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What does this sort of news say about India?

Leongsam

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Admin
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Makes Vivian and his team look really good in comparison.

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Race to save Games amid the corruption

By Andrew Buncombe
5:30 AM Sunday Aug 22, 2010
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Workers struggle to keep up with the building schedule at Shivaji Stadium. Photo / AP


At the Shivaji Stadium in the centre of Delhi, there appeared little reason to cheer.

Hundreds of workers wearing flip-flops and singlets, loincloths and saris laboured amid the m&d to complete a Herculean task.

They rushed to finish laying marble for stands, build a series of five-storey blocks and repair collapsed scaffolding.

The stadium is set to be the practice venue for hockey matches in 43 days but this week it is fit for nothing.

Just six weeks before Delhi hosts the 19th Commonwealth Games, the city is in a state of chaos. Venues that should have been completed weeks ago remain dirty, mosquito-ridden worksites; major roads are blocked by construction work and projects to landscape the city appear to have been forgotten halfway through.

Even the Games' official theme, composed by A.R. Rahman, the man who wrote Jai Ho from the movie Slumdog Millionaire, is behind schedule.
Added to this is the growing sense of panic. Amid revelations of corruption, mismanagement and refusal to follow best practice is widespread concern that the event could turn into a national embarrassment. The city's chief minister said this week she is "nervous" about the outcome.

This week, the Commonwealth Games Federation, which oversees the event, put on a brave face. At a press conference after a two-day inspection of venues for the 17 sports represented, federation president Mike Fennell said that for "all practical purposes" the venues were completed. However, there was still "a long list of detailed work to be attended to".

He listed concerns about the readiness of the Games Village, transportation, catering, landscaping, cleaning, sanitation and hygiene. There were also worries that much of the electronic equipment required by the various disciplines were not yet in place.

However, he dismissed a claim by former Australian swimmer Dawn Fraser that the event would become "another Munich", a reference to the 1972 Olympics at which 11 Israeli athletes and coaches were killed by Palestinian militants, and said he was satisfied with the security in place.

For many involved in Delhi's bid to host the event, bringing the Games to India had little to do with sport. Instead, it was an opportunity to demonstrate a nation keen to throw off the shackles of poverty and boast its economic growth rates of 8 per cent or more.

Falling after the 2008 Olympics, hosted by India's Asian rival, China, there was even more conviction that the event had to be a show-stopping success. Those who spoke out, such as former sports minister Mani Shankar Aiyar - who said he believed the money spent on the event should be used to develop sports in villages across the nation - were condemned.
The event has also suffered from a sporting perspective. Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt pulled out long before his recent injury worries, the feeling being that the Games were an insufficient stage for the world's fastest man.

Heptathlete Jessica Ennis has also ended her season early. And Chris Hoy is among the many names from cycling who are choosing not to disrupt their preparations for November's European Championships, a qualifying event for the 2012 Olympics.

But if the Games fail, it will not be for lack of money. The cost of the event was reported to have increased almost 18 times from its original budget.

The most recent prediction for the total cost of the two-week event stands at £4.22 billion ($9.3 billion). The 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester cost £300 million.

In Delhi, taxes have increased, money originally set aside to help the development of Dalit or "untouchable" groups has been diverted and slums have been bulldozed.

There are also reports that labour laws and health and safety regulations have been violated.

Moushumi Basu, of the People's Union for Democratic Rights, a civil rights group that has filed a series of court actions against the authorities, said workers had routinely been paid less than the legal minimum wage.
One worker, Bhakti Mandal, from West Bengal, labouring at the Shivaji Stadium, a venue the authorities have admitted will not be fully completed by October, said he was getting paid 3000 rupees ($92) a month to work 12 hours a day, seven days a week. By law he should have been getting double that.

Aside from workers' conditions, some of the most worrying accusations relate to corruption, a daily feature of life in India.

Earlier this year, the Government's main watchdog identified 16 Games projects in which there appeared to be financial irregularities. Three senior officials have already been suspended.

In another blow, two state-run firms have withdrawn their sponsorship as a result of the "negative publicity" stemming from the alleged corruption and mismanagement.

With the negative press that the Games have attracted and the chaotic preparations, some have wondered whether the event could be called off. That is unlikely to happen.

A more likely scenario is that there will be a final frenzy of work that will be sufficient to pull together a decent event.

It might even prove to be a success, a view expressed by many people here, including 71-year-old Babu Lal Bharti, who was certain it would be completed on time, saying: "It will be good for India, it will be good for Indian pride."
- INDEPENDENT
By Andrew Buncombe
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
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Re: What does this sort of new say about India?

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Tot tossed from Indian train

6:40 AM Sunday Aug 22, 2010

NEW DELHI: Indian police are investigating the death of a 2-year-old child allegedly thrown from a moving train after an argument between passengers.

