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Thursday, December 08, 2016

வள்ளுவர் கோட்ட கழக ஆர்ப்பாட்ட தேதி மாற்ற அறிவித்தல்-2

 
திருத்தம்:
செல்லாக் காசு மோடியை எதிர்த்த வள்ளுவர் கோட்ட கழக ஆர்ப்பாட்டம் 12-12 2016 இலிருந்து 16-12-2016 இற்கு மாற்றப்பட்டதை அறிவித்தோம்,அது மீண்டும் 19-12-2016 இற்கு மாற்றப்பட்டுள்ளதை இத்தால் அறியத் தருகின்றோம்.
சிரமத்துக்கு மன்னிக்கவும். Enb Tenn Admin
 

 
தமிழகச் சூழலில் ஏற்பட்டுள்ள மாறுதல்கள் காரணமாக, மோடி ஆட்சியின் `செல்லாக் காசு` அறிவிப்பை எதிர்த்து  12-12-2016 திங்கள் காலை வள்ளுவர் கோட்டத்தில் நடத்தத் திட்டமிட்டிருந்த கண்டன ஆர்ப்பாட்டம், 19-12 2016 திங்கள் அன்று நிகழவுள்ளதாக கழகம் அறிவித்துள்ளதை அறியத் தருகின்றோம்.

 

Forbes - Sri Lanka's debt crisis is so bad

 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


 


 

`நல்லிணக்க அரசே, பொதுபல-சிவ சேனைகளை உடனே தடை செய்!




NPC's resolution against Buddhist temples not valid:Lanka govt

Press Trust of India  |  Colombo
December 8, 2016 Last Updated at 18:42 IST

Sri Lankan government today said that a recent resolution adopted by the Northern Provincial Council prohibiting the construction of Buddhist temples in the Tamil-dominated North will have no legal standing.

Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe told Parliament that there were no constitutional provisions for provincial councils to introduce such resolutions and that the government would in no way accept such a resolution.   
 
The Northern Provincial Council (NPC) controlled by the Tamil National Alliance has been expressing opposition to erection of Buddhist religious sites by the military in the north since the war with the LTTE ended in 2009. Tamil Hindus dominate the region.

The NPC Chief Minister CV Wigneswaran took exception to the move by publicly raising opposition.

The extreme Buddhist nationalist groups blamed the government of the President Maithripala Sirisena for not safeguarding the Buddhist religious sites in the former conflict zones in its desire to achieve reconciliation with the Tamil minority.

It was only this week that Sirisena said he was to appoint an all religious steering committee to defuse potential religious unrest created by certain extremist elements representing all religions.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
======================
Muslim Ministers demand arrest of aggressive monk
December 8, 2016 14:06

Rishard Muslim Ministers today demanded the arrest of a Buddhist monk who had disrespected Islam.

Minister Rishad Bathiudeen told Parliament that a police complaint was filed against the monk.

However he said the monk continues to be part of discussions being held by the Government with no legal action being taken against him.

State Minister M. L. A. M. Hizbullah also questioned what action will be taken against the monk.
He said that a joint letter by Muslim Parliamentarians raising concerns over threats being faced by Muslims in the country was sent to the President and Prime Minister.

He said the Bodu Bala Sena continues to make statements disrespectful to Islam and action must be taken against them.

Hizbullah also warned that Muslim leaders will not be able to control Muslim youth if Islam continues to be disrespected in the country.

Buddha Sasana Affairs and Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe said that the Government is looking to resolve the recent issues through dialogue.

He said that President Maithripala Sirisena had a discussion with religious leaders this week in an attempt to ensure religious unity.

Rajapakshe said that when an attempt is being made to resolve the issue, representatives of the public must support such attempts.

He accused some Muslim Ministers of attempting to incite more racial hatred instead of attempting to resolve the issue. (Colombo Gazette)
===================

Minister visit Batticaloa to discuss and settle the religious dispute
Thursday, December 8, 2016 - 16:00
 
Sandasen MARASINGHEDisna Mudalige and Ishara Mudugamuwa

Buddha Sasana and Justice Minister
Dr. Wijayadasa Rajapaksa said he would visit Batticaloa to discuss and settle the religious dispute that has been cropped up in the area.

He made this comment in response to a question raised by TNA MP S. Viyalendran during the committee stage of the debate of ‘Budget 2017’ in Parliament today.

