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British gurdwara ready to turn into temporary hospital

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Guru Maneyo Granth Gurdwara, Slough – Photo: Gurdwara Facebook page
By Asia Samachar Team | BRITAIN |

How can a gurdwara serve the wider public in the face of a looming medical crisis with the spread of a novel coronavirus? Well, let’s turn it into a hospital!

That’s exactly what the folks at a Slough gurdwara have in mind.

Many gurdwara have turned up the heat in the Langgar, or the gurdwara kitchens, to whip up meals for the needy.

The people running Guru Maneyo Granth Gurdwara, located on Bath Road and attracting Sanggat members from as far afield as London, has come out with their own novel idea.

The gurdwara is offering its entire four acre site to the National Health Service (NHS) as a temporary hospital, reports Slough Observer.

“We are fortunate to have a site with large versatile open spaces, excellent parking facilities and a communal kitchen that can serve thousands of meals a day,” gurdwara trustee Savraj Singh told the newspaper.

Guru Maneyo Granth Gurdwara, Slough

He said the trustees and volunteers wanted to ensure the facilities could be put to use in serving the community in the best way possible and hence offered the entire Gurdwara site to the Berkshire NHS Trust.

“We are simply doing our duty to serve the community at its time of need, in the same way many other across the country are all playing their part in this national effort to defeat the virus,”he said.

For now, he said they had informed that additional hospital space was not required, but things could change.

“The gurdwara is now looking to supply volunteers to the NHS to help with a range of activities,” he said.

SEE ALSO: Roles and functions of a gurdwara

Volunteers at Gurdwara have also seen a growing demand for its free mobile food support service, where daily food parcels are dropped to the elderly, self isolated and NHS workers, the report said.

The gurdwara has linked up with Slough Children Services and Age Concern Berkshire to ensure that help gets to the most vulnerable in Slough. (Those interested can contact volunteers on 07960 781799 or 07492 383057 or visit www.GMGGurdwara.com).

The gurdwara is currently not open to the congregation in response to the government announcement to close all places of worship in the battle to contain Covid-19.

 

RELATED STORY:

Meals to help the needy (Asia Samachar, 28 March 2020)

Roles and functions of a gurdwara (Asia Samachar, 11 Dec 2015)

ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond. Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here |

Afghan KL envoy condemns attacks ‘on our Sikhs and Hindus’

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By Asia Samachar Team | MALAYSIA |

The Afghanistan envoy in Malaysia has condemned the attack on the Kabul gurdwara, which killed 25 people, as an attack on its own people.

In a letter, the Kuala Lumpur embassy said it ‘strongly condemns the unconscionable terrorist attack on our Sikhs and Hindus in Kabul on 25 March 2020.’

“This was an attack on the people of Afghanistan. All of us share the pain of our Sikh and Hindu brothers and sisters,” it said.

The letter was in response to a note dispatched by Khalsa Diwan Malaysia (KDM), one of the oldest running Sikh organisations, appealing the Afghanistan Government to provide help to the victims and ensure more security be enforced to avoid such incidents in future.

“It was heartening to see the local Afganistanis helping out the victims,” KDM president Santokh Singh Randhawa said in the letter.

A copy of the letter, addressed to Afghaistan ambassador to Kuala Lumpur, Dr. Moheb Rahman Spingar, was emailed to Asia Samachar.

KDM said it was ‘greatly saddened by the cowardly and dastardly attack’ on the Sikhs gathered for a prayer at Gurdwara Guru Har Rai in Shor Bazaar.

A Sikh organisation har urged the Canadian government to absorb the last remaining Sikhs and Hindus in Afghanistan after the latest terror attack upon a Sikh gurdwara in central Kabul on Wednesday that killed 25 men, women and children.

The World Sikh Organization of Canada has written to Canadian Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Marco Mendicino to highlight the desperate plight of Afghan Sikhs and Hindus.

It highlighted the need for a direct sponsorship program to get them out safely before more die at the hands of ISIS.

For many amongst the 2,000 odd Sikhs and Hindus, the senseless attack upon the Gurdwara Guru Har Rai in Shor Bazaar was the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back as far as their dreams of continuing to live in Afghanistan.

