposed alliances in elections in Andhra Pradesh both for the Lok Sabha and Assembly with the Telugu Desam Party and in Tamil Nadu with the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam. In Andhra Pradesh the CPI(M) has not taken a stand vis-195128vis Telangana Rashtra Samiti (TRS), a party that reached out to the Left for an understanding. The CPI(M) is not in favour of the TRS's Telengana plank. However, it will not have a problem if the TRS arrives at an understanding with the TDP. Even in 2004, the TRS had a tie-up with the Congress, as did the Left parties. CPI(M) general secretary Prakash Karat said most of the State party units had identified seats to contest and the committee would hold discussions on the issue. In the wake of the Mumbai terror attacks and the recent blasts in Assam, the party would draw up a campaign against terrorism and communalism. (HINDU)

I. CURRENT AFFAIRS

Police custody for Ajmal till Jan. 19: Mohammed Ajmal Amir was on Tuesday remanded to police custody till January 19 by a magistrate court for his role in the shootout at the Cama and Albless Hospital here. Kasab has been in police custody since his arrest on November 26.(HINDU)

STATES

ANDHRA PRADESH

In an assessment of the political situation that he provided to the All India Congress Committee (AICC) leadership on Tuesday evening, Chief Minister Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy reportedly said that the alliance-in-the-making between the Telangana Rashtra Samiti (TRS), Telugu Desam Party (TDP) and the Left will not hurt the Congress' prospects in the coming elections. On the other hand, the TRS' move to part company with the Congress was, in a way, good riddance since the ruling party need not concede the 30-odd Assembly seats to it, sources quoted Dr. Reddy as telling AICC president Sonia Gandhi and Union Ministers Pranab Mukherjee and A. K. Antony at a meeting of the party's core committee in New Delhi. PM Manmohan Singh and Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram, who are also members of this committee, did not attend. Dr. Reddy's views on this score appeared at variance with those of APCC president D. Srinivas who stated at Bheemgal in Nizamabad district that the doors for his party were still open for the Congress' erstwhile ally, the TRS. He maintained that the Congress had never severed its ties with the TRS nor longed for an alliance in the 2004 elections.(HINDU)

RAJASTHAN

The proceedings in the Rajasthan Assembly were stalled on Tuesday with the opposition BJP taking strong exception to the recent controversial remarks of Governor S. K. Singh accusing Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh of having a 'direct role' in the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi. Mr. Singh stated at a seminar on 'Gandhi in times of terror' here on Sunday that though terror had failed to scare Gandhiji, the Mahatma himself fell prey to it. He said Nathuram Godse, an RSS member, killed Gandhiji because he was in favour of providing Rs.85 crore to Pakistan at the time of Partition. Infuriated at the charge, the BJP MLAs disrupted the proceedings as soon as the House met on Tuesday and created an uproar demanding immediate dismissal of Mr. Singh. Loud slogans such as 'Vande Mataram', 'Sack the Governor' and 'Bharat Mata Ki Jai' rent the air. Speaker Dipendra Singh Shekhawat's repeated pleas that the Governor's conduct could not be discussed in the House failed to cut ice with the BJP, which charged that Mr. Singh had distorted historic facts and wrongly tried to link RSS with Mahatma Gandhi's murder. BJP MLA Jaswant Singh Yadav raised the issue as soon as Question Hour started and remarked that Mr. Singh 'seems to have lost his mental balance'. (HINDU)

UTTAR PRADESH

BSP president Mayawati has resolved the crisis in her party's Rajasthan unit by allowing her six MLAs to continue their support to the Congress Govt, headed by CM Ashok Gehlot. The reasoning given for supporting Gehlot, even while opposing the Congress everywhere else, is that the Rajasthan CM belongs to a backward caste. The BSP MLAs had voted for the Gehlot Govt during the trust vote in the Assembly, held on Monday, and demanded removal of Rajasthan in-charge Dharam Singh, alleging he was an autocrat. Sources in the BSP said Mayawati, who reached Delhi on Monday evening, contacted the Rajasthan MLAs and heard them patiently. Singh as well as BSP legislature party leader Rajendra Gudda confirmed the party's decision to continue support to the Gehlot Govt. 'They have supported neither the Congress nor the BJP. They have supported a CM who is from a backward caste,' said Dharam, explaining the party decision. (IE)

II. INDIA & THE WORLD

EDITORIAL

In Pakistan's interest: PM Manmohan Singh made a strong statement on Tuesday accusing Pakistan of using terrorism as state policy. The PM and the foreign secretary are unwilling to believe that the scale and sophistication of the Mumbai attack could have been possible without the knowledge and cooperation of some official agencies in the neighbouring country. Above all, India is concerned about Pakistan's evident inaction post-Mumbai, and justifiably so. But of equal, if not more, concern is the fact that the official statements coming from Pakistan have been pathetically inconsistent. Soon after the Pakistani establishment dismissed Ajmal Amir Iman Kasab's confession as 'doctored' and the evidence provided by India as 'insufficient' thereby refusing to act on either the Pakistani High Commissioner to India, Shahid Malik, said that 'there is no question of Pakistan rejecting India's evidence'. Pakistan since then has also said that it is 'examining' the material, and will respond in 'a day or two'. Now, the dossier provided to Islamabad and the international community includes Kasab's confession, GPS and satellite phone records of those involved in the Mumbai attack, transcripts of conversations between the terrorists and their handlers in Pakistan as the security forces battled the militants.(IE)