The TNA MP asked the Justice Minister why the government was not taking action against Ampitiye Sumanarathana Thera of Sri Mangalarama Viharaya in Batticaloa, for his recent abusive remarks against the Tamils and Muslims.

The Minister had replied that he was aware of the incident and that he regretted its occurrence: “It is not that we cannot implement the law strictly against such acts.

But knowing the sensitivity of these issues, we are trying our best to iron out any mistrust between the communities through negotiation,” the Justice Minister said.

“We will come there and I invite you all to be there as well. Do not misunderstand. We are worried as much as you all about these incidents that damage the national unity.

However, we act with restraint to make sure that these problems do not propagate,” he told the TNA MP.

The Minister in his speech also said the four ministers holding portfolios relevant to religion were sitting as a committee to discuss about the recent religious tensions in the country:
“We have been meeting all the religious leaders with the President in the chair and we will come up shortly with a suitable mechanism deal with these issues, ” he said.

 

Ranil-Committed to solve the National Debt crisis within this decade!

The government is committed to solve the National Debt crisis
Thursday, December 8, 2016 - 01:00
 
Amali Mallawaarachchi

The government is committed to solve the National Debt crisis within this decade, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said.

The Prime Minister was speaking at an awards ceremony to present appointment letters to 124 Assistant Customs Superintendents at the Sri Lanka Customs yesterday.

The 124 Assistant Customs Superintendents were selected from 13,405 applicants who faced an open/limited competitive examination and a structured interview.

“We are dedicated to solve the National Debt Crisis, without letting this issue be carried into the next generation. We should not let our children be burdened with an unresolved National Debt. If a country is unable to pay its debts, that indicates the country is at a crisis. Sri Lanka unfortunately fell into this crisis since for a decade our expenditure outgrew our national income,” the Prime Minister said.

“Taxes were not properly collected. The whole country was at a tax-cessation. Some companies are cherishing a 30 years tax-holiday. They have not paid a penny as taxes. Thus it is
not a wonder.Even a post-war economy, was not able to pay its National Debt,at least its recurrent expenditure. This debt crisis is what triggered the 2015 Presidential Election.

The fear was that the debt crisis would keep growing and the plan was to increase taxes following the election,” the Premier revealed.
“However, President Maithripala Sirisena’s government is focused on not allowing this National Debt Crisis to burden the next generation. We are planing to increase the economic growth rate and the GDP growth rate up to 7%, for which increase of taxation is important. This process will ultimately end the National Debt Crisis. As the budget for 2017 is brought forth, we have now achieved a condition where we are able to recoup our expenditure except capital expenditure. Our next target is to be able to settle our National Debt.The budget deficit for the year 2015 reached 6.5 percent of the GDP. Our aim is to make it 3.5 percent by 2020. The battle is to increase our national income in which the Customs is at
the fore front,” the PM pointed out.

“For swift economic development, direct foreign investments are the key. We have started it with investment projects in Hambantota, Kalutara and Trincomalee. If more investments are to be attracted, we need to prove our economic stability and our tax reliefs and other facilities, we provide for the investors. We should create a conducive environment, especially at the airports and the ports, to ease the import export process,” the Premier pointed out.

Tuesday, December 06, 2016

காமராஜர்,எம்.ஜி.ஆர்,ஜெயலலிதா மீண்டும் எழுதப்படும் வரலாறு!

எழுபது ஆண்டுகள் ஓயாத அழுகுரல்!
 
காமராஜர்


https://youtu.be/5SSFE0_N3XA

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/5SSFE0_N3XA" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

எம்.ஜிஆர்



https://youtu.be/6Urbf7LmEYI

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/6Urbf7LmEYI" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

ஜெயலலிதா



https://youtu.be/0owIFUGeu-c

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/0owIFUGeu-c" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>



 
* அம்மு ஜெயலலிதா, அம்மாவாகினார்!
 
* ஜெயாவின் முதல் அரசியல் பணி எம்ஜி ஆர்  ஆட்சியின்  `சத்துணவுத் திட்டமாகும்`
 
* இந்த சத்துணவுத் திட்டம் காமாரஜரிடமிருந்து எம்.ஜி.ஆர்.கடன் வாங்கியது ஆகும்.
 
*  எம் .ஜி.ஆர் திட்டத்தின் தொடர்ச்சியும் அபிவிருத்தியுமே அம்மா திட்டமாகும்.

