Monday, March 9, 2009

IFAN 2009 Plan

IFAN 2009

We have committed to organise the following regionalmeets/activities, and have selected coordinators for each region too :

Delhi = 2 - Prashant & Yavnika

Mumbai = 2 - Iris & Mihir

J&K = 2 - Touseef & Dipanker

Kerala = 2 - Sunil / Dhanu

Goa = 1 - Sauvik

UP+Jharkand+Bihar = 1 - Manuwant, Rajesh, Sudhir Pal, Lenin

Bangalore = 2 - Zainab, Trupti

Calcutta+N.E. = 1 - Najeeb

We need to achieve at least 6 of the above for the year, roughly 1meet every alternate month, starting April; though we can follow anyschedule.The target audience for these meets is ourselves and like-minded /liberal individuals and perhaps others who might be interested: IFANmembers, LYF India, LYSA, FNF Partner Orgns.

IFAN 2009 main objectives are :-netowrk should discuss liberal policies for India and disseminatethese to key individuals in politics and industry in different partsof India-network should continuously lobby for liberal draft policies, withspecific aim of involving adults and young leaders-network should Establish a group of at least 5 multipliers /moderators-network should Establish Discussion groups

Possible Topics:1. Financial Crises: Chances & Challenges (liberal perspective)

2.Political Scene form a Liberal perspective

3.IAF seminar topics e.g. What is a Strategy planning workshop forFNF?

4. What's new in the Indian Book market (liberal perspective) -perhaps start a liberal book club

5.Free Trade - Boom or bane (lib persp)

6. Publications on Liberal perspective

7. Liberty & Security

8.Initiate a People to people meet between India and Pakistan LiberalsA possible structure could be to Host a two hour session :30 min: talk on a theme30 min: Q&A on the theme45 min: Moderated discussion on possible liberal strategy on thatparticular issue15 min: Conclusion by resource person and moderator.

The idea is not so much to develop an action plan, but to get into themode of thinking in that manner. The resource person and moderatorcould be rotated each session so as to expose everyone to differentroles.To begin with, the action plan could be hypothetical. But if we canbuild a momentum among the IFAN members, then at least one or two ofthe olans could be adopted by a few of the members and take it to thelevel of implementation, under the auspices of one of the partners.That way IFAN members and FNF partners may begin to develop a moresymbiotic relationship.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

t is to inform you that new Executive Committee (EC) of India-FNF Alumni Network (IFAN) was elected in recently concluded IFAN General Meeting 2008 in Mumbai. The line-up of EC members are:


1. National Coordinator : Ms. Iris Madeira irismadeira@usa.net
2. Deputy Coordinator : Mr. Touseef Magray touseefmagray@gmail.com
3. Secretary : Mr. Shabi Hussain shabi.fof@gmail.com
4. Treasurer : Mr. Satyajit Dey satyajit@ccs.in

It is further to inform you that EC has formulated a certain plan of action aimed at reforming the network (IFAN) and how to take up activities this year. We will be getting back to you from time to time. But since we say that we are a network, so for this network to work successfully we require support of each member/organisation. We can't do anything with out your active support and contribution. It is in this regard you are hereby requested to lend your kind support from time to time in our future endeavours. In the meantime, you can contact anyone of us for any clarifications/suggestions.

Looking forward to your active support.

New EC

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

A NEAR CRASH EXPERIENCE

Monday, April 7, 2008

A NEAR CRASH EXPERIENCE

MID-AIR JETLITE PILOT DETECTS TECHNICAL SNAG

BOMBAY-PATNA JETLITE FLIGHT 6721 DIVERTED TO AHMEDABAD

`HAWA MEIN PLANE KHARAB HO GAYA' frantic passengers call home after landing...