A gunmen stormed into the gurdwara, shot discriminately and held 80 hostages. In the end, at least 25 people, including a child and women, were dead. On the next day, an explosive went off just outside the crematorium as the Sikhs were cremating their dead. And the next day, yet another attack.

In response, the letter noted that in 2018, Dr. Moheb Rahman was in Kabul as head of the Institute of Diplomacy in Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Afghanistan, a similar ‘brutal attack’ happened on the Sikh brothers and sisters.

The July 2018 attack killed at least 10 Sikhs.

 

RELATED STORY:

Gunmen, suicide bombers attack Sikh gurdwara in Kabul (Asia Samachar, 25 March 2020)

Sikhs are finished in Afghanistan (Asia Samachar, 29 March 2020)

ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond. Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here |

Covid-19 should be teaching us about our folly

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By Jagdesh Singh | OPINION |

If you’re reading this now, you’re probably trying to cope with anxiety and stress of the unknown. You’re probably barely coping, some might say. The barrage of news at your finger tips, whether you want it or not, doesn’t stop.

While the news can be depressing, and we don’t know what the future holds for us, the reminders we’re getting from the situation we’re all in together are stark and sobering.

If you’re reading this on your mobile device, from the comforts of your home, you’re already lucky to have the luxury to do so. Meanwhile, in one stroke, a billion people in India became jobless, stranded in limbo trying to get home, and starving with small mouths to feed.

I dare say there are some of our neighbors going through similar challenges. I should be thankful, and I shouldn’t need reminders to be.

Another reminder that hasn’t been repeated enough amongst ourselves – even though it is so obvious and in your face – is that this disease, like any other disease, does not discriminate. It doesn’t discriminate religion, race, sex, age, sexual preference, political preference, rich or poor, educated or not, spiritual or not. No matter how closer you think you are to God or not, every single human being in existence can get it, and possibly die from it.

And here’s the clincher. For us to not get it, we have to help the people around us not get it. It is so cliched, but we are now more connected to each other than we ever thought we would be. The Muslim, the Hindu, the Christian, the Jew, the Buddhist, and even the Sikh next door, is helping us not get it while we are helping him or her not get it.

This itself should tell us that we are all one of the same. We are connected to each other for the sake of our survival, and that we need each other more than ever now. I mean, literally, this disease is spreading to all corners of our world, which means nobody can run away from it and claim that their race or religion is superior to save us from it. Rather, practicality and common human decency to treat each of us as humans the same as us, will save us.

This universal message has been taught to us by the great Masters of any religion or spirituality since the day we were born. Yet, we have never been as disconnected as humans as we were before Covid-19 decided to make it’s presence known.

You’ve heard it before.

“Love Thy Neighbor”

“Don’t return the hand of the needy. That hand is trying to give you Jannah”

“If a man going down into a river, swollen and swiftly flowing, is carried away by the current – how can he help others cross?”

I still find it amusing to see some reflex reactions from people blaming this calamity on sexual preferences or supposed non-religious behavior of some people at some location. The next you know, the disease is in their backyard, equally affecting people supposedly religious. And yet, the realization that race and religion does not matter as much any more as the type of food we eat or the clothes we wear still begs to be asked of these people.

For the believers of spirituality, challenging this disease in the name of God, such as attending large gatherings that bears the risk of transmitting the disease to one another, simply defies the fundamental fact that we’re being selfish and not helping our brothers and sisters. In fact, we are making it worse. Sure, we might die in the name of God and go to the heavens promised, but we’ll be leaving behind hungry mouths and even more people to die. To what ends? For nought. For the record, I personally don’t think you’ll be going to heaven with that logic.

Let’s save our own lives, by saving our friends and neighbors, and any human that bleed the same red colored blood that we do. Let’s do it by staying away from each other, for a while. Not because the government tells us to, but because we are doing it for ourselves. Because we are connected.

Jagdesh Singh, a Kuala Lumpur-based executive with a US multinational company, is a father of three girls who are as opinionated as their mother

* This is the opinion of the writer, organisation or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Asia Samachar.

 

RELATED STORY:

Private medical specialists urged to step forward (Asia Samachar, 30 March 2020)

Virtual Sikhi (Asia Samachar, 16 March 2020)

ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond. Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here |

Private medical specialists urged to step forward

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Dr Balwant Singh Gendeh
By Asia Samachar Team | MALAYSIA |

Private medical specialists can do their part in battling the novel covonavirus pandemic by coming forward to serve the nation.

