Re: [BST] Digest for bharatswabhimantrust@googlegroups.com - 10 Messages in 7 Topics

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Pradeep.Bhandari Bhandari

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Aug 15, 2010, 9:30:30 AM8/15/10
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Dear All,
 
I agree with the views express on the media by 'Shankar Dutt Fulara'. I generally don't watchTelevision except Aastha or Sanskar channel. If print and electronic media was vigilant our country would not have remain poor even after 63 years of Independence. The reason for saying is that media at the time of election says that country is not having any issue.
 
One cann't have a bigger joke than this, issues exist everywhere in this country whether pertaining to water, electricity, road, law and order, corruption, unemployment, inflation and so on.
 
If media was responsible perhaps they could have shown no. of times program on bharat Swabhiman to show the people of this country that this is the way forward.

On Thu, Aug 5, 2010 at 10:54 PM, <bharatswabhima...@googlegroups.com> wrote:

Group: http://groups.google.com/group/bharatswabhimantrust/topics

    Himanshu Bisht <spyhi...@gmail.com> Aug 05 12:03PM +0530 ^
     
    Jai Ho !!
     
    THE MOST advanced computers are unlikely to cost beyond '60,000 - and that
    is a fact that everyone except the Commonwealth Games Organising Committee
    (OC) is well aware of.
     
    How else does one explain the fact that the OC paid an astronomical '89,502
    per computer as "rent" for 45 days, when it could have easily bought the
    machines for '50,000-60,000? Headlines Today has unearthed a preposterous
    scam which highlights the manner in which the taxpayers' money is pocketed
    by corrupt officials in the name of Commonwealth Games.
     
    *The Con Games<http://in.news.yahoo.com/248/20100802/1601/tsp-the-con-games.html>
    *
     
    And it's not just computers that have been hired at such exorbitant rates.
     
    A liquid soap dispenser, which should not cost more than '460, has been
    hired for '3,397. The OC has rented 2,883 such units.
     
    Documents of the OC's murky dealings have revealed that it has rented 6,218
    six-ampere plug points at '1,219 per unit. But a market survey would easily
    establish that the maximum a plug point can cost is '75.
     
    As many as 970 pedestal fans have been rented at '4,412 each.
     
    The list price of the most exorbitantly priced fan does not exceed '4,500.
     
    Similarly, the OC is hiring mosquito repellents for '135 each as against
    their unit price of '100.
     
    Rent for 43 ice-making machines cost the OC about '46 lakh, at '1,06,279 per
    unit, when these could easily have been purchased for '1.5 lakh.
     
    Beleaguered OC chairman Suresh Kalmadi has denied the charges of corruption
    but is at a loss to explain the fraud. The deals, after all, took place only
    after the OC gave the go-ahead.
     
    A list of 500 such items were rented at a total of '650 crore.
     
    The OC, however, remains defiant in the face of all allegations of
    corruption. It has maintained that it has followed proper procedures and
    contracts were awarded to the "lowest bidders". "The contracts were allotted
    on a competitive bidding basis," committee secretary general Lalit Bhanot
    said.
     
     
     
    --
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    --
     
    Rgds/Himanshu

     

    B P DOBHAL <dobh...@gmail.com> Aug 05 02:58PM +0530 ^
     
    shame shame.........................................................................CWG
     

     

    Mohan Lal <kusal...@gmail.com> Aug 05 08:31PM +0530 ^
     
    THANks. ive shared this & requested to all my frnds in Facebook to share it
    further.
    Right now this is possible from me. let them at least be aware.
     
    rgds,
     
    Monu.

     

    dsp_d...@engineer.com Aug 05 07:00AM -0400 ^
     
    इसमें गलतिया होंगी तो कृपा करके बतायी|
     

    Words :
    १)एहम ->में
    २)त्वं -> तुम
    ३)किम -> क्या
    ४) मम ->मेरा
    ५)आसीत् ->है
    ६) धन्योस्मिः ->धन्यवाद
    ७) पुनर्मिलामः ->फिर मिलेंगे
    ८)भारतः ->भारत
    Sentences :
    १)मम नाम भारतः आसीत् ->मेरा नाम भारत है
    २)त्वं नाम किम आसीत्? ->तुम्हारा नाम क्या है

    Jai Bharat!
    Shailesh Gaikwad
     
     
     
