Police File

DATED

02.10.2018

Special drive against consuming liquor at public place was carried out at different parts of the city in which total 04 cases U/S 68-1 (B) Punjab Police Act 2007 & 510 IPC got registered.

 In continuation of a special drive against consuming liquor at public place, yesterday, the drive was carried out at different parts of the city. Under this drive total 04 different cases U/S 68-1(B) Punjab Police Act 2007 & 510 IPC got registered in different police stations of Chandigarh in which total 04 persons were arrested while consuming liquor at public place. All later on bailed out. The detail of police Stations in which cases U/S 68-1 (B) Punjab Police Act 2007 & 510 got registered:- PS-17 = 2 cases & PS-SPR = 2 cases.

This drive will be continuing in future, the general public is requested for not breaking the law.

One arrested under NDPS Act

Chandigarh Police arrested a lady resident of Sector 25, Chandigarh near Mori Gate, Sector 25, Chandigarh and recovered 12 injections of Buprenorphine drugs from his possession. A case FIR No. 292, U/S 22 NDPS Act has beenregistered in PS-11, Chandigarh. Investigation of the case is in progress.

Two apprehended for MV thefts

A case FIR No. 202, U/S 379 IPC has been registered in PS-Maloya, Chandigarh on the complaint of Kishan Lal R/o # 1757, DMC, Chandigarh who alleged that unknown person stolen away complainant’s M/800 Car No CH-03X-5893 while parked near his house on the night intervening 26/27-09-2018. One juvenile boy has been apprehended in this case. Stolen vehicle recovered from his possession and Section 411 IPC has been added in this case. Juvenile sent to juvenile home. Investigation of the case is in progress.

A case FIR No. 203, U/S 379 IPC has been registered in PS-Maloya, Chandigarh on the complaint of Prem Chand R/o # 55, DMC, Chandigarh who alleged that unknown person stolen away complainant’s Apachi M/Cycle No CH-01BT-0997 while parked near his house on the night intervening 12/13-09-2018. One juvenile boy has been apprehended in this case. Stolen vehicle recovered from his possession and Section 411 IPC has been added in this case. Juvenile sent to juvenile home. Investigation of the case is in progress.

Threatened for Extortion of money

A case FIR No. 257, U/S 385 IPC has been registered in PS-Sarangpur, Chandigarh on the complaint of Gulshan Mahajan R/o # 955, Village-Dhanas, Chandigarh who alleged that two persons namely Vidhya Rattan Sharma R/o # 188, Dasmesh Nagar, Village Zirakpur, Distt-Mohali (PB) and Deepak Sharma R/o Gali No 5, Sarswati Vihar, Dera Bassi (PB) threatened complainant for extortion of money. Accused have been arrested in this case. Investigation of the case is in progress.

Deterred public servant while discharging govt. duty

A case FIR No. 351, U/S 332, 353, 506, 294, 509, 34 IPC has been registered in PS-36, Chandigarh on the complaint of SI Chander Singh I/C PP-ISBT against Sahiba, Tulsi, Deepika all R/o # 80/25 Vill-Kajheri, Chandigarh who quarreled/manhandled police officials, created obscenity among general public, and deterred police officials while discharging duty at slip road, Sector 43 near Kajheri Chowk, Chandigarh on 29.09.2018. Investigation of the case is in progress.

Theft

A lady resident of Sector-18, Chandigarh reported that unknown person stolen cash Rs. 2 Lakh, 2 Diamond Bangles, one watch and one pistol from her house on 01.10.2018. A case FIR No. 288, U/S 380 IPC has been registered in PS-19, Chandigarh. Investigation of the case is in progress.

A lady resident of Sector-40B, Chandigarh reported that unknown person stolen away two gas cylinders from her house on the night intervening 30-09/01-10-2018. A case FIR No. 398, U/S 380 IPC has been registered in PS-39, Chandigarh. Investigation of the case is in progress.

MV Theft

Sh. Rajdeep Kumar R/o # 3250, Sector-27/D, Chandigarh reported that unknown person stolen away complainant’s Activa Scooter No. CH-01AX-8043 from near his residence on 27.09.2018. A case FIR No. 318, U/S 379 IPC has been registered in PS-26, Chandigarh. Investigation of the case is in progress.