This is the call from the Association of Specialists in Private Medical Practice of Malaysia (ASPMPM) as Malaysia and nations globally contend with the spread of Covid-19.

“This is our calling and our duty to the sick and the nation,” said ASPMPM president Dr Balwant Singh Gendeh.

“All private medical specialists will support the Health Ministry fully and work together with the private hospitals each one is attached to, to combat the virus,” he said in a statement released on Sunday (29 March).

The association has also urged the government to ensure adequate personal protective equipment (PPE) supplies for all frontline doctors in light of increasing reports of healthcare workers succumbing to the virus in other countries.

“We hope the government and NGOs can look into residential facilities for frontline staff to stay especially those involved with ICU care so that they do not infect their family members in case they become positive for the virus,” he said.

Dr Balwant, now attached to the Pantai Hospital, retired after the serving in the government service for 36 years as a professor and ear, nose and throat (ENT) surgeon.

 

RELATED STORY:

Malaysian gurdwaras to cancel Vaisakhi celebration (Asia Samachar, 27 March 2020)

ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond. Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here |

Singapore Sikhs condemn ‘senseless attacks’ on Afghan Sikhs

By Asia Samachar Team | SINGAPORE |

Singapore’s Sikh Advisory Board (SAB) has condemned the ‘senseless and reckless act’ when 25 people were killed in an attach on a gurdwara in Kabul, Afghanistan.

“We express our solidarity with the Afghan Sikh community and the families of victims and condemn the senseless and reckless act,” SAB said in a statement released yesterday. A copy was emailed to Asia Samachar.

SAB is a statutory board established under Singapore’s Ministry of Community Development.

SEE ALSO: Gunmen, suicide bombers attack Sikh gurdwara in Kabul 

Under the present set-up, SAB has 12 members, nine nominated by five gurdwaras and three nominated by the Government. The five nominating gurdwaras are Khalsa Dharmak Sabha, Khalsa Jiwan Sudhar Sabha, Pardesi Khalsa Dharmak Dewan, Sri Guru Nanak Sat Sang Sabha and Sri Guru Singh Sabha (SGSS).

In a subsequent statement from the nation’s foreign ministry, Singapore said it ‘strongly condemns’ the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) at a Sikh religious complex in Kabul, Afghanistan on 25 March 2020 which killed and injured many people including children.

“There can be no justification for such attacks on houses of worship. We convey our heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims and wish the injured a speedy recovery,” it said.

(Story updated with Singapore foreign ministry statement)

 

THE FULL MEDIA RELEASE

The Sikh Advisory Board (SAB) in Singapore is saddened by the senseless attacks on Sikhs in Afghanistan this past week.

On Wednesday (Mar 25), a lone wolf terrorist stormed and attacked a Sikh Gurdwara in Afghanistan, in which 25 innocent people lost their lives and many others were injured. An explosive device then detonated the funeral service of the 25 beloved Sikhs the next day. The Islamic State (IS) has claimed responsibility for both attacks and also issued threats that future attacks on the Afghan Sikh community, numbering some 300 families, is imminent unless they leave the country.

We express our solidarity with the Afghan Sikh community and the families of victims and condemn the senseless and reckless act.

We pray for strength for the families of those who perished in this heinous act and for the speedy recovery of those injured. These attacks are the most recent on the Afghan Sikh community as they continue to be targeted by terrorist groups in the country, in a bid to eradicate the country of religious minorities.

We are fortunate here in Singapore that minorities, such as the Sikh community, continue to play an important and valued part in the nation’s social fabric and have flourished.

The SAB also notes that Sikhs and Muslims around the world continue to enjoy mutual respect and understanding, including here in Singapore where both communities work closely together to strengthen social cohesion and that such isolated terror incidents will not serve to undermine these bonds.