     

    Words :
    १)एहम ->में
    २)त्वं -> तुम
    ३)किम -> क्या
    ४) मम ->मेरा
    ५)आसीत् ->है
    ६) धन्योस्मिः ->धन्यवाद
    ७) पुनर्मिलामः ->फिर मिलेंगे
    ८)भारतः ->भारत
    Sentences :
    १)मम नाम भारतः आसीत् ->मेरा नाम भारत है
    २)त्वं नाम किम आसीत्? ->तुम्हारा नाम क्या है

    Jai Bharat!
    Shailesh Gaikwad

     

    Aastha <divyaaa...@gmail.com> Aug 05 12:12PM +0530 ^
     
    ---------- Forwarded message ----------
    From: viji123 <vij...@yahoo.com>
    Date: Wed, 04 Aug 2010 07:03:25 -0000
    Subject: [bm] Indian Express - Who is Sohrabuddin
    To: bharatud...@yahoogroups.com
     
     
     
    Here is an article written by Dovalji and published in Indian Express.
     
    http://www.indianexpress.com/news/complicated-encounters/655825/0
     
    Complicated encounters
     
    Ajit Kumar Doval
    Aug 04 2010
     
     
    Beware of half truths — because you may be holding the wrong half.
    After having seen and read so much about the Sohrabuddin episode in
    the last five years, one might believe one knows it all. Sohrabuddin
    is now cast as an innocent victim of police excess.
     
    However, it would be worthwhile to explore the real facts about
    Sohrabuddin, the nature of police encounters, and the real issues at
    stake. Sohrabuddin was an underworld gangster who was involved in
    nearly two dozen serious criminal offences in states of Gujarat,
    Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. He maintained transnational
    links with anti-India forces from the early `90s onwards, until his
    death in 2005. Working with mafia dons like Dawood Ibrahim and Abdul
    Latif, he procured weapons and explosives from Pakistan and supplied
    them to various terrorist and anti-national groups (had it not been
    for his activity, at least some terrorist acts could have been
    averted). Sohrabuddin was solidly entrenched in the criminal world for
    a decade-and-a-half. Around the time he was killed, the Rajasthan
    government had announced a reward on his head. In 1999, he had been
    detained under the National Security Act by the Madhya Pradesh
    government.
     
    In a 1994 case investigated by the Ahmedabad crime branch, he was
    co-accused along with Dawood Ibrahim and convicted for five years, for
    waging war against the Government of India, planning an attack on the
    Jagannath rath yatra in Orissa, and other offences under the IPC, Arms
    Act, etc. During the investigation, 24 AK-56 rifles, 27 hand grenades,
    5250 cartridges, 81 magazines and more were seized from his family
    home in Madhya Pradesh. In 2004, a fourth crime was registered against
    him by Chandgad police station of Kolhapur district in Maharashtra
    under sections 302, 120 (b), and 25 (1) (3) of the Arms Act, for the
    killing of Gopal Tukaram Badivadekar. As fear of him often silenced
    people from reporting his whereabouts, let alone deposing against him,
    the Rajasthan government had to announce a reward on his head after he
    killed Hamid Lata in broad daylight in the heart of Udaipur, on
    December 31, 2004. So much for Sohrabuddin's innocence.
     
    However, irrespective of who Sohrabuddin was and what he did, the use
    of unaccountable force against him is indefensible is the public view
    of many (often at variance with their private view). There are many
    who feel that there is a higher rationale for such actions in
    compelling circumstances, as the law of the land has repeatedly found
    itself helpless in dealing with individuals bent on bleeding the
    country. Their argument, that the rule of law is a means to an end and
    not an end in itself, often finds support in the jurisprudential
    principles of salus populi est suprema lex (the people's welfare is
    the supreme law) and salus res publica est suprema lex (the safety of
    the nation is supreme law). Even the Supreme Court of India, in the
    case of D.K. Basu vs. State of West Bengal [1997 (1) SCC 416] accepted
    the validity of these two principles and characterised them as "not
    only important and relevant, but lying at the heart of the doctrine
    that welfare of an individual must yield to that of the community."
    The validity of the principles of salus populi est suprema lex and
    salus res publica est suprema lex could have been part of an
    enlightened national discourse, and what could be the governing
    instrumentalities, empowerments, legal checks and stringent processes
    if these principles were to be invoked. It is better to accept reality
    as it is and then strive to change it for the better, rather than what
    we wish it to be. Feigned ignorance is the worst type of hypocrisy.
     