ஆக மொத்தம் இது 70 ஆண்டுகள்!

துண்டுப்பிரசுரத்தின் கேள்வி;

70 ஆண்டுகள் ஒரு பெரும் சமூகத்திரளை உற்பத்தி வாழ்வில் இணைய வல்லமையற்றவர்கள் ஆக்கி இலவசத்தில் வாழ வைத்த தமிழகத்தின் பொருளாதாரக் காரணிகள் என்ன?
 

Italian referendum defeat 'threatens survival of the euro,'


Matteo Renzi's Italian referendum defeat 'threatens survival of the euro,' warn German business leaders

By Barney Henderson  ;

The euro's survival is under increased threat following the political instability caused by the Italian referendum result, German business bosses warned yesterday, raising further questions about the long-term viability of Italy’s membership of the currency union.

Ulrich Grillo, the head of the Federation of German Industries, or BDI, said the crushing defeat handed to the Italy’s centrist prime minister, Matteo Renzi, had worsened the outlook for the survival of the single currency.

"The risks of a new political instability for economic development, the financial markets and the currency union are increasing further,” he said.

Stock and bond markets shrugged off the immediate risk from the Italian vote, but a leading independent analyst warned that Italy’s membership of the euro on “borrowed time” following Mr Renzi’s defeat at the hands of anti-establishment political forces.

The Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR), a leading economics consultancy, said that following the vote it now estimated the chances of Italy staying in the Euro for the next five years had fallen below 30 per cent.

The CEBR said that bitter three-month campaign had demonstrated that Italian voters would not tolerate indefinitely the chronic unemployment, stagnant wages and Brussels-imposed austerity that now came with euro membership.

“There is no doubt that Italy could stay in the euro if it were prepared to pay the price of virtually zero growth and depressed consumer spending for another 5 years or so,” the group said in a note.
“But that is asking a lot of an increasingly impatient electorate. We think the chances of their sustaining this policy are below 30 per cent.”

European leaders did their best to put a brave face on the loss of a prime minister who had embraced European economic reforms, but whose back-me-or-sack-me call over the referendum was rejected by an emphatic 59% to 41% margin.

Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, said she was saddened by Mr Renzi’s defeat, having supported his reforms, but said that Europe would continue on its current course, regardless. "From my point of view, we will continue our work in Europe and we have set the right priorities,” she said.
Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the German foreign minister, gave a franker assessment, conceding that the rejection of Mr Renzi was “not a positive development in the case of the general crisis in Europe”.

Manfred Weber, the leader of the main conservative group in the European Parliament, said that success of populist forces such as Italy’s Five Star Movement and anti-immigrant Northern League heralded a new phase of instability in Europe.

“It is also a setback for those who want readiness for reform, those who want European countries to change. That is the only way we can deal with globalization,” he said.

Stock and currency markets gave a muted response to Mr Renzi’s defeat which had been widely expected and priced into the market, with main losses confined to shares in Italy’s heavily indebted banking sector. The euro recovered early losses against the dollar.

Meanwhile, in Milan bankers held emergency meetings to discuss whether there was sufficient market confidence to proceed with plans to launch a €5bn recapitalization of Monte dei Paschi di Siena, the world’s oldest lender.

Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the Dutch finance minister and head of the 19-member Eurozone, moved to calm concerns, saying that political limbo left by Mr Renzi’s defeat did not require any immediate intervention from Brussels or Frankfurt.

"It doesn't really change the situation economically in Italy or in the Italian banks,” he said in Brussels ahead of a meeting to discuss the on-going Greek bailout programme, “It doesn't seem to require any emergency steps.”

Downing St has said Britain will "work closely" with the new administration in Italy which emerges after the resignation of Prime Minister Matteo Renzi in the wake of his referendum defeat,  according to the Press Association.

The 41-year-old Italian PM threw the EU into fresh turmoil by announcing his departure following the decisive 59%-41% rejection of his plans for constitutional reform.

His resignation sparked a slump in the euro, which fell sharply against the US dollar and hit a four-and-a-half-month low against sterling, reaching a 1.20 exchange rate for the first time since July.

Number 10 stressed that the outcome of the referendum on proposed constitutional changes was "a decision for the Italian people".