A first person account by Manuwant Choudhary

After a liberal meeting in Bombay taking the early morning Jetlite flight at 5.35 is never easy and the only consolation is that within 2-and-a-half hours I would be in Patna but not this time. What does it feel when mid-air you hear a crackle and your pilots voice says all is not well.
We had almost done some 40 minutes of flying when I could feel suddenly the engines making less noise than they did and a few seconds later the crackle of the speakers, "This is your pilot. We have detected a technical snag and will be diverting this plane to Ahmedabad...."
A pause...
And then to reassure passengers the pilot stammers ...."The...the....situation is under control...so nothing to worry."
One could hear the silence.
A few passengers just slept, but those awake tried to look out from their windows.
As the pilot changed direction we could feel the flight was not normal.
At one point it swayed but found its path again.
And a girl in front called the airhostess and asked, "Is this serious?"
Airhostess "There is a snag so only the pilot knows but we will keep you informed if anything changes."
But within ten minutes the pilot spoke again, "We are ready to land at Ahmedabad so please fasten your seat belts."
And we held our breadth.
The pilot successfully landed.
There was a sigh amongst passengers but no celebrations...just murmurs and people frantically reaching out for their cellphones.
As soon as the plane taxied to a halt people called up their relatives, "Hawa mein plane kharab ho gaya" (Our plane got spoilt mid-air).
But a journalist does not call relatives. He calls the news channels. I sent SMSs to my freinds and soon the news was on air.
First passengers were asked to remain seated and the plane would take off once engineers rectify the problem.
But then there was another announcement, "All passengers are to deplane and they must take another flight to Delhi and then another to Patna and Ranchi. The Ranchi passengers did not even have a connecting flight.
A few Jetlite ground-staff were there but clearly they were not sure of what they must do in such situations.
We were issued some four boarding paases for this journey from Bombay to Patna.
And in Delhi after the usual identification of baggages etc..passengers were issued new boarding passes.
When passengers got on board the scene looked like a train or worse a bus in Bihar where passengers fought over seats.
Soon it was found that Jetlite issed similar number seats to passengers.
Two foreigners on the flight were having a harrowing experience due to the confusion, until I helped them out.
Fortunately, everyone did finally get a seat and we landed at Patna at 12.35 p.m. after an all-India tour and a near-crash experience.
Jetlite's are the planes that came with the Jet-Sahara deal.

Manuwant Choudhary

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Thanks

Dear friends,

I express my sincere thanks to all of you to be the part of our team and inspite of being so many hurdles you all continued to be in the group.

In any organisation or group when it is newly formed, the first year goes very difficult because in that first year nothing would had been set. So this crucial period is very delicate and generally is the most difficult one.

However during this time when you all had worked so hard inspite of being your busy schedule and other engagements, I take this onus to thank you all.

We the Executive Committee (Former) has done whatever we could in the given phase and resources so hats off to all of you. I spoke to Barun afterwards but I couldnot get time to speak to you Rajesh thanks for everything.

I am also thankful to FNST for their support and to all the other members for their faith in me for electing me as the first National Coordinator of IFAN.

Being the IFAN National Coordinator I must greet you and at the same time I convey my best wishes to all the newly elected Executive Committee.

Regards,
Ashraf Ahmed Shaikh
Former National Coordinator
IFAN
Mumbai
+919867855733

Monday, March 31, 2008

Report on Networking

Dear Friends,
We (EC) would be grateful to all of you if you could provide us with, the networking benefits or activities that you have as an individual or your organisation have received, provided or done.
I.e, Barun ( liberty institute) has done some work with, Zainab, Manu and Rajesh.
Rajesh had helped CCS in organising a meet at patna, etc.

This information is important as primarily it has to be reported and analysed on our second alumni meet at Mumbai.

Considering, there are only a few days left please, do so urgently.

please send in the details to my personal email id: maniyarpur@yahoo.co.uk
or post as a comment on the blog.

Regards,

Rajesh Singh
Deputy Coordinator
IFAN

Monday, March 24, 2008

Monkeys Deserve Peanuts

The recommendations of the 6th Pay Commission are making the news now. This reminds me of the time when the 5th Pay Commission met over a decade ago. Then, an officer of the Indian Administrative Service named Srivatsa Krishna wrote an article in The Economic Times quoting Lee Kwan Yew's dictum "If you pay peanuts, you get monkeys". His argument was that IAS blokes like him must be very highly paid.

I was a regular contributor to the editorial pages of ET then, and wrote a rejoinder titled "Monkeys Deserve Peanuts". It provoked wide outrage in the IAS mafia and a flurry of letters to the editor followed. Unfortunately, this was in the pre-digital era, and no electronic records exist. But I can mail photocopies to anyone interested.

Of course, my arguments were correct. The 5th Pay Commission bankrupted the State and public services did not improve at all. This scenario will be repeated again.

Babus who perform no useful work should not get paid at all. Indeed, because they produce nothing, babus are "unproductive". What is worse, many are "misproductive", causing losses to the community - like, for example, when the beat officer extorts money from all street vendors. They produce nothing, but impose costs. That is "misproductive" employment.

The greatest joke, of course, is that these misproductive types get tonnes of cash from the public treasury in order to "generate" gainful employment!

Pay hikes for this misproductive bureaucracy must be strongly opposed.

