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Ukraine to give up nuke material; boost for summit

News4u-News Desk-President Barack Obama optimistically opened a 47-nation nuclear summit on Monday, boosted byUkraine’s announcement that it will give up its weapons-grade uranium.

At the same time, Obama and Chinese President Hu Jintao sought agreement on potential sanctions to discourage Iran’s efforts to come up with its own nuclear weapon.

Ukraine’s decision dovetailed with Obama’s goal of securing all vulnerable nuclear materials worldwide within four years — an objective that the White House hopes will be endorsed by all summit countries at a closing session on Tuesday, even if the means to accomplish it are unclear.

The fear is that terrorists or a nation other than the major nuclear powers could obtain crucial ingredients and inflict horrendous damage.

Before formally opening the summit with a reception and working dinner, Obama held a series of one-on-one meetings with leaders from China, Jordan, Ukraine, Armenia andMalaysia.

Presidential aides billed the summit as the largest gathering of world leaders hosted by an American president since the 1945 conference in San Francisco that founded the United Nations.

In a brief exchange with reporters at the White House, Obama said of the summit: “It’s impressive. I think it’s an indication of how deeply concerned everybody should be with the possibilities of nuclear traffic, and I think at the end of this we’re going to see some very specific, concrete actions that each nation is taking that will make the world a little bit safer.”

The talks are a centerpiece of Obama’s broader agenda for ridding the world of nuclear weapons, a long-term process that he says should include gradual disarmament by the nuclear powers, stronger steps to head off a nuclear arms race and more urgent action to lock down tons of plutonium and highly enriched uranium that are the key building blocks of atomic weapons.

According to Harvard’s Belfer Center, there are about 3.5 million pounds of highly enriched uranium and half a million pounds of bomb-grade plutonium in the world.

Combined, they could be used to build as many as 200,0000 nuclear weapons, or about 8 1/2 times the world’s current total of 23,360 warheads.

Not all countries share Obama’s view that the nuclear-materials problem is a priority.

Some think the bigger emphasis should be on disarmament, particularly by the United States and Russia, which despite recent reductions still possess 90 percent of the world’s nuclear arms.

At a parallel unofficial conference of more than 200 international nuclear experts, participants said too many leaders don’t share Obama’s urgency about nuclear ingredients.

“There is a great complacency among policymakers around the world that terrorist groups couldn’t make a nuclear bomb,” said Matthew Bunn of Harvard.

In a detailed report on the challenge of securing nuclear materials, Bunn said no one really knows the likelihood of nuclear terrorism.

“But the consequences of a terrorist nuclear blast would be so catastrophic that even a small chance is enough to justify urgent action to reduce the risk,” he wrote.

“The heart of a major city could be reduced to a smoldering radioactive ruin, leaving tens to hundreds of thousands of people dead.”

Seeking to highlight the urgency of the threat posed by terrorists in pursuit of a nuclear bomb, John Brennan, the White House’s counterterrorism chief, told reporters that al-Qaida is actively in search of the key ingredients for a bomb and the expertise to assemble it.

He said such an improvised device could be obtained through criminal gangs or by infiltrating nuclear labs in Pakistan or other nuclear nations.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Obama’s conference offers a way to reinforce existing global controls on nuclear materials.

“It’s an area that people talk about a lot, but frankly there hasn’t been the concerted international attention in these two areas that there might have been,” Gates said at the Pentagon.

Another major concern of many attendees at the conference is that Iran will build or obtain a nuclear weapon.

Iran was a major topic of a lengthy meeting between Obama and Hu, said White House national security aide Jeff Bader.

“They’re prepared to work with us,” Bader said of the Chinese position on Iran, a stance he called a sign of international unity.

He said Obama and Hu agreed that a set of potential sanctions should make clear to Iran the cost of continued nuclear defiance.

Yet there was no breakthrough, and Chinese spokesman Ma Zhaoxu did not mention sanctions in his more-general statement on the meeting.

