New Delhi, Aug 9 - After the government sought to assure senior leaders Mulayam Singh Yadav, Lalu Prasad and Murli Manohar Joshi that there would be no scaling down of their security cover, former bureaucrats and ministers have been lobbying to ensure that their security too remains untouched.
Around 400 VIPs are being provided with security cover in Delhi. Many in the list include politicians, former bureaucrats, judges, religious leaders, lawyers, ministers and a few journalists. Many of them have been enjoying top grade cover for years despite intelligence reports confirming there is no threat to their lives.
Sources say the review committee under Home Secretary G.K. Pillai has given a go ahead for lowering the security cover of many VIPs. Now the million-dollar-question is: Will the government actually whittle down their bodyguards?
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An invite, not an Air India boarding pass!
Journos on the aviation beat were surprised to see a formal invitation card for the first press conference of Arvind Jadhav, the chairman and managing director of Air India who took charge of the troubled carrier a couple of months ago.
Used to calls from the Air India media relations team for such events, scribes were taken aback over the terse wording of the invite. 'As seating arrangements are limited, entry will be restricted to invitees only.'
Not just that, it wanted journalists to ensure they bring the card along and be seated by 4.15 p.m., as Jadhav was to address the media 15 minutes later.
Not only did scores of scribes turn up, all managed to get in. 'It's just an invite, not a boarding pass!' quipped one.
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K-word out, B-word in
Now that some of the din and dust kicked up by the Sharm-el-Shaikh joint statement has settled, what is becoming clear is that considerable groundwork took place between the foreign ministries of India and Pakistan leading to the impugned two-page, 12-para note after their meeting on the sidelines of the non-aligned summit at the Egyptian desert resort.
The two foreign secretaries who were charged with the responsibility of drafting the joint statement came out twice with independent versions before they were asked by the two prime ministers to combine them into a joint one incorporating the views and sentiments of both sides. The statement that finally came out was cleared by Prime Ministers Manmohan Singh and Yusuf Raza Gilani.
The incorporation of Balochistan was not considered particularly offending - even though it was appearing in a joint statement for the first time - because the subject had been discussed at bilateral talks at various levels in the past. Pakistan thought that if the exclusion of the K-word (Kashmir) was a concession by Islamabad, the inclusion of the B-word had to be a matching concession from New Delhi.
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A daunting Nobel laureate
If a faux pas committed by Vice President Hamid Ansari in the presence of Nobel laureate Amartya Sen is any indication, the latter is surely an overwhelming personality.
Ansari committed the gaffe while addressing a function organised to celebrate the golden jubilee of the Bar Association of India (BAI). Besides Sen, the event was attended by Law Minister M. Veerappa Moily, eminent jurist and BAI president Fali S. Nariman and the top echelons of the judiciary.
In his opening remarks, Ansari described BAI as the Bar Council of India (BCI). While BCI is the country's apex statutory body to regulate legal education, exercise disciplinary jurisdiction over lawyers and practice in the country, the BAI, set up by eminent jurist M.C. Setalvad, strives for the welfare of lawyers.
Ansari was quick to confess: 'I'm too daunted by the presence of Nobel laureate Sen and a galaxy of other legal luminaries.'
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Rising solar power, but flagging interest
Minister for New and Renewable Energy Farooq Abdullah has established a reputation in the capital that he is not very interested in his portfolio, say insiders, though it includes the world's most ambitious solar energy development plan.