Politics with Dinkar

The name of the ‘rashtra kavi’ (national poet) Dinkar has appeared in media and this time not for any posthumous award or celebration of any anniversary. It relates a complaint or grievance by Dinkar’s 80-year-old daughter-in-law Hemant Devi and grandson Arvind Kumar Singh against Sushil Modi’s nephew for forcibly occupying a part of the late poet’s house, Dinkar Bhavan, on Arya Kumar Road near Machuatoli in Patna.

Few years ago I was in Patna and staying with Janardan, my relative and friend of Kankarbag As usual in morning walk I had gone up to the house. When I asked someone about Dinkar’s house, a person indicated his finger towards an unassuming house. I had expected it to be a property under some institution or government as well maintained and well preserved museum of Dinkar’s literary manuscripts and belongings. Instead when I thought of entering its open door I got scared thinking someone may charge for trespassing his in his personal property. I just couldn’t go in that. Why do we treat our writers so shabbily? I have seen the fate of Premchand house in Lamhi on TV sometimes. That also gives the same impression. Why are the Hindi states so poor in respecting their great sons whom even the whole world respects? Why can’t the state or some rich men from the state take the task of building a memorial grad enough to match the personality of the poet and author of great literary creations such as Urvashi, Rashmirathi, Parashuram ki Pratiksha, Kurukshetra and Snaskriti ke Char Adhyaya?

I remember how Dinkar made a speech on Marina Beach when JP Narayana was ill. “O God! Please take me away and give JP a longer life.” Interestingly JP survived but Dinkar fell ill and died.

I did also read an article written by Harridans Rai Bachchan on Ramdhari Singh Dinkar in Dharmyug of Dharamvir Bharati era. While talking about his achievements of his life, Dinkar had told the senior Bachchan, “I married sixteen girls of the family. After I got Rs 1 lakh award of Bhartiya Gyan Peeth, the boys’ fathers started saying that now Dinkar is lakhpati so they can expect good dowry.”

Recently, I wrote in my facebook that the credit of Rahman’s ‘Jai Ho’ was first time used in Rashmirathi. Those are the first two words of the famous book. Dinkar’s forceful negation of caste system in Rashimirathi is something to be noted and respected.
‘जय हो’ जग में जले जहाँ भी, नमन पुनीत अनल को,
जिस नर में भी बसे, हमारा नमन तेज को, बल को।
‘क्षत्रिय है, यह राजपुत्र है, यों ही नहीं लड़ेगा,
जिस-तिस से हाथापाई में कैसे कूद पड़ेगा?
अर्जुन से लड़ना हो तो मत गहो सभा में मौन,
नाम-धाम कुछ कहो, बताओ कि तुम जाति हो कौन?’

‘जाति! हाय री जाति !’ कर्ण का हृदय क्षोभ से डोला,
कुपित सूर्य की ओर देख वह वीर क्रोध से बोला
‘जाति-जाति रटते, जिनकी पूँजी केवल पाषंड,
मैं क्या जानूँ जाति ? जाति हैं ये मेरे भुजदंड।

Can’t Bihar government, some other interested agency, an institution or individual acquire the house from the family if it has gone poor enough to maintain its glory at proper price and convert it in a memorial befitting to the name of Dinkar?

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Can there be an Egypt in India any day?

When a national weekly such as ‘India Today’ with so huge a circulation in many local languages beside English publishes someone on its cover page, it must be a serious story getting noticed by almost all in the administrative setup of Indian Government who matter. February 7 issue of ‘India Today’ has a photograph of, Hassan Ali Khan smartly smoking a cigarette and a mind blowing revelation: ‘This man owes Rs 50,000 cr. in taxes. He has $8 billion in a Swiss bank. Why is Government afraid to act?’

And when I was going through Times of India of January31, I found the action of the government through another headline though in an inside page: ‘Hasan Ali’s $6 billion in Swiss a/cs missing’. And the information is credited to the finance Minister.

Interestingly, one another cover page story in ‘India Today’ week ago dealt with the same subject of black money as $500 billion loot: “At least $500 billion, or Rs 22.5 lakh crore, has been spirited out of India illegally to foreign bank accounts over the six decades since Independence. This is the key finding of a comprehensive study on the Drivers and Dynamics of Illicit Financial Flows from India: 1948-2008 conducted by the US-based Global Financial Integrity (GFI).”