Theresa May's official spokeswoman said that the Prime Minister would seek to speak with Mr Renzi - who remains in office until his successor is appointed - over the coming days.

Rome was one of the stops on Mrs May's whirlwind tour of EU capitals in the days after she took office in July, when she was given a red-carpet welcome by Mr Renzi for talks over lunch.

Italian President Sergio Mattarella issued a statement today lauding the referendum's high turnout as "testimony of a solid democracy and a passionate country capable of active participation."
"Before us there are commitments and deadlines which Italy's institutions will have to respect in order to provide an adequate response to the problems of the moment," he added.

Italian media outlets were reporting that outgoing prime minister Matteo Renzi will hold a cabinet meeting of his ministers this evening, possibly to be followed by a formal announcement.

"Renzi is strongly disliked," Antonio Noto, head of IPR Marketing polling institute, told AFP, adding that votes against the PM were "votes against the establishment, but also against his style".

Cecila Carrara, a lawyer in an international firm, said Renzi's "record is disastrous, he has mainly focused on getting good publicity".

The former mayor of Florence also came under fire for failing to get Europe to share the burden of the migrant crisis. Butcher Antonio Canestri told AFP that when it came down to it, "Europe wasn't listening to Renzi".

"Those who voted 'No' were impoverished middle-class families, hit by the economic crisis, without hope of prosperity or well-being for children or grandchildren... (and) the unemployed young," editorialist Maurizio Molinari wrote in La Stampa daily.

Fabrizio Sabelli, professor at the University of Geneva, said "the constitution is not the fundamental problem. It's the improvement of living conditions of so many people who suffer, and this jolt will undoubtedly do us good".

In the areas with the highest jobless rate the "No" camp won with 65.8 percent, while the impoverished south also largely voted "No".

Source Telegraph

Assad is on the verge of taking Aleppo


The Opinion Pages | Op-Ed Contributor
How the War Ends in Syria


Syrian government soldiers in Aleppo on Saturday. Credit Hassan Ammar/Associated Press 
By PETER W. GALBRAITHDEC. 6, 2016

TOWNSHEND, Vt. — The civil war in Syria is over. Now it is time to stop the fighting.
Aided by Russia, Iran, Shiite militias and Hezbollah, the government of President Bashar al-Assad is on the verge of taking Aleppo, once Syria’s largest city. Supported by its powerful allies, the Syrian Army will then move to eliminate the remaining pockets of resistance, notably around the northern city of Idlib. While Iran has been Mr. Assad’s most important military ally, the Syrian regime would still want to have Russian airpower to finish its reconquest of the country’s populous west.
The Assad regime has prevailed through tactics of unspeakable brutality — barrel bombs, starvation, the targeting of hospitals and rescue workers and the suspected use of chemical weapons — but it has prevailed. Samantha Power, the United States ambassador to the United Nations, has rightly focused attention on these war crimes, but these denunciations will make no difference to the situation on the ground.

There is an absolutely counterproductive idea favored by Washington’s foreign policy elites of both parties, recycled recently by President Bill Clinton’s secretary of state Madeleine K. Albright and Stephen J. Hadley, national security adviser to President George W. Bush, for providing additional military support to the moderate Syrian opposition. Such aid cannot possibly now change the trajectory of the war, but will certainly get more people killed.

Though the outcome is clear, how the war ends matters greatly. The United States has an interest in a result that allows as many Syrians as possible to go home, that ensures the total defeat of the Islamic State and other extremist groups, and that safeguards the Syrian Kurds, who have been America’s principal ally against the Islamic State.

Achieving these goals will require close collaboration with Russia, whose intervention enabled Mr. Assad to turn the tide of the war. Fortunately, Russia shares many of America’s objectives, even if its Syrian ally does not.

The United States and Russia could start by negotiating terms that would end the fighting between the regime and the moderate opposition. The terms might include an amnesty for the rebels, the right of Syrian refugees to return and equal access to reconstruction assistance. It could even include some promises of basic political freedoms, international monitoring and the removal of Syrian officials (not including Mr. Assad) responsible for the worst crimes.
  
The Russians have considerable leverage with a Syrian government that wants Russian backing for mopping-up operations. The United States, with less leverage, will have to persuade the non-Islamist opposition that a negotiated surrender is better than total destruction.

