Watch Live NEWS Channels

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Andhra Pradesh CM dead in chopper crash: PMO sources


NEW DELHI: Prime Ministers Office declared on Thursday that Andhra Pradesh chief minister Y S Rajasekhara Reddy died in an air
crash.

Five bodies were found at the site where Andhra Pradesh chief minister YSR Reddy chopper’s wreckage has been traced.

The helicopter carrying YSR Reddy, two of his staff and two pilots went missing in pouring rain Wednesday morning over the Naxal and tiger-infested Nalamalla forests.

The government on Thursday confirmed that Nearly 24 hours after YSR's chopper went missing, it was located atop Serai Salem hill, at a distance 40 nautical miles (70 kms) east of Kurnool.

The CM left Hyderabad on a six-seater Bell chopper at 8.35am for Chittoor accompanied by his secretary and chief security officer. After 9.27am, radio contact was lost with the helicopter.

Soon after the chopper lost contact, multiple agencies of the state launched a massive hunt for possible wreckage in the desolate terrain. By evening, it expanded into the country's biggest-ever search operation with satellites in the sky joining remote sensing aircraft
, fighter jets, unmanned aerial vehicles, troops on the ground and even barefoot deer-hunting tribals with bows and arrows.

Read more...

YSR's chopper located near Kurnool: IAF


NEW DELHI: Andhra Pradesh chief minister Y S Rajasekhara Reddy's chopper has been reportedly traced near Kurnool. An Air Force spokesperson has
said the chopper has been located on top of a hill at a distance of 40 nautical miles east of Kurnool.

“As of now, we have located the helicopter. We are not sure whether it has crashed or not,” said Air Commodore Sagar Bharati of the Bangalore Air Command.

Air Force helicopters are flying over the region, trying to find a position to land. More details are awaited.

K V P Ramachandra Rao, Rajya Sabha member and a close aide of the Andhra Pradesh chief minister, also confirmed the chopper has been found.

The helicopter carrying YSR Reddy, two of his staff and two pilots went missing in pouring rain Wednesday morning over the Naxal and tiger-infested Nalamalla forests.

The CM left Hyderabad on a six-seater Bell chopper at 8.35am for Chittoor accompanied by his secretary and chief security officer. After 9.27am, radio contact was lost with the helicopter.

Soon after the chopper lost contact, multiple agencies of the state launched a massive hunt for possible wreckage in the desolate terrain. By evening, it expanded into the country's biggest-ever search operation with satellites in the sky joining remote sensing aircraft, fighter jets, unmanned aerial vehicles, troops on the ground and even barefoot deer-hunting tribals with bows and arrows.

Read more...

Inside US mission in Kabul: Booze, nudity & lewd acts

WASHINGTON: Private contractors hired by the US government have jeopardized security at the American embassy in Kabul with lewd, drunken conduct
and an understaffed guard force at a time of rising violence in the Afghan capital, a watchdog group said on Tuesday.

The non-partisan Project on Government Oversight sent US secretary of state Hillary Clinton a letter documenting complaints about guards working for ArmorGroup, North America, and photos of nearly naked men behaving lewdly at their camp.

The firm employs 450 guards to provide security at the Kabul embassy under a five-year, $189 million State Department contract. The department extended the contract in June.

Pictures obtained by the group showed male guards, scantily dressed in G-string style garments, dancing around a bonfire and urinating while others snapped photographs. Video showed them pouring alcohol down the bare backside of a new recruit and trying to drink it as it spilled from the man's buttocks.

These are the latest of many allegations of misconduct by private security contractors hired by the US government to perform duties in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"These are very serious allegations and we are treating them that way," State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said at a briefing, adding that the issue had been turned over to the department's inspector general.

About 150 guards are Americans or from other English-speaking countries. The remaining 300 are identified by the Project on Government Oversight as Gurkhas from India and Nepal who speak little or no English. The group said the language barrier between English-speakers and Gurkhas was so severe it would be difficult for them to communicate in a crisis.

Read more...

Afghanistan deputy spy chief among 23 dead in Taliban suicide blast

KABUL: A Taliban suicide bomber killed Afghanistan's deputy chief of intelligence during a visit to a mosque east of Kabul on Wednesday in an
attack that left 22 others dead.

The bombing, which occurred in the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, struck at the heart of Afghanistan's intelligence service and underscored the Taliban's increasing ability to carry off complex and targeted assaults.

