Monthly Archive for January, 2008

Ethnic anger in Malaysia

Thomas Fuller reports from Kuala Lumpur in International Herald Tribune:

The customers of Malaysian Indian Casket, a small shop on the outskirts of this modern and cosmopolitan city, come in all different sizes: standard coffins clutter the entrance, child-size boxes are stacked high on the shelves and extra-large models, those for the tallest of the deceased, are stored in the back.

But there is no variety in the ethnic background of the clientele. “All the customers are Indian,” said Aru Maniam, a shop salesman.

In death as in life, Malaysians are divided by ethnicity. The country’s main ethnic groups – Malays, Chinese and Indians – have their own political parties, schools, newspapers and, in the case of Malays, a separate Islamic legal system.

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Stolen kidneys: A shocking scam

And in The New York Times, a report by Amelia Gentleman:

As the anesthetic wore off, Naseem Mohammed said, he felt an acute pain in the lower left side of his abdomen. Fighting drowsiness, he fumbled beneath the unfamiliar folds of a green medical gown and traced his fingers over a bandage attached with surgical tape. An armed guard by the door told him that his kidney had been removed.

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Pakistani justice breaks silence

Salman Masood in International Herald Tribune.

Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, the former chief justice of Pakistan who was removed last year when President Pervez Musharraf imposed a state of emergency, has finally broken his silence.

A letter from Chaudhry to Western officials was circulated Wednesday. It lambasted Musharraf for quashing Pakistan’s independent judiciary and illegally detaining him and his family, and noted that the Supreme Court had not had a chance to rule on whether it was legal for Musharraf to run for re-election in December.

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God help cricket

Cricket columnist Peter Roebuck in The Sydney Morning Herald.

INDIA’S performance in chartering a plane to take the players back home in the event of an independent judge finding against them in the Harbhajan Singh case counted amongst the most nakedly aggressive actions taken in the history of a notoriously fractious game. If this is the way the Indian board intends to conduct its affairs hereafter, then God help cricket.

It is high time the elders of the game in that proud country stopped playing to the gallery and considered the game’s wider interests. India is not some tinpot dictatorship but an international powerhouse, and ought to think and act accordingly. Brinkmanship or not, threatening to take their bat and ball home in the event of a resented verdict being allowed to stand was an abomination. It sets a dreadful precedent. What price justice now?

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Postcards from the end of the earth

Delhi-based psychiatrist Sudhir Khandelwal is spending three-and-a-half months in the Antarctica doing research at the Indian base station there. He’s been posting (through a complicated route of emailing his posts to his son in the US) on Himalayan Adventurer. Thanks to Binoo K. John’s column Log of the Blog on Mail Today for pointing this site out.
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Unfortunately the chick did not survive. I myself discovered it under some stones away from the nesting area. I felt very sad and could not do anything. I just sat there on a stone praying. I had wished that both chicks should grow and fly away from here to their distant destination. I am not sure what caused its death. It could not have been due to lack of food or weather. There is evidence of availability of plenty of food; there are remnants of freshly killed snow petrels (skua’s pet game bird) strewn all over. So far weather has also not been too inclement. I wonder whether its elimination was through the process of natural selection. It is known to occur in case of Adelie penguin when it lays two eggs. It selects the fitter chick to survive in a very practical but merciless manner. I shall tell you its story some time.

Tiger burning bright

Last week, Bal Thackeray announced his disdain for the ‘Modi pattern’ and the ‘Mayawati pattern’, and reiterated the Shiv Sena’s special relationship with Sharad Pawar. What did he really mean, asks Kumar Ketkar in The Indian Express 

A roaring tiger with menacing eyes is a symbol of the Shiv Sena. But the Sena supremo has the mind of a fox. The BJP leadership is often in awe of Balasaheb Thackeray — not just the state leadership but also the high command. Balasaheb knows this and enjoys outwitting them. So it was no surprise to Balasaheb watchers when he suddenly announced last week that Maharashtra will have ‘only the Shiv Sena pattern’ and not the ‘Modi pattern’. To drill the point home, he declared that not even the ‘Mayawati pattern’ will have any relevance in the state. Actually, he need not have brought Mayawati into this matrix.

