Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Exceptionally talented dancing troupe of persons with disability

Pasha hails from Anekallu, a village near Bangalore, and is now a professionally trained actor, Bharatanatyam and Kathak dancer, a graduate in choreography and inventor of Therapeutic Theatre for persons with disabilities. He has worked as an International Scholar at Cornell University, and special pedagogic dance theatre director at many schools in Finland and at Sutra Dance Theatre – Malaysia, USA and UK. He is also a National Award winner. “For the past 10 years, I have been working in Delhi with differently-abled children and at present over 150 children avail of dance therapy in our Foundation. Though most girls here are deaf and dumb, you don’t see a shadow of sadness on their faces. The feeling of loneliness or alienation has vanished,” Pasha said proudly.

Nishisth is a proud member of AUF. He has visited foreign countries and performed in many AUF productions including Natya on Wheels. “I feel proud to be the member of this foundation. Guruji has taught us what life is and how to face it. I have learnt Bharatanatyam and various kinds of dances from Guruji. He is everything for us,” he says. Ashiq Ali, Kumar Manish, Harbir, Sonu Gupta, Ishrath, Priya Sharma, Karuna, Alka, Ajay Kumar are some other students presently learning and performing dance here. They were part of the show recently held in Noida, UP.

The foundation receives a number of e-mails and letters from parents of differently-abled children from various parts of India to treat their children and engage them with the foundation. With limited space, however, it’s been a tough task for Pasha. “Sometimes children directly come here and join us. Sometimes we do workshops, events and visit slums where we find variety of differently-abled children with multi-talents. So, we have given them a platform to prove themselves. People in Jhilmil Colony celebrate when they see Gulshan Kumar’s performance on the television. After performing in America and UK, his confidence level is now sky high. At the end of the day, we see satisfaction in these children, which is important”, says Pasha.

Guruji Pasha has urged the government several times to use 3 per cent reservation for disabled consistently. The 1995 Disability Act says that there should be equal opportunity for every disabled person, but sheer negligent attitude of the government compelled the foundation to hire legal help to allow them to draw attention to the apathy demonstrated by various government departments. “I have written many letters to Cultural Department and even to the Sangeet Natak Academy, but never received a reply from them. It shows that they are unaware and not bothered about these children.” Even after passing the Disability Act, there is little done. Pasha acknowledges that the journey in the last 30 years hasn’t been easy and, he says, the journey in the future is not going to be easy either. In any case, to this group of determined people, it is not a concern.
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IIPM Editorial, 2009

An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Tuesday, June 22, 2010

You Cannes or you can’t

Though the 63rd Cannes Film Festival was an unusually low-key affair, the closing night Palme d’Or triumph for a Thai artist-filmmaker helped the show end on a high note, writes Saibal Chatterjee

Thai filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul receives the Palme d'Or from French actress Charlotte Gainsbourg

The 63rd Cannes Film Festival shunned excess. It attracted fewer stars, delivered a lower dose of razzmatazz and its ‘selection officiel’ did not have the usual complement of films. It was probably symptomatic of a world only just beginning to emerge from a meltdown. However, the carnival-like atmosphere that inevitably engulfs the world’s premier film festival was anything but missing. It was business as usual on the French Riviera.

As the excitement surrounding the race for the Palme d’Or peaked, the jury’s choice of winner left a sizeable chunk of attendees a tad perplexed. For Thai avant-garde filmmaker Apichatpong “Joe” Weerasethakul’s singular triumph at was more than just a vindication of his brand of personal cinema.

The decision of the nine-member jury headed by Hollywood maverick Tim Burton to award one of cinema’s biggest prizes to Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives was nearly as much about art and politics.

But that is the way it almost always pans out in Cannes. The festival revels in springing surprises. It celebrates ground-breakers.

Weerasethakul is nothing if not one. His exquisite Uncle Boonmee, the first Asian film to win the Palme d’Or since 1997, pushes the boundaries of the cinematic medium with unwavering precision and intent – the defining attributes of the 39-year-old filmmaker’s art. His cinema makes no concessions to the norms of the mainstream Thai movie industry dominated by action flicks, period epics and horror tales.