How can a citizen know what is truth or what is the intention of the government? Should we overlook media reports?

I get reminded of another story about Quattrocchi. In December 2005: ‘Mr B. Datta, the additional solicitor general of India, acting on behalf of the Indian Government and the CBI, requested the British Government that two British bank accounts of Ottavio Quattrocchi be de-frozen on the grounds of insufficient evidence to link these accounts to the Bofors payoff.’

Interestingly, the principal opposition party has circulated a report on black money after a press conference. How serious are they? Have they taken effective steps in the states they rule?

Should the people keep on watching these news reports on TV channels and reading in newspapers and magazines or react in some effective manner? And how should one react?

Sometimes now I start worrying now. Can one day the people of the country will be forced to behave as Egyptians are doing today even though the persons like me may not wish that to happen?

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Inflation and Exotic Broccoli


The country is worried of the price rise. Harendra had asked for only a small eggplant or baigan. I saw that green vegetable, broccoli that I loved and hated. I went ahead without picking one up though it was lush green indicating it freshness.

I loved it as I liked it and hated as it was vegetable beyond reach. But when I was coming out of the store, I saw by chance a poster hanging in that Safal’s outlet. ‘Exotic Broccoli Rs 25 a kg’. I got surprised. I returned back and reconfirmed. Some persons volunteered information. “The farmers have got the bumper crop. It’s selling Rs 10-15 with vendors on road.”

I used to see only few broccolis with one or two vendors in weekly bazaar on Sunday in front of my house in Noida. Price would be Rs 60-90 per kg. Is it not interesting providing the answer for Manmohan Singh or Pranab babu, if not for Sharad Pawar who hardly bothers about anything but sugarcanes that has sweetened his life till date.

Let the ministers realize the potential of mother earth and the hardworking farmers. Encourage the growers. Pay the right price. All inflation will vanish in air. The case of broccoli can be repeated for anything, be it onion or milk.

India can produce five times of what it produces today. Why should not the government focus on providing the inputs instead of putting all its brainpower in discovering or minting excuses for the inflation and price rise that go in a cycle; sometimes it will be onion, sometimes pulses and sometimes oil.

I only fear the poor farmers must be morose with the crash of the price of broccoli. They will hardly get any return. They would never have thought of getting this poor a price. I am sure they will not grow it next time.

For information, the price of brinjal or baigan was Rs 40 a kg.

It is unfortunate that we don’t get Indian apples and pears any more. Even if you find some, the price will be around Rupees hundred a kg or more. But imported apples, pears and many other fruits are today easily available though at high prices. But the quality appears to be so good that one gets tempted to buy it compromising with quantity. Perhaps, the imported fruits have increased the prices of the local stuffs too.

Is this the price of globalization and free trade?
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PS Price of broccoli still remains Rs 25 per kg even on January 31, 2011

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On This Republic Day: Some Observations

After some years, I watched today’s Republic Day parade from start to finish. It really excited me and gave me confidence about India’s great future. At end of the Republic Day Parade, I could conclude to two views about India’s strength.

India has a huge lot and varied soft power that it has hardly tapped to its potential. Each tableau, be it of DRDO, CSIR or cultural ones confirmed my confidence in the view.

I remember an intellectual once saying that ‘one Indian is better than any individual from the developed country but a group of five Indians working together is worse than the worst of such a group from the advanced countries’. And the parade should remove all the doubts about the group working of Indians. Can anyone after seeing the daredevil performance of the motorcyclists question about the ability of Indians for performing the best in group?

But soon after the parade I listened to the news. And two news items not only shocked me but made me feel miserable. How can the country tolerate mafia burning alive an additional collector on duty? Why does a young man attack Rajesh Talwar? Was it just the madness or loss of faith in judiciary or investing agencies? Can the agencies be satisfied after booking for the attempt of murder or look into it a little more seriously?

And a question haunts me. How can persons like Manmohan Singh and Pranab Mukherji from whom the country men expected a lot take an excuse or use their all skills in not divulging the name of those Indians who had stashed unaccounted money abroad in foreign banks?

How long they go on be blind and deaf when ‘a current study by Global Financial Integrity had estimated the present value of illicit money outflow to be $462 billion’?

Why can’t the intellectuals, economists and legal luminaries of the country force them to do that? Why can’t media leak those names as it did the conversation of Nadia?