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Writes of passage

Namita Bhandare in the Hindustan Times questions the wisdom of film star Aamir Khan’s presence as a delegate at the Jaipur Literature Festival 

I yield to nobody in my regard for Aamir Khan as a fundamentally decent human being. I doff my (metaphorical) hat at his courage to follow his politics and I applaud from my heart at Taare Zameen Par (TZP) as a sensitive, socially-relevant film that every parent, teacher and thinking adult should watch.

Yet, even I have to question the wisdom of Khan’s opting to attend the Jaipur Literature Festival recently, not as a participant — because surely it was his right to attend an event that has free entry for all — but as a delegate.

Now Khan may be a fine actor and a sensitive director, but he’s no writer; not at least to the best of anyone’s knowledge although he does post occasionally on his blog. His conversation with Tehelka’s Shoma Chaudhury had little to do with books (though someone from the audience did ask what he had read in recent times) and more to do with films, particularly TZP. Quite clearly, even Shoma, a lit fest veteran, was aware of the awkwardness, beginning her conversation by wondering aloud what Aamir was doing at a festival that celebrates literature.

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Aung San Suu Kyi: Prepare for the worst

Aung Hla Tun has a report on the detained Myanmar opposition leader in Reuters

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Detained Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi is frustrated at a lack of talks on political reform with the ruling military junta since last year’s bloody crackdown on dissent, her party said on Wednesday.

After a rare meeting between the Nobel peace laureate and leaders of her National League for Democracy (NLD), spokesman Nyan Win said Suu Kyi held out little hope that unprecedented international pressure on the generals would bear fruit.

“Let’s hope for the best and prepare for the worst,” he quoted her as saying, adding she worried that Wednesday’s 90-minute meeting, and another immediately afterwards with junta liaison minister Aung Kyi, might give rise to “false hope”.

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What makes a miracle

Some myths about the rise of India and China by UC, Berkeley Economics professor Pranab Bardhan in the Boston Review 

After more than a century of relative stagnation, the economies of India and China have been growing at remarkably high rates over the past 25 years. In 1820 the two countries contributed nearly half of the world’s income; by 1950, with the industrialized West having pulled away, their share had fallen to less than one-tenth. Today it is just less than one-fifth, and projections suggest that by 2025 it will rise to one-third. (In 2008 the World Bank is expected to issue revised numbers about cost of living in China and India, which may somewhat reduce these estimated income shares, both current and future).

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Pakistan’s party on wheels

NBC’s Islamabad correspondent Michelle Kosinski on a colourful tradition in Worldblog

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Since Benazir Bhutto’s assassination, and well before, Pakistan has been a nation battered by all sides. The frequent scene of suicide bombings, it has also been suffering under its worst energy crisis ever, often enduring blackouts in its major cities, frequent unrest on its streets and a worrisome shortage of flour and basics.

For all of its problems, it is a beautiful country, the people especially.

If there is one image that seems to keep returning to mind whenever I think about Pakistan, it is something that is utterly unique to this place, in a world where such peculiarities are ever more rare: the eye-popping, elaborately painted trucks that suddenly jump out from the dusty brown roads like exotic birds in the sand.

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Fab four CEOs score at Forbes wealth chart

Economic Times has the PTI agency story on its front page

STEEL tycoon Lakshmi Niwas Mittal and the Ambani brothers are among the 10 wealthiest CEOs in the world, according to Forbes. Mr Mittal is ranked the second-wealthiest CEO, followed by Mukesh Ambani (6th), Anil Ambani (7th) and Wipro chief Azim Premji (9th). Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett tops the list with a fortune of $52 billion. Arcelor Mittal chief LN Mittal has a net worth of $32 billion, while Mukesh Ambani and Anil Ambani have fortunes of $20.1 billion and $18.2 billion, respectively. Chief of IT bellwether Wipro Azim Premji has a net worth of $17.1 billion.

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Bed and (board)room? No big deal, say Indian executives

Office romances are all in a day’s work for a significant section of India’s corporate sector, finds a survey reported by Veenu Sandhu of Hindustan Times

For a significant section of India’s corporate sector, romancing a colleague, or even the boss, is all in a day’s work, according to a survey, Romance at Workplace, conducted by staffing company TeamLease Services.