Accident

A case FIR No. 405, U/S 279, 337 IPC has been registered in PS-MM, Chandigarh on the statement of Sh. Rajesh R/o # 2159, Mouli Jagran, Chandigarh who alleged that driver of loading Auto No. CH-01TB-6822 sped away after hitting to complainant’s father namely Sh. Raghubeer Singh (Cyclist) near Kala Gram light point, Chandigarh on 01.10.2018. Cyclist got injured and admitted in Civil Hospital Manimajra, Chandigarh and later referred to GMCH-32, Chandigarh. Investigation of the case is in progress.

Cheating

A case FIR No. 406, U/S 420 IPC has been registered in PS-MM, Chandigarh on the complaint of a lady resident MDCSector-5, Panchkula (HR) who alleged that Vinit Verma R/o Swaroop Jwellers, Shop No 119, Old Ropar Road, Mani Majra,Chandigarh cheated Rs. 41,000/- from complainant in the name of kitty. Investigation of the case is in progress.

A case FIR No. 352, U/S 420, 120-B IPC & 66/C, 66/D IT Act has been registered in PS-36, Chandigarh on the complaint of a lady resident GMCH Complex, Sector-32, Chandigarh who alleged that Gourav Mittal R/o # 67, Gill Colony, Gulabgarh Road, Ward No 6, Dera Bassi (PB) who is good friend of her husband introduced online business to complainant and her husband and assured them for heavy returns. He cheated Rs. 12.10 lakh from complainant in the name of online business of amazon & flipcart. Investigation of the case is in progress.

Chandigarh Police Celebrates Bapu’s B’day with “Swachhata Abhiyan

 

To coincide with the ideals and vision of a clean India of Mahatma Gandhi Ji whose inspiration is behind the Swachhata Abhiyan, Today, a cleanliness drive under ‘Swachhata Abhiyaan’ was organized by Chandigarh Police in Police Headquarters, Police Stations, Police Posts, Police Lines, Training Centre and all other units of Chandigarh Police including India Reserve Battalion situated at Sarangpur, UT, Chandigarh.

All the units of Chandigarh Police cleaned up their offices as well as surroundings under this drive.  The waste articles and other garbage were removed from surroundings.

Sh. Milind Mahadeo Dumbere, IPS, SSP/Head Quarters, UT Chandigarh inspected and participated the Swachhata Abhiyaan at Police Headquarters, Sector 9, Chandigarh.

हुड्डा साहब अपने दम पर ही प्रदेश मे ला सकते है सरकार : गीता भुक्कल

ब्रेकिंग् फ्रॉम झजजर

पूर्व शिक्षा मंत्री गीता भुक्कल का बयान

प्रदेश कांग्रेस पद को लेकर बोली भुक्कल

कहा, हुड्डा साहब में  प्रदेश अध्यक्ष पद के बिना भी प्रदेश में सत्ता लाने का जज्बा

:

: अशोक तंवर द्वारा प्रदेश के अलग अलग विधानसभा में उम्मीदवार के नाम घोषित करने पर भी बोली भुक्कल

कहा, टिकट बाटने व उम्मीदवार घोषित करने का अधिकार केवल राष्ट्रीय अध्यक्ष राहुल गांधी जी को

: महात्मा गांधी के जन्मदिन पर स्वछता अभियान मनाए जाने पर भी बोली भुक्कल

कहा, महात्मा गांधी जी के जन्मदिन पर राजनीति करने छोड़े बीजेपी

: पिछले 4 साल से गांधी जी के नाम पर पोलटिक्स कर रही है सरकार

: स्वच्छ्ता के नाम पर फ़ोटो खिंचवाने की बजाय धरातल पर काम करे सरकरा

: स्वछता के नाम पर प्रचार प्रसार ज्यादा हुआ

: केवल स्वछता के नाम पर विज्ञपान का पैसा बर्बाद किया गया

हंसराज स्कूल में स्वछ अभियान चलाया और रैली निकाल कर लोगो को जागरूक किया

फोटो और ख़बर : कपिल नागपाल

पंचकूला के सेक्टर 6 हंसराज स्कूल में स्वछ अभियान चलाया। और रैली निकाल कर लोगो को जागरूक किया।

