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G.M.Turns to the Chinese to Help Sales in India

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

Automaker General Motors began initial production of its “first Chinese-designed car for the Indian market” this week, Reuters reported in Talegaon, about 60 miles from Mumbai.

The Sail, which is already sold elsewhere “as a sedan and a hatchback,” will go on sale next month in India, the report said. The car was the first model designed by SAIC Motor, G.M.'s Chinese partner.

“Unlike the situation in China,” the report said, “where G.M. and Volkswagen top the passenger vehicle market with a combined 30 percent share,” in India, foreign automakers have struggled in the”highly competitive and price-sensitive” car market.

Read the full report.



Al Jazeera Wrests Back Its Web Sites From Pro-Assad Hackers

By CHRISTINE HAUSER

Hackers said to be supporters of the Syrian government temporarily took over Web sites of the satellite broadcaster Al Jazeera, which like many other news organizations has been transmitting reports of the fighting in Syria and its violent impact on civilians.

On Tuesday, users who tried to go to Al Jazeera's Arabic and English Web sites were instead directed to an image that said “Hack!!” and “Hacked by Al-Rashedon,” which is an Arabic reference that generally means “the rightly guided” ones, in bold letters across an image of the news organization's page. A Syrian flag waved in the background.

“In response to your stance against Syria (the people and the government), and support for only armed terrorist groups, and publication of news reports that are lies,” the Arabic statement said in part, “this is our response to you.”

On Wednesday, Al Jazeera reported that the cyber attack lasted several hours, by affecting a third-party service provider that distributes the station's online content worldwide in a security breach.

It said the authorities in the United States, where the content distributor is based, were investigating. AlJazeera.net is registered to Network Solutions, whose spokeswoman, Susan Datz Edelman, said she did not have an immediate “definitive” comment.

A spokesman for Al Jazeera, Osama Saeed, said in e-mailed statements: “Some visitors to our Web sites faced disruption after external DNS servers were compromised.”

“The company that operates them quickly resolved this, though some users may continue to experience issues for a couple of days,” he continued. “We th ank our online community for their patience and support.”

In another statement late on Wednesday, he said, “Just to give you a scale of the problem as it stands, we're only around 10 percent lower on our usual number of Web visitors.”

Other news organizations or human rights groups reporting on the conflict have been hacked in protest of their coverage. As The Lede reported last month, the international news agency Reuters temporarily suspended the operation of its blogging platform after its Web site was hacked and false reports of setbacks for Syrian rebels were posted online.

Amnesty International, the human rights organization, was also hacked.

Al Jazeera, based in Doha, Qatar, has aggressively covered the Syrian conflict and the other government upheaval going on in the Middle East for the past few years.

In a telephone interview, Mr. Saeed of Al Jazeera declined to discuss coverage or the possible motive of the hackers.

“We don't know anything about them, and what I understand, there is not much about them in the public domain,” he said.

He said the hacking also affected the organization's Balkans site.



McDonald\'s Vegetarian Restaurants: Latest in Long, Tough Battle to Woo India

By HEATHER TIMMONS

The announcement by McDonald's on Tuesday that it would open a few vegetarian-only restaurants in India next year marks the fast-food chain's latest attempt to appeal to consumers in an unlikely market.

The fast-food chain has been on a nearly two-decade slog in India, one marked by both controversy and success. On Tuesday, the company said it planned to open vegetarian outlets near the Golden Temple in Amritsar and a Hindu shrine in Jammu and Kashmir.

McDonald's now has 270 outlets in India, less than 1 percent of the company's more than 33,000 stores worldwide, but a much larger presence than Western food chains like KFC, which has 160 restaurants in India.

Mu ch of the controversy has revolved around the product on which the McDonald's brand is based: beef hamburgers. The company does not sell any beef products in India, where about 80 percent of the population is Hindu.

McDonald's accounts for 3 percent of all beef consumption in the United States, or some 800 million pounds a year, according to Meat Trade News Daily. (Based on average beef production per cow of 585 pounds, that's 1.37 million cows per year killed in the name of the fast-food chain, in the United States alone.)

Just over a decade ago, McDonald's was nearly forced to leave the country after it was reported that beef flavoring was in the fat it used to make French fries around the world. Shiv Sena and other Hindu activists protested McDonald's outlets, in some cases ransacking them. In a letter to then Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, activists demanded the chain be banned from India, saying “in a country where 80 per cent of the population worsh ips the cow, one cannot go on with this kind of a controversy,” The Hindu newspaper reported in May of 2001.