But then I again want to return for an appeal to the millions of youth of the country to focus on knowledge, innovations and entrepreneurship. How can one deny the huge potential today for the young India working or getting ready to enter in IT, telecom, pharma or auto components sector to innovate new applications, products, and services that can reach far and near and make India great?

Why can’t the politicians, babus and judiciary contribute its best to the growth story by changing the old way of working when they very much know that India can find its place even in spite of that?

——————
PS:I now find many had these questions in mind. Rajdeep Sardesai writes in Hindustan Times, ‘Constitutional crisis’

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Critical Issues, Belated Responses?

After months that the nation has suffered from high inflation particularly in prices of essential vegetables such as onion and tomato, an economist, Deputy Chairman of Planning Commission, discovers and suggests that ‘the horticulture items should all be removed from the ambit of the Agriculture Produce Marketing Committee (APMC) Act to check volatile prices of fruit and vegetable and ensure farmers get the best prices for their produce’.

Even if we give credit for the idea for which he might expect a Padma Bibhusan if not Bharat Ratna, he very well knows he can’t get it implemented. Can the Prime Minister help his best assistant and supporter come out and get an ordinance issued in 24 hours? However, the same party could go out of the way for declaring emergency and many lesser evils such as declaring a president rule in Bihar. This government even after six years of ruling the country besides the party running it for the most of the six decades can still confuse the aam aadami by blaming NDA for every policy that is wrong, be it telecom or forward trading of essential commodities..

There is another great man rather Maratha running the agriculture who after all his years of running the government and cricket found out and suggested encouragement for the farmers around 50 kilometers of metros and now all towns of population more than 50,000 for growing vegetables. As usual, he is not responsible for anything, but remains the key figure because of compulsion of coalition.

But the funniest was a special report published in India Today on onion. The farmer of Nasik who takes his onion to the town mandi sells it to local traders at a price of Rs 43 a kg. I wish that is true. Will someone confirm what the farmer gets from the traders to whom they sell? As I guess the farmer would not have got anything more than Rs5-7 a kg from the trader.

Can the metros or for that matter all the towns create a farmers’ market places at nominal rental where the farmers can come and sell directly to the consumers?

Can the state government encourage the farmers along the highways and expressways the growing of vegetables and fruits that require fast transportation to the consumers?

Can the government encourage the use of high speed vehicles integrated with the world class technology for increasing self-life of the produce during transportation?

Can the government focus on R&D for improving the yield of the produce to reach the level achieved in the developed countries or China?

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A Letter to CM, Bihar

Dear Nitish Kumarji

Giving you the benefit of doubt, I infer that you are too busy to come with a mission statement for the next five years on your blog. Actually I wished you to write about what you expect from various classes to make Bihar grow as according to your dream. Towards the end of this tenure you should not say that the people didn’t cooperate.

I shall certainly expect certain outcomes as indicator of his success.

Each and every child must reach and be in the schools. Bihar government must get Premji Foundation or some similar reputed agency, involved for improving the quality of teaching. Even it can encourage the model followed by Chandrakant Singh in his Chaitanya Gurukul Public School.

As the health minister announced, I expect that every panchayat will have a health centre and a preventive approach for it through a yoga centre. Compulsory physical training in school curricula can help in this direction. For information, my own village still lacks a health centre. Can the government ensure that all deliveries will be under the supervision of trained midwives? I wish the panchayat head be made accountable for this. As I understand in many panchayats, it’s not happening because of the local politics. Further, the government must involve and seek participation from the community. Many will like to participate in this mission of health care and education. Why can’t every panchayat constitute a body to look after the two basic infrastructures? If I wish to donate for an ambulance for my panchayat who will take the responsibility to effectively use it?

It is unfortunate but fact many, if not most, of the village heads Mukhiyas are busy for their own gains and aam aadami are scared to talk with them, There are hardly any general body meeting or dialogues among the villagers.

The main thrust is to be on creating jobs particularly in the rural areas. It requires an innovative approach. For example, can you appeal and encourage some 100 selected teachers and students of the management institutes to make the subject their project and come out with some implementable ideas? You can also appeal to the trade and business associations of the state to suggest ways and means and take actions to use the educated and skilled human resources, particularly women, in the villages to manufacture and produce items that they can market.

I hope there will be some visible actions.