Four men tried to forcibly share a berth already occupied by the victim Nisha, her father Ram Kishore and mother Phool Kumari, who resisted the attempt, said police official Nirmal Singh.

None of the passengers intervened when they got violent and started assaulting the parents.

"In a fit of rage, [the four men] picked up the two-year-old girl and threw her out of the open door, killing her instantly," Singh said.


Copyright ©2010, APN Holdings NZ Limited
 

longbow

Alfrescian
Loyal
Re: What does this sort of new say about India?

Nothing has changed - the rich skim off the profits and live in London, the politicians suck up to the rich for campaign funding. Most of the $$ is parked overseas.

The poor's plight remain the same, defecate in the streets, live in slums with little improvement, clingling on to a meaningless word - DEMOCRACY.

There is relatively few opportunities for the man on the street to make it big (unless you are into IT and have good education), the rich control everything.

If you have good edu, just go work in the USA where there is no caste system and your kids will not have legacy of the lousy caste.
 

kensington

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Re: What does this sort of new say about India?

However, he dismissed a claim by former Australian swimmer Dawn Fraser that the event would become "another Munich", a reference to the 1972 Olympics at which 11 Israeli athletes and coaches were killed by Palestinian militants, and said he was satisfied with the security in place.

Their security details leave much to be desired. The mujahideens and the Hindoos rightists will battle it out claiming lives as trophies. Medal somehow loses out to martyrdom to some of these people. Interesting claim by Dawn Fraser anyway but will the authority listens and responds ? A total chaos is predictable and incoming...:eek::eek:

Vivian should go lend a hand...Paiseh:o:o:o
 

kingrant

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What does ths sort of news say about India? Plenty.

For one, it means if you put all the Indians together in one place, this is what you get.

Compare it with China. They hosted the Olympics, the Expo...with super infrastructure, they opened up in 1978 after Deng and never looked back. China was in deeper shit - Communism, cultural Revolution, broken country for years after the last dynasty.

India started off as a democracy, altho its economy was Marxist modelled central planned. But they abandoned it since 1990s, today still nowhere but a broken country!

A lot to do with the race. God save singapore for having so many Indians now!
 
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borom

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
What does it say about Singapore when the Papaya wants to import another
100,000 of them.

Just look at DBS-how many IT/ATM shutdown (not to mention other screw ups in HK,Thailand, mini bonds ect2 ).
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
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It's the same no matter where they are in the world. Indian traits are hardwired and cannot be erased. No amount of assimilation can change a thing. The Chinese are not alone when it comes to spreading misery around the world. Indians are constantly nipping at their heals.

*******

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GP suspended for lying about qualifications

5:30 AM Wednesday Aug 25, 2010
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Photo / Herald on Sunday


An Auckland GP has been suspended and fined by the Health Practitioners Disciplinary Tribunal after lying about his qualifications.

Vikram Jayaprakash, 34, who emigrated from Britain in 2005, faced two charges laid by a New Zealand Medical Council committee, New Zealand Doctor newspaper reported.

One charge related to false information on a CV used in late 2008 to get work as a trainee in anaesthesia for the Auckland District Health Board.
Dr Jayaprakash claimed he passed the Royal College of Physicians membership exams, parts one and two, and the primary exam for the fellowship of the Royal College of Anaesthetists in Britain.

The second charge related to lying to the anaesthesia training supervisor at Auckland City Hospital in the middle of last year. He said he passed the primary fellowship exam for the Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists (ANZCA) earlier that year.

Dr Jayaprakash admitted lying about ANZCA after he gave the supervisor a forged letter to confirm his claim.

The tribunal suspended Dr Jayaprakash for six months, fined him $5000 and $9600 costs.

- NZPA
Copyright ©2010, APN Holdings NZ Limited
 

oli9

Alfrescian
Loyal
It comes with no surprises. Indians arent called "TWO HEADED SNAKES" for nothing. It's got nothing to do with racism. Its everything to do with their culture, sadly.
I look down on India of making a mess of the commonwealth games. It shows in their culture. Theyre lazy, likes to pass the buck, drink masala teas 3-5 times a day & fart a lot. must be the chickpeas.
Lets hope the whole world take notice & conclude that India will never be the next dragon of Asia. And the cause of this debacle are their own people itself. the very same people who left their own country & become PR in Spore.
 
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no_faith

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...And the cause of this debacle are their own people itself. the very same people who left their own country & become PR in Spore.
yup, but on another pt of view, judging from the living condition in india, they have to leave in search for a better condition and at the same time, dey dun believe their country economic will grow. tis is juz my tots.
 

Char_Azn

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India News damn interesting compared to anywhere else. U even have MP suspected of killing another MP or MP hire assasins to kill some activist trying to expose them. U dun even get anything half as interesting on a weekly basis, they have it everyday
 

soIsee

Alfrescian
Loyal
Sam Leong, if you want to criticise a third world country like India..