“McDonald's has made itself extra-sensitive in the Indian market since then, and the results are beginning to show,” The New York Times reported in 2003. “Its mayonnaise is made without eggs. All stores maintain two separate burger-cooking lines, one vegetarian and one not. Workers in the vegetarian section wear green aprons, and workers from the non-vegetarian section are forbidden to cross over without showering first.”

The Tuesday announcement inspired navel-gazing among avowed foreign vegetarians and enthusiasm from the Indian news media. But some Hindu groups took it as a call to arms.

McDonald's, an “organization associated with cow slaughter,” is attempting to humiliate Hindus by opening the outlets in religious spots, an official from the Swadeshi Jagran Manch, a branch of the Hindu nationalist group Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, told The Daily Telegraph of Britain. “We are definitely going to fight it.”



Video of Quebec Gunman\'s Rant After Shooting at Separatist Rally

By ROBERT MACKEY

As my colleague Ian Austen reports, the leader of Canada's separatist Parti Québécois was hustled off stage during a speech after her party's victory in a provincial election Tuesday night when a 62-year-old man opened fire outside the rally, leaving one man dead and another in critical condition.

A Montreal Gazette video report showed the interrupted address by party leader, Pauline Marois, who is in line to become Quebec's first female premier. Before she was forced off stage, the footage shows that Ms. Marois had switched from French to English to assure Quebec's Anglophone minority, “don't worry, your rights will be fully protected. We share the same history and I want us to shape together our c ommon future.”

Video of security guards hustling Pauline Marois, the leader of Canada's separatists Parti Québécois, off stage during a victory speech in Montreal on Tuesday night.

CBC News posted raw video online of the premier's speech being interrupted - just after she had said that the future of Quebec would be as “a sovereign nation” - and of the suspected gunman's arrest.

The footage showed the man, who wore a balaclava and bathrobe, shouting to onlookers and the media, in French, “The English are awakening!” as he was led away by police officers. Switching to English, the suspect warned in obscene terms that there would be “payback.” Before he was bundled into a police car, he added: “gonna make trouble!”

The man was described by the police as a resident of Quebec, but not from Montreal where the shooting took place, The Montreal Gazette rep orts.

Despite the suspected gunman's dark promise of sectarian rage at the election result, which left Ms. Marois's separatist Parti Québécois short of an absolute majority but in position to rule Quebec, there appears to be little prospect of independence for the province in the near future.

As Doug Saunders notes in an analysis of the result for Toronto's Globe and Mail, a poll published last week in Quebec showed that just “28 per cent of voters support full secession” from Canada. That, Mr. Saunders observed, puts Québécois nationalists in a very similar position to Catalans and Scots who are seeking more independence from federal governments but are unable to muster enough support to break away entirely. He writes:

In Catalonia, Scotland and now Quebec, power is held by separatist parties that have little chance of winning a sovereignty referendum in the foreseeable future, but are instead using their electoral mandates to demand i ncreasing devolution of power from the national government.

There's little coincidence in this: In the nine years since the Parti Québécois were last in power, the separatist movements in Canada, Britain and Spain have become increasingly interlinked and motivated by one another's tactics. Their leaders nowadays meet with one another on a regular basis, study one another's slogans and strategies, and celebrate their mutual victories.



Image of the Day: September 5

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

Green Party Ad Featuring Bleeped Obscenity Challenges TV Indecency Rules

By ROBERT MACKEY

A political ad for the Green Party featuring the presidential candidate Jill Stein denouncing the major parties in frank terms.

The Green Party won a public-relations battle with Google on Tuesday, forcing the company's television advertising division to book time for a commercial in which its presidential candidate uses a (partly bleeped) obscenity to describe the policies of the major-party candidates.

Google TV Ads, which fills advertising slots for television stations, initially rejected the commercial in an e-mail to the party's ad agency on Monday, citing the use of “inappropriate language” by Jill Stein, the Green nominee. No doubt try ing to avoid violating the Federal Communications Commission's vague standards for what constitutes indecency on television, Google TV Ads instructs clients to “avoid bleeped-out expletives where curse words are still identifiable from the audio.”

In response to that initial rejection, the Green Party called on its supporters to “Tell Google TV Ads Not to Censor Our Ads!” The party argued, “Never mind that these ads already comply with F.C.C. regulations regarding appropriate content, what Google does not seem to understand is that federal law prohibits broadcasters from censoring ads submitted by candidates for public office.”