A third of those surveyed also saw no harm in romancing a married colleague, while 44 per cent said an affair was often a strategic move to climb the corporate ladder.

The first in a series of surveys aimed at understanding the country’s new corporate world, the study covered 402 men and women from leading companies in Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Kolkata, Pune, Chandigarh and Hyderabad.

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Romance in the workplace. See full study

Remembering Bapu

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On Gandhi’s death anniversary today: Rev Jesse Jackson visits India and there is quite a bit of introspection on the legacy of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi and his relevance to the world today.

First, historian and author (India After Gandhi) Ramachandra Guha argues in the Hindustan Times that Gandhi cannot be understood without the context of his faith and religious belief but it was a faith that was of vital assistance in promoting peace and harmony between people who worship different Gods, or no God at all:

Many years ago, I had an argument with the philosopher Ramchandra (Ramu) Gandhi about his grandfather’s faith. I had always admired the Mahatma, but my secular-socialist self sought to rid him of the spiritual baggage which seemed unnecessary to his broader message. Could we not follow Gandhi in his empathy for the poor and his insistence on non-violence while rejecting the religious idiom in which these ideas were cloaked? Ramu Gandhi argued that the attempt to secularise Gandhi was both mistaken and misleading. If you take the Mahatma’s faith out of him, he told me, then Gandhi would not be the Mahatma. His religious beliefs were central to his political and social philosophy – in this respect, the man was the message.

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In the Times of India, political psychologist Ashis Nandy analyses the ‘fear of Gandhi’ and the middle-class antipathy towards him that has only become stronger in the global knowledge industry:

On the 60th year of the murder of Mohandas Gandhi, we must recognise the ambivalence towards him in India’s modernising middle classes. Gandhi was not killed by British imperialism or Muslim fanatics, but by middle-class Hindu nationalists committed to conventional concepts of statecraft, progress and diplomacy. He was not killed by a lunatic, as Nehru alleged, but by one who represented ‘normality’ and ’sanity’.

The middle-class antipathy to Gandhi cuts across ideologies. During one of her earlier tenures, Mayawati precipitated a first-class public controversy by attacking Gandhi. But she was only joining a long line of distinguished critics of Gandhi, stretching from Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the classical liberal turned Muslim nationalist, to Bal Thackeray of the Shiv Sena. New, aggressive critics of Gandhi are now being thrown up by the knights of globalisation in India.

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And, finally, political scientist Pratap Bhanu Mehta in The Indian Express argues that Gandhi achieved more in death than in his life, which in the 1940s had become marginal to the new forms of Indian politics:

Gandhi’s gloriously original and inventive life continues to be extraordinarily fascinating. But his assassination remains shrouded in embarrassed silence. At the Indira Gandhi memorial, visitors are subjected to the details of her assassination. Gandhi, on the other hand is memorialised, but not primarily through Birla House, a monument that still does not have its rightful place in the historical itineraries of Delhi. There is a simple story we have told about the assassination: Gandhi was killed by a fanatic representing the fringes of society, and that is that. But for a life whose every gesture was overloaded with meaning, the interpretive silence over Gandhi’s assassination itself begs for interpretation. Was it the enormity of that crime that silences us? Or was it its marginality? Were the perpetrators distant from us? Or was there a wider complicity, if not with the assassination itself, with the sentiments that fuelled it? The question, ‘Why was Gandhi killed’, is an easy one to answer only if we deliberately shut ourselves to the complex political realities of the time.

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Harbhajan is no saint

Rediff.com on Harbhajan Singh’s troubled track record.

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Temperamental off-spinner Harbhajan Singh is no stranger to controversy, having been booked five times for violation of the ICC Code of Conduct in his international career so far.

Harbhajan, who escaped with a 50 percent fine in Tuesday’s hearing and managed to clear his name from the racism slur, often ran into trouble because of his volatile temper. Then a rookie spinner, Harbhajan had removed Ricky Ponting, who was to prove his bunny in subsequent years, stumped in the one day match at Sharjah on April 22, 1998.