The explosion ripped through a crowd in Laghman province just as Abdullah Laghmani, deputy chief of Afghanistan's National Directorate for Security, and other officials were leaving the main mosque in Mehterlam, 60 miles (100 kilometers) east of Kabul. Laghmani died at the scene, according to Sayed Ahmad Safi, the spokesman for the local governor.

A Taliban spokesman said a suicide bomber on foot targeted Laghmani, a key figure in Afghanistan's security services. President Hamid Karzai and the United Nations condemned the attack.

Laghmani was the former intelligence chief for Kandahar, a Taliban stronghold. In his most recent post, he directed intelligence operations, especially in eastern Afghanistan, and appointed local intelligence officials throughout the area.

He was an ethnic Pashtun, along with nearly all the Taliban, but fought with a Tajik-led faction during the war against the Taliban that preceded the US-led invasion of 2001.

His death occurred as tensions rise in the wake of the divisive Aug. 20 presidential election. The country's election commission said Wednesday that Karzai had 47.3 percent of the vote and top challenger Abdullah Abdullah had 32.6 percent.

Those figures were with votes counted from 60 percent of the country's polling stations. Karzai needs 50 percent to avoid a two-man runoff.

In the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif, meanwhile, an official with Abdullah's campaign warned supporters of the former foreign minister would take to the streets if there was any perception that election fraud was overlooked. Karzai is an ethnic Pashtun, while Abdullah is half Pashtun and half Tajik but is seen as the Tajik candidate.

Hundreds of serious allegations of fraud have been formally lodged since voting day, mostly involving ballot-box stuffing and voter intimidation. The country's Electoral Complaints Commission said Wednesday the number of serious complaints from election day was 652, with the highest number coming from Baghlan, Kabul and Kandahar provinces.

"We are not talking too much because people are very angry and we don't want to add to that, but Dr. Abdullah is meeting with foreign embassies and regional partners to try to find a solution," said Zalmai Younosi, Abdullah's campaign chief in six northern provinces.

"After that, if there is no result, then it is protest and violence," he warned. "Yes, violence is bad for the country ... When Russia occupied Afghanistan, we had to fight. When the Taliban came we had to fight back. How can we accept a corrupt government funded by drugs and not respected by the world? We have to defend our own rights."

The blast east of Kabul killed Laghmani, the executive director of Laghman's governor's office, the head of Laghman's provincial council, two of Laghmani's body guards, and 18 civilians, said Sayed Ahmad Safi, the spokesman for Laghman's governor.

"It is indefensible that such an attack was carried out at a mosque during the holy month of Ramadan," said Peter W Galbraith, the deputy UN chief here. "The contrast between the vast majority of Afghans who yearn for peace during this holy month and those who conducted this attack could not be more stark."

Karzai said in a statement the "enemy" tried to kill "brave and hardworking" officials, but others with those same traits would take their place.

US troops cordoned off the blast site, right outside Mehterlam's main mosque, which sits in a crowded market area. Safi said Laghmani was visiting the mosque to discuss plans to rebuild it.

Taliban suicide attacks frequently target high-ranking government officials. Militants have warned Afghans for years not to work as government officials, teachers, or in the country's armed forces.

Taliban attacks have spiked the last three years and insurgents now control wide swaths of territory, momentum that forced President Barack Obama to send 21,000 additional troops to the country this year.

US military officials may soon ask for even more troops to be sent to the country, but American public opinion is starting to turn against the almost eight-year war as US troop deaths have reached an all-time high.

The National Directorate for Security suffered a second attack in the country's north. An intelligence officer kidnapped a few days ago by Taliban militants in Kunduz province was found Wednesday hanging from a tree on the outskirts of Baghlan city, said Kabi Andarabi, the provincial police chief.

In other violence, four militants were killed overnight when a roadside bomb they were planting detonated, said Fazel Ahmad Sherzad, the deputy police chief of Kandahar.

Read more...

US posts smallest private jobs decline in 11 months

WASHINGTON: The US private sector shed the smallest number of jobs in nearly a year, erasing 298,000 jobs in August as the country emerged from a
severe recession, payrolls firm ADP said on Wednesday.

The August figure for nonfarm private employment on a seasonally adjusted basis was much higher than the 250,000 expected by most analysts.

ADP said while the world's largest economy continued to lose jobs as it struggled out of prolonged contraction, "employment losses are clearly diminishing.