Monkeys deserve peanuts.
Sauvik Chakraverti


Your are requested to visit the blog of Sauvik Chakraverti
http://sauvik-antidote.blogspot.com/

Thursday, March 20, 2008

WRONG, MR. EDITOR

by SAUVIK CHAKRAVERTI

Some months ago, the editor of the Times of India, Gautam Adhikari, published a signed article claiming that this leading Indian newspaper is wedded to 'classical liberalism'. However, the lead editorial of March 15, titled "Clean up Goa", lets the side down. It is illiberal, intolerant and unsympathetic; it is blind to reality; and its prescription is astoundingly impractical. Allow me to elaborate on each point.

The editorial begins by saying that, because of the easy availability of drugs, and because 'liquor flows uninterruptedly', Goa has become 'an attractive hangout for socially dysfunctional people'. Actually, people who successfully 'score' illegal drugs are not at all socially dysfunctional; rather, they are 'black market savvy'; they are 'street smart'. Living in Goa, as I have been for over two years now, it becomes apparent that the really dysfunctional people here are the local alcoholics (and there are scores of them). Still, I wonder if Goa would be a better place if it was like New Delhi, where the government monopolistically sells warm beer in staggeringly hot weather, where drinking in bars in unaffordable even for newspaper editors, and where all queue up outside government shops to buy alcohol.

This first portion of the editorial smacks of intolerance. A true classical liberal would appreciate the fact that 'it takes all kinds to make a world' – and make room in his theories for all these types. Robert Nozick, the liberal philosopher, made the telling point that a truly free society is not one Utopia conceived of by the theorist; rather, it is a 'society of utopianism', wherein each can look for his own utopia.

The next part of the editorial lacks any sympathy for a bereaved mother. This second paragraph should never have been published, being completely irrelevant to the main issue. At a moment of stark state failure, and tragedy, it attempts to implicate a mother who was, in the deepest sense, 'liberal' with her wilful teenage daughter.

Thereafter, the editorial is blind to reality. It asks the totally stupid question: "How is it that the drug trade in Goa is flourishing, that too, in full public view and under the nose of the state police who's duties include cracking down on such activities?" The drug trade is flourishing all over the world, including New Delhi. I myself scored marijuana in London a stone's throw from the headquarters of Scotland Yard. The duties of the Goa police also include ensuring road safety. Every Goan, local as well as tourist, would be safer if this duty was performed. The drug trade should be legalized – but this is probably 'too liberal' an idea for the editor. He wants state action in checking the 'resident status and visa validity' of all foreigners here, a recipe for tyranny. A true liberal would favour a free, long-term 'visa-on-arrival' so that tourism, the largest industry in the world, is encouraged. Goa gets a full forty percent of India's tourism. Of the five million foreigners who risk their necks visiting India every year, two million come to Goa. But fifty million visit China and eighty million go to tiny France. If the editor has his way, tourism in Goa will slump.

The editorial then proceeds to display complete lack of 'knowledge' on drugs saying that 'locally available intoxicants like bhang and charas are a tradition' in Goa. The real hippy tradition here is of ganja. Bhang is not used in Goa, either by locals or tourists. Charas is not a local substance and is imported from the north. Because of illegality, quality charas is hard to find. Only brand names can ensure quality, which requires legalization. I met a group of German tourists who smuggled Moroccan hash into Goa for their holidays, knowing well that good charas is unavailable here. A Dutch tourist I met complained that Goa offered 'bush grass and horseshit hash'. In Holland, all this (and more) is legal, quality is excellent, and the cops are socially functional.

This illiberal, unsympathetic and ignorant editorial then descends to rank idiocy, calling upon Goan civil society to undertake an 'anti-drug crusade' led by the local musician Remo Fernandes. What the state police, armed with draconian legislation and guns, cannot accomplish, cannot be miraculously performed by a performer. Actually, if you talk to drug dealers, you realise that they do not want legalization, which would ultimately institute a market regime of 'normal profits'. Branded ganja and charas would then be sold at probably the same price as Darjeeling tea. Drug dealers abhor this idea because today their profits are astronomical. They share these huge profits with those in authority, corrupting institutions. This also makes them much more powerful than any civil society group. If Remo took up cudgels against them armed with just his guitar, he would not get far.

The editor has revealed his Utopia as a drug-free world. He wants this accomplished by state as well as civil society. But the sorry fact is that his vision has no place for the twin liberal values of Freedom and Justice. The editor of the Times of India, thus, is not a liberal at all.



--
Sauvik Chakraverti
Goa contact (0832) 2643048