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The master in his absurd exile

Tehelka’s Shoma Chaudhury visits exiled artist M.F. Husain in Dubai

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ON 19 JANUARY, 2008, the day twenty men with hockey sticks smashed NDTV’s office in Ahmedabad, and beat two of the staff, for running an SMS poll on whether MF Husain should be awarded the Bharat Ratna, the master himself sat quietly on the floor of his home in faraway Dubai, rapt in a sketch of two ceremonial horses – a wedding card for Ustad Amjad Ali Khan’s son.
A meditative silence enveloped the room, heightened by the rhythmic sound of his sketching pen. Nothing could touch him, immune in his concentration. The sun set outside on a brilliant skyline. The beautiful room acquired a sense of prayer. Husain had just spent hours outlining his love for Hindu philosophy and culture, a life lived in its worship. Eight years spent painting the Ramayana, as many painting the Mahabharata.
Hundreds of canvases of Ganesha and Shiva and Parvati and Hanuman, the ragas, the natyas and Benaras. Seventy years spent as “Chobi Das”, a devotee of the image. Seventy years spent roaming the earth, seeking to enrich its understanding of India. And now, they were smashing offices in his name. Declaring him an apostate.

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In the Widening World of Reality TV, Being a ‘Crowd’ Is No Easy Job

India’s boom in audience-based reality TV spawns new jobs for poor, unemployed young women, but forces a break from tradition writes Rama Lakshmi in The Washington Post 

Eighteen-year-old Mital Limbad stretches lazily in bed in her tiny, one-room tenement. It is 8:30 a.m., and she has been home for only a few hours, having spent the previous night at a long and tiring TV shoot.

As her family goes about the morning chores, her cellphone rings. Limbad answers it, listens and hangs up.

“I need to be at the Cinevista studio in two hours,” she says.

“What show will you be on this time?” asks her mother, Jyoti, 39.

” ‘K for Kishore,’ ” she answers, referring to a popular TV talent show. Her mother and her younger sister and brother cheer.

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At 90, sci-fi guru wishes E.T. would call

Associated Press reports on Arthur C Clarke’s recent 90th birthday

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Science-fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke listed three wishes on his 90th birthday: for the world to embrace cleaner energy resources, for a lasting peace in his adopted home, Sri Lanka, and for evidence of extraterrestrial beings.

“I have always believed that we are not alone in this universe,” Clarke said in a speech to a small gathering of scientists, astronauts and government officials Sunday in Colombo where he lives.

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Yes, Pakistan’s new national gallery has nudes

Thanks to Sohail Hashmi for sending us this posting by Carol Grisanti at MSNBC’s Worldblog on Pakistan’s National Art Gallery which opened in November last year

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There is something of a modern-day bard in Pakistani architect Naeem Pasha, but it’s not just because he writes poetry – it’s more an expression of what he wants his buildings to be.

“It’s not that I am concentrating on purely architectural expression,” said Pasha, 64, his brown-rimmed glasses perfectly offsetting a head of thick snow-white hair and neat goatee. “All those sketches would have a lot of couplets, the beginning of a poem might be there,” he said smiling.

I was intrigued.

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Disney youth don’t Bop; they’re singing in Hindi

Brooks Barnes from Los Angeles in The New York Times.

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How do you sing “bop to the top” in Hindi? If you are the Walt Disney Company, very carefully. The media conglomerate is trying to expand the global reach of “High School Musical” to squeeze even more money from the franchise. The new efforts – which include a long-term London stage production, a touring stage show in Asia and music videos in 17 languages – are also intended to start prepping foreign markets for the musical’s high-stakes transition to the big screen.

“High School Musical 3: Senior Year” is scheduled for release in North American theaters in October, with a global premiere to follow soon after. “These are all building blocks,” said Anne Sweeney, the president of the Disney-ABC Television Group. “Every new piece of this franchise opens a new door.”

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Modi, my maid and a few home truths

Posted by Daipayan Halder in his blog, Subaltern Studies

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My maid is a Modi fan. She is a Maharashtrian, a Dalit (she told me so, I had no way of knowing) and an avid Muslim hater (I knew this morning). She had gone to hear Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi (the same man who had been variously called the ‘Butcher of Gujarat’ and a ‘mass murderer’ for his alleged support to post-Godhra Hindu rioters) rave about his third consecutive Gujarat victory and rant against Muslim anti-socials who need to be shown their place at Shivaji Park the Sunday before last Sunday. She came back convinced. “Them, Mollahs need a thrash or two from time to time,” she told me while mopping the floor, “and Modi will ensure that”.