"Despite recent indications that overall economic activity is stabilizing, employment, which usually trails overall economic activity, is still likely to decline for at least several more months, albeit at a diminishing rate," the ADP national employment report said.

It pointed out that August's employment decline was "the smallest since September of 2008."

ADP also revised lower the estimated change of employment from June to July by 11,000, from a decline of 371,000 to a decline of 360,000.

Analysts also cautioned about continuing job losses.

"It is evident from the latest ADP survey that the labor market is taking small steps toward recovery, but conditions remain extremely difficult," said Ryan Sweet, a senior economist with Moody's Economy.com.

"Considering the severity of the recession and uncertainty over the strength and sustainability of the recovery, the labor market's recuperation will be gradual and painful," he said.

Employment in the service-providing sector fell by 146,000 in August while that in the goods-producing sector declined 152,000 and in the manufacturing sector by 74,000, its smallest monthly decline since July of 2008, ADP said.

Large businesses, defined as those with 500 or more workers, saw employment decline by 60,000, while medium-size businesses with between 50 and 499 workers declined 116,000.

Employment among small-size businesses, defined as those with fewer than 50 workers, fell 122,000.

Also Wednesday, the government said US nonfarm productivity accelerated to a stronger than expected revised 6.6 percent annualized rate in the second quarter, the biggest increase in nearly three years.

The increase in the April-June period was the largest since the 2003 third quarter. Most analysts had expected an increase of 6.4 percent.

The ADP figure came ahead of Friday's government August nonfarm payrolls report, seen as one of the best indicators of economic momentum.

A consensus among analysts showed the report should show a smaller loss of 225,000 jobs compared with a 247,000 decline in July and an unemployment rate ticking up to 9.5 percent from a 26-year high of 9.4 percent.

"We reckon Friday's official number will be about 250,000," said Ian Shepherdson, chief US economist with High Frequency Economics.

"That's still terrible, but it does mean that the trend towards smaller net job losses continues. The move to payroll stability, still less net gains, is some way off yet, though," he said.

President Barack Obama has warned that the jobless rate could soar to about 10 percent by year-end, even with an improving economy.

The US economy contracted 1.0 percent in the second quarter, after declining 6.4 percent in the first quarter and 5.4 percent in the final quarter of 2008.

Read more...

Obama hosts Iftaar party at White House

WASHINGTON: US President Barack Obama praised Islam and American Muslims during an Iftaar party hosted by him at the White House and said he was
Obama hosts dinner during Ramadan
US President Barack Obama hosts a dinner celebrating Ramadan in the state dining room at the White House in Washington. (Reuters Photo)
More Pictures
committed to build a better relationship between the US and Muslim world.

"Together, we have a responsibility to foster engagement grounded in mutual interest and mutual respect. And that's one of my fundamental commitments as President, both at home and abroad," Obama said at the Iftaar, the meal that breaks the daily fast during Ramadan, on Tuesday evening -- his first at the White House.

"That is central to the new beginning that I've sought between the United States and Muslims around the world. And that is a commitment that we can renew once again during this holy season," Obama said before a host of diplomats including Indian ambassador to the US Meera Shankar, lawmakers, his cabinet colleagues and eminent American Muslim leaders.

"Tonight, we celebrate a great religion, and its commitment to justice and progress. We honour the contributions of America's Muslims, and the positive example that so many of them set through their own lives. And we rededicate ourselves to the work of building a better and more hopeful world," he said.

Ramadan, a month-long period of prayer, reflection and sunrise-to-sunset fasts, began on August 22 in most of the Islamic world.

Nearly two dozen Ambassadors were invited to attend the White House Iftaar wherein the menu included dates, kitchen garden green salad, spiced marcona almonds, Charlie's honey vinaigrette, organic chicken, potato and leek puree, late summer peas, kataifi wafers, oranges and lemon sorbet.

Quoting from one of the statements of the legendary American boxer Muhammad Ali, the US oresident said: "Rivers, ponds, lakes and streams -- they all have different names, but they all contain water. Just as religions do -- they all contain truths."

They all contain truths, Obama said. Among those truths are the pursuit of peace and the dignity of all human beings. That must always form the basis upon which we find common ground, he said.

"And that is why I am so pleased that we are joined tonight not only by so many outstanding Muslim Americans and representatives of the diplomatic corps, but people of many faiths -- Christians, Jews, and Hindus -- along with so many prominent Muslims," Obama said.