In matters more mundane, the inventive director has for years been a vocal opponent of the censorship laws in place in his country and the Cannes award for his latest film is a tribute to the spirit of creative freedom that he represents at a time when Thailand is in the throes of unprecedented civil strife.

The political significance of this year’s Palme d’Or, therefore, was not lost on anybody. But, then, Cannes and politics have always gone hand in hand.

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IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Wednesday, June 16, 2010

The myth of security council

Does permanent membership in the UN Security Council matter?

Iranian President Ahmadinejad and his Zimbabwean counterpart Mugabe recently have urged for reform in the UN Security Council. Well, their calling for reforms may not egg on the world community into serious consideration but the issue for some nations has become of extreme importance, undoubtedly. Germany, Japan, Brazil, India along with South Africa, Egypt and many others are fighting wholeheartedly to secure permanent membership in the Security Council. Japan's former PM Junichiro Koizumi, his Indian counterpart, Dr. Manmohan Singh and the Brazilian President Lula urged nations to support them. This, invariably, creates an impression that they are in a rat-race, well, but for their betterment?

One side of the story is countries like India are suffering from countless severe issues from internal instability, terrorism, poverty and others. Thus, permanent membership in the Security Council may seem simply foreign policy glamour. The other side of the story is that domestic issues are of serious concern and need immediate domestic policy interventions. But then, can that be at the cost of foreign policy concerns? The People's Republic of China joined the Security Council in 1971 when it didn’t have economic prosperity as it has today and it had the same problems that India still suffers from.

Reforms in the UN Security Council are important to bring more democracy into the world's most powerful body as Kofi Annan, the former UN Secretary-General said, “We are the ones who go around the world lecturing everybody about democracy. I think it is time we apply it to ourselves, and then show that there is effective representation.” More importantly, influential nations should join the Council for the interest of the world community to oppose US hegemony. The world might not have seen devastating wars like that in Iraq or Afghanistan, had India, Brazil, Japan or Germany been able to use a veto power. Moreover, even if permanent membership doesn't directly guarantee that age-old plights of developing countries in the IMF and WTO would be removed overnight, it will definitely enhance global integration. It might not give India or Brazil a status equal to that of the US or Russia, but it will certainly guarantee the end of a colonial attitude prevailing within and without for centuries. It’s clearly unfair that only 5 out of 191 nations enjoy the liberty of veto power and dictate the terms of world affairs while 186 nations wait for their two-year term of the non-permanent membership. If a nation is responsible to take care of the plight of its citizens, it also has the responsibility to take care of the poor, hungry and homeless Afghanis, who are victims of vulnerability. Ergo, the Security Council membership should be targeted not to fulfil one’s ego, but to ensure global equality.

But will the above mentioned nations be allowed to join? Japan is the 2nd largest donor to UN projects. Germany is a strong economy, donor and more importantly, a much more open nation than many western countries. Even India and Brazil fulfil all ‘written’ possible criteria to join the Council. But then, there’s much a slip between the cup and the ‘written’ lip.

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IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Not a garden city anymore

In the name of development many trees are being felled

Bengaluru is fast turning into a desert. To improve the city’s infrastructure, the government has planned train projects worth Rs 1,000 crore and for that trees will be felled. This week, the state government announced railway projects worth Rs 600 crore including local rail, mono rail and high speed rail link projects. The city’s urbanisation drive has led to a massive tree felling. According to official sources, in the last two years the garden city has lost nearly 5,000 trees.