On Tuesday afternoon, Google TV Ads relented and agreed to pass the ad on to broadcasters in the 11 media markets where the Green Party hopes its message will have the most impact. In an e-mail shared with The Lede by Ben Manski, Ms. Stein's campaign manager, a Google TV Ads employee also asked th at the party “make immediate arrangements to remedy/retract the message” posted on its Web site.

As my colleague Adam Liptak reported in June, when the Supreme Court ruled in favor of two broadcasters who had faced potential fines for programs featuring cursing and nudity, the justices “left open the question of whether changes in the media landscape have undermined the rationales for limiting their free-speech rights in ways the First Amendment would not tolerate in other settings.”

According to Mr. Manski, the Green Party ad was primarily intended to be shown on cable and satellite channels, like MSNBC and Comedy Central, which, like the Internet, are not subject to government regulation of objectionable language in the way that words and images broadcast over the airwaves still are.



Two Hungry Nations Collide Over Fishing

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

VELLAPALLAM, India - “Drifting on the strait between India and Sri Lanka, an Indian fisherman named Sakthivel cowered in his boat,” Jim Yardley wrote in The New York Times. “A Sri Lankan naval officer, who took the man's photograph, delivered a warning: If we find you in Sri Lankan waters again, you will never leave.”

“Returning to this Indian fishing village, Sakthivel quickly sold his boat and swore off fishing,” Mr. Yardley wrote. But uneducated and jobless, he took to fishing again to feed his family, and “again set out toward Sri Lanka, and never returned.” Mr. Sakthivel has been missing for almost a year.

Read full article.



Q. and A.: Climate Change and the Monsoon

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

“Scientists who have devoted their careers to studying the monsoon and predicting its dimensions say that the prognostications can be incredibly difficult,” Vikas Bajaj wrote in the New York Times's Green blog. “Adding to the complexity is global warming, which could potentially cause monsoon patterns to change.”

But in a recent paper in Nature Climate Change, “researchers write that they are beginning to understand more about the systems driving the monsoon and that they hope to improve their projections in years to come,” Mr. Bajaj wrote.

Read the excerpts of the interview Mr. Bajaj conducted recently with Andrew Turner, a researcher in the Department of Meteorology at the University of Reading in England who was co-authored the article wi th H. Annamalai.



India and China Agree to Resume Joint Military Exercises

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

The defense ministers of India and China agreed Tuesday to resume joint military exercises, which were frozen two years ago, The Associated Press reported.

A. K. Antony and his Chinese counterpart Liang Guanglie announced the agreement after talks in New Delhi. However, no dates were set for the exercises, the report said.

During the talks the two sides also agreed to “hold high-level official exchanges, conduct joint maritime search-and-rescue exercises and strengthen anti-piracy operations off the coast of Somalia,” the report noted.

The exercises were suspended after Beijing denied a visa to an Indian general who worked in Indian-controlled Kashmir, the report said.



Sharp Criticism for Mamata Banerjee in Muslim Officer\'s Book

By ANURADHA SHARMA

KOLKATA - In just over a week since its launch, Musalamander Koroniyo (What Muslims Should Do), a book in written in Bengali by a senior police officer, has attracted national attention and raised new questions about intolerance in West Bengal, where Mamata Banerjee is chief minister.

The police raided the College Street office of the book's Kolkata publisher, Mitra & Ghosh, on Friday, closing it for hours and sparking fresh allegations of Ms. Banerjee's “autocratic style of functioning.”

The book, a mere 102 pages, written in a straightforward and proscriptive style, is unsparing in its criticism of the policies of Trinamool Congress, Ms. Banarjee's party, regarding Muslims. It particularly criticizes new promises that Ms. Banerjee has made, including stipends for imams and muezzins, who give the call to prayer, and the state's plan to recognize 10,000 madrasas , which would allow the religious schools to get some state benefits.

“She knows Muslims are uneducated, unaware and unorganized,” the book says of these policies. “Therefore, they will not be able to understand the trick.”

The author, Nazrul Islam, is a senior Indian Police Service officer, currently serving as the additional director general of the West Bengal police. (Check back with India Ink later today for an interview with Mr. Islam).

The government has “tried to intimidate us in different ways,” Indrani Roy, a director at Mitra & Ghosh, the book's publisher, said in an interview at her Selimpur home. First, the head of a rival publisher, who publishes books by Ms. Banerjee, called up Ms. Roy's father, who used to run the business, she sa id.