फोटो : कपिल नागपाल

 

फोटो : कपिल नागपाल

पंचकुला सेक्टर 27 की झुग्गियों में युवक ने कि आत्महत्या घरवालों ने जताई हत्या कि आशंका

 

फोटो और ख़बर: RK / कपिल नागपाल

पंचकूला के सेक्टर 27 की झुग्गियों में रमेश कुमार युवक ने फांसी लगाकर की आत्महत्या लड़के के परिजनों का कहना कि यह आत्महत्या नहीं है यह हत्या है पुलिस ने सेक्टर 6 मोर्चरी में रख बाई बॉडी।

फोटो : RK / कपिल नागपाल

 

फोटो : RK / कपिल नागपाल

 

Gita Gopinath to be next IMF Chief Economist

Gita Gopinath is the new Economic Counsellor and Director of the International Monetary Fund’s Research Department.  


Gopinath, who currently serves as the John Zwaanstra Professor of International Studies and Economics at Harvard University, succeeds Maurice (Maury) Obstfeld, who announced in July that he would retire at the end of 2018


The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has appointed Gita Gopinath as Economic Counsellor and Director of its Research Department. IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde made the announcement on October 1.

Gopinath, who currently serves as the John Zwaanstra Professor of International Studies and Economics at Harvard University, succeeds Maurice (Maury) Obstfeld, who announced in July that he would retire at the end of 2018.

“Gita is one of the world’s outstanding economists, with impeccable academic credentials, a proven track record of intellectual leadership, and extensive international experience,” Lagarde said in a statement. “All this makes her exceptionally well-placed to lead our Research Department at this important juncture. I am delighted to name such a talented figure as our Chief Economist,” she added.

Gita Gopinath becomes the second Indian after Raghuram Rajan to hold the post. Rajan was IMF Chief Economist from 2003 to 2006 before he joined the Union Ministry of Finance as the chief economic adviser and was later appointed the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor.

IMF’s Research Department director oversees the World Economic Outlook Report, a major survey of the global economy, and several other reports and research projects that determine the financial and economic statuses of countries.

Gopinath, co-editor of the American Economic Review and co-director of the International Finance and Macroeconomics Program at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), has co-edited the current Handbook of International Economics with Former IMF Economic Counsellor Kenneth Rogoff. According to the IMF statement, she has authored 40-odd research articles on exchange rates, trade and investment, international financial crises, monetary policy, debt, and emerging market crises.

Born and raised in India, Gopinath received her PhD in economics from Princeton University in 2001 after a BA from the University of Delhi and MA degrees from both Delhi School of Economics and the University of Washington. She joined the University of Chicago in 2001 as an Assistant Professor before moving to Harvard in 2005. Gopinath is a US citizen and an Overseas Citizen of India now.

Pakistan glorifying its own atrocities on Kashmiries on stamps


In its quest to defame India, Pakistan revealed its own crime.


Remember the stamps Pakistan issued in praise of Hizbul Mujahideen terrorist Burhan Wani in an attempt to highlight alleged ‘atrocities’ by India? It turns out that in its quest to defame India, Pakistan revealed its own crime by showing pictures of atrocities committed on Hindus and Sikhs by Islamabad-backed terrorists.

The stamps, 20 in all, were issued by Pakistan Post on 24 July, a day before the general election in Pakistan. While one of the stamps hailed Wani as a “freedom fighter”, others carried provocative messages and images through which Islamabad attempted to stir up emotions against India.

But their attempt backfired when a group of Kashmiri Pandits revealed that the stamp headlined “missing persons” shows a demonstration organised by a Kashmiri Pandit group called Roots in Kashmir against Pak-sponsored terrorism.

The picture used by Pakistan in the stamp was taken at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi in January 2014.

The group unmasked Pakistan’s maliciousness in a Twitter post on 30 September. In the post, the group identified every protestor who were actually victims of Pak terror.