    But there is another vital question that needs to be addressed. While
    pursuing the Sohrabuddin case, was the government really serious about
    stopping the menace of fake encounters, or was it pursuing a different
    agenda? Encounters have been taking place all over the country under
    all regimes, at times degenerating into what are called fake
    encounters. Between 2000 and 2007 there have been 712 cases of police
    encounters in the country with UP topping the list at 324, and Gujarat
    figuring almost at the bottom with 17.
     
    In some of the cases there was not much on record, even to establish
    the criminal past of those killed. Settling political scores through
    security and investigative agencies like the CBI is not only bad
    politics, but also destructive for the nation's security. To convey
    the impression (explicitly or implicitly) that Sohrabuddin was
    targeted for belonging to a particular community, thereby creating a
    sense of insecurity in a section of society, is detrimental to
    national interests. It is little known that a large number of
    Sohrabuddin's victims were Muslims while a good number of his closest
    associates (including Tulsiram Prajapati, who was also killed in a
    similar encounter), were Hindu. William Blake could not have been more
    right when he said that "a truth that is pursued with bad intent beats
    all the lies you can invent".
     
    The other negative impact of the Sohrabuddin case is the impression it
    is creating that all encounters in which police and security forces
    are involved, are fake. Society needs to be reassured that the
    majority of encounters are genuine and mostly in response to murderous
    attacks on security personnel. The fact that, on average, over 1,200
    policemen get killed every year grappling with terrorists, insurgents,
    underworld mafia and other anti-social elements, bears ample testimony
    to this fact. Playing up a few aberrations and blowing them out of
    proportion and presenting them as the only truth is not in the
    national interest.
     
    The other downside of the publicity around such cases is that it
    erodes the people's trust in governance. Administrations begin to be
    seen as instruments of repression and self-aggrandisement and
    politicians as perceived as manipulating their power for political and
    personal gains. This erosion can lead to a dangerous delegitimisation
    of the polity. Democratic politics is an exercise in
    regime-legitimisation, and to lose the confidence of the governed
    would set the government on a self-destructive path.
     
    The writer is former director of the Intelligence Bureau
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    --
    आस्था

     

    HARIHARA SUBRAMANIAN <hsubram...@yahoo.co.in> Aug 05 10:41AM +0530 ^
     
    HSMani
     
    --- On Thu, 5/8/10, Ananthanarayanan Vaidyanathan <kvanantha...@gmail.com> wrote:
     
     
    From: Ananthanarayanan Vaidyanathan <kvanantha...@gmail.com>
    Subject: Fwd: this one is really important!!
    To:
    Date: Thursday, 5 August, 2010, 7:38 AM
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    Dear FriendsSir/Madam ,
     
    SPARE 5-MINUTES from ur busy schedule .PLEASE !!!
     
    Lt. Saurabh Kalia of 4 JAT Regiment of the Indian Army laid down his
    life at the young age of 22 for the nation while guarding the
    frontiers at Kargil.
    His parents, indeed the Indian Army and nation itself,
    lost a dedicated, honest and brave son.
    He was the first officer to detect and inform about
    Pakistani intrusion. Pakistan captured him and his patrol party of 5
    brave men alive on May 15, 1999 from the Indian side of LOC.
    They were kept in captivity for three weeks and
    subjected to unprecedented brutal torture, evident from their bodies handed over
    by Pakistan Army on June 9, 1999.
    The Pakistanis indulged in dastardly acts of inflicting burns on these Indian officers with cigarettes, piercing their ears with hot rods, removing their eyes before puncturing them and breaking most of the bones and teeth.
    They even chopped off various limbs and private organs of the Indian soldiers besides inflicting unimaginable physical and mental torture.
     
