Monday, August 31, 2015

Senior Bureaucrat Rajiv Mehrishi Will Be New Home Secretary

New Delhi:  In a high-level shake-up in the government, a new home secretary will take over just six months after the last appointment.

 

Senior bureaucrat Rajiv Mehrishi has been appointed home secretary in place of LC Goyal, whose appointment in February was also sudden. The new Home Secretary has had a stint in Rajasthan where he served as Chief Secretary and was hand picked by the Prime Minister to serve in the central government

 

Mr Goyal had replaced Anil Goswami, who was asked to go for allegedly interfering in a CBI probe on behalf of a Congress leader.

 
A government statement said Mr Goyal’s request for voluntary retirement has been approved by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. He has reportedly cited “personal reasons.”

 

Mr Mehrishi, a 1978 batch IAS officer, was Secretary in the Department of Economic Affairs, Finance Ministry. He was due to retire today but has been given a two-year extension.

 

Sources say “low synergy” between the finance and home ministries was among the reasons for the shuffle. They also say Mr Goyal had few options but to make way for a new officer in his place. He has not enjoyed the best of ties with the government or the finance ministry.

Indrani Mukerjea Being Mistreated by Cops, Lawyers Allege

Indrani Mukerjea Being Mistreated by Cops, Lawyers Allege

Indrani Mukerjea being taken, with her face covered, for questiniong to the Khar Police Station in Mumbai on Saturday. (Press Trust of India)



Mumbai:  Indrani Mukerjea, arrested for the murder of her young daughter Sheena Bora, has been beaten by the police, say sources on her legal team, adding that they are being given grossly inadequate access to the 43-year-old former media executive.

Ms Mukerjea’s legal team is headed by noted lawyer Mahesh Jethmalani.  Sources working with him say that in a phone call, he told Mumbai police chief Rakesh Maria, that his client is visibly bruised, and that on Saturday night, her meeting with her lawyers was conducted inexplicably in the presence of five policemen.  Sources say a formal complaint is unlikely to be filed today in the court where Ms Mukerjea will be brought along with the others arrested in the case – former husband Sanjeev Khanna, and driver Shyam Rai.


Ms Mukerjea was arrested a week ago  -the result of an anonymous phone call and three months of surveillance- for allegedly strangling Ms Bora, then setting her body on fire in 2012. Till her arrest, Ms Mukerjea, who is married to TV tycoon Peter Mukerjea, had maintained that Ms Bora was her younger sister who had relocated to the United States to study.

At the time, Ms Bora was engaged to Peter Mukerjea’s son from an earlier marriage, Rahul Mukerjea.  


Police sources say their investigation has looked at two possible motives for the killing. The young couple’s parents had expressed their disapproval of the relationship between step-siblings; the other strand of inquiry is a financial dispute, allegedly ceded during interrogation by Ms Mukerjea, who has reportedly confessed that she “hated” Ms Bora but didn’t murder her.


The second of her three husbands- Sanjeev Khanna- has allegedly confessed to his role in the killing, stating that Ms Mukerjea led him to believe that the daughter they share, 17-year-old Vidhie, was likely to be killed by Ms Bora and her brother, Mekhail.


Ms Mukerjea, according to her son, tried to have him killed on different occasions, including on the day that Ms Bora was killed. 


Oops. Someone Hacked Into Big B's Twitter Account and Did This

This happened. Amitabh Bachchan, Bollywood boss on Twitter, had a rude start to his Monday. He logged in, found himself following ‘sex sites’ and deduced that his account had been hacked.


 

He appears to have now excluded the offending sites from the 984 accounts he follows.


The 72-year-old actor is India’s most followed celebrity on social media with a Twitter community that’s over 16.5 million strong. He’s also one Bollywood’s most active users of Twitter and Facebook and also runs his own blog. Big B has been on Twitter since May 2010. (Also Read: Amitabh Bachchan Now Has 16 Million Twitter Fans and Counting)


Last seen in Piku with Deepika Padukone, Amitabh Bachchan has Wazir with Farhan Akhtar coming up and will also make a special appearance in director R Balki’s Ki and Ka, currently shooting.