“What have you got against Muslims?” I ask, hiding my shock behind a smile. “They are all wrong,” is all she offers.

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Power games

He’s been here, there and everywhere this past week — holding noisy demonstrations against Pervez Musharraf’s meeting with Gordon Brown in London; speaking out against the regime at the Asia Society in New York and castigating the Bush government for propping up the Musharraf government at the National Press Club in Washington.

So why has Imran Khan remained on the fringes of Pakistan politics? Do sportsmen make good politicians and could Imran be the man to watch writes Tunku Vardarajan in a December profile for the Financial Times

Imran Khan is a very unusual man. An arrogantly wonderful cricketer – a former captain of Pakistan and candidate for any all-time cricket dream-team – he is now so immersed in his country’s opposition politics that he was thrown into jail for a few days last month by General Pervez Musharraf.

Khan’s singularity, firstly, has to do with the fact that not many sportsmen go into politics. They ply different trades, athletes and politicians, each demanding great dedication to get to the top. Who straddles the two seemingly unconnected worlds? Sebastian Coe, perhaps, in the contemporary era?

A former middle-distance runner, he is now a Conservative member of the House of Lords, though few regarded him as a serious politician (except perhaps William Hague, his one-time boss and jiu-jitsu sparring partner).

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Hollywood Ram

Ashok Banker’s Ramayana is being made into a Hollywood series. Purnima Sharma has the story in Times of India  

It was his love for mythology that led Ashok Banker to dabble in Ramayana, the series which is now being adapted on celluloid by Hollywood. Says the normally reticent writer, “The talks actually started way back in 2006. Before that too, there had been some tentative enquiries. A studio wanted to make three films on the Ramayana in both English and Hindi, to be shot in India.” But Ashok decided to sell an offer to Ben Kingsley. “Being of Indian origin, he had the most exciting vision. Ben had initially wanted to fly down with Nicole Kidman to speak to me about it, and that sure got me a bit flustered,” he laughs.

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A great seduction begins …

Antonia Senior, a columnist with The Times, London, on… well, just read on…

So, it’s true?” she asked softly, her green eyes brimming with tears. He looked down at her, his eyes glinting like steel under the office strip lighting. “Yes,” he said, in that deep voice that made her tremble. “I’m going to India to handle the launch. Mills & Boon is hitting Bombay.”
Her mind was spinning.

He folded his arms across his broad chest, and she watched the muscles flexing under his immaculately pressed shirt.

“India has 300 million English-readers,” he said, and his voice was cold. “We already sell four books a second. Think how far we could go.” She saw the light shining in his eyes, and knew she had already lost him. “Go then,” she sobbed. “With a business case like that, you have no choice.”

That’s it.

Rambo goes to Burma

Joel Stein takes a look at the new Rambo film for Time magazine

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Sylvester Stallone has memorized a lot of Procol Harum lyrics, and for the next two minutes I’m going to hear them. Because if you want to know what inspires a man to write a movie in which hundreds of people are blown up and which, by his own estimate, contains only three pages of dialogue between the two main characters, apparently you have to listen to the lyrics of a psychedelic 1968 song called In Held ‘Twas in I: Glimpses of Nirvana. This is the song that made Stallone want to be a writer, which is surprising because while it contains one Zen koan and mentions the Dalai Lama three times, it does not allude to firing a rocket launcher through a helicopter window.

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Combative Indian magazine struggles to sell its ‘bad news’

Sonia Phalnikar in International Herald Tribune


taruntejpal.jpgA glance at a newsstand in any major Indian city reveals a media market in the midst of a boom. There are frothy tabloids, slick business papers, racy Bollywood glossies and lifestyle magazines, with new titles hitting the stands every week. Advertisers are shoveling out cash and foreign investors are stampeding in.

But the news is not as good for the country’s boldest English-language news magazine, Tehelka. The crusading independent weekly is struggling to expand and take a bigger slice of a highly competitive print market.

