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Issue 2 Vol I, October 30, 2005

 
About Us

South Asia Post
IT is pertinent to ask as to why a new website. In this information age when we are bombarded from all sides with evocative or obtuse information and opinions then why add another name. Friends, after spending years in the field of journalism, somewhere in the inner recesses of the mind,   a thought lingered and always troubled most of us who are involved in launching this web opinion newspaper.

 
Newsbag
Earthquake, Blasts and the Dance of Death
THREE weeks have gone by since the devastating earthquake measuring of 7.6 magnitude struck northern Pakistan and India, mainly Kashmir killing nearly 80,000 people. But the agony caused by the quake that  within minutes killed nearly half (if not more) as many people as the insurgency in the state has killed in 15 years, has not  proved to be a catalyst for peace.
 
Comment

Canada Looks to Police to Nourish Multiculturalism
Surrey Police needs to expand its investigation into Park attacks
Gupreet Singh writes from Vancouver
SURREY, a bustling town nestled with Vancouver, British Colombia prides in its multi cultural liberal Canada, is in deep shock. In fact, this little Punjab on the Pacific side showcases the broad contours of a tolerant fast growing society.  But somewhere cracks are appearing.

 
Law and Justice

Judicial Accountability
Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer
Democracy, as the opening page of our Constitution declares, proceeds on the fundamental postulate that ultimately political sovereignty vests in the people of the country. This sovereignty gains reality and dynamic viability only if the constitutional instrumentality submits tacitly to the broad oversight of the sovereign people.

 
Analysis

Punjab, Understanding the Past Through Lies
Gobind Thukral
FOR weeks the two sides spent days and nights, digging holes, collecting documents, plotting and building a hard case to finally nail down the real villain of tragic drama in Punjab that took away nearly 50,000 innocent lives and devastated thousands of homes. Henchmen, free loaders and cheerleaders – all joined in to equip the top fighters.

 

Political Economy of Punjab: A Perspective
Dr. Baljit Singh Mann
Punjab once the leading state in the country in terms of GDP and per capita income is now facing economic crisis and political decay. Political and civil institutions established for the purpose of governance are in the process of decline to which Samuel P. Huntington describes political decay.

 
The Rise of Manmohan Singh
Phony Redemption
Gobind Thukral
IN political and economic choices, Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh seems to have declared autonomy. Catapulted to the seat of power the Congress President, Mrs. Sonia Gandhi refused to lead the country as the chief executive and opted out to head the powerful coordination committee of the United Progressive Alliance.
 

Not my Tragedy or Your Tragedy, its Our Tragedy

Gurpreet Singh writes from Vancouver
THE Vancouver based Cultural Jammers have sparked a vigorous debate on whether the West should hold a two minute-silence for the victims of Iraq invasion. They have pointed out that Canada and Britain should spare two more minutes for a silence to remember the more than 30,000 civilians who have died since the beginning of the second Gulf War. America has lost its 2,000 soldiers.

 
Features

Preaching of Economics
Vinod Anand
LIFE is a divine gift to us, and so are other conditions that help us live it. When we are born, the life span, whatever it is, is given and is exogenous, though unknown. The family, the place, the surroundings and the socio-economic conditions with which we get linked at the time of our birth are also given, and, as such, are exogenous, but known.

 
Life Style

Medical Tourism: Curing the Sick
Jyotika J. Thukral
PEACE moves between India and Pakistan that are helping trade and allowing people to travel a bit freely across the borders, could offer a key area of growth to Indian Punjab – medical tourism. It is perceived as one of the fastest growing segments in marketing ‘Destination India’.

 
Art & Films

I Have not Killed Gandhi: Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara
Jyotika J. Thukral
GANDHI May not be a stimulating subject for the Indian politicians. He may not be relevant for the policy makers and the government in the country of his birth. There is indeed lot of lip sympathy for Gandhi and all he stands for.  Even Congress party which he nourished with his very blood hardly understands him, what to say of implementing any of his ideas.

 

Unending Travails of Creativity
The Poet-Painter Dilemma
Dr. Jaspal Singh
Umberto Eco, the Italian Semiotician turned novelist says that if you remove 'empty spaces' from the universe and from the structure of all the atoms constituting it, the cosmos will shrink to a tiny ball not bigger than one's fist.  The writer or anybody engaged in creativity tries to fill these 'empty spaces' left by nature's scheme of things.

 
Poetry Corner
Navneet Toor
WE take the pleasure of introducing young talented poets in the Poetry Corner. If you have given expression to your welled up emotions   in rhyme, free verse or blank, we shall be glad to publish your flights of fancy. Do join and let your poems be read or sung.
 
Letters

Congratulations on your new website!  I have read through all your articles and I must say that that the editorials that you have put up on the site are very informative and are on all sorts of issues ranging from health to politics.

 



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SOUTH ASIA POST INC.
Editor: Gobind Thukral
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