 

RELATED STORY:

Kabul gurdwara attack ‘sheer butchery’, says NZ Ekta (Asia Samachar, 29 March 2020)

Sikhs are finished in Afghanistan (Asia Samachar, 29 March 2020)

 

ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond. Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here |

Book Review: Sikh Homeland and Speeches in Parliament by Sirdar Kapur Singh

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Photograph of Sirdar Kapur Singh taken by S. Baldev Singh at Chandigarh – Source: Gurtej Singh blog
By Gurmukh Singh | OPINION |
  • Sikh Homeland was not a separatist move but would have strengthened Indian unity.
  • Dedicated to Bhujangi Khalsa, the publication is a permanent contribution to the Sikh polity as it emerges from the uncertainties of the present.

Historically, the Sikhs as the Khalsa Panth have always insisted that they should be approached and dealt with at state level as a collective group and entity.

This Sikh insistence on being treated as a collective group and entity was understood by the Mughals. The Sikhs were recognised as such when colonial Britain called them around the negotiation table in their own right during independence talks. This condition had also been continually met by the Indian leaders before the partition of the Indian sub-continent when the brave Sikhs were always at the forefront of Indian struggles over the centuries, for independence.  Promise of a Sikh Homeland was made.

However, as soon as the colonial powers left India, Indian national leaders no longer felt any need to keep their promise nor to negotiate with the Sikhs as a collective group and entity.

Minus any distinct Sikh qaomi recognition in the Constitution, the document  was not signed by the Sikh representatives.  Thenceforth, in one form or another, the relationship between the Sikhs and the Indian State has never been stable. In fact, it has been quite violent at times. 

Documents on SIKH HOMELAND and Speeches in Parliament by Bhai Sahib Sirdar Kapur Singh is the title of a recently published book edited by Prof Gurtej Singh. (Published by Satvic Media Pvt Ltd, January 2020). It places demand for Sikh homeland in its historical context  and gives useful pointers to the future direction of Sikh political thought and interface with the rulers of India. Below are some general points with quotes in italics from the book. The book is also relevant to the future Sikh and Indian State relationship.

Prof Gurtej Singh has given an excellent summary in two introductory items. (The Foreword is in the name of Jaswant Singh Mann but was drafted by Gurtej Singh.) It was probably the 1965 war with Pakistan which resulted in the much truncated and grudgingly conceded Punjabi Suba. According to Gurtej Singh, most leading figures were against it: Nehru did not want it, Lal Bahadur Shastri too believed like him that it was dangerous to trust a Sikh majority state at the sensitive border with Pakistan, Indira Gandhi subscribed to the same view with more vehemence. ….Sardar Hukam Singh was personally opposed to it and his Parliamentary Consultative Committee was equally divided about it.

The Sikh Homeland Resolution of Akali Dal, passed by its working Committee on July 20 1966, at Delhi, reminded the rulers of India of their pre-independence promises so that Sikhs could live as respectable and equal citizens of the Union of India. It was not a separatist move but quite the opposite! It was a statement of the just aspiration of the Sikhs as a distinct people in the Indian Union. It was conceived to be a demand which would strengthen the unity of India and will enhance its prestige.

It asked for inclusion of certain Sikh areas (listed in the Resolution) deliberately and intentionally cut off and not included in the new Punjab which the Resolution proposed as the Sikh Homeland, within the Union of India.

Such an autonomous constitutional status had already been envisaged for Jammu and Kashmir in the Constitution Act in 1950. The Sikhs were only asking for a redefinition of their status through a perfectly legitimate right of amendment to the Constitution, otherwise already amended a number of times before that. So, to those who opposed such an amendment so vehemently, the question: What can construe a demand for another alteration [to the Constitution] into a sedition? Indeed!

Sikh history is witness to the nature of a Sikh state. In such a state to be a Sikh shall be a matter of pride, but at the same time all citizens without any distinction whatever shall be co-sharers in the rights and privileges which accrue from it…. There is nothing in the past history of the Sikhs or their present political aims which is detrimental to the interests of Hindus as such. 

History has already witnessed such a shared socio-political environment of a Sikh Homeland during the time of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. Such a regime would rest on the pillars of universal Sikh values of kirat karo, naam japo, wand chhako. That means that one must work honestly and share with those in need while remaining God-aware.

Punjab – undivided and, later, divided and much reduced to a fraction of its original size – where Sikhs have lived and regarded the land as their home, all have been welcomed from all over India to work and live while other states have imposed restrictions on Punjabi migrants.