Former President George W Bush also held Iftaars during his eight years in office.

Read more...

I've travelled in a UFO: Japan's new first lady

TOKYO: Japan's next prime minister might be nicknamed "the alien", but it's his wife who claims to have had a close encounter with another
world.

"While my body was asleep, I think my soul rode on a triangular-shaped UFO and went to Venus," Miyuki Hatoyama, the wife of premier-in-waiting Yukio Hatoyama, wrote in a book published last year.

"It was a very beautiful place and it was really green." Yukio Hatoyama is due to be voted in as premier on September 16 following his party's crushing election victory over the long-ruling Liberal Democratic Party on Sunday.

Miyuki, 66, described the extraterrestrial experience, which she said took place some 20 years ago, in a book entitled "Very Strange Things I've Encountered".

When she awoke, Japan's next first lady wrote, she told her now ex-husband that she had just been to Venus. He advised her that it was probably just a dream.

"My current husband has a different way of thinking," she wrote. "He would surely say 'Oh, that's great'."

Yukio Hatoyama, 62, the grandson of a former PM, was once nicknamed "the alien" for his prominent eyes.

The former actress said she was now "burning" with desire to make a film in Hollywood. She playfully added the lead actor would be Tom Cruise, "because I know he was a Japanese in a previous life".

Read more...

Curbs on AQ back after US warning

WASHINGTON: The Pakistani government has again isolated its nuclear brigand-cum-national hero A Q Khan after the US came down heavily on efforts
to free him, saying he continues to be a serious proliferation risk.

A Lahore court on Wednesday reversed an earlier court decision to free him from the "security protocol" - a euphemism for house arrest - following a government appeal which essentially said it was for his own good. The move also follows fears that western agencies might kidnap Khan to get to the bottom of the decades-long nuclear proliferation ring he oversaw, ostensibly, as he has suggested, at the bidding and with the knowledge of successive Pakistani governments.

Khan had earlier been declared a "free citizen" by another judge after he appealed to the courts following an incident where he was not allowed to attend his grand-daughter's graduation ceremony. Security agencies continued to hem in Khan at his house even after the court order, at which point the disgruntled nuclear scientist had threatened to squeal about Pakistan's nuclear secrets, forcing the government to back off.

But the hold of the US on a country that has basically parcelled out its sovereignty to various stake holders, including China and Saudi Arabia, was evident within days. Barely 24 hours after Washington warned that Khan continued to pose a proliferation risk and freeing him was not a good idea, the Pakistani government filed an appeal in a different court, which reversed the earlier order and allowed Islamabad to resume restrictions on him.

"Our concerns over the potential for proliferation activities by Mr Khan are well known to the Pakistani government. We believe that he remains a proliferation risk", state department spokesman Ian Kelly had said.

Pakistan is in line to receive a $7.5 billion five-year aid package - after the Congress clears it later this month - in addition to nearly $6 billion that the so-called Friends of Democratic Pakistan is lining up.

Read more...

Search operations narrowed down to 5km radius area: Prithviraj Chavan

HYDERABAD: A 5km radius area in the Nallamalai forests in Andhra Pradesh from where the missing helicopter
carrying Andhra Pradesh CM Y S
Rajasekhara Reddy made the last contact to Air Traffic Control has been identified, Union minister Prithviraj Chavan said in Hyderabad on Thursday.

IAF's Sukhoi 30MK1 aircraft with synthetic aperture radar for high resolution ground mapping and a pilotless low-flying ISRO aircraft scoured the thick Nallamalai forests in Kurnool district to locate the missing chopper with five persons, including two pilots, on board.

"By triangulation, we have located the area which is about 5km radius circle and it has been identified based on the last contact with the Air Traffic Control," Chavan, the Union minister of state in the PMO, told reporters.

"They (people on board the chopper) were carrying about five cell phones and so whenever a cell phone passes through a tower it will register and with best help from BSNL, we will identify the area," Chavan, who along with Union law minister Veerappa Moily rushed here on Wednesday night, said.

"We are sparing no efforts whatsoever. We have deployed everything what we have got, air force, state police, air-surveillance, satellite imagery and remote-sensing aircraft have been taking photos. Everything has been put into service," Chavan said.

"It is that area where the last contact with Air Traffic Control was made and also contact with a BSNL mobile tower was made," he said.

Chavan said the photos were not visible clearly and he expects to get clear information in the morning.