“Pakistan adds insult to injury by using picture of RIK PROTESTORS AGAINST PAK TERROR to propogate fake narrative of human rights violation by India. The real violation is done by Pakistan itself by ensuring the ethnic cleansing of the aborigines of Kashmir; the Kashmiri Pandits,” the tweet read.

 

Roots In Kashmir@RootsInKashmir

Pakistan adds insult to injury by using picture of RIK PROTESTORS AGAINST PAK TERROR to propogate fake narrative of human rights violation by India. The real violation is done by Pakistan itself by ensuring the ethnic cleansing of the aborigines of Kashmir; the Kashmiri Pandits


Another stamp titled “homeless children” apparently shows the Sikh victims of the Chittisinghpura massacre that took place in Jammu-Kashmir on 20 March 2000. A group of Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorists killed 35 Sikhs triggering protests in the state against Pak-sponsored terrorism.

According to reports, one of the children in the image used for the stamp shows a Sikh boy with his turban obscured by the stamp’s denomination.

The issuance of the stamps, news of which came to light only after a Pakistani official confirmed it in September, was one of the major reasons behind India’s decision to cancel a planned meeting between External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj and her Pakistani counterpart on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.

The news of the stamps came at a time when Pakistani soldiers slit the throat of a BSF jawan near the International Border.

Meanwhile, social media users slammed Pakistan for its attempt at slandering India’s image and hiding its own crimes.

 

View image on TwitterView image on TwitterView image on TwitterView image on Twitter

Naila Inayat

@nailainayat

Pakistan can’t even do propaganda properly. Now the Kashmir postage stamps that foreign minister also mentioned at the carries incorrect photos. One is from a protest by Kashmiri Pandits, while the other photo is of Chittisinghpura massacre of Sikhs.


View image on Twitter

Mauseen Khan@mauseen_khan

See how Pakistan quotes fake propaganda stamps of Kashmir against India.👇

The reality is, in its propaganda stamps, Pakistan showcased its own terrorism against Kashmiri Pandits and Sikhs.😠


This is the second time Pakistan has been caught using wrong images to falsely accuse India. In 2017, Pakistani Ambassador to the United Nations Maleeha Lodhi had passed off the picture of an injured Palestinian girl as a victim of Indian pellet guns in Kashmir in the UNGA. Islamabad was severely censured for the lie.

Swaraj, who delivered an address at the UNGA on 29 September, tore into Pakistan’s lies slamming Islamabad for backing terrorism in the region and called Pak PM Imran Khan statement accusing India of sabotaging chances of dialogue a “complete lie”.

protesting farmers faced water cannons at the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border

Police fire water cannons upon protesting farmers at the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border on Tuesday, October 2, 2018.


The farmers were marching to Delhi from Haridwar.


Delhi police on Tuesday fired water cannons and teargas shells at protesting farmers as they tried to break barricades put up to stop them at the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border.

The Delhi police had issued week-long prohibitory orders under section 144 on Monday, in anticipation of the Kisan Kranti Padyatra organised by the Bharatiya Kisan Union, arriving from Haridwar.

The rally was expected to make its way to Kisan Ghat in the city this afternoon. But organisers said that the police were not letting the march enter the city because of the large number of tractors they were bringing along with them.

Farmers marching towards Delhi as part of the Kisan Kranti Padyatra organised by the Bharatiya Kisan Union on Tuesday, October 2, 2018.

In East Delhi, the prohibitory orders issued by Deputy Commissioner of Police (East) Pankaj Singh under section 144 of the Criminal Procedure Code, will be in force until October 8.

It covers Preet Vihar, Jagatpuri, Shakarpur, Madhu Vihar, Ghazipur, Mayur Vihar, Mandawli, Pandav Nagar, Kalyanpuri and New Ashok Nagar police station limits.

In northeast Delhi, the prohibitory orders were issued by Deputy Commissioner of Police (Northeast) Atul Kumar Thakur and will be in force till October 4.

Leaders will have to pay for damage by cadre: SC

 

Leaders of outfits who instigate a mob to an act of vandalism, which results in death or loss of public and private property, will personally face criminal action and are liable to compensate the victims of the violence, the Supreme Court ruled on Monday.