Senior bureaucrat Rajiv Mehrishi will be new home secretary

New Delhi:  In a high-level shake-up in the government, a new home secretary will take over just six months after the last appointment.

Senior bureaucrat Rajiv Mehrishi has been appointed home secretary in place of LC Goyal, whose appointment in February was also sudden.


Mr Goyal had replaced Anil Goswami, who was asked to go for allegedly interfering in a CBI probe on behalf of a Congress leader.


A government statement said Mr Goyal’s request for voluntary retirement has been approved by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. He has reportedly cited “personal reasons.”


Mr Mehrishi, a 1978 batch IAS officer, was Secretary in the Department of Economic Affairs, Finance Ministry. He was due to retire today but has been given a two-year extension.


Sources say “low synergy” between the finance and home ministries was among the reasons for the shuffle. They also say Mr Goyal had few options but to make way for a new officer in his place. He has not enjoyed the best of ties with the government or the finance ministry.



 


In '65 War, His Plane Crashed in Pak. Then, a Great Escape.


In the early part of the 1965 war with Pakistan, Dara Phiroze Chinoy, a young Flying Officer with the Indian Air Force found himself suddenly trapped on enemy land.

“An anti-aircraft shell had exploded into my engine and the engine flamed out. The aircraft was on fire and there was smoke and flames in the cockpit. I couldn’t see anything,” Chinoy, now 70, told NDTV in his house in Bengaluru.


His story is one of the greatest wartime escapes by any Indian in any war fought by India.  



 




Dara Phiroze Chinoy as a young IAF pilot



 

On September 10, 1965, Flying Officer Dara Chinoy, a 20-year-old Parsi from Mumbai, was flying French-built Dassault Mystere fighter-bombers out of the Adampur Air base in Punjab. He was a rookie, having been commissioned just two years earlier. Then his unit was tasked to take out a Pakistani artillery position just across the border in Pakistani Punjab. According to Chinoy, “There was a gun position harassing our Army and they had to keep their heads down. They were trying to cross the Ichhogil canal but they couldn’t because of these heavy artillery guns which were keeping them down. We were supposed to destroy one of these targets [located] in South Pakistan.”

 

Eager to rush into battle with his Squadron Mates, the young Flying Officer didn’t bother to grab a quick bite, or for that matter, drink a drop of water, something that nearly cost him his life in the hours ahead.

 

“As we pulled up for the attack on the gun position, I felt a solid thud in the bottom of my aircraft”. With his fighter jet on fire (there was no co-pilot), Chinoy ejected.

 




Chinoy has cheated death three times in a little more than the last fifty years.




Floating to the ground with his parachute, he very nearly made an easy target. “On the way down, they were firing at me with rifles. I could hear the zing of the rifle shots as I could also hear the loud booming of the anti-aircraft guns. As I landed, escaping the gunfire from the rifles, they were shouting saying ‘Maaro’ (kill) and using abusive language.”

With his heart in his mouth, the young pilot ran for his life. “They chased me on jeeps and on foot but, fortunately, the crops were not being attended to and the grass was tall. It was a sugarcane field with grass and sugarcane growing upto six feet high, so I was dodging them like a rabbit. I managed to dodge them by heading North, keeping the setting sun to my left. They expected me to head East.”  



 



But the game was far from over. Chinoy realised that the only real opportunity to hot-foot it across the border and get into India would be under the cover of darkness. “I waited for the sun to set. There was the moon rising at the same time as the sun set (in) those days, so that guided me towards the East. I burnt all my authentication sheets and maps and removed all shiny objects.”
Alternating between running, jogging and walking for the next five hours, Chinoy was tired, his throat parched and his legs and back aching because of the force of the ejection he had undergone hours earlier. “My greatest fear was that I would fall unconscious because of a lack of water – dehydration – and whoever found my unconscious body would kill me and ask questions later.”