"The state machinery is fully geared and briefed us completely and we are quite satisfied that all efforts are being made to locate Rajasekhara Reddy," Chavan said.

Asked what are the chances of the survival of persons on board the chopper, Chavan said, "Let's not speculate. Let's hope and pray that with the best equipment at our disposal, we will go to the point which is the identified area of about 5km radius."

Moily said the state and central governments are taking best possible efforts to locate the chopper. "In fact we expect that something... some positive signals will come back in the early hours."

Read more...

Last message: 'We are climbing 550...'

CHENNAI: "Victor Tango Alpha Pappa Golf calling Chennai radio. We are from Hyderabad heading for Chittoor. Departed Begumpet at. We are climbing
550 (5,500 ft). Expected time of arrival at Chittoor."

"Roger."

That was the last radio communication between the pilot of the fateful helicopter carrying Andhra Pradesh chief minister Y S Rajashekhar Reddy and the Flight Information Region (FIR) in Chennai. That was around 9.10 am. After a few minutes, the pilot radioed the Hyderabad control that he would be in contact with Chennai, following which Hyderabad handed over the control to the Chennai FIR.

"We haven't heard anything from the chopper after that," an air traffic official privy to the last communication told TOI, explaining the fire-fighting that followed. According to protocol, if no communication is received from an aircraft 30 minutes after its control is handed over to an FIR, the centre goes about plotting three phases: Uncertainty phase, alert phase and distress phase, each at an interval of 30 minutes.

Hearing nothing from the chopper, which was to communicate using a high frequency radio (HF), Chennai FIR kept switching between two HF radios, 6655 KHz and 8909 KHz. "Chennai radio calling Victor Tango Alpha Pappa Golf. Are you reading?" No reply. FIR then tuned into the very high frequency (VHF) band of 123.4 MHz, usually used for communication between pilots.

"We wanted to see if the pilot lost our frequency and was trying some other pilot. When there was still no reply, we tried the universal emergency frequency 121.5 MHz, to which any pilot in an emergency situation is expected to tune in. That too drew a blank," the source said.

FIR then initiated the 'uncertainty phase' and sent out signals to all air traffir control stations and airports in the vicinity such as Tirupati, Mangalore, Visakhapatnam, Bangalore and Hyderabad about the missing chopper.

The 'alert phase' started around 10.40 am and all the stations were called up to inquire about any signals they received. The air traffir management and Airports Authority of India top brass were then informed before going into the 'distress phase'. Subsequently, the regional coordination centre attached to the FIR took over the case.

Read more...

Sukhois with night vision join search

NEW DELHI: As Andhra Pradesh chief minister Y S Rajasekhar Reddy's missing chopper remained untraceable despite day-long aerial search
operations, the government is resting its hope on IAF Sukhois with night vision capability which can detect the heat of the craft.

The Sukhois can pick up the heat trails of the chopper if it has come down in the forests of Nallamalla. There are 20 ground teams comprising personnel from various agencies including anti-naxal commandos searching for the chopper in what has now been identified as a 1,000 sq km area. This remains a daunting task and the rescue operations will depend on aerial and satellite surveys apart from help rendered by local tribals near Almakur where the helicopter was last seen.

Home ministry officials coordinating the search hope any wreckage could be located by Thursday afternoon as operations intensify with more helicopters and low-flying aircraft.

The area -- where the search operation is going on -- has been pin-pointed with the help of tribals who last saw the chopper over Almakur and the nearest mobile coordinates. The chopper, taking the north-south flying path from Kurnool to Chitoor, is understood to have taken an eastward diversion, possibly due to bad weather.

Officials said the pilot might have tried to negotiate clouds and turnedtowards Almakur and nearby Iskala and Phaula Bhudua villages where it was last spotted by tribals.

Andhra Pradesh government -- which first pressed private choppers for search operations after losing contact with the CM's helicopter -- contacted the defence ministry around 12.30 pm. The defence ministry choppers could not take off from Hyderabad before 1.30 pm and had to return in an hour due to bad weather. Later, Dornier aircraft and low flying planes with remote sensing capability were used.

Though the Nalamalla forest area has naxal presence, security and intelligence officials discount any sabotage or action even after a crash. They feel bad weather or some technical fault could be the reason for a mishap.

Even national security advisor M K Narayanan, while talking to a television channel, admitted that the government was not taking any chance keeping in mind the naxal presence. Anti-naxal commandoes could also be used given their training for negotiating forest areas.