European countries have a strong interest in creating conditions to encourage refugees in Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey to return to Syria rather than heading west. America should work to ensure the diplomatic engagement of European allies to bring an end to hostilities, as well as their financial support for reconstruction in Syria.

In eastern Syria, Kurdish forces supported by the United States Air Force and special forces are battling the Islamic State in a largely separate conflict. On a recent trip to the Kurdish areas, I traveled to within 15 miles of Raqqa, the capital of the Islamic State. Kurdish fighters feel confident that they can take the city, but their leaders understand that they’re not in a position to govern a large Arab city. Since there is no viable Arab alternative to the Syrian government, this will mean transferring control of Raqqa to the regime in Damascus.

Finally, the United States must provide long-term guarantees to the Syrian Kurds, who now control a large territory, not all of which is Kurdish. For now, the Syrian Army is in no position to take on the Kurdish forces, but eventually, Mr. Assad will surely try to recreate the centralized Arab state he inherited from his father. He will also want to use Syria’s oil resources — much of which are now under Kurdish control — to finance reconstruction.

One option is to establish an American-protected Kurdish safe area in northeastern Syria similar to the one created in northern Iraq after the first gulf war. That expensive option is complicated by the inability of the United States to use Turkish air bases to enforce it. (Turkey regards the Kurds as its leading enemy in Syria.) The less costly alternative is to co-sponsor a Russian plan for an autonomous Kurdish area within a federal Syria.

However, Russia’s leverage with Mr. Assad will diminish as the opposition crumbles in Syria’s west and Russian airpower becomes less important. At that point, the opportunity to extract concessions will disappear, and the field will belong to Mr. Assad and Iran.

President-elect Donald J. Trump has stated his intention to work with Russia and Mr. Assad to defeat the Islamic State. The sooner America reaches out to Russia, ideally before January’s handover of administration, the better.

Peter W. Galbraith is a former United States ambassador to Croatia.

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook and Twitter (@NYTOpinion), and sign up for the Opinion Today newsletter.

Monday, December 05, 2016

Indian Joint fishing proposal reject by Mannar fishers

Indian academic’s proposal for joint fishing rejected by Mannar fishers
Sunday Times LK

A proposal by an Indian academic for joint fishing by Sri Lankan and Indian fishermen in the Palk Strait, without engaging in bottom trawling, was rejected on Friday by Mannar fishermen.

At least 37 fishermen from Mannar representing Pallimunai, Pesalai, and Talaimannar fishing villages were invited for a discussion with Prof. V. Suryanarayan, a leading specialist in South and Southeast Asian studies at the Navy Naval Command in Talaimannar. He was in town this week for the annual International Maritime Conference “Galle Dialogue”.

“In the first place we don’t know why the Navy had to arrange this meeting at a naval base. Also we have made it clear that we won’t allow Indian fishermen to engage in fishing in Lankan waters at any cost,”Mannar Fisheries Cooperative Union leader N.M. Aalam told the Sunday Times.

The discussion was solely focused on the possibilities of joint fishing by fishermen from both countries while Tamil Nadu fishermen were urged to switch to marine environment friendly fishing methods giving up their practice of bottom trawling.

“In addition to upholding the sovereignty of the country, as northern fishermen still struggling to come out from the economic impact of three decades of war, we can’t allow this to continue,” he said.

At the India-Sri Lanka Joint Working Group of Fisheries meeting held in New Delhi on November 5, India had agreed at policy level that bottom trawling had caused significant damage to marine resources in the Palk Strit and assured remedial steps will be taken to urge Tamil Nadu fishermen to go for deep sea fishing.

According to the joint communique, the working group consisting of ministers will meet in January next year in Colombo to continue their talks on finding a lasting solution to the poaching crisis.

 

Tamil Nadu CM Jeyalalitha Decclared Dead

 
ஜன சமுத்திரம்,பொலிஸ் கடல்,
 
மறைந்த தமிழக முதலமைச்சர் செல்வி.ஜெயலலிதா, எம்.ஜி.ஆர் அருகில் அரசுமரியாதையுடனும்,, ``அம்மா, தாயே``  என்கிற இலட்சோபம் விவசாயிகளின் அலறலின் மத்தியில், அமைதியான இறுதி ஊர்வலத்தின் பின் நல்லடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டார்.
 
