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UK charities scam linked to Sangh Parivar
Washington, February 25
A report to be released in the House of Lords in London today provides alarming evidence linking UK-based charities to Sangh Parivar groups in India. The report, “In Bad Faith? British Charity and Hindu Extremism,” produced by Awaaz, a London-based secular network, states that these charities collected donations running into millions of pounds from the British public under the guise of humanitarian causes. Most prominent among these were relief efforts to aid victims of the Orissa cyclone and the Gujarat earthquake.

Morocco quake death toll 564
Imzouren (Morocco), February 25
At least 564 persons have been killed and some 300 injured in yesterday’s powerful earthquake that rocked northeastern Morocco, leaving hospitals struggling to cope with a flood of casualties amid a desperate search through devastated villages for survivors.

Duma to have say in Cabinet formation
Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, listens to Deputy Prime Minister Viktor KhristenkoMoscow, February 25
The Duma majority will have a say in the formation of the new Russian Cabinet, President Vladimir Putin declared today, defending his decision to dismiss Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov with his entire Cabinet.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, listens to Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Khristenko, who was named acting Prime Minister on Tuesday, during the President Cup judo tournament in Magnitogorsk, 1350 km southeast of Moscow, in this Saturday, December 9, 2000, file photo. Vladimir Putin on Tuesday dismissed Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov and his Cabinet. — AP/PTI photo

Busting proliferators a challenge: CIA
Washington, February 25
Concerned over the “one-stop shop” of nuclear technology run by Pakistani scientist A. Q. Khan, the CIA has said proliferators hiding among legitimate businesses and countries concealing weapons of mass destruction made busting “private entrepreneurs dealing in lethal goods” a formidable intelligence challenge.


Former employee of Britain's global surveillance centre GCHQ Katherine Gun smiles outside the Old Bailey in London
Former employee of Britain's global surveillance centre GCHQ (Government Communications Head Quarters), Katherine Gun, smiles outside the Old Bailey in London on Wednesday. Charges were dropped on Wednesday against government translator Gun who was accused of leaking a top-secret memo which media reports said was a request from the US for Britain to help spy on United Nations members in the run-up to the Iraq war.
— Reuters
 

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UK charities scam linked to Sangh Parivar
Ashish Kumar Sen

Washington, February 25
A report to be released in the House of Lords in London today provides alarming evidence linking UK-based charities to Sangh Parivar groups in India.

The report, “In Bad Faith? British Charity and Hindu Extremism,” produced by Awaaz, a London-based secular network, states that these charities collected donations running into millions of pounds from the British public under the guise of humanitarian causes. Most prominent among these were relief efforts to aid victims of the Orissa cyclone and the Gujarat earthquake.

“We do not think it is a coincidence that the two Indian states where Hindutva networks, violence and hatred have grown phenomenally in recent years both had natural and human tragedies, followed by massive funding to Hindutva organisations from overseas,” the report says.

The document explains in detail how the UK based Sewa International sent £2 million raised for Gujarat earthquake relief to its Indian counterpart, Sewa Bharati. Part of the Sangh Parivar, Sewa Bharati has a well-documented agenda of expanding Hindutva networks in India.

Much of the funds collected in the name of humanitarian causes were spent on schools run by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh that “indoctrinate children into Hindutva and promote anti-minority hatred,” the report says.

“Most donors would be horrified if they knew the nature, history and ideas of the RSS,” Mr Suresh Grover, one of the directors of Awaaz, said in a telephonic interview from London.

Awaaz’s report exposes links of the Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh (HSS), Sewa International and the Kalyan Ashram Trust to Sangh Parivar sponsored violence in India. “We cannot say that pounds collected here were used to buy guns in India, but we can say with confidence that the money was used to build hatred against a minority,” said Mr Grover. There are close a million people of Indian origin living in the UK.

“Many in the Indo-British community donated funds in good faith on Sewa International’s Gujarat earthquake appeals, but would not have done so had they known that the organisation was linked to the RSS,” Mr Grover said.

The association of prominent British personalities with these organisations was one of the factors that contributed to a sense of complacency amongst donors. Lord Adam Patel, a member of the House of Lords and a patron of Sewa International, resigned from his latter affiliation last year after learning of the group’s links to the Sangh Parivar.

Though not registered as a charity in the UK, Sewa International is the fund-raising arm of the registered charity HSS, the UK branch of the RSS. “It uses the charity registration number of the HSS to raise funds from British people,” the report says. Funds raised by Sewa International run into millions of pounds. The bulk of this money has allegedly been channelled to RSS front organisations in India.

The authors of the report have asked the Charity Commissioner to withdraw charity status of the HSS (UK), the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, UK, and the Kalyan Ashram Trust.

The London-based Charity Commission is already investigating the HSS and Sewa International. “There are some very serious allegations... We are looking into potential links between the charity and extremist organisations in India and alleged payments to these groups by the charity,” a spokesperson for the commission said. “We are looking at the relationship between the HSS and Sewa International, and also the administration of the funds that were collected for the Gujarat Earthquake Appeal,” she added.