 



Eventually, he regained his strength after finding a well where he drank to his heart’s content. But there was hardly a moment to waste. Swimming across canals, some deep, and running some more, avoiding villagers and stray dogs along his hastily-improvised route, Dara Chinoy came finally across what looked like the Amritsar-Batala highway.  



 



But he wasn’t sure. And even if this was India, the danger was not behind him. “At dawn, I came across some soldier talking in a South Indian language. I challenged them first saying ‘kaun hain vahan? (who goes there)’? Of course, [within moments] they had me kneeling at gunpoint with my hands raised. I said I was Flying Officer Chinoy. They asked for ID.” But the young fighter pilot had none to show – he had destroyed or thrown away all personal identification when he was behind enemy lines.  



 



Eventually, he was freed and allowed to return to his Unit. Back at his base in Adampur in Punjab, Chinoy received a raucous welcome. “My roommate, in good humour, said ‘Oh no, he’s back"”.  



 




Dara Phiroze Chinoy with Squadronmates



 

And within days, Chinoy was back in the thick of action flying over Pakistan.

 

Remarkably, Chinoy who retired as Group Captain, has cheated death three times in a little more than the last fifty years. Even before his ordeal in 1965, Chinoy, just a trainee-pilot in 1964, ejected from an Ouragan fighter over the Brahmaputra river after his jet developed a serious loss of control problem with a runaway electric trimmer (a key control system in the aircraft). In 1987, Chinoy faced another life and death situation when he had to eject from a MiG-21 after a bird hit to his jet.

 

But his love for aviation remained steady. For several years, Dara Chinoy continued flying as a civilian pilot, clocking thousands of hours operating corporate aircraft belonging to the Tatas and the Ambanis. 

Karnataka Scholar's Security Was Withdrawn Days Before his Killing






Dharwad:  Hundreds of people poured into a college in Karnataka today to pay tribute to renowned scholar MM Kalburgi, who was shot dead on the doorstep of his home on Sunday morning.




Here are 10 developments in the story:


  1. MM Kalburgi, the former vice chancellor of Hampi University, answered the doorbell at his home in Dharwad at around 8.40 am when he was shot in the forehead and chest.

  2. The attackers had come on a bike, said Dharwad police chief Ravindra Prasad. They are yet to be caught or identified. A six-member Special Investigation Team of the police will investigate the murder.

  3. Neighbours say the 77-year-old, a well-known let ideologue and rationalist, had received many threats to his life, but he had never taken them seriously.

  4. Dr Kalburgi was given a gunman as an escort last year but security was withdrawn on his request 15 days ago.

  5. The professor was provided security after he provoked the anger of fringe groups by speaking in support of writer UR Ananthamurthy, who had shared that as a child, he had urinated on idols. He had also commented that the Lingayat community that he belonged to, were not Hindus.

  6. A Sahitya Academy winner, Dr Kalburgi had several run-ins with Hindu rightwing groups who opposed his writings and speeches and called them “anti-Hindu.”

  7. The police have filed a case against an activist of Hindu rightwing group Bajrang Dal, Bhuvith Shetty, for a threatening tweet after the killing.

  8. The professor was provided security after he provoked the anger of fringe groups by speaking in support of writer UR

  9. Former Chief Minister BS Yeddyurappa, also a lingayat community leader, said: “Whatever be his views, he was a great historian and cannot be replaced. The culprits must be hanged.”

  10. In the last couple of years, there have been at least three such attacks. In August 2013, anti-superstition activist Narendra Dabholkar was shot dead in Pune while he was out for a morning walk. In February this year, social activist and veteran CPI leader Govind Pansare — who was holding agitations against toll tax among other issues — was shot dead in similar circumstances in Kolhapur.


Story First Published: August 31, 2015 12:39 IST