“China and the United States share the same overall goal on the Iranian nuclear issue,” the Chinese statement said.

Brazil and Turkey are studying an alternative proposal to deal with Iran’s controversial nuclear program, Brazilian minister of foreign affairs, Celso Amorim, said Monday.

Brazilian president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, talked about designing a strategy different from sanctions.

Amorim said in a press conference that Brazil agrees with the permanent members of the Security Council seeking a “diplomatic solution,” but Brazil has a different perspective on how the issue should be approached.

Iran’s U.N. Ambassador Mohammad Khazee on Monday declared Obama’s new nuclear policy, which excludes Iran from a U.S. pledge not to use nuclear weapons against countries that do not have them, an act of “state terrorism” because it threatens nations with weapons of mass destruction.

“This policy of nuclear blackmail and terror” runs counter to international law and the U.N. Charter and “must be denounced by the international community and all peace-loving nations,” Khazee told a General Assembly committee considering a draft Comprehensive Convention on Terrorism.

Ukraine, which gave a major boost to arms control in 1994 when it agreed to surrender the nuclear weapons it inherited in the collapse of the Soviet Union, agreed to get rid of its weapons-grade fuel by 2012, according to the White House.

Some details are yet to be worked out, including how and where the fuel will be disposed of, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said.

Gibbs said the material could be sent to the U.S. or Russia. He declined to specify the amount, other than to say it was enough to make several nuclear weapons.

After a private meeting, Obama and Ukraine President Viktor Yanukovych issued a statement in which Obama praised the agreement as historic and pledged U.S. technical and financial assistance to support it. No dollar amount was mentioned.

As for nuclear risks from terrorists, Brennan said that al-Qaida and other groups “know that, if they are able to acquire highly enriched uranium or separated plutonium and turn it into a weapon, they would have the ability not only to threaten our security and world order in an unprecedented manner but also to kill and injure many thousands of innocent men, women, and children, which is al-Qaida’s sole agenda.”

The counterterror chief said international criminal gangs, aware of al-Qaida’s interest, are a potential source of key materials.

He said some criminal groups have tricked al-Qaida by offering sales of phony materials, but al-Qaida has responded by developing the scientific expertise it needs to weed out scams.

Al-Qaida also is a threat to penetrate the nuclear establishments of countries like Pakistan, where al-Qaida leadership resides, Brennan said.

“Al-Qaida is looking for those vulnerabilities and facilities and stockpiles in different countries that would allow them to obtain the byproducts of nuclear reactors and materials that they can use, but also to go after those individuals that might have access to the materials, as well as individuals who have the expertise that they need to actually fabricate and improvise a nuclear device,” he said.

Asked whether there is evidence that they’ve tried such inroads in Pakistan, Brennan replied, “There’s evidence of their attempts to do that. I would like to think that we have been able to thwart their success to date.”

The District of Columbia stepped up security and restricted pedestrian, vehicle and other traffic in the area surrounding the convention center where the summit was being held. A bicyclist was killed Monday night when she collided with a D.C. National Guard vehicle assigned to the summit’s motorcade route, authorities said.

US President Barack Obama meets with Ukraine President Viktor Yanukovych during the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, Monday

US President Barack Obama meets with Ukraine President Viktor Yanukovych during the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, Monday

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PM meets leaders of parties favouring Women’s bill

News4u- News Desk- New Delhi, (PTI) With Rajya Sabha witnessing pandemonium over opposition to Women’s Reservation Bill, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh met leaders of parties backing the Bill amid indications that he would call an all party meeting tomorrow to discuss how it can be passed smoothly.

Singh met leaders of BJP, CPI-M, CPI and TDP after SP and RJD stalled the functioning of both houses of Parliament protesting against the Bill that provides for 33 reservation to women in Lok Sabha and state assemblies.