 
   Last Updated               06 12 2016           13.30 GMT  

 
 
   Last Updated               06 12 2016           01.42 GMT    
 
 
பொதுமக்கள் பார்வைக்காக ராஜாஜி மண்டபத்தில் ஜெயாவின் பூத உடல்
 
 
 
                                 Last Updated               05 12 2016           21.20 GMT                                        
 

         First  Published                                            05 12 2016                                          12.30PM

 
     Last Updated                                           05 12 2016                                               20.30 GMT

சென்னை மரீனாக் கடற்கரையை அண்டிய ராஜாஜி மண்டபத்தில் பொதுமக்கள் பார்வைக்கு பூத உடல்.

எம்ஜிஆர் நினைவிட வளாகத்தில் முதலமைச்சர் ஜெயலலிதா உடல் நல்லடக்கம் செய்யப்படும்.

முதலமைச்சர் மறைவுக்கு 7 நாட்கள் அரசுமுறை துக்கம் அனுசரிப்பு
 

முதலமைச்சர் ஜெயலலிதா மறைவு: பள்ளி, கல்லூரிகளுக்கு 3 நாட்கள் விடுமுறை

Tamil Nadu chief minister J. Jayalalithaa died at 11.30pm on Monday, according to a statement by Apollo Hospital in Chennai.

Jayalalithaa, who had been hospitalized on 22 September, suffered a cardiac arrest on Sunday, following which she was admitted is on ECMO and other life support systems, Apollo said. ECMO, or Extra Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation, is a heart-and-lung machine used to support the body when one’s organs are too sick to do the job.

Despite all efforts, the chief minister’s “underlying conditions rendered her unable to recover”, the hospital said.

Earlier in the day, the faithful had gathered outside Apollo Hospital, as the city, the state of Tamil Nadu, and the entire country held its collective breath on Monday, while the state’s popular chief minister J. Jayalalithaa battled for life inside.
 
The city remained on edge for most of the day as periodic statements from the hospital and a specialist involved in treating the chief minister described her condition as “very critical” and “grave”, a distinct change from the optimistic tone of earlier statements on the health of Jayalalithaa, who has been in hospital since 22 September.

A brief rumour on her death was quickly scotched, but local law enforcement officials, businesses and some of the city’s older citizens who remember the widespread looting that followed the 1987 death of chief minister M.G. Ramachandran, Jayalalithaa’s mentor, remained nervous.
 
Like MGR, as he was and is popularly known, Jayalalithaa, has a cult following in the state, where she is known as Amma (mother) and Puratchi Thalaivi (revolutionary leader). Now in her fourth term as chief minister, Jayalalithaa has evolved her own style—a mix of authoritarianism and paternalism—to run a welfare state. She was first elected to the post in 1991, and also won elections in 2001, 2011 and 2016.
 
However, she has been dogged by allegations of corruption and has had to step down, albeit temporarily, as chief minister twice, for five months in 2001-02, and for eight months in 2014-15. Both times, O. Panneerselvam stood in for her, as he continues to do now.
 
“Despite our best efforts, our beloved CM remains in a grave situation,” Apollo Hospital’s joint managing director Sangita Reddy said in a Twitter post on Monday. An earlier bulletin from the hospital described her condition as “very critical”.

Richard Beale, a London-based doctor who was involved in Jayalalithaa’s treatment, concurred that the situation was “extremely grave”, though he confirmed that “everything possible is being done to give her the best chance” and that a team of doctors has been sent from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, to Chennai to help in Jayalalithaa’s treatment.

On Monday, supporters of the ruling All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam pelted the hospital with stones, shoved the barricades around it and threatened to burn it down if anything happened to their beloved leader.

Thousands of policemen have been stationed outside the hospital and roads in the area have been closed to regular traffic. Shops and some offices closed early, and the US Consulate in Chennai, which has temporarily suspended routine appointments, issued an advisory to visiting US citizens, asking them to review their “personal security plans”.

A significant part of India’s auto and auto-components industry is based in and around Chennai, which has in the past decade also emerged as a hub for IT services.

Sunday, December 04, 2016

Kashmir 150 Days


Day 149: Protests in Palhallan, Kulgam, Tral; Srinagar abuzz
In Srinagar, the summer capital, Sunday market remained abuzz throughout the day while shoppers could be seen buying winter stuff.