“He said that the book has not gone down well with the higher-ups,” she said. On Thursday evening, an officer from the enforcement branch of the police called her father and asked him not to circulate the books. On Friday a team from the enforcement branch raided the College Street shop, she said, forcing it to shut for three hours, “manhandled our staff” and demanded copies of the books. We asked them to give us a seizure list, they offered to buy the books and took with them five copies.”

Ms. Roy said she believes the raid, the first in the publisher's 80-year history, stems from Ms. Banerjee's intolerance to criticism. “It is rather unnerving,” she said. “We are actually very scared. Our freedom is at stake and who knows what will happen tomorrow.”

Still, it has been good for business. Already, the book has sold over 450 copies, a high figure for this type of publication.

Here are some translated excerpts from “What Muslims Should Do:”

Chapter: What Needs to Be done?
Page 54

We need to form one society that will include not just Muslims, but also the low-caste Hindus-those belonging to the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, Other Backward Classes and others. It needs to be given a name that is easy, concise and acceptable to all, such as Adhijan Samity, Bhupiputra Samity and Mulnibasi Samity.

We will have to take the organization from the state level to the district level, from the district level to the block, and from block level to the village level. Our principal focus will be education. We have to lay stress on proper education at the pre-primary and primary levels. If the government can set up schools in the villages, then it's fine. Otherwise, we must build private schools in the villages.

Chapter: Why Government Doles for Imams and Muezzins?
Page 78

The announcement of the leader of the ruling party will deprive the n amazis of their right to decide who will be the imam at a particular time. To get the allowance the imam's name has to be registered in the government records. Those who have seen the activities of the leaders of the ruling party will have no doubt that they will not select the eligible person, but the one who supports them. This supporter can be the most detestable person in the eyes of the namazis, and worse, once his name is registered, whether he remains an imam or not will not depend on the namazis but the leaders of the ruling party through the government employees. Even if he commits a thousand sins and loses the right to be imam, it will not be possible to remove him without the wish of the ruling party leaders. Such a situation is not desirable for devoted Muslim namazis. 

Page 81

For a government, to use the taxpayer's money to financially help practitioners of a particular religion violates the fundamental right to equality guaranteed by Articles 16, 15 and 14 [of the Indian Constitution].

So, this announcement is bound to overruled. In that case, why did the leader of the ruling party make this announcement? The announcement's immediate aim is Muslim votes. Muslims respect imams. The aim is to win Muslim votes by supporting imams.

Even if the announcement is overruled, it's not a loss to them. Rather, it'll be good. Government funds will not have to be given out. And you can even tell the Muslims: “See, we really wanted to give. The opposition conspired to foil the plans. So identify those who opposed the move.” 

The long-term aim of the announcement is even more damaging. Let Muslims get stuck on grants of  2,500 rupees per month. Let them send their children to the madaras. Brahmin-Baidya-Kayasthas [Hindu upper castes] do not want Muslim children to be educated under a modern system and compete for jobs with monthly salaries of 250,000 rupees. They want Muslims to concentrate more on reading namaz, performing roza and sending their children to the madrasas so that they produce more and more imams or madrasa employees, earn 2,000 to 3,000 rupees in salary and live unfed or half-fed. While, the children of the Brahmin-Baidya-Kayasthas become leaders and ministers, join services such as the I.A.S [Indian Administrative Service], I.F.S [Indian Foreign Service], I.P.S. [Indian Police Service] and I.R.S. [Indian Revenue Service] to become cabinet secretary, chief secretary, home secretary, D.G. [director general], C.P. [chief commissioner], D.M. [district magistrate] and S.P. [superintendent of police]. Then someday, we'll all say: “Madrasas are breeding grounds of terrorists.” And then before the elections, we'll give recognition to one or two madrasas, instead of opening schools, in the Muslim areas. And we'll say: “They did not do anything for the Muslims in the past 34 years. We will do.” And after coming to power, without having done anything, within a f ew days, we will say: “We've accomplished 90 percent of the work. That has to be accepted.” Do the Muslims understand all this? That something needs to be done for them? We've punctuated our speeches with ‘Khuda-Hafiz-Inshallah' at all the wrong places, we've been to the iftaar parties. We've posed for pictures with Haj-bound pilgrims. If all this is not enough, should we need, we have some people on hire; two or three bearded men. We will make them come in their [skull] caps to some function. We have designers to ensure appropriate clothing at such a function. And we will pull a cloth over our heads and say, ‘Khuda-Hafiz-Inshallah'. That will surely do it!