The Sikh Homeland idea as presented by Sirdar Kapur Singh in his Parliamentary speeches is his permanent contribution to the Sikh polity as it emerges from the uncertainties of the present.

The book is recommended reading for the Bhujangi Khalsa of today to whom the book is dedicated.

Gurmukh Singh OBE, a retired UK senior civil servant, chairs the Advisory Board of The Sikh Missionary Society UK. Email: sewauk2005@yahoo.co.uk

* This is the opinion of the writer, organisation or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Asia Samachar.

 

RELATED STORY:

Delhi Violence and the Future of Indian Democracy (Asia Samachar, 9 March 2020)

 

ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond. Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here |

Kabul gurdwara attack ‘sheer butchery’, says NZ Ekta

By Asia Samachar Team | NEW ZEALAND |

Charitable organisation Ekta New Zealand Inc described the attack on the Kabul gurdwara which killed 25 people was Sikhs ‘sheer butchery’.

Ekta NZ spokesperson Sunita Musa said that the detonating of an explosive the next day near where the families were cremating their loved ones showed how inhuman the terrorist were.

On 25 March, some gunmen launched a brutal attack on Guru Har Rai Gurdwara in Central Kabul, killing 25 people and injuring scores of others.

“It is sheer butchery,” she said in a statement emailed to Asia Samachar.

Coming just days after the Christchurch tragedy anniversary, Musa said it brought back all the memories of that horrible period.

It appeared as if the terrorist were wanting to take advantage of the world’s attention on the Covid-19 lockdown, to mount the attack so that it would not attract as much as attention as it would otherwise have got.

Musa said it appeared that they have gotten away as there has been very little media attention on the attack and nearly all world leaders have been silent on it.

However, Ekta NZ was not sitting still and has written to the prime minister requesting for NZ’s condemnation of the attack.

“It is our hope that other world leaders will follow suit. We need to create an awareness of the tragedy so that the terrorists know that the whole world is against them,” she said.

She has appealed to all faith groups to post their condemnations on social media.

 

RELATED STORY:

NZ interfaith food distribution for Guru Nanak’s birthday (Asia Samachar, 27 Nov 2019)

Sikhs are finished in Afghanistan (Asia Samachar, 29 March 2020)

ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond. Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here |

India’s brutal lockdown

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Volunteers coming together to provide simple, nutritious meals to those stranded without food and work, specially the homeless in #LockdownIndia – Photo: Karwan e Mohabbat
By Gurpreet Singh GP | OPINION |

India’s brutal lockdown more lethal & contagious than Covid-19 itself

On the evening of March 24, Indian Prime Minister Modi announced lockdown for 21days starting from the next day.

He said, “If the situation is not handled in these 21 days, the country and your family could go back 21 years. If the situation is not handled in these 21 days, several families will get devastated forever. Hence, you must forget what going out means for the next 21 days.”

India reported the very first case of novel coronavirus as early as January 30 but the first-ever address by PM on the pandemic came on March 19 for the call of voluntary lockdown for a day on March 22 and was named ‘janta curfew’ (people’s curfew) which is now seen as a preparation for total lockdown that followed three days later.

Such addresses by PM Modi are not the first of its kind. He has the distinction of not addressing a single press conference in his till date six-year tenure as the Prime Minister but has delivered several monologues, many of them under the title ‘mann ki baat’ – mind speak.

DEMONITIZATION

But the announcement of lockdown finds close resemblance with the announcement he made on November 8, 2016, for demonetization which banned high currency notes from the next day with the agenda to hit at black-money. Both demonetization and lockdown gave a few hours’ notices to the public and so both resulted in immediate panic.

While demonetization announcement made people rush to jewelry stores, real estate agents to purchase high-value assets before the currency gets redundant, lockdown announcement resulted in people flocking for pharmacies, groceries to store essential as much as possible.

In both of the announcements, the narrative of establishing ‘only one solution’ as the panacea of all evils dominates. As ‘cash transaction’ was made the only cause of black-money and so demonetization comes up as the solution. Likewise, ‘isolation’ is propagated to be the only way to fight Covid-19 and so three weeks lockdown, a brutal lockdown, comes up as the solution.