Shockingly, half of Bengaluru’s greenery has been destroyed for road widening, flyovers and other projects. By now more than 300 lakes have dried up. Besides, some 50,000 trees have been axed for various development works. In 2008, a joint survey conducted by Bengaluru Environment Trust and Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP)showed that the city has less than 7 per cent of its area under tree cover. In fact, the tree cover has come down to less than 50 per cent in a few decades. Now Bengaluru has only 15 lakh trees in its green belt. Dr A. N. Yellappa Reddy, environmentalist and former Indian Forest Service (IFS) officer, says: “Nearly 50,000 trees have been felled for Namma Metro and other projects. A lot of damage has been done to the environment in the name of development during the last decade. There is hardly any tree left in the city. If the government continues with its projects then even the existing trees will perish. There is nothing left to protest.”

Environmentalists are vehemently opposing the Metro project as they know that more trees will fell. Besides, a portion of Lalbagh — the world’s famous garden of the city — will also be destroyed. But the authorities are least bothered about it. They have gone ahead with their projects. Currently, several trees were felled on the Mysore road for widening it. The BBMP is trying to revive the greenery by planting saplings. “We have already planted some eight lakh saplings in the last three years,” says Shanthakumar, a forest conservator, who works with the BBMP. But, environmentalists are not convinced. They aren’t sure whether these actions will get the required results.

“Who will donate four-square feet land for greenery when a square feet is worth Rs 5,000? People need to understand the value of having trees around. They should plant new ones in their areas. Felling of trees has an impact on the environment also. It has led to warm weather and heat waves in the city. Air circulation has also reduced due to the dense residential development and loss of tree cover,” says Yellappa Reddy.

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IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Monday, June 14, 2010

Marriage trap

In a cluster of villages in rural Bangalore, child marriages are robbing young girls of the right to college education. B S Narayanaswamy and N K Suprabha investigate

Young Kavya’s life would have been very different had she not stood her ground when it really mattered. A year back, when she was only 15, her parents, upper caste and middle class, asked her to brace herself up for a 'bride show' in her school. Kavya refused. All hell broke loose at home. But the girl did not budge. However, her classmate in Uyyamballi high school, Deepu, like many others, could not resist family pressure.

Today, Deepu is married to a boy of her own caste while Kavya goes to college to pursue higher studies. She is determined to make her mark in life and the Pre-University College in Dodda Alahalli village of Kanakapura taluk, 60 km from Bangalore, is helping her prepare for a higher purpose.

“That was the most horrible moment of my life,” says Kavya, recalling the day she had to take on her parents. “It is common for girls here to be married off before they can enter college. Deepu got married when she was a 10th standard student. But I was very clear about my future.”

Unfortunately, in this part of Karnataka, the likes of Deepu constitute an overwhelming majority and gutsy girls like Kavya are a rarity. In the last five years, over 1,000 arranged child marriages have taken place in Kanakapura. School premises are openly used as a setting by prospective bridegrooms to check out their future brides.

“Most of the girls get engaged in 10th standard and they get married as soon as they finish their exams. Every year we receive plenty of such wedding invitations from our students,” says Jyothi, headmistress of Dodda Alahalli high school.

Girls get pushed into matrimony before they are ready to make up their own minds. Parents use every emotional ruse in the book to have their way. They evoke the issue of family honour to browbeat young girls into submission. They are actually desperate to prevent inter-caste marriages, the possibility of which increases once a girl gets into college and mixes with students of the opposite sex with relative freedom.

In high schools, girls are often pulled out of a classroom when a bridegroom comes calling. Says Anil Gummanahalli, physical training teacher at Uyyamballi high school: “Sometimes a groom visits a girl’s house without a prior appointment. So the girl’s parents come to the school along with the groom. I myself have sent many girl students from an ongoing class for this kind of vadhu pariksha. It's quite commonplace.”

Elagahalli high school headmaster Shivarudrappa also confirms that many such vadhu parikshas have occurred in nearby schools in recent times. While these bride shows happen under the very nose of the law, the law-keepers are either blissfully unaware about the social menace or are simply inacapable of taking action against the wrongdoers under the law.