With regards

Indra Roy Sharma

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Gurus’ Nano and Sushant

‘Business Today’ in its nineteenth anniversary issue has articles from many management greats and gurus such as Tarun Khanna and Vijay Govindarajan:

Tarun Khanna: Tata’s Nano, the first so-called ‘1 lakh Rupee’ car ($2,200, or close to this) and its Ace, the mini-truck, are surely impressive attempts to create affordable transport for India’s masses, with immediate resonance for several consumers worldwide. The Nano might well find a home in other countries, and the re-engineering and tabula rasa design approach taken by the company might also prompt the rethinking of automotive design.

Vijay Govindarajan: But the real breakthrough is yet to come – it is about taking the Nano global. Already, Tata is preparing to take the Nano to other emerging markets. Even more important, the company plans to scale up the Nano platform and launch it in Europe and the US. Imagine for a moment that Tata Motors invests another $2,500 to make the Nano the world’s most intelligent car – with integrated navigation, entertainment, and information. Even at $5,000, the Nano would be the cheapest car and could well take the low end of the US auto market by storm.

Even McKinsey in an article in its January issue, ‘Unleashing Innovation in China’, has a special mention of Nano as an example of India’s strength against that of China.

Indians are pushing the envelope with designs such as the world’s cheapest car, the Nano. They are also finding that innovation in a traditional area can lead to innovation closer to the technological edge—for example, the plan to build a battery-powered Nano. There is no reason China shouldn’t aspire to that kind of innovation as well.

According to Swaminathan SA Aiyar, ‘Tata’s Nano has made India world famous in autos.’

Are the above mentions not exhilarating?

I, myself have been fan of Ratan Tata since I read first about the concept of Nano in media and written about it many times. It was a daring project for its huge investment. Lack of customers for Nano as it appeared after November sale figures appeared, was shocking. The news of Nano catching fire was equally troublesome for me as an Indian and an engineer by profession who spent his life in the sector. However, I thought Tata Motors will overcome that.

Unfortunately Tata Motors tried to market Nano by words of mouth and didn’t make arrangement for financing it easily for the customers going for it as first car. Tata would have made Nano interesting bait for youngsters, both in urban and the rural India.

I was feeling bad about Nano. I wanted it to be the successful product from India flooding the global markets. Instead I was hearing only bad field reports. But then I heard Sushant.

Sushant’s residence is on my route to the park where I go for morning walk every day. He had been wishing every time he sees me. The youngsters these days hardly try to notice the elders. Sushant is different. He is enterprising too.

Sushant is a little handicapped. He limps a bit. It is perhaps right from birth. His father worked in telephone exchange. He managed to get a plot in this sector and build his house too. He has two sons. Sushant is the elder one.

He had a scooter earlier. Then one day I found a Maruti 800. But recently after returning from US, I saw one day a Nano outside his gate. I had not seen Nano in Noida. When I asked, he confirmed that he bought it few days ago.

A conversation with Sushant made me feel good. He was very positive about Nano. When I talked about Nano catching fire, he told me his views. According to him, some customers take a new Nano and get some elctricals changed as advised by some roadside experts. That has been the cause of a short circuiting and fire. I don’t know if he is right. But I remember ignorant customers of Ambassador cars making similar mistake in my days with Hindustan Motors. Once I found some welders doing full electric arc welding of the floor panels that was spot welded in the plant as per the specifications. It would certainly be making the cars unsafe, particularly during crash.

As Sushant told me, on his own he had persuaded some of his friends also to buy Nanos.

I wish Tata Motors takes all the steps to prevent any mis-engineering.

Tata Motors must learn, appreciate and take all steps to prove the product worthy of the hopes and aspirations of the management gurus and senior citizens like me.

Are they hearing?

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Confused or Confusing Government

There are certainly two sets of news appearing in media. One pains and other excites.

I happened to listen to Kapil Sibal yesterday that was very well covered by digital media. It appeared he was advocating for A Raja and defaming an institution that has been a watch dog: “We are extremely pained at methodology adopted by CAG (Comptroller and Auditor General) for arriving at 2G spectrum. There were actually no losses to the exchequer. CAG has done injustice to itself and the Opposition is doing injustice to aam aadmi.” I wonder how a responsible man can say all that in such a manner. How has he been allowed by a prime minister, an economist by training to do that? Why should Sibal thinks that all the technocrats, mainly CAs or financial experts working for CAG are fools and he is the only who understands accounts and technology? I wish the professionals must object to such criticism more vocally and effectively. Unfortunately, for me it was a shock, as I was a fan of Sibal as HRD minister. But as it appears he is just an advocate and not an effective administrator or implementer.