After more than three years of demonetization, it’s no more a secret the irreparable damages that demonetization has brought to the economy with no impact on black money. Now, even the government does not mention demonetization episode at any platform, just like to live with the narrative that it was ‘a decision with some flawed implementation but with good intention’. But before the 21-day lockdown is also going to be reduced to the legacy of ‘a decision with some flawed implementation but with good intention’, it will take its toll heavily like never seen before in the recorded history of Indian sub-continent, and has already started the signs. What demonetization did to black money, lockdown will do to Coronavirus.

HUNGER PANGS: Volunteers coming together to provide simple, nutritious meals to those stranded without food and work, specially the homeless in #LockdownIndia – Photo: Karwan e Mohabbat
SOCIAL DISTANCING AND PHYSICAL DISTANCING

Social distancing is the term generally used for isolation as a measure to prevent the spread of the virus. But this can be confusing in the Indian context, as social distancing has always been here and exists for more than three thousand years. People are maintaining social distancing between the upper caste also known as ‘swarna’ from the lower caste, known as ‘shudra’ or Dalit. There’s a noticeable distance between them in every sphere of life – occupation, housing, education, health & justice. Hence the term social distancing may not represent the right chord in India, it’s more appropriate to use the term ‘physical distancing’ as a preventive measure against the coronavirus.

Mainstream media has effectively convinced its mass viewers that ‘isolation’ is the only solution and so other important aspects like – testing, treatment facilities like ventilators, and safety of doctors through Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) all have become non-issues. Entire communication has been limited to make lockdown a success. Indian citizens have comfortably digested the chronicle – because the Indian health system is not equipped to tackle a pandemic so we have no other option than a complete lockdown. The government is happy with this belief as it exonerates it from its core responsibility and in the case of an outbreak, experts say is imminent, the entire blame would be on the public for not following the lockdown directives properly.

The government has successfully run such campaigns in the past. One of the flagship projects of the Modi govt was called Swatchh Bharat Abhiyaan which was the cleanliness and sanitization drive. PM Modi’s most dominant part of his every speech was ‘if 125 crore people of the country decide not to spread litter, then no power on Earth can stop making India clean.’ In other words, if you see garbage piled up near to your house, you know whom to blame. The entire Swatch Bharat campaign was run on such slogans.

There was no space in the mainstream media to debate on the investment done by govt to procure cleaning equipment, recruitment of more cleaners, enhance the working conditions of cleaners and tackling manual scavenging. So, there is no visible change after more than five years of the campaign except that Indian rivers have become more polluted, air quality has further degraded and litter all around. The 125 crores failed to do their job properly.

India so far has one of the lowest coronavirus testing ratios in the world. India has approximately 1 doctor per 1500 citizens. In rural India where two-thirds of the Indians live and rely almost solely on government hospitals, the ratio is 1 doctor to more than 10,000 people. India has 2.3 intensive care beds per 100,000 people, and 30,000 to 40,000 ventilators nationwide. This is in addition to the severe shortage of PPE. On the day of Janta Curfew, many came out on the streets beating utensils and dancing in groups, though Modi had appealed to clap or beat utensils only from the balconies as a show of gratitude for doctors. But the public responded more enthusiastically. A lot of gratitude was showered but without surety of safety for doctors. In between, we heard the news of landlords at some places asking doctors to leave their rented accommodations as doctors can bring coronavirus to their homes. The government hasn’t shared any concrete plans to address the core issues except the announcement of a mere Rs15000 crore package to strengthen healthcare with not much detail.

The first few days of lockdown shows that it may not serve the purpose of physical distancing, but will enable social distancing to the next level. Tens of thousands of daily wagers and migrant workers, the majority of them are Dalits, are leaving for their homes into the deep rural parts of the country. The place where they belong, far away from the urban civilization which is designed for the privileged class. They were in urban areas to run factories and construction work.

With the closure of these, they are not required now and will be called back as and when required. They have embarked on an arduous journey to their homes on foot. Their journey range from 50km to 500km which can take 5 to 10 days, on foot. There’s no public transport, no trains, no buses, as part of disciplined lockdown. So they have to travel on foot. Many are carrying infants on their shoulders, some holding malnourished hands of toddlers along with a bag of household items. Some have few currency notes in their pocket, many don’t.