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IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Wednesday, June 09, 2010

FIENDS ON THE PROWL

A TSI sting operation finds how paedophilia has turned into a thriving business in Delhi, NCR and Mumbai. Taking advantage of kids’ poverty and craze for brands and gadgets, middlemen get rich by supplying minor boys and girls to satiate the desire of sick, rich men, many of them NRIs and foreigners. By Abhishek Kumar and Neeraj Rajput

Dutch national Will Heum’s arrest in Chennai for having sex with minors and uploading pornographic pictures on the Internet came as an isolated shock to the nation. But a TSI investigation finds out that paedophilia is rampant in India’s cities. The number of sick and rich individuals who want to have sex with minors is large enough to sustain a thriving business involving middlemen and child sex workers. So if any of you thought paedophilia was a western malaise that would not affect India, you could not be more mistaken.

Children are the easiest to be taken advantage of. Poverty as well as their desire to own the latest gadget make them vulnerable to overtures of middlemen. Most kids, whom the TSI team met, had told their parents that they were going for study or dance lessons. To explore more, the TSI special investigative team visited Faridabad, Noida, Delhi, Mumbai and Goa many times. What was astounding was that despite being minors, these kids spoke and reasoned like adults, obviously trained by the pimps who brought them along. Another startling fact is that not only kids from poor and needy families are being trapped in this racket. Kids from rich or well-to-do families are also lured into the trap.

We got lead about Ansh, a pimp in Noida. One of us posed as an Australian NRI on the phone and he agreed to meet us. The next day, we met Ansh at a coffee outlet in Noida Sector 18 market. We reached much before time, eager to find out who all accompanied him. There were two more people, one of them a girl. When we met him, a kid sitting next to him greeted us. He said he was 14 years old, but looked younger. The smartly dressed kid looked like from a well-to-do family. We were right. The kid said his father was a big officer in Indian Railways. He was so confident that we felt we were not talking to a child but a professional in this field for years.

TSI- What is your name?
BOY-……….
TSI-What work do you do?
Boy-I am a student.
TSI - Where do you study?
Boy-I am in the XIIth standard
TSI-Where are you studying?
Boy-………………………., Daryaganj
TSI-What is your age?
Boy-14 yrs
TSI- But you don’t appear 14. You seem to belong to a rich family.
TSI-In case you are wondering where I got your number from, I saw an advertisement in the newspaper and picked it up from there.
Ansh-Yes. We have advertised many times in newspapers.
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IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Tuesday, June 08, 2010

Old warhorse rides back

Uma Bharti, the OBC face of the Ram Mandir movement, may be re-inducted into the BJP and is likely to lead the party in Uttar Pradesh, Priyanka Rai reports

Dogged by its own problems, confronted with one internal crisis after another, the 30-year-old BJP is struggling to find direction. It has failed to come up with an effective plan which would give the party a firm footing in the electorally significant state of Uttar Pradesh.

According to party insiders, BJP is not only all set to re-induct senior estranged leader Uma Bharti but also give her the charge of UP to galvanise BJP’s rank and file. The BJP leadership feels she is the rare politician who successfully combined mandir with mandal and is the best weapon to counter Mayawati in a state where caste is the king. The idea to launch Uma Bharti as the face of BJP in UP reportedly came from RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat who believes she can strengthen the party in Uttar Pradesh. Senior RSS leaders believe that she fits the bill of a “charismatic leader” the party so badly needs to take the SP and the BSP head on.

Moreover, being a firebrand woman leader, Uma is also seen fit to be pitted against BSP supreme and state chief minister Mayawati who is also known for her aggressive style of politics. “She is not new to UP. The party needs a dynamic face that is distant from local factionalism and at the same time understands the internal dynamics of the state,” says a senior BJP leader. Uma Bharti had once been a credible OBC face of the party. Since she belongs to the Lodh community, many leaders believe she would compensate for the loss of Kalyan Singh, another leader from the same community. With her entry, the BJP leadership feels, the operation to transplant backward caste vote bank on a Baniya-Brahmin system can materialise.