The meeting was called to discuss the strategy for ensuring the passage of the land-mark legislation. While the government was keen on passing the bill today itself without discussion, leaders attending the meeting insisted on a discussion before passing the Bill.

“We want the bill to be passed and also want the Parliamentary procedure to be respected,” CPI leader Gurudas Dasgupta said.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh

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Rahul Gandhi meets Malaysian PM

News4u-News Desk-In a first of its kind, Congress General Secretary Rahul Gandhi on Thursday had a formal meeting with Malaysian Prime Minister Mohd Najib Tun Abdul Razak who wanted to “touch base” with the next generation leader of India.

The meeting was sought by the Malaysian Prime Minister who wanted to have discussions with the young Congress leader about various aspects of his party, sources said.

During the hour-long discussions, Razak enquired about the functioning of the Congress and the secrets of its success considering that it has been in power for so long, they said.

The Malaysian Prime Minister, who heads a coalition government, also wanted to know how Congress is working with other parties in running the government.

The sources said Razak, who is Malaysia’s second Prime Minister, wanted to “touch base” with the next generation leader of India.

The sources described the meeting as a “casual chat”.

This was the first formal meeting that Rahul Gandhi has had with any head of government or state in India. He has met foreign leaders during some of his visits abroad.

UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi had met Razak on Wednesday

Congress General Secretary Rahul Gandhi

Congress General Secretary Rahul Gandhi

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Japan’s Ozawa meets PM after arrest

News4u- News Desk- The Japanese ruling party’s No.2, Ichiro Ozawa, met briefly with Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama at his residence hours after the arrest of two former aides in a funding scandal, Kyodo news agency said Saturday.

Both men left without commenting on whether Ozawa, widely seen as the real power in the ruling Democratic Party, would step down over the 400 million yen (4.41 million dollars) scandal.

Domestic media have reported pressure on Ozawa is rising, adding to the woes of Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama’s government ahead of a key mid-year election.

A third suspect in the funding scandal, Takanori Okubo, a current aide to Ozawa, was arrested today, Kyodo news agency said.

Prosecutors are investigating the source of cash the veteran politician’s funding group used to pay for a plot of land in Tokyo. Ozawa, widely seen as the real power in the ruling Democratic Party, has repeatedly said there was no intentional wrongdoing.

Hatoyama said as recently as Friday Ozawa should stay in his post as secretary-general, where he plays a key role in election strategy.

Hatoyama faces his own funding scandal and opposition lawmakers have vowed to attack the two leaders over corruption in the new session of parliament, which starts on Monday.

Ozawa intends to stay on in his post after three of his aides were arrested over a funding scandal, domestic media said Saturday.

Ozawa apologized over the fuss in a speech to a gathering of regional assembly members, but that he wanted to stay in his post.

Yukio Hatoyama and Ichiro Ozawa

Yukio Hatoyama and Ichiro Ozawa

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Prachanda meets PM to end poll deadlock

News4u-News Desk-Hours after declaring that he would not hold talks with the “puppet government” in Nepal, Maoists supremo Prachanda took a U-turn as he met the Prime Minister in a bid to end the political crisis, which threatens to spark a fresh round of violence in the country.

Nepal’s main opposition party Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) on Tuesday threatened to paralyze the country with an indefinite general strike from 24th Jan and declared that it would no longer hold talks with Nepal’s ruling parties who were “robots” “remote-controlled” by India.

However, Prachanda met Madhav Kumar Nepal along with hardliner Maoist leader Mohan Vaidya Kiran to find a way out of the political crisis which threatens to engulf the country in a fresh round of violence. They also discussed about Nepal’s forthcoming visit to China, according to sources close to the Prime Minister.

The Maoists supremo told his supporters at the end of the party’s three-day anti-government agitation that he has no hopes of ending the current deadlock through dialogue with Nepali Congress and the CPN-UML as they act as per the orders from New Delhi.