Lockdown also has little options of food their way back as most of the dhabhas / eateries are closed. At many places, state governments, NGOs, Sikh organizations, other religious organizations & individuals are organizing free food for them but all these efforts are insufficient considering the magnitude of the situation. Physical distancing becomes irrelevant at these free kitchens. Thousands can be seen flocking at the state borders hoping to get some transport. Lately, some state governments have arranged buses for them. A 1.5-meter safe physical distance norm cannot be applied here either practically or mathematically. This lockdown has ensured that the virus reaches every village of the country which otherwise was restrained to the urban areas.

WORK FROM HOME

The concept of ‘Work from Home’ applies to the minuscule population of India. We are talking of millions of people who are daily wagers and migrant laborers who are left with neither ‘work’ nor ‘home.’ We are talking about the huge population for whom a loss of day’s work means they might miss the meal for the day, and we are talking about 21 days lockdown. Finance Minister announced a 1.7 lakh crore relief package for 800 million poor people for 3 months which is less than 1% of India’s GDP. This was too little too late. Mathematically per person, it comes out to be Rs 2125 for 3 months or Rs 24 (0.32 US$) a day assuming 100% of it trickles down the corrugated bureaucratic pipeline.

Covid-19 is believed to kill 2-5% of the infected population, but hunger kills 100%. Very soon people in India would start dying by hunger and famine before coronavirus could catch them. We are just a few days away from the major food riots. Though PM Modi in his address assured that no one needs to worry about essential commodities, but at the same time using the word ‘curfew’ several times.

Indian Police who is trained as per the legacy of colonial rule understands ‘curfew’ better than ‘lockdown with essential commodities’. So at various places police were seen stopping the transportation of essential items. Many instances have been reported of police beating mercilessly people moving around even for the purchase of essential commodities. In rare cases, the public also gets the chance to beat the police.

This migration will ensure that urban areas are cleared of poor, Dalits and migrant laborers. A perfect social distancing. This will ease out the pressure on the urban hospitals and the privileged people can be treated a little better. Mainstream media will do its job of focusing on the urban areas and blackout the news from the poor rural, where there are almost negligible health services, ventilators or ICUs remains a far cry, the poor do not even expect these things. They know they don’t deserve equal health facilities.

The times of riots, famine, and health crises are great opportunities for rulers to tighten the grip on society and ensure that democratic institutes are further crushed in the greater interest of the nation. The government will do everything right, there may be a flawed implementation but with good intention. The government cannot be blamed if the 125 crore population failed to do their job properly.

Gurpreet Singh GP is a Sikh activist and the author of the bilingual (Punjabi / English) book Sole Enemy of a Sikh, Brahmanism (Sikh da Ikko Vaeree, Brahmanvaad)

 

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ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond. Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here |

Sikhs are finished in Afghanistan

ANGUISHED: A child after the attack on Gurdwara Guru Har Rai in Shor Bazaar, Kabul, on 25 March 2020 – Photo: Reuters
By Asia Samachar Team | CANADA |

A Sikh organisation har urged the Canadian government to absorb the last remaining Sikhs and Hindus in Afghanistan after the latest terror attack upon a Sikh gurdwara in central Kabul on Wednesday that killed 25 men, women and children.

The World Sikh Organization of Canada has written to Canadian Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Marco Mendicino to highlight the desperate plight of Afghan Sikhs and Hindus.

It highlighted the need for a direct sponsorship program to get them out safely before more die at the hands of ISIS.

For many amongst the 2,000 odd Sikhs and Hindus, the senseless attack upon the Gurdwara Guru Har Rai in Shor Bazaar was the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back as far as their dreams of continuing to live in Afghanistan. The gunmen stormed the gurdwara, shot discriminately and held 80 hostages.

After the first attack on 25 March, the next day, an explosive went off just outside the crematorium as the Sikhs were cremating their dead. And the next day, yet another attack.

In a tweet yesterday, US-based Sikh activist Harinder Singh from Sikhri noted: “3rd attack in 3 days on Sikh-Afghanis. Kabul Gurduara President Gurnam Singh: Sikhs must stay at home in Kabul … Attacks happening while 200 policemen are present … Sikhs are finished in Afghanistan … Appeals globally for immediate help & intervention. #SaveAfghanSikhs”

Indeed, the plight of the small band of Sikhs – born and bred in the Afghanistan – is probably at the end of the line.