Page 84

On the other hand, such announcements give [pro-Hindu communal] outfits like R.S.S. [Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh] a chance to say that the ruling party is appeasing the Muslims. “Hindus second class citizens in Hindustan.” This has to be stopped. Hindus must protest. And this leads to commu nal riots. As a result, the Brahmin-Baidya-Kayastha leaders gain from both sides.

Chapter: Why Government Recognition for 10,000 Madrasas?

Page 86

Actually, the one who is making these announcements does not know much. She does not think it is necessary to know. She knows Muslims are uneducated, unaware and unorganized. Therefore, they will not be able to understand the trick. As it is Muslims have a soft corner for the word “madrasa.” The announcement of 10,000 madrasas, with a sprinkling of Khuda-Hafiz-Inshallah is sure to buy off a Muslim and make him a slave.

Therefore, Muslims must become aware and organized. They must say:

  1. Publish the list of 10,000 madrasas.
  2. How many of them have been recognised? Which institution has recognized them?
  3. How many more will be recognized? Who will do that?
  4. What are the terms of recognition?
  5. What is the gain from the recognition?
  6. What is the loss f or not being recognized?
  7. Without doing anything really for Muslims, why is so much song and dance over recognizing 10,000 madrasas?

 



Relations Between India and Sri Lanka Sour

By JIM YARDLEY

Last week, while traveling down the coast of Tamil Nadu for my article about the fishing wars between India and Sri Lanka, I noticed pilgrims walking along the side of the road. They trudged along, despite the heat, as they walked kilometers on a pilgrimage to Christian shrines in the state of Tamil Nadu. What I had not realized is that some of the pilgrims visiting the state were from Sri Lanka.

That has become painfully clear this week.  The same tensions coursing through the fishing dispute between India and Sri Lanka are now contributing to an ugly spectacle in Tamil Nadu as Indian protesters on Tuesday stoned buses carrying Sri Lankan pilgrims. The Sri Lankan government issued a travel advisory and arranged for a special plane to transport pilgrims home. The attack followed earlier protests and prompted India's Ministry of External Affairs to offer reassurances that Sri Lankans are safe in India.

From New Delhi, where foreign policy attention is usually focused on Pakistan and China, it is easy to forget that Sri Lanka remains a potent, explosive issue in Tamil Nadu, roughly three years after the Sri Lankan government defeated Tamil rebels to end of the bloody Sri Lankan civil war. Since then, officials in New Delhi have worked to maintain relations with Sri Lanka, even as state leaders in Tamil Nadu want India to pressure Sri Lankan leaders on the post-war treatment of Tamils and to ensure that their rights are equal to the island nation's Sinhalese majority.

In recent weeks, the Tamil Nadu chief minister, Jayalalithaa, has seemed eager to deliberately provoke the Sri Lankan issue. Last week, she suspended a civil servant bec ause he had permitted a soccer team from a Sri Lankan school to play in a match in a government stadium in the state capital of Chennai. She said the presence of the Sri Lankan team had offended native Tamils. Her move came after she had also called on Indian leaders to suspend joint military exercises with Sri Lanka.

In this context, the angry protests erupted against Sri Lankan pilgrims. In an editorial titled “A Dangerous Game,” The Hindu, a leading national English-language newspaper based in Chennai, criticized India's central government for failing to push Sri Lanka on the rights of ethnic Tamils in Sri Lanka. But the editorial also warned that Ms. Jayalalithaa had “harmed the image of the State and tarnished the reputation of Indian as an open and tolerant society.”

“It is one thing to demand the government desist from training soldiers from the island nation and quite another to ask for â€" and then peremptorily impose â€" a virtual embargo on s porting and cultural ties with ordinary Sri Lankans,” the editorial stated.

Meanwhile, on the ground in Tamil Nadu, many pilgrims were hurrying to leave. R.K.M.A. Rajakaruna, Sri Lanka's deputy high commissioner for southern India, said a special plane had been ordered. “The pilgrims called me to make a strong appeal that they should be repatriated to Sri Lanka immediately,” he said in an interview. “Our main priority is to ensure the safety of our people. The situation on the ground is getting worse.”

He added: “The vast majority of the people of Tamil Nadu are not hostile. They are not unfriendly. But small groups are trying to project that the whole of Tamil Nadu is against Sri Lankans. These groups should not be allowed to have an impact on India-Sri Lanka relations.”

Niharika Mandhana contributed to this post.