The media carried one more confusing news too and that came from Jairam: “The Akshardham Temple, built on banks of Yamuna River in New Delhi, lacks environmental clearance, but nothing can be done about it now.” What is the purpose? Why doesn’t he prevent? He is another wide mouth man in the government. I am totally confused with his announcements and its intentions. I have started doubting his IIT background.

It was to my excitement that there were reasons to feel good too.

India is poised to overtake the USA and emerge as the World’s second largest economy on purchasing power parity basis by 2050 and has the potential to supersede China to the top spot, according to a report published by PwC.

And Sam Pitroda promises, ‘about 250,000 panchayats would be connected through fibre optics and broadband connections within the next couple of years.’
And thus it goes.
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PS: It is interesting to note that ‘CAG-sticks-to-176L-cr-figure’.And Arun Jaitley replied his advocate friend in his own way.

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Man Mohan and Sonia: Be Decisive; Run or Quit

A question constantly haunts me. Should Man Mohan Singh be compared with other politician prime ministers that India had till date? Is not he at the best a CEO appointed by Congress Party or more correctly by Sonia Gandhi?

I am sure, for all the bureaucrats and the congress men Sonia Gandhi is the boss. Man Mohan only goes by his wonderfully developed perfect telepathic communication with Sonia Gandhi. How long the country men be kept under confusion? How long would the country go on getting ranked at the bottom of the rankings of transparency Index?

Today, it has become almost necessary for the country to have an effective and independent prime minister who can not only mull but implement and administer his ideas. If it doesn’t happen, no amount of freebies through popular schemes such as NREGA or food security can make the country grow for the people at the bottom of the pyramid.

Man Mohan must have the mandate and guts of Nitish Kumar to confiscate the property and the wealth laundered by any one in public service, be it politician or bureaucrats, or from the respected services or judiciary.

With the corruption scams and scandals covering all the media demoralizing and nullifying the advantage of the demographic dividend, Man Mohan must decide and act. Many including his great supporter Khuswant Singh and modern Ved Vyas expect him to speak out and break his silence. Many have started questioning.

B.S. Raghavan has written: “It should cause no surprise if “the question, “What to do with Dr Manmohan Singh?” has for some time been the burning topic of cogitation among Ms Sonia Gandhi, her family members and close circle of friends and advisers.

I expect him to act as a CEO without any fear and save the nation from the dilemma. He has already wasted his six years.

And let Sonia Gandhi be decisive about Rahul Gandhi and allow him to prove if he can be better than his father and grandparents, as Sonia has already pushed his uncle out of the history book of Congress party.

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Alumni Meet of IIT, Kharagpur- My Views

I wish I would have joined the meet of alumni of IIT, Kharagpur of batch that passed out in 1961. Even the mere imagination of some old men in seventies getting together is pretty exciting.

Over the years, I have kept myself in contact with some-TR Murlidhar has recently visited us and stayed with us in Noida. OP Khanna has remained close to us. Perhaps it is so because all of us worked also for Hindustan Motors. I have also kept myself in touch with Prof BB Pandey and his research. I would have loved to meet with those around my roll number ME297 or those who were in Prof. Seyfarth class with me.

I would love to propose the creation of a special fund from the donations from the batch mates, at least a minimum of Rs 1, 00, 000 from each person. I wonder if we could collect about Rs 2 crore.

But I propose the fund for a little different purpose. Many IITians are not equally fortunate as many of the highly affluent ones. The fund can provide assistance to such unfortunate ones if there are any. The assistance may also come from the fund, particularly if they are finding difficulty in supporting the higher education of their children.

Its unfortunate the society keeps on talking about the successful ones and never bother about those who were cursed by the destiny. Should not we do something about them? Will we make a beginning?

I have few reasons for not going to the meet organized by IIT, Kharagpur. Yamuna will not allow me to do that. Moreover I shall feel bad if in Calcutta where we had a house till last June, I am to go to stay in a hotel.

Moreover, the inclement weather, the fog makes any journey at this time of year difficult for the unpredictable troubles.

Further, I have gone through the list of the batch mates that are attending. I would have wished some who were very close to me would have also joined.

Moreover, what is the fun if I can’t meet any of the professors whom I loved?

But let me confirm that I shall pay my Rs 1, 00, 000 if my proposal is accepted.

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