Uma was also at the forefront of the Ram Mandir movement and was a star campaigner of BJP during the movement, which had played an important role in the party’s expansion across the country.
But, in the quintessential BJP style, the party is divided over this issue. Party sources say BJP president Nitin Gadkari and Mohan Bhagwat want to welcome Uma back in the BJP ranks, whereas senior leaders like Sushma Swaraj, Arun Jaitley, Venkaiah Naidu and Madhya Pradesh chief minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan are not too happy about this move. Apart from these senior leaders, many other BJP central leaders are also opposed to it as she has a history of bitter clashes with some of them. Former Deputy Prime Minister and BJP stalwart L.K. Advani has reportedly given the green signal to Uma Bharti’s re-entry in the party. Sources close to him confirm the news but don’t see it happening too soon.

Uma Bharti was expelled from the BJP in 2005 after she had attacked senior leaders, including then president Advani. She stormed out of a party meeting after insulting the leader. Uma had shouted about “rootless Rajya Sabha members who plant stories” in television channels and newspapers and had challenged Advani to take disciplinary action against her. That left the BJP leadership with no choice but to suspend her from the primary membership of the party. She then formed her own party called Bhartiya Janshakti Party. Uma Bharti recently resigned from the post of president of her own party. This move is seen as the first step to mend fences with the BJP.
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IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Monday, June 07, 2010

Bad Mash Company

A crumpled mess of implausible storytelling glazed with over the top stylisation

If making a good movie is like crafting a statue out of stone, “Badmash Company” takes the Lego blocks assembly shortcut mashing together a few borrowed cons (some may faintly remind you of “Matchstick Men”, a Nicholas Cage starrer released in 2003) to churn out a wasteful effort. In fact, you suspect if any effort was involved at all in scheming up the story of four friends who try to make some fast money via dodgy means. Everything is a fair game – from sneakers to gloves to even the mortgage market – for our con artists extraordinaire led by Karan (Shahid Kapoor), who start with simple sneaker smuggling in a pre-liberalised India and then set their sights on pulling off cons in the Big Apple. How four ordinary Indians with seemingly little in terms of connections can pull such far fetched and ambitious heists is beyond comprehension.

Implausibility aside, the film appears too stylised (Yash Raj Films love their costumes and their locations grand and slick but you’d be surprised to see how glam pre-liberalisation India looked!) for you to be interested in the characters, who by the way are lazily etched anyway. The story is pretty predictable and the fact that our ‘Friends & Co.’ (that’s what the four dub themselves) touch everything from the mortgage market to the stock market besides getting Michael Jackson to start a fashion trend will make you want to yank your hair out. The acting is conspicuous by its absence; Meiyang Chang and Vir Das have too little screen time to really matter and Anushka Sharma is just about there. Shahid Kapoor tries to be all he is not and fails miserably. The film is a poor mash up of borrowed content and artificial intent.
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IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Friday, June 04, 2010

Rift turns polls colourful

Soumya Bandopadhyay says the civic polls will decide the course of the 2011 Assembly polls in West Bengal

Thank God! The alliance is no more! Otherwise the election to 81 civic bodies including Kolkata and Salt Lake would have turned colourless. There is a general ‘Feel Good’ wind doing the Left Front’s corridors. But whether a division of opposition votes really translate in the Left Front’s victory is a million dollar question. It will also answer whether this division is the only factor which has enabled the Left to be in power for nearly 33 years. Perhaps, it’s an opportunity for Mamata Banerjee and her party to negate this myth. This is the biggest attraction of these civic polls.

For Alimuddin Street satraps, who have forgotten class struggle and have turned arrogant, flamboyant and patronising towards party cadres, combating the stormy political weather of change, which started since the Singur-Nandigram days, was impossible. The Trinamool onslaught in south Bengal left the Left at its defensive best in the last three and a-half decades. The ever-growing blind and unquestionable mass support to Mamata had another truth to it. The masses were mainly demanding the ‘end of CPM rule’.