Like many anti-establishment publications around the world, Tehelka has garnered only lukewarm support from advertisers and relative disinterest from readers more interested in upbeat news.

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India’s investors lack sophistication

From the blog, Riding the Elephant by John Elliott, Fortune’s India correspondent  

India has unsophisticated investors. I’m talking about stock market investors of course following the stock market crash, with Mumbai’s key Sensex index plummeting 19% from an all time and over-priced high of above 21,000 on January 8 to under 17,000 by Tuesday. Such a remark, judging from past Riding the Elephant experience, will generate a furious tirade of comments, especially from readers based in the United States who are always anxious to protect India’s reputation.

But how else can you explain a market which swings from such extremes. Last week it mobilized bids totaling an astronomic $180 billion for the $2.9 billion initial public offering launched by Anil Ambani’s Reliance Power (which has yet to produce a revenue stream). On Monday and Tuesday, it crashed, seemingly ignoring the country’s strong economic fundamentals. As Palaniappan Chidambaram, India’s finance minister, pointed out when he tried to calm nerves during the slide, the fundamentals are strong. The economy, he pointed out, is growing at around 9%, and the prime minister’s economic advisory council is forecasting 8.5% for 2008-09.

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Frozen and framed in time

Archana in the Mail Today looks at an ongoing photography exhibition at Delhi’s National Gallery of Modern Art

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A 1933 self-portrait by Umrao Singh Sher-Gil clicked in Paris. This section is curated by the photographer’s grandson, the artist Vivan Sundaram and Devika Daulet Singh

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Standing tall in a country of small men

In Mint, Mehul Srivastava on what it takes to be a doorman at a five-star hotel in New Delhi.

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With his bearing erect, his turban resplendent, and his closely tailored doorman’s uniform almost shining under the lights at a Taj Mahal hotel in New Delhi, Bijay Pal Singh looks taller, grander and almost more dignified than many of the guests he helps usher into one of the Capital’s most prestigious hotels.

He is 6ft 2 inches tall and, in a country of short men, Singh holds an ace card. He outgrew the national average-about 5ft 6 inchesfor men-when he was just about 12, he remembers, and since then, literally speaking, he has towered over most of India.

His height, he says, got him a good job in the army, working for an artillery regiment. And when he retired after 17 years and nine months of being a soldier, hoping to spend time closer to his family in Haryana, he heard about this job, a job that required, above all, that he be tall.

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He gave Pakistan her voice

In a country where extremists rage against the cosmopolitan, Ali Saleem dons the persona — and sari — of a flirty middle-aged widow for a TV talk show watched by everyone from models to mullahs. Bruce Wallace reports from Karachi in Los Angeles Times.

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Out of costume but not out of character, one of Pakistan’s hottest TV stars was sipping his first tea of the day as the sun faded on a December afternoon, the shadow of his beard evidence of rising late after another night of partying hard in the country’s media capital.

“I want to lift all this negativity we have, to get my poor people to lighten up,” Ali Saleem said in the rapid, chatty style that has helped make his talk show popular with everyone from models to mullahs.

Amid the bombings and assassinations, Ali said, it’s his duty to give audiences a respite from reality, and to present a Pakistani face to the world that challenges the monochromatic image of a country descending into hell.

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The comfort of Ian McEwan

In Hindustan Times, Indrajit Hazra meets Ian McEwan at the Jaipur Literature Festival.

It’s not easy to situate Ian McEwan in the surroundings of a mall. But there he is, with the popcorn machines in the background, in Jaipur’s Inox cinema, waiting for the Indian premiere of the adaptation of his novel, Atonement, to come to an end and field questions from the audience. Along with him are some friends that include Golden Globe-winning and Oscar-nominated screenwriter Christopher Hampton. I butt in and tell McEwan that a sequel of his novel, Saturday, already seems to have been filmed in India. “Yes, quite,” he says with a crooked smile, pointing with his head to the poster of the Ajay Devgan-Irfan Khan starring Sunday that’s also premiered the same day.

The ‘Ian at Inox’ moment happens a day after I had joined him, his charming wife, journalist Annalena McAfee, Hampton and a few other friends at a table in Jaipur Diggi Palace hotel.

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