The commission’s inquiry has been spurred by allegations that funds collected by Sewa International were sent to Sewa Bharti, a group linked to communal violence in India. The Madhya Pradesh government revoked Sewa Bharti’s licence because of its alleged involvement in violence against christians.

In the case of Vishwa Hindu Parishad, the commission is in the process of “gathering and evaluating information.”

Rebecca Draka, another spokesperson for the Charity Commission, said it was “waiting for the trustees of the charity to supply us with more information, which is taking a long time because they are obtaining this information from India.” She said the Government of India had “refused” the commission’s visa application, but added: “We have contacted them to ask them to reconsider their decision and are awaiting a response.”

Sewa International (UK) became a high profile fund-raising organisation after the Gujarat earthquake. It raised around £2.3 million for its India “quake appeal from the British public.

Mr Grover cited the funding of RSS schools by Sewa International (UK) as a key example of the financing of hatred in India. Some funds for earthquake reconstruction were also channeled to the RSS’s Lok Kalyan Samiti in Chanasma village, which has been implicated in the violent “cleansing” of all Muslims from the village.

Another RSS project, Jankalyan Samiti, was a recipient of Sewa International (UK) earthquake funds. The Jankalyan Samiti’s Maharashtra branch has been involved in violence against Christians and Christian organizations.

The report makes a pointed reference of the fact that despite these charities repeated claims to be non-sectarian and non-discriminatory, Sewa International, the HSS and the VHP did not launch any humanitarian appeal following the Gujarat violence in 2002.
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Morocco quake death toll 564

Imzouren (Morocco), February 25
At least 564 persons have been killed and some 300 injured in yesterday’s powerful earthquake that rocked northeastern Morocco, leaving hospitals struggling to cope with a flood of casualties amid a desperate search through devastated villages for survivors.

As aftershocks rippled across the region, thousands of panicked residents prepared to spend the night in the open.

The death toll, released late yesterday by the Moroccan official MAP news agency, confirmed fears of a high number of casualties from the quake in Al Hoceima province, which includes both Mediterranean ports and remote mountain hamlets.

The quake, which struck at 2.27 am, was measured at 6.3 on the Richter scale by French seismologists and was felt as far away as in southern Spain. — AFP
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Duma to have say in Cabinet formation

Moscow, February 25
The Duma majority will have a say in the formation of the new Russian Cabinet, President Vladimir Putin declared today, defending his decision to dismiss Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov with his entire Cabinet.

Addressing the caretaker Cabinet meeting, Mr Putin said there were ‘political and administrative-organisational’ reasons for sacking the Kasyanov government yesterday, ahead of next month’s presidential poll, after which he anyway would have tended his Cabinet’s resignation in accordance with the Russian Constitution.

“As a presidential candidate, I can and must introduce the public with the person, who will be nominated by me as the chairman of the Council of Ministers,” Mr Putin told the meeting, which was also attended by Mikhail Kasyanov.

Mr Putin also said while appointing new Cabinet members he would consult the parliamentary majority as he had declared in his annual state of the nation address last year.

In the State Duma (Lower House) pro-Putin ‘Yedinaya Rossia” (United Russia) has an absolute majority of over 300 seats.

Mr Putin also underscored that if going by the constitutional time-frame the new government would have been in place only after June as most of the Cabinet members would have been in suspended mode, losing precious time. — PTI
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Busting proliferators a challenge: CIA

Washington, February 25
Concerned over the “one-stop shop” of nuclear technology run by Pakistani scientist A. Q. Khan, the CIA has said proliferators hiding among legitimate businesses and countries concealing weapons of mass destruction made busting “private entrepreneurs dealing in lethal goods” a formidable intelligence challenge.

Testifying before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence here yesterday, CIA Director George Tenet said the “rolling up” of Khan’s network was one of the most “significant counter-proliferation successes in years”, but others could now adjust and adapt to evade such investigations. — PTI
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South Korean policemen scuffle with protesters as they try to burn a North Korean flag at a rally near the US Embassy in Seoul on Wednesday.
South Korean policemen scuffle with protesters as they try to burn a North Korean flag at a rally near the US Embassy in Seoul on Wednesday.
— Reuters

Man jailed for killing pigeon
WELLINGTON:
A New Zealander was jailed for six weeks on Wednesday for killing native pigeons — the first person to go to prison under tough new laws protecting wildlife. Radio New Zealand reported that Robert Cassidy, of Hokianga, in the Northland province where conservationists say populations of the bird are dwindling, denied the charge. — DPA

Janet Jackson loses film role
LOS ANGELES:
Janet Jackson’s controversial exposed breast incident during last month’s Super Bowl has cost the singer a movie role, a news report said on Tuesday. The entertainment magazine Extra reported that Jackson (37) was passed over as the choice to play the legendary singer Lena Horne in a television film. Horne, 86, reportedly was so shocked by the breast exposure incident that she expressed reservations about Jackson portraying her in the project. — DPA

British killer doc cremated
LONDON:
British family doctor Harold Shipman, who murdered more than 200 patients to become one of the world’s worst serial killers, has been cremated at a service attended by a handful of mourners, the Sun newspaper reported on Wednesday. His wife Primrose, was advised not to bury her husband in case the grave was attacked. — AFP
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