As people of different colours and creed have joined that stream, the Congress leadership too, acknowledging people’s wishes, got their state leadership to join that force. Whenever elections were held in the post-Singur-Nandigram period, the state Congress leadership had to obey the dictum of its high command — be it Panchayat election or by-polls to Bishnupur (West), Bowbazar or Sealdah or the Lok Sabha election. But, now the flute is playing a different tune. And the Trinamool, Pradesh Congress and the Congress high command, all have been conductors in this grand orchestra.

The question is, despite honouring all the demands of Mamata Banerjee till date, why did Congress president Sonia Gandhi did not force the state leadership to listen to the Trinamool supremo?

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IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Wednesday, June 02, 2010

Greece’s problem is only temporary and its capital will flow again

Like in Poland, Hungary too in early 1990s faced rapid institutional change and severe economic downturn — when a reform package known as “legislative shock therapy” was announced. The main points of this package were debt restructuring and vigorous privatisation, especially for the public sector and the banking system. These changes were successfully implemented to create one of the strongest financial sectors in the region with a well governed market.

Therefore, it can be deciphered that investors have short memories — Greece will get over its current crisis and capital will start flowing again — as it happened in Russia, Poland and Hungary. Also it is a fact that ex-communist countries could only dream of the kind of support Greece is getting from its European partners. Under the plan, Euro zone nations (comprising of 16 states) would provide $570 billion, while the rest $75 billion is offered by the European Union Commission. IMF will also provide a backing of $325 billion, half of what euro zone leaders have granted.

It is an opportunity for the West European nations to get their acts together. One sometimes wonder, had the problem be with Ukraine or any other similar nation— who is also seeking EU membership, just like Greece — would it receive same kind of attention as its neighbour! It’s anybody’s speculation.

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IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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Tuesday, June 01, 2010

India can’t manufacture SIM cards as per requirements

It is not that the Indian Parliament is oblivious of the fact. Even parliamentarians are worried about this grave danger. BJP MP and member of the parliamentary committee on IT and communications Rajendra Aggarwal asks for a ban on SIM cards coming from China. He also seeks an audit check of the SIM cards which have already reached the country. He says, “The government should take immediate steps in this regard. The SIM cards which have come from China should be put to security audit. I am not against trade with China but the trade which puts our security in danger should be stopped.” The same apprehension is expressed by Prabhat Jha, MP and also a member of the same committee. He says, “Import of SIM cards from China is inviting danger.”

If the Chinese hackers hack the secure unique authentication key of the Indian SIM cards which are in china and pass it on to terrorists planning to spread violence in India, it can lead to a disaster. In countries like US, instances have been found where terrorists have cloned SIM cards and used them to not only talk to their handlers but also to trigger bomb blasts. The terrorists which attacked Indian Parliament also used a cloned phone. Now, when the government is strict about the verification of identity before issuing mobile connections, the possibility of using cloned phone increases. If the secure unique authentication key of a SIM is known, then any mobile number of the Indian network can be put on the Pakistani mobile network. A defence officer says, “We found a mobile with a terrorist and were stunned to find that the SIM of Indian network was working on Pakistan mobile network. It becomes very difficult for Intelligence agencies to trace such mobile numbers.”

Even then, DoT keeps its eyes closed. The way in which interests of Chinese companies are being safeguarded hints at a big scandal. TSI has in its possession the report of the committee under the chairmanship of the member technical of the DoT which was submitted on April 1, 2010. The committee was set up by the department of telecommunication to give security clearance to equipment and software bought by the cellular companies. This report has a few parameters for obtaining security clearance and the list of 15 equipment and software for which cellular operators will require the government’s permission. But the circular issued on December 3, 2009, asked the operators to take security clearance from the department if they bought any software or equipment. According to this circular, even SIM cards require security clearance. The sources informed TSI that while the list of the equipment and software which needed security clearance was being finalised, it had even SIM cards on it. But it was removed at the last moment. Why was this done? Was it the carelessness of the department or a planned omission? It will get clear only after an inquiry.

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Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2009


An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

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