Saturday, October 28, 2006

Story of a Hero

Two news items that appeared on opposite pages of Gulf News on October 28, 2006 is worth mentioning.

One report
talks about the sorry state of Kuldip Singh, a bus driver with Delhi Transport Corporation who on this day last year courageously disposed off a ticking time bomb from his bus saving the lives of all of the 71 passengers on board; but in the process was grievously injured and suffered from complete loss of his eye sight.

Kuldip Singh and his family survive on a meagre income of 100 dollars per month. The fact that he is not getting any help from the government does not surprise me…!

I wonder what the 71 passengers - happily alive today thanks to Singh – are doing to help their saviour??? Have they grown as cold and thankless as their government..???

The other report talks about the arrest of two militants who were planning to blow up the Karnataka Legislative assembly building in Bangalore. The police have traced their satellite phone numbers and calls to Kashmir and Pakistan. Last year gunmen had attacked the prestigious Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore killing one scientist…

I wish the perpetrators of terrorism would put the money that they are spending to destabilise India to better use in their own country!!!

What noble cause can be served by violence, death and destruction…???

Friday, October 27, 2006

Indians Make Best Husbands

Indians have already proven their mettle in the IT arena…And now, they are being prized as the best foreign husband a Russian woman can get…!!!

According to an article published in Indian Express, Maria Arbatova, the controversial Russian feminist and poetess, feels that Indian men make the best husbands for Russian women.

Twice married Maria is now living with an Indian.

After the Techies, perhaps India should now look at exporting Hubbies !!! Any Takers...????

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

The World Needs an alternative fuel …NOW

I drive a Mitsubishi Pajero and I love it. It has a 3000 cc, 6 cylinder engine which delivers a cool 185 bhp power, and has enough room for my entire family and the occasional friends.



I love the feeling of power, the size and the look of the vehicle. But I feel extremely guilty for my thoughtless indulgence in this gas guzzler, because, as much as I love big cars, I am also a conscientious greenie.

I could probably do just as well with a 1300 cc car which would only burn a third of the fuel as my SUV would and emit a third of the green house gases and toxic stuff...

But can you blame me and the scores of other SUV owners for owning the things we love and doing the things we love...?

Answer to the woes – both environmental and economic - lies not in driving people to shift to smaller cars but in pushing the scientific community to develop not just cheaper, but more importantly, cleaner and renewable fuel.

While I appreciate the push for cleaner and more efficient cars, serious efforts are needed in developing alternative clean fuel which will considerably reduce the dependence on gasoline.

Although there are many alternatives to Gasoline as vehicle fuel - Electricity, Ethanol, Methanol, Methane (Natural Gas), Propane and re-formulated gasoline - Ethanol is the most promising alternative to Gasoline.

Ethanol (grain alcohol) is the primary automotive fuel in Brazil and ethanol-gasoline blends (known as gasohol) have been used in US for many years. Pure Ethanol fuel offers excellent performance combined with low hydrocarbon and toxic emission. Ethanol can be produced from corn, sugar cane, as well as from cellulosic material such as wood or paper waste.

Ethanol accounts for 20% of the transport fuel in Brazil whereas the use of alternative fuel in the rest of the world is a scanty 1%. That is a 20% reduction in dependence of fossil fuel and toxic emission from burning of gasoline as compared to the rest of the world!!!

I am looking forward to the day when I can drive my SUV without feeling guilty about it...!!!

Veil Issue : From Egypt to England

Debate is raging if veil is indeed an Islamic tradition stipulated by the Holy Quran or just a tribal tradition that came to be associated with Islam.

Veil has increasingly started appearing on the streets from Egypt to England and from India to Indonesia.

In the more moderate Muslim majority countries like Syria, Lebanon and Jordan, veiled women are now a prominent sight where as it was rare a decade ago.

Is this the assertion of the new and emerging face of a radical islamic identity or a veiled protest against the mainstream society…?

The US and allied forces’ reaction to 9/11 – the occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq – has undoubtedly driven moderate Muslims to embrace a more radical form of Islamic identity.

The irony in the case of Aishah Azmi, the veiled teaching assistant in England and that of Iman Ahmad, the 21-year old University of Halwan student who was banished from residence halls of the university, is that these women have embraced the veil (known as niqab) on their own free will…!!!

The vast majority of Muslim women in the arab world do not wear the full face cover, but opt instead to wear only the headscarf known as the Hijab

"I don't agree that the veil should be compulsory, and I don't like it," says Soad Saleh, a professor of Islamic law and former dean of the women's faculty of Islamic studies at Al-Azhar University, which is more than a thousand years old.

According to her “Quran does not say that women have to cover up their face – it is an old Bedouin tradition”.

Whatever one may say about the veil – pro or anti – the veil row is here to stay for a while.

As per press report in Egypt, a 63 year old Egyptian grandmother divorced her husband of more than 40 years because her ophthalmologist husband does not favour her wearing the veil!!!