A Bench of Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra and Justices A.M. Khanwilkar and D.Y. Chandrachud pinned the criminal liability squarely on leaders of outfits who “initiate, promote and instigate” mobs to destroy public and private property in the name of demonstrations, especially against cultural programmes, films and expressions of artistic freedom.”

The taxpayer is not responsible to cough up money to pay for the destruction caused by mobs, the Bench held.

Each and every person, who was part of the violence, would be booked under Sections 153A (promoting enmity), 295A (deliberate and malicious acts to outrage religious feelings), 298 (intent to wound religious feelings) and, lastly, 495 (mischief) of the Indian Penal Code. The offences would come alive if the call for violence was made through a spokesperson or through social media of a group or by any individual.

The Supreme Court ordered persons caught red-handed by the police to be arrested on the spot.

If any leader fails to appear in the police station concerned, he shall be proceeded against as a suspect and be even declared an “absconding offender”.

State governments should set up Rapid Response Teams, preferably district-wise, to respond to mob violence, install websites which report instances of mob violence and destruction of public and private properties, special helplines, employ non-lethal crowd-control devices, like water cannons to deter the mob

India should avoid trading insults with Pakistan at UN, act in a manner commensurate with emerging-power status

Goaded by a myopic media, India and Pakistan launch their annual tirades against each other from the United Nations forum, and none in the whole wide world except these two nations are even remotely interested in the competitive slanging match. While this perfectly suits Pakistan’s strategy, the time has come for India to take a hard look at its terms of engagement.

It has become something of a macabre ritual. Every year at the UN General Assembly address, Pakistan will “extend hand for peace” in cherubic innocence while continuing to manufacture, nurture and export terror to India. India, indignant, will accuse Pakistan of hypocrisy and duplicity. Pakistan will accuse India of “human rights violations” in Kashmir and call for global attention. India will blame Pakistan for running “Ivy League of terror” and call terrorism the most egregious violation of human rights.

External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj at the UNGA

Pakistan will play the victim and call for “talks” in a spirit of “supreme sacrifice”. An angry India will denounce Pakistan for running the world’s biggest terrorism racket and dismiss “talks” unless it is ready to change its behaviour. Pakistan will exercise its right to reply to India’s insult. India will exercise its right to reply to Pakistan’s insult. And this sparring match will be accompanied by media fusillade from both sides.

This dumb charade plays out every year with unerring accuracy. This year provided no exception. Regimes change, faces change, characters change but the script remains the same. Even media reports are the same as if the same copy is being recirculated year after year with a perfunctory change in date and names. What policymakers in India do not realise is that wrestling with a Pakistan is never going to be fruitful.

As usual, Pakistan opened the batting with its newly minted foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi first suggesting that Sushma Swaraj handed him a snub at the SAARC meeting because she was under “domestic political pressure”. Qureshi even went on to make a tasteless personal remark, that the Indian external affairs minister was “looking pale” in avoiding him.

If anything, there has been a proliferation of violence in Kashmir since Pakistan started talking “peace”. In the Valley, political workers of mainstream parties and even state police personnel are being threatened, kidnapped and murdered. Even family members of the cops are not being spared.

Around the time that Imran Khan played “apostle of peace” by calling for the resumption of dialogue, Pakistan Army operatives slit a BSF head constable’s throat and attempted to behead him along the India-Pakistan international border (not the LoC). Amid reports that India had (inexplicably) consented to a “meeting between the two foreign ministers in New York, reports emerged that Pakistan has “reissued” a series of postage stamps glorifying Hizbul Mujaheedin operatives, and three Indian SPOs have been killed by Pakistan-backed terrorists.

Imran’s calls for dialogue coincided with India’s assessment that Pakistan Military has become “more aggressive”  since the former cricketer was installed in the prime minister’s chair.

So, while Pakistan military continues with its policy of low-cost hybrid warfare against India and employs terror-jihadi tools to achieve its objectives, the civilian administration sends “invitation for peace” and poses as if it is India that is withholding the process by refusing to talk.