Then why is it your LKY want to import such fuck into his cuntry?

For fuck?

If you know some ppl or things are fuck, do you still want to fuck around with them?

Worse, invite them inside your home to fuck!

If you do, then your cuntry is even more fuck-up then the Bangla in India, who was already born fuck-up with a mindset unable to be changed.

So before you want to fuck another cuntry, take a look at your own first.:biggrin:
 

saratogas

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Loyal
An article of India MP asking for a 400% pay hike to fight corruption...

Editorial: MPs’ salary hike

India’s politicians can be a fractious lot at times. Brawls in Parliament, for example, are not unknown. But there are occasions when they are of one mind — such as when the subject is their pay.

Last week members of the national Parliament in New Delhi turned out in force to debate the issue and there was uproar when they discovered that the government planned to delay a decision on the issue as potentially divisive. In the event, it backed down — twice in fact. At first, although it baulked at the fivefold salary hike the MPs wanted, it agreed to a threefold increase. It then agreed to substantially increase MPs’ expenses after the latter made it clear they rejected the rise as insufficient.

The truth is that the MPs had a point. They were among the worst paid elected lawmakers in the world — and still are. Their annual salary has gone from 192,000 rupees or $4,100 to 600,000 rupees or $12,850. A British MP’s salary is over $100,000, a German MP’s $116,000.

Unfortunately, the hike does not seem to have gone down well with the Indian public. As it was, a recent Indian survey had suggested a massive credibility gap between the public and politicians. It showed that the former consider the latter to be among the most corrupt of any group in the country.

This hike is not going to do anything to change that perception. Firstly, in a country where the recession has been painful and the economy is only beginning to return to boom, where last year’s average household income was about $2,360 and where today pay hikes are averaging between 8 and 13 percent, a 212-percent hike is seen as deeply unfair. Secondly, Indian MPs’ expenses are extremely generous as they are, even by international standards, with provision of free air and rail travel, cars with chauffeurs and government housing. Lastly, many Indian MPs are enormously wealthy as it is and the job is seen as the door to assured and continued personal enrichment.

If it seems strange for a newspaper in Saudi Arabia, where the political system is rather different, to comment on the system in India, there is a moral here that is universal. No matter where in the world, politicians must command pubic respect. Demanding — and getting — massive pay rises when the vast majority of the population has to make do with so much less is not going to ensure that, especially when there is already a jaundiced view about them.

The people of India are extraordinarily hard working (as Saudi Arabia knows only too well) and the economic future of that country is bright. Although Indian exports dipped in July, growth is still expected to be around nine percent this year and there are predictions that it will outstrip that of China within three to four years. But political discontent puts that at risk. Last April, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh warned that left-wing extremism posed the greatest internal security threat to India. The perception that the country’s elected politicians are self-seeking money grabbers is not going to help in that crucial fight.
 

borom

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http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepag...n-Store-refuses-to-serve-hero-in-uniform.html

AN injured war hero was barred from his local cornershop - for wearing his Army uniform.

Cpl Sam Rae, 27, who is recovering after breaking his back in a June bomb blast, popped in for chocolate and crisps in his desert combats.
The Royal Dragoon Guard said: "The shopkeeper pointed at my uniform and said, 'Are you military? I can't serve you. Can you get out.' I flung the crisps on the counter and walked away."
Sam narrowly escaped death when he was thrown 20 yards from his tank in Afghanistan.
He said: "I'm proud to be a soldier. I'd expect a welcome - not to be kicked out of a shop."
Arumugam Tharma, 43, who runs the store in Heysham, Lancs, claimed licensing laws prohibit sales of cigarettes to anyone in uniform - but the MoD say no law exists. He said: "I've no feelings on the war."
Defence Secretary Liam Fox vowed to outlaw discrimination against troops. He said: "It is a disgrace that one of our brave soldiers should be treated in such a disgusting manner."

Already heard of so many anti-social behaviour from these FT's here, having learned from the Papaya how to fix the locals.
 

annexa

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Because our wonderous FT policies have stripped India of their top talents. Someone pls send our wonderous ministars a congratulary note. Thank you.
 

scroobal

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Really tired hearing Indians promise things but unable to deliver. As Sam said, I too think that it is "hardwired". I am anxiously waiting for them to prove me wrong for the upcoming games. In 2008, I told a friend from SIA that his mats for 1st, business and economy at Indira Ghandi airport at Delhi were soiled and the those of other International Airlines were in better condition. He sent the email to the head of the region. I got a profusely apologetic letter and promised to fix it immediately.

It was actually worn out as well. The trouble is that they check the VIPs including the executives that no is in a position to notice.

I was told that region head is not easy in that part of the world. Much time is chasing payments from agents and handlers and nothing comes into plan. The passengers from India are also demanding.
 
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