Prachanda had also demanded the scrapping of the 1950 Indo-Nepal Peace and Friendship Treaty along with all other unequal  pacts with India.

The former rebel leader also called for the withdrawal of Indian troops from Kalapani, a disputed part of Nepal’s territory on the borders of India, Nepal and China.

His remarks about talking directly to New Delhi comes ahead of a planed three-day visit by Indian Foreign Minister S. M. Krishna to Nepal in mid-January.

Meanwhile, a top meeting of the Maoists on Wednesday decided to end its seven month long disruption of Parliament, which is tasked to frame a new constitution.

The 601-member Constituent Assembly, which functions as the country’s parliament, returned to normal for the first time since May after the Maoists ended its protests that had brought the government to a standstill.

“Instead of demonstrating and chanting slogans to disrupt parliament we will try to discuss and debate the issues,” said Baburam Bhattarai, the deputy leader of the party.

The anti-government protests by the CPN-Maoist was aimed to step up pressure on the embattled 22-party coalition to rectify the “unconstitutional” decision of President Ram Baran Yadav, who reinstated the then army chief Gen Rukmangad Katawal, dismissed by Prachanda in May.

Political tensions have been high in Nepal since a government led by the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) resigned earlier this year amid the dispute with the president

over the army chief’s refusal to incorporate former Maoist rebels fighters into the military.

The deepening political crisis has put new stresses on Nepal’s reconciliation efforts after the end of the insurgency in 2006, amid fears that the already stalled peace process may be derailed.

Maoists supremo Prachanda

Maoists supremo Prachanda

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Nepal Cabinet meets in shadow of Mt Everest

News4u-News Desk-Armed with oxygen tanks, Premier Madhav Kumar Nepal and his 23 Cabinet colleagues on Friday held a historic meeting at the base camp of Mt Everest amid freezing temperatures to highlight the danger posed by global warming to the Himalayas, ahead of the key Copenhagen summit on climate change.

In a 10-point declaration issued at the end of the half-an-hour meeting at Kala Patthar plateau, which is 17,200 ft above the sea level, the ministers said the countries contributing to the green house gas emission should bear the responsibility to minimise the impact of climate change.

The meeting also declared Apinama-Gaurishanker region as the new conservation area, according to the declaration read out by Prime Minister Nepal at a press meet at Syangboche, near the base camp of the world’s highest peak, shortly after the Cabinet talks.

He also announced an increase in protected area coverage to 25 percent from the previous 20 percent and pledged to consolidate the 40 percent forest coverage of the country.

The Prime Minister called on developed nations to study the impact of climate change on the poor, marginalised, backward communities and women and children living in the 2,700 km-long Himalayan region.

The climate change issue is not only linked to the mountainous countries and those at the sea level, it has become the common global phenomenon, he pointed out.

The aim of the meeting at Kala Patthar was to raise awareness about the melting Himalayas due to climate change.

“We are here to give the message to the world that the climate change is going to affect 1.3 billion people of the Himalayan belt and lower areas,” the Premier said.

Scientists say the Himalayan glaciers are melting at an alarming rate, resulting in creation of huge lakes with walls that threaten to burst and flood mountain communities downstream.

Deputy Prime Minister Sujata Koirala, who also attended the meeting, called on industrialised countries to provide funds to help developing nations cope with climate change.

Nepal will submit the 10-point agenda during the 7th-18th December Copenhagen climate change conference.

The government has also decided to launch a ‘Summit to Safe Himalayas’ march past in Copenhagen to draw global attention to the impact of the climate change to the Himalayan range.

The march past will be attended by dozens of Everest summiteers from Nepal and across the globe.

Ahead of the meeting at the Mt Everest base camp, the Nepalese ministers were examined by doctors after which they were given the green signal to proceed to Kala Patthar in helicopters.

The Himalayas

The Himalayas

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UN commission meets Musharraf in connection with Bhutto’s probe

News4u-News Desk-The UN investigation body probing former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s assassination has met and questioned former President Pervez Musharraf in a “frank and cordial” conversation.
The body, looking into the facts and circumstances behind the assassination, has met “dozens” of officials during its investigation, a spokesperson from the Secretary General’s office told journalists in UN on Thursday.
“The Commission of Inquiry says that it had a frank, open and cordial conversation with former President Musharraf, having been able to pose to him many queries on issues central to its mandate,” the spokesperson said.
While the UN did not reveal the location of the meeting, a media report in Pakistan quoted Musharraf’s spokesperson Nasim Ashraf as saying that the meeting took place in Philadelphia on 27th Oct.
A brief statement carried by Dawn newspaper, quoted Musharraf as saying: “While I met the team, I strongly oppose any international probe into Pakistan’s domestic affairs”.
Bhutto was killed in a gun and bomb attack at a rally in the garrison town of Rawalpindi in December 2007 while campaigning for parliamentary elections.
Investigations carried out by the then Musharraf government blamed Baitullah Mehsud, a Pakistani Taliban commander who operates in the lawless tribal areas of northwest region.
UK’s Scotland Yard was also called to investigate the killing.
Bhutto’s supporters, not satisfied by Pakistani investigations, have accused Musharraf of having involvement in the assassination.
After Asif Ali Zardari became president, Pakistan requested the UN to conduct an independent investigation.
The Commission, that started its work on 1st Jul to perform “fact finding activities in Pakistan and abroad”, was criticized for having a limited mandate.
The mandate of the body is limited to determining the facts and circumstances of the assassination and does not have any competence to establish criminal responsibilities.
The commission members have already met Zardari and members of his cabinet, including Interior Minister Rehman Malik, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, and will soon be meeting opposition leader Nawaz Sharif.
It is expected to submit a report to UN Chief Ban Ki-moon within six months of starting its work in July.
Ban will then share the report with the government of Pakistan and submit it to the Security Council.

News4u-News Desk-The UN investigation body probing former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s assassination has met and questioned former President Pervez Musharraf in a “frank and cordial” conversation.

The body, looking into the facts and circumstances behind the assassination, has met “dozens” of officials during its investigation, a spokesperson from the Secretary General’s office told journalists in UN on Thursday.

“The Commission of Inquiry says that it had a frank, open and cordial conversation with former President Musharraf, having been able to pose to him many queries on issues central to its mandate,” the spokesperson said.

While the UN did not reveal the location of the meeting, a media report in Pakistan quoted Musharraf’s spokesperson Nasim Ashraf as saying that the meeting took place in Philadelphia on 27th Oct.

A brief statement carried by Dawn newspaper, quoted Musharraf as saying: “While I met the team, I strongly oppose any international probe into Pakistan’s domestic affairs”.

Bhutto was killed in a gun and bomb attack at a rally in the garrison town of Rawalpindi in December 2007 while campaigning for parliamentary elections.

Investigations carried out by the then Musharraf government blamed Baitullah Mehsud, a Pakistani Taliban commander who operates in the lawless tribal areas of northwest region.

UK’s Scotland Yard was also called to investigate the killing.

Bhutto’s supporters, not satisfied by Pakistani investigations, have accused Musharraf of having involvement in the assassination.

After Asif Ali Zardari became president, Pakistan requested the UN to conduct an independent investigation.

The Commission, that started its work on 1st Jul to perform “fact finding activities in Pakistan and abroad”, was criticized for having a limited mandate.

The mandate of the body is limited to determining the facts and circumstances of the assassination and does not have any competence to establish criminal responsibilities.

The commission members have already met Zardari and members of his cabinet, including Interior Minister Rehman Malik, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, and will soon be meeting opposition leader Nawaz Sharif.

It is expected to submit a report to UN Chief Ban Ki-moon within six months of starting its work in July.

Ban will then share the report with the government of Pakistan and submit it to the Security Council.

Former Late Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto

Former Late Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto

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President meets kids on Children’s Day

News4u-News Desk-For over 450 school children from different parts of the country, it was a memorable experience as they entered the sprawling Rashtrapati Bhavan campus to meet President Pratibha Patil on the occasion of Children’s day on Saturday.
The children and their teachers came from Mahbubnagar (Andhra Pradesh), Bahadurgarh and Sonepat (Haryana) along with various other schools from the National Capital Region.
Three-year-old Vaibhav Kumar dressed like India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru was delighted to meet Patil, who gave him a chocolate.
He soon became a favourite among the other children.
“For a successful person education is the strength. Indians worldwide are known as honest and hardworking… you should also strive to be one and excel in life,” Patil said while addressing children.
The children presented the President flower bouquets, portraits and paintings on various subjects related to climate change and environment.
“I wished the President good health and success. I loved the Rashtrapati Bhavan,” Mrinal Sharma, a student of class seventh from a Delhi-based school, said.
The children were taken on a tour of the Presidential palace and were treated to packaged sweets and delicacies.

News4u-News Desk-For over 450 school children from different parts of the country, it was a memorable experience as they entered the sprawling Rashtrapati Bhavan campus to meet President Pratibha Patil on the occasion of Children’s day on Saturday.

The children and their teachers came from Mahbubnagar (Andhra Pradesh), Bahadurgarh and Sonepat (Haryana) along with various other schools from the National Capital Region.

Three-year-old Vaibhav Kumar dressed like India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru was delighted to meet Patil, who gave him a chocolate.

He soon became a favourite among the other children.

“For a successful person education is the strength. Indians worldwide are known as honest and hardworking… you should also strive to be one and excel in life,” Patil said while addressing children.

The children presented the President flower bouquets, portraits and paintings on various subjects related to climate change and environment.

“I wished the President good health and success. I loved the Rashtrapati Bhavan,” Mrinal Sharma, a student of class seventh from a Delhi-based school, said.

The children were taken on a tour of the Presidential palace and were treated to packaged sweets and delicacies.

President meets kids on Childrens Day

President meets kids on Children's Day

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Prez meets Indian diaspora, asks them to join in eco growth

News4u-News Desk-President Pratibha Patil began her first State visit to the UK by meeting prominent Indian- origin people, including Nobel Laureate V Ramakrishnan, and asked them to join in the economic growth that the country has witnessed over the last decade.
At a dinner reception hosted by Indian High Commissioner Nalin Surie on Monday night, Patil appealed to the community members to join in the economic growth that India has seen in the recent years.
“I am confident that Indians living overseas will join in the endeavour to contribute to India’s growth. As members of the Indian diaspora, you know better than others the challenges and opportunities that a resurgent India represents,” Patil, who is the first Indian Head of State to visit the UK in the last 20 years, said.
The five-star luxury Hotel Marriott was flocked by prominent personalities of Indian diaspora including industrialist Lord Swraj Paul, ‘Curry King’ Ghulam Noon, noted businessmen S P Hinduja, Nath Puri and Jogindar Sangar, owner of Bentley Hotel, among others.
Patil congratulated Ramakrishnan, who won this year’s Nobel Prize for Chemistry, and said people of Indian origin have made “significant contributions” in the development of educational institutes in United Kingdom.
“Significant contributions have been made over a period of time, by Indian-origin teachers and scientists to the development of educational institutions in the UK,” she said.
The President said: “Most recently, we were delighted at the news of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry being conferred on Dr Venkataraman Ramakrishnan, an Indian-origin scientist currently working at the University of Cambridge.”
“Our focus for the future is to expand economic opportunities for all our people and propel the economy towards higher growth rate. We are in the process of undertaking a massive expansion of our infrastructure and to achieve energy security, food security and enhance welfare activities,” she said.
Patil said India has maintained six percent growth rate even during the times of global financial crisis which makes it one of the major economies of the world.
“Today, we are one of the major economies of the world and our weightage is only likely to grow further. Our conduct as the world’s largest democracy has also been impeccable. We have demonstrated an uninterrupted adherence to respecting the mandates of elections. We are a stable country with an attractive market,” she said.
The President said the young population of Indian diaspora are not only contributing to traditional areas of economy, healthcare and education, but also in culture, media and politics.
“In the years to come, this generation will be a vital bridge between our two countries,” she said.
President Patil said education linkages are an important pillar of our relationship, and the two countries have identified it as a priority area for co-operation.
She said the role of Indians in political and social life of Britain has been positively significant.
“We are proud that… there are over two dozen members of Indian origin in the Houses of Lords and Commons, representing all the three major British political parties,” she said.
Patil praised the first wave of immigrants from India who formed the backbone of Industrial workforce and played “a stellar role in rebuilding Britain’s war-ravaged economy.”
“You have worked hard and, today, there are many among you who are leaders in the world of business and finance. We recognise your achievements,” she said.
The President also applauded the contribution made by doctors and teachers from India to the public services in the UK, especially the National Health Service.
“When we hear the Prime Minister of Great Britain, His Excellency Mr Gordon Brown, mention the excellent treatment he personally received from by an Indian-origin doctor in the NHS, we feel proud of all of you,” she said.
“Today, the Indian Diaspora is estimated at about 25 million. We seek to engage and interact directly and substantively with them,” the President said.

News4u-News Desk-President Pratibha Patil began her first State visit to the UK by meeting prominent Indian- origin people, including Nobel Laureate V Ramakrishnan, and asked them to join in the economic growth that the country has witnessed over the last decade.

At a dinner reception hosted by Indian High Commissioner Nalin Surie on Monday night, Patil appealed to the community members to join in the economic growth that India has seen in the recent years.

“I am confident that Indians living overseas will join in the endeavour to contribute to India’s growth. As members of the Indian diaspora, you know better than others the challenges and opportunities that a resurgent India represents,” Patil, who is the first Indian Head of State to visit the UK in the last 20 years, said.

The five-star luxury Hotel Marriott was flocked by prominent personalities of Indian diaspora including industrialist Lord Swraj Paul, ‘Curry King’ Ghulam Noon, noted businessmen S P Hinduja, Nath Puri and Jogindar Sangar, owner of Bentley Hotel, among others.

Patil congratulated Ramakrishnan, who won this year’s Nobel Prize for Chemistry, and said people of Indian origin have made “significant contributions” in the development of educational institutes in United Kingdom.

“Significant contributions have been made over a period of time, by Indian-origin teachers and scientists to the development of educational institutions in the UK,” she said.

The President said: “Most recently, we were delighted at the news of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry being conferred on Dr Venkataraman Ramakrishnan, an Indian-origin scientist currently working at the University of Cambridge.”

“Our focus for the future is to expand economic opportunities for all our people and propel the economy towards higher growth rate. We are in the process of undertaking a massive expansion of our infrastructure and to achieve energy security, food security and enhance welfare activities,” she said.

Patil said India has maintained six percent growth rate even during the times of global financial crisis which makes it one of the major economies of the world.

“Today, we are one of the major economies of the world and our weightage is only likely to grow further. Our conduct as the world’s largest democracy has also been impeccable. We have demonstrated an uninterrupted adherence to respecting the mandates of elections. We are a stable country with an attractive market,” she said.

The President said the young population of Indian diaspora are not only contributing to traditional areas of economy, healthcare and education, but also in culture, media and politics.

“In the years to come, this generation will be a vital bridge between our two countries,” she said.

President Patil said education linkages are an important pillar of our relationship, and the two countries have identified it as a priority area for co-operation.

She said the role of Indians in political and social life of Britain has been positively significant.

“We are proud that… there are over two dozen members of Indian origin in the Houses of Lords and Commons, representing all the three major British political parties,” she said.

Patil praised the first wave of immigrants from India who formed the backbone of Industrial workforce and played “a stellar role in rebuilding Britain’s war-ravaged economy.”

“You have worked hard and, today, there are many among you who are leaders in the world of business and finance. We recognise your achievements,” she said.

The President also applauded the contribution made by doctors and teachers from India to the public services in the UK, especially the National Health Service.

“When we hear the Prime Minister of Great Britain, His Excellency Mr Gordon Brown, mention the excellent treatment he personally received from by an Indian-origin doctor in the NHS, we feel proud of all of you,” she said.

“Today, the Indian Diaspora is estimated at about 25 million. We seek to engage and interact directly and substantively with them,” the President said.


President of India Pratibha Patil

President of India Pratibha Patil

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Suu Kyi meets foreign diplomats to discuss lifting sanctions

News4u-News Desk-Myanmar’s detained pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi has on Friday been allowed by the country’s junta leader to meet Western diplomats to discuss sanctions imposed against the military-ruled country.
The decision came following the United States recent high level talks with Myanmar that came first in nearly a decade where the US denounced on lifting the sanctions against the country unless it forwards towards the democracy.
The opposition leader Suu Kyi in a sent letter to the junta leader Senior Gen Than Shwe late last month stated her willingness to cooperate with the military government to have the sanctions lifted against the country.
In reference to that, the letter sought permission from the military ruler to hold the meeting with Western diplomats in order to understand positions of governments that imposed the sanctions.
Suu Kyi continues to remain under house with the extended detention, however was consented to meet the foreign diplomats of the US, Great Britain and Australia for which she was driven to a government guest house.
The information was revealed by the officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press, however denied on disclosing the content of the meeting.
After the letter, Myanmar Relations Minister Aung Kyi met with Suu Kyi twice within a week. The second meeting took place on Wednesday.
The 64-year-old democracy icon, who eased her stance on the sanctions, had previously welcomed it as a way to pressurize the junta to achieve political reconciliation with the pro-democracy movement.
The movement has insisted on concessions from the government if they are to work together, particularly the freeing of political prisoners.
The Nobel Peace Prize winner, Suu Kyi has been under house arrest for 14 of the last 20 years and the United States had served the release of the pro-democracy leader as one of the demands for lifting sanctions against the country.

News4u-News Desk-Myanmar’s detained pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi has on Friday been allowed by the country’s junta leader to meet Western diplomats to discuss sanctions imposed against the military-ruled country.

The decision came following the United States recent high level talks with Myanmar that came first in nearly a decade where the US denounced on lifting the sanctions against the country unless it forwards towards the democracy.

The opposition leader Suu Kyi in a sent letter to the junta leader Senior Gen Than Shwe late last month stated her willingness to cooperate with the military government to have the sanctions lifted against the country.

In reference to that, the letter sought permission from the military ruler to hold the meeting with Western diplomats in order to understand positions of governments that imposed the sanctions.

Suu Kyi continues to remain under house with the extended detention, however was consented to meet the foreign diplomats of the US, Great Britain and Australia for which she was driven to a government guest house.

The information was revealed by the officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press, however denied on disclosing the content of the meeting.

After the letter, Myanmar Relations Minister Aung Kyi met with Suu Kyi twice within a week. The second meeting took place on Wednesday.

The 64-year-old democracy icon, who eased her stance on the sanctions, had previously welcomed it as a way to pressurize the junta to achieve political reconciliation with the pro-democracy movement.

The movement has insisted on concessions from the government if they are to work together, particularly the freeing of political prisoners.

The Nobel Peace Prize winner, Suu Kyi has been under house arrest for 14 of the last 20 years and the United States had served the release of the pro-democracy leader as one of the demands for lifting sanctions against the country.


Pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi

Pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi

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