“Without internal flight options, or prospects of meaningful integration in neighbouring countries, international resettlement has become the only viable solution for Afghan Sikh and Hindu asylum seekers,” WSO Canada said in a statement the day after the incident.

The Islamic State affiliate in Afghanistan claimed responsibility for the attack on the group’s Amaq media arm, according to SITE Intelligence Group, which tracks militant postings and groups. The gunmen was identified as Indian national Abu Khalid al-Hindi, AP report.

In the past, Canada has opened its border to the needy citizens of the world. In December 2015, the first of many government-arranged flights arrived with Syrian refugees. From then till February 2016, slightly more than 26,000 Syrian refugees were resettled in Canada, under the government led by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

In the statement, WSO Canada said: “Kabul is home to the last remaining Sikhs in Afghanistan. Sikh and Hindu Afghans currently face a difficult, if not unliveable, situation in many parts of Afghanistan. The Sikh and Hindu communities that have lived in Afghanistan for hundreds of years now number approximately 1,000. Prior to 1992, their population numbered over 200,000, however due to persecution and discrimination, most have been forced to flee to other countries. The Afghan Sikh and Hindus remaining in Afghanistan are the most vulnerable who do not have the resources or ability to relocate.”

The WSO said it, along with the Manmeet Singh Bhullar Foundation and the Canadian Sikh community, have consistently called for measures to address the plight of Sikhs and Hindus in Afghanistan, as Afghan authorities have been unable to offer meaningful protection of their basic human rights.

It said it continues to assist the efforts to resettle some of these Afghan Sikh and Hindu families to Canada, which were begun by Alberta MLA Manmeet Singh Bhullar before his tragic death in 2015. While 15 refugee families have now settled in Canada, many others continue to await the processing of their files.

WSO president Tejinder Singh Sidhu said, the attack on Gurdwara Guru Har Rai and the brutal murder of so many Sikhs was a horrific act of terror, but sadly not one that was unexpected.

The Sikhs of Afghanistan are a persecuted minority that has been subject to ethnic cleansing for many years, the World Sikh Parliament (WSP) said in a statement after the attack.

In the early 1990s there were as many as 200,000 Sikhs spread across Afghanistan, but as a result of over 30 years of unabated attacks, the community has been reduced to under 300 families.

After the July 2018 incident when at least 10 Sikhs were killed in a targeted suicide bombing in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, WSP noted that the Canadian Sikh community again lobbied hard for the Canadian government to step-in and help bring these people to safety.

“Unfortunately the disappointing response from our elected officials was that there was no proof that the attack was ethnically motivated, despite the fact that Sikhs were primarily killed in the attack – and the Canadian government did not act, despite the pleas of Sikh Canadians. Since then, Sikhs have continued to be attacked, kidnapped and killed in Afghanistan,” it said.

 

ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond. Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here |

Klang police arrest 4 Punjabi men for alleged defying MCO, public drunkenness

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Photo released by North Klang police
By Asia Samachar Team | MALAYSIA |

Police arrested four Punjabi men for alleged drunkenness in public as well as not complying with the movement control order (MCO) in Klang, Selangor, yesterday (27 March).

It was the tenth day of the partial lockdown ordered by the Malaysian authorities to clampdown the spread of the novel coronavirus Covid-19.

The four men in their 30s were picked up from a gazebo in a housing township in Klang allegedly while consuming alcohol, said North Klang police chief ACP Nurulhuda Mohd Salleh in a statement yesterday.

She said they were being investigated for alleged drunkenness in a public place under Section 21 of the Minor Offences Act 1955.

The section covers ‘any person found drunk and incapable of taking care of himself, or is guilty of any riotous, disorderly or indecent behaviour, or of persistently soliciting or importuning for immoral purposes in any public road or in any public place or place of public amusement or resort, or in the immediate vicinity of any Court or of any public office or police station or place of worship.’

In the same day, 88 individuals in seven states had been arrested by the authorities for allegedly flouting the MCO, according to a Bernama report.

Kuala Lumpur police chief Commissioner Mazlan Lazim said 11 men, including nine foreigners, jogging around Mont Kiara were detained for violating the movement control order (MCO). They included two Malaysians, an American, a British national, an Indian national, four Japanese and two South Koreans.

 

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ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond. Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here |