Accordingly,  a saintly Qureshi sermonised at the UN that “Dialogue is the only way to address long-standing issues that have long bedevilled South Asia and prevented the region from realising its true potential.” For good measure, he added that the “unresolved Jammu and Kashmir dispute hinders the realisation of the goal of durable peace” as if “peace” is Pakistan’s noble goal, not secession of Kashmir.

Qureshi’s strategy was clear. It has been Pakistan’s long-standing strategy to provoke India into a sparring match the multilateral forum so that its domestic and international objectives are met. Domestically, Pakistan’s military that runs the weak state gets more public legitimacy in entrenching its power. Internationally, the issue of Kashmir is kept relevant. This isn’t a fresh idea but one that has been done to death. If Pakistan insists on using and reusing this strategy, it is because Indian policymakers, politicians and media have been trapped into an illusion of their own making — that it needs to “win” the perception war on Kashmir by “exposing” Pakistan.

On cue, Swaraj spent a good part of her speech castigating Pakistan for “trying to mask malevolence with verbal duplicity.” She said Pakistani allegations of India ”sabotaging” dialogue process is a “complete lie”, narrated Pakistan’s repeated betrayals despite Indian overtures, reminded the world of its perfidies on 9/11 and 26/11 and accused Pakistan of throwing “dust of deceit and deception against India in order to provide some thin cover for its own guilt.” As if the world needed a reminder or an explanation of Pakistan’s treachery.

What Swaraj inadvertently did was create the space for a slanging match, and Qureshi didn’t let go of the opportunity. He escalated the bickering and suggested, quite outrageously, that India was somehow involved in the killing of Pakistani school children by terrorists in Peshawar.

“Pakistan continues to face terrorism financed and orchestrated by India — shall never forget the mass murder of more than 150 children in a Peshawar School, the terrible Mastung attack and others that have links with terrorists supported by India,” said Qureshi.

India had little choice but to react. It called the charges “most outrageous” and “preposterous” and reminded Pakistan of “the outpouring of sorrow and pain in India that followed the massacre of innocent children in 2014. Both houses of India’s Parliament had expressed solidarity while paying respect to the memory of those killed. Schools all over India had observed two minutes of silence in their memory,” stated Eanam Gambhir, first secretary in the Permanent Mission of India to UN, while exercising India’s right to reply.

“The despicable insinuation made by the Foreign Minister of Pakistan dishonours the memory of the innocent lives lost to terrorists on that day,” she said, and added that “it is a desperate attempt to look away from the monster of terror that Pakistan has itself created in its quest to destabilise its neighbours and covet their territory.”

India sought to punch holes in Qureshi’s victim card on terrorism and challenged Pakistan to deny “the fact that it is the host and patron of 132 of the UN-designated terrorists and 22 terrorist entities under the 1267 and the 1988 UN Security Council sanctions regime as of today.”

India’s retort was factual and devastating but served little purpose on the ground except give Pakistan more fuel for even more outrageous attacks.

It brought slanderous charges against the RSS, calling it a “breeding ground of terrorism”, and delved into India’s domestic politics by targeting Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath. It made references to National Registrar or Citizens, church attacks, lynching incidents etc.

“For a country where Right to citizenship to Bengalis in Assam is being arbitrarily rescinded and who have suddenly been made stateless and have been called ‘termites’ by a prominent Indian leader, where churches and mosques are torched, is surely not qualified to give sermons to others,” said Pakistan’s envoy to the UN Saad Warraich.

There are two ways of looking at the statement. One, long been accused of using terrorism as a foreign policy tool, Pakistan is desperate to deflect criticism if needed by bringing wild allegations. Two, it wants to lock India into an eternal slanging match because as the weaker of the two nations, it helps Pakistan to hyphenate itself with India and gain a sort of perverse equilibrium in the perception war.

This is cause enough for India to take a long, hard look at its terms of engagement with Pakistan. Getting absorbed in a perennial war of insults on multilateral forums serves no purpose, and in fact is counterproductive for India’s strategic interests.

As an emerging power, a stronger economy and stabler democracy, it is in India’s interest to de-hyphenate itself from Pakistan and act in a manner commensurate with its heft and strategic interests. This obsession with Pakistan is taking India nowhere and stunting its influence in the comity of nations.