ABID BASHIR/ KHALID GUL
Srinagar/Anantnag, Publish Date: Dec 4 2016 11:11PM | Updated Date: Dec 4 2016 11:11PM

Even as Kashmir remained abuzz with activities on weekend relaxation call by joint resistance leadership, massive protests erupted at Palhallan and Tral area while as yet another school went up in flames in south Kashmir, witnesses and reports said on Sunday.

In Srinagar, the summer capital, Sunday market remained abuzz throughout the day while shoppers could be seen buying winter stuff.

Roads witnessed massive traffic jams as public transport plied smoothly. Private vehicles also plied on roads in a big number. This is the third weekend relaxation announced by the joint resistance leadership since July 8. In old city all major markets remained abuzz with activities.

Reports said that all the schools were open across Kashmir with full attendance of students.

South Kashmir

Devsar and other adjoining villages observed a complete shutdown on Sunday against the killing of a local Fisheries department employee, Asadullah  Kumar,  of Mudhal- Devsar allegedly by government forces.

The Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti visited the area amidst shutdown to inaugurate the JK Bank ATM. She also visited the hospital and college in Kelam village of Devsar. “Shops remained closed and traffic was of the roads in Devsar-  Kellam and adjoining villages,” witnesses said.

They said police and paramilitary forces were deployed in strength to thwart any attempts of protests. “Clashes, however, erupted between the forces and protesters after the Chief Minister left the area,” witnesses added.

Meanwhile, Dooru and Verinag areas of Anantnag district continued to observe shutdown against the killing of a Congress Sarpanch Sajad Malik allegedly by forces during police custody. Shops remained shut while traffic remained off the roads.

In Southern Tral area of Pulwama district clashes erupted on Sunday evening after the culmination of a religious function at the shrine of Hazrat Shah-e-Hamdan (RA).

Witnesses said that youth pelted stones on the paramilitary forces stationed in the town after the Urs of  Hazrat Shah-e-Hamdan ended at Khanqah-e-Faiz Panah. The forces responded by firing teargas shells.

Shopkeepers downed their shutters following the clashes. The whole market wore a deserted look despite the relaxation in shutdown called by the separatist leadership. “Some youth who were returning from Urs, pelted stones on forces who were chased” SP Awantipora Zahid Malik said. 

Earlier the annual Urs of Hazat Amir Kabeer Mir Syed Ali Hamdani (RA), popularly known as Shah-e-Hamdan, was observed at Khanqah-e-Faiz Panah in the area with religious fervor and enthusiasm. The Urs is observed on 6 Zul Hijjah every year but local Auqaf administration had postponed it due to the ongoing uprising.

Another school goes up in flames

Another government run school went into flames in a mysterious fire incident in Kokernag area of south Kashmir's Anantnag district last night.

Officials said that a government high school was torched at Narsangri in Larnoo area last night. “The fire damaged the rooftop of the  building and few rooms of,” an official  said.

The flames were brought under control by police and Fire and Emergency Department personnel, the official said, adding that no was injured in the incident. The cause of the fire is being ascertained, the official added.

North Kashmir

North Kashmir's Palhallan area observed a spontaneous shutdown on Sunday against the arrest of three local youth.

Locals alleged that forces raided the area last night and arrested three youth. As the word about the arrest spread, locals took to the streets in the morning and staged a massive protest demanding immediate release of the arrested youth. However, forces resorted to massive teargas shelling to disperse the protesters, who retaliated with stones triggering clashes.

NC condemns detention of legislators

The main opposition party National Conference has condemned the detention of its legislators from south Kashmir in Anantnag (Islamabad) while they were on their way to Dooru and said this incident had yet again exposed the "tyrannical and anti-democratic creed" of the current PDP-BJP dispensation.

In a statement here National Conference Provincial President Nasir Aslam Wani said the detention of party legislators Altaf Ahmed Kaloo, Abdul Majeed Larmi and Dr Bashir Ahmed Veeri indicates Government “desperation” in trying to hide what has happened in Dooru.

“Detaining legislators and disallowing them from reaching out to the people is extremely tragic and highly condemnable. This has exposed Mehbooba Mufti’s tall claims about working towards the restoration of normalcy in the state. When legislators are detained and not allowed to visit a specific area to ascertain the truth – all claims of the Chief Minister stand exposed as hollow rhetoric”, Wani said.

(WITH INPUTS FROM IRFAN AMIN MALIK, SHOWKAT DAR AND ALTAF BABA)

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