The NSA, however, ruled out the possibility of naxals bringing down the CM's chopper. He said, "Naxal strike seems extremely improbable. I would almost entirely rule it out. I do not think the naxalites have the capability to bring down the helicopter."

ISRO satellites are also being used, though they will not cover the area till Thursday morning. US ambassador to India Timothy J Roemer spoke to home minister P Chidambaram and offered all help. The nature of assistance or requests was not specified but could include technical assistance like satellite surveillance.

Chidambaram, who rushed to Delhi from Chandigarh after getting a message of missing chopper around 11 am, said in the evening, "There is no good news yet. We are keeping our fingers crossed. Our prayers are with Rajasekhara Reddy's family."

The home minister, who is talking to all local SPs and other senior officials, said the search had been stopped for the time being because of weather and light conditions. "Tomorrow, in the first light of the day, helicopters will continue the search," he added.

However, the home minister said the search on foot by forest and revenue officials was on around the point where they think the Bell helicopter was last seen. Police and CRPF personnel were also moving on foot.

The home ministry has rushed five companies of CRPF -- about 600 personnel -- to the area.

Read more...

Congress waits for 'tiger of Cuddapah'

NEW DELHI
: The downcast mood at the Congress headquarters mirrored the dark, overcast sky on Wednesday. Their concern was palpable and a
desperate search for "good news" saw them huddled before TV sets at 24, Akbar Road.

On his way to the airport in the evening, en route to Hyderabad, law minister Veerappa Moily told TOI, "We still have no news. But operations will go on through the night. I am worried by the developments, but we are doing all we can. ISRO has been asked to help locate the missing chopper." Apart from central leaders, Andhra Pradesh MPs were also airdashing to Hyderabad.

The downcast mood was understandable as Y S Rajasekhara Reddy or "YSR" has forded the Vindhyas to demonstrate how a leader from the South could make himself a key influence with the party leadership, while emerging as a satrap who towers above other regional bosses.

The 2009 Lok Sabha polls entrenched YSR on the national scene, even though he was happy with a state role. The canvas that was explored by leaders like Sharad Pawar, Lalu Prasad and Mulayam Singh Yadav is now YSR's, but his impact was more behind the scene as far as the Centre is concerned. But it cannot be understated with a tally of 33 MPs when Congress was not expected to touch half of its 2004 tally of 29.

YSR did this even as his views on Telangana were uncompromising and the collapse of Satyam hurt. He returned to power all by himself backing his instincts fiercely and delivered a huge leg up to the Congress. The surprise victory — not for him — made him a legend overnight.

For a heavily centralised AICC not given to accommodating satraps, Reddy has managed to carve a place for himself as a regional heavyweight, even reviving a non-existent phenomenon. He has done this without losing his tag as a firm 10, Janpath favourite. As a state boss, he seems to have left behind satraps like J B Patnaik of Orissa and, on a much smaller scale of political significance, Bhajan Lal.

Reddy consciously kept the central leadership on his side, delivering key promises on time. His role in breaking Telugu Desam Party ahead of July 22 confidence vote, despite the MPs being under the close watch of their chief Chandrababu Naidu, also endeared himself to the powers-that-be.

The success of 'tiger of Cuddapah' to have his way with high command marks his importance as an organiser. And the fear of any calamity leaving a void in its wake is writ large on the faces worried about the party's future in Andhra Pradesh.

Reddy has not just authored a roadmap to bring down Telugu Desam Party chieftain Chandrababu Naidu, he has also chartered the party through a difficult phase when it had to confront hostile elements like TRS and an agenda of bifurcation which may have cost him his place with the constituents in Rayalaseema and Coastal regions.

With a mix of stubbornness, a strongarm approach and shrewd politics, the organiser-in-chief has moulded a dissidence-ridden unit into a cohesive machine, though not without ruffling feathers. While in the process he earned a fair share of detractors, he has been helped by a trusting leadership which has thrown its lot behind him whenever delegations have come knocking at 10, Janpath.

The resultant stability has proved a boon for Congress by neutralising the 'Telugu pride' card which regional outfit Telugu Desam has played to trip it. It is not for nothing that workers are worried and the leadership is hoping for the best.

Read more...

TELUGU e-papers

About This Blog

E-PAPER: English PRINT EDITIONS

Lorem Ipsum

Hindi News Paper

  © Blogger templates Newspaper III by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP