Monday, November 23, 2009
Power Projects in trouble as Chinese leave India
Saturday, November 21, 2009
What lies for Indian Doctors in the UK
Although the EU has been blowing the trumpet since long now, but Prime Minister Gordon Brown's statement that he is pledged to curb the entry of doctors and other professionals from outside Europe into the UK, as a new crackdown on immigration, is a move likely to adversely impact thousands of Indians. this came as the Labour government signaled a major shift in its immgration policy, the Prime Minister vowed to "stem rising tide of migration" and his government plans to restrict the points based system for determining which migrants can work in Britain. "One of the reasons that immigration will fall is the tightening of the new points system and it will continue to tighten over the next few months," Brown told theDaily Mail in an interview ahead of a major speech on immigration on Thursday.
Even as insisting that immigration had been a source of "economic, social and cultural strength" for Britain, Brown said the points-based system, introduced last year to control the entry of non-EU citizens to the UK by grading incomers on the skills they can offer the country, would be further toughened up.
In a major policy change, Brown is expected to announce that the door is being closed to non-EU hospital consultants, civil engineers, aircraft engineers and ship's officers, the report said. "I know people worry about whether immigration undermines their wages and the job prospects of their children and they also worry about whether they will get a decent home for their families," he underlined.
At times when the global leaders and experts have warned against the use of protectionist policies during recession, such a move seems to be naive and also promotes restrictions widening the already existent rift among the migrants and the natives. Britain should realise that it has one of the largest migrant diaspora population world over, but no wonder their eyes are closed and blinded with local politics wooing applause for all the wrong decisions and misguiding public as to what stand to benefit at large.
A Multi-entry Visa to 26/11 Suspects???
External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna had promised to look into the possible lapse that enabled Rana and a woman, Samraz Rana Akhthar, who he claimed to be his wife, get multiple entry visas under the discretion of the Consul General, even though a communique had been sent to all missions abroad in 2004 to verify antecedents of foreigners of Pakistan or Iranian origin, irrespective of their current nationality.
Vishvas Sapkal, Consul General at Chicago — who was left to respond to media queries — told HT that the visas were given after “due scrutiny”. All procedures have been followed, he had said on Monday. As per the procedure, no clearance from the home ministry was required in such cases, he told PTI on Wednesday. Rana was given a year-long business visa and Samraz was here on a tourist visa valid for five years. Both arrived in Mumbai on November 12 last year after which they travelled to Kochi four days later.
“No one can say with certainty that the consulate would have been able to detect Rana’s Lashkar links during the verification process. Or that it would not have…but it was something that should certainly have been done,” a home ministry official in Delhi said Hindustan Times, 19th Nov. 2009).
Friday, November 20, 2009
Abandoned 12-year old on streets of London
Gurinderjit Singh (12) has been abandoned by his parents and he is stuck in London for the last 20 months. Though he wants to be back in Punjab with his grandparents, but without a passport, he can’t be home. Guess what the lonely boy was found abandoned on a street in the Asian-dominated western London suburb of Southall on March 18, 2008. His parents, Mohinder Singh and Deepinder Kaur, used forged documents to travel and are in hiding to aviod being arrested and deported. “Both are in Europe. Mohinder is believed to be in Italy, while Deepinder is stated to be…in the United Kingdom,” the Ealing Council told the Punjab and Haryana High Court last week.
The boy is currently living with an Indian family appointed as his guardian by the West London Borough of Ealing council (local authority), which governs Southall. The council moved the court after the ministry of external affairs and the Indian high commission in London failed to arrange an emergency passport for the boy. As Singh’s passport is with his parents. “This has become a torture for him,” the council said. In its petition, the council criticised the ministry’s non-cooperative attitude. When “Gurinderjit’s uncle (Mohinder’s brother) came forward to claim his guardianship and filed a case in Punjab the council’s lawyer Anil Malhotra told the court that it could not be decided in the absence of the boy. He said the family division of the London high court had asked the Indian authorities to cancel the old passport and issue a new one to Singh.
“The MEA and high commission both have cited rules, saying an application for issuing a passport or an emergency certificate should be signed by parents in case of a minor,” Malhotra told the court. As usual though it been over an year the MEA refused comment, saying it was a matter to be decided by the court. It just shows how least concerned these institutions are with what happens to people they are supposed to be protecting and taking care of. (Hindustan Times: 19th November, 2009)