    After 22 days of torture, the brave soldiers were ultimately shot dead. A detailed post-mortem report is with the Indian Army. Pakistan dared to humiliate India this way flouting all international norms.
    They proved the extent to which they can degrade humanity. However, the Indian soldiers did not break while undergoing all this unimaginable barbarism, which speaks volumes of their patriotism, grit, determination, tenacity and valour - something all of India should be proud of.
    Sacrificing oneself for the nation is an honour every soldier would be proud of, but no parent, army or nation can accept what happened to these brave sons of India. I am afraid every parent may think twice to send their child in the armed forces if we all fall short of our duty in safeguarding the PRISONERS OF WAR AND LET THEM MEET THE FATE OF LT..SAURABH KALIA.
    It may also send a demoralising signal to the army personnel fighting for the Nation that our POWs in Pak cannot be taken care of. It is a matter of shame and disgust that most of Indian Human Rights Organisations by and large, showed apathy in this matter.
     
     
    Through this humble submission, may I appeal to all the civilized people irrespective of colour, caste, region, religion and political lineage to stir their conscience and rise to take this as a NATIONAL ISSUE !!!
    International Human Rights Organizations must be approached to expose and pressure Pakistan to identify, book and punish all those who perpetrated this heinous crime to our men in uniform.
    If Pakistan is allowed to go unpunished in this case, we can only imagine the consequences.
    Below is the list of 5 other soldiers who preferred to die for the country rather than open their mouths in front of enemy -
     
    1. Sep. Arjun Ram s/o Sh. Chokka Ram; Village & PO
    Gudi. Teh. & Dist.
    Nagaur, (Rajasthan)
     
    2. Sep. Bhanwar Lal Bagaria h/o Smt. Santosh Devi;
    Village Sivelara;Teh.&
    Dist.Sikar (Rajasthan)
    3. Sep. Bhikaram h/o Smt. Bhawri Devi; Village
    Patasar; Teh.
    Pachpatva;Distt.Barmer (Rajasthan)
     
    4. Sep. Moola Ram h/o Smt. Rameshwari Devi; Village
    Katori; Teh. Jayal;Dist.
    Nagaur(Rajasthan)
     
    5. Sep. Naresh Singh h/o Smt.. Kalpana Devi; Village
    Chhoti Tallam;
    Teh.Iglab; Dist.Aligarh (UP)
     
     
    Yours truly,
    Dr. N.K. Kalia (Lt. Saurabh Kalia's father).
    Saurabh Nagar,
    Palampur-176061
    Himachal Pradesh
    Tel: +91 (01894) 32065
     
    Please sign in by writing your name and then copy and
    paste it again to forward it to your friends and relatives. Let us give a supporting hand to Dr. Kalia in his efforts to get justice.
    Remember, Lt. Kalia and his colleagues died on the front so that we could
    sleep peacefully in our homes.
     
    PLEASE DON'T BREAK THE ONWARD MOVEMENT OF THIS MAIL.
    WE SEND ALL SORTS OF SILLY MAILS TO OUR FRIENDS WHICH
    COMPEL ONE TO FORWARD BY SAYING THAT IT MAY HARM YOU IF YOU WON'T DO SO. BUT
    HERE IT IS NOTHING LIKE THAT, IT WILL ONLY BE YOU WHO WILL FEEL
    SATISFIED IF YOU WILL CONTRIBUTE TO THE CAUSE.
    JAI HIND ....Victory to India !!
     
    Add your name to the list and forward
    1 Prishi (Gurgaon,India)
    2 Sudhir Singh ( Pune, India)
    3 Neha Sarode (Pune, India)
    4 Sanjay H Shrotriya, Pune India
    4 Vivek Apte Bangalore, India.
    5 Virendra Mantri, Mumbai, India
    6 Jayant Sardesai, Nagpur, India
    7 Pratap Shinde, Nagpur , India.
    8 Jaisingh Dhumal, Mumbai, India
    9 Umesh Gaikwad, Mumbai,India
    10&nbs p; Mandar Aryamane, Mumbai, India
    11 Santosh Sawant, Mumbai, India
    12 Prashant Pandya, Mumbai, India
    13 Dilip Gurav, Mumbai, India
    14 N.V. Santosh, Mumbai, India
    15 Sameer Narsapur, Mumbai, India
    16 Rajeev Mahajan, Mumbai, India
    17 Siddharth Lohia, Mumbai, India
    18 Bibhash Jha, Mumbai, India..
    19 Dhi rendra Jha, Pune, India
    20 Gaurav Nagpal, Pune, India
    21 Sachin Mehrotra, Pune, India
    22 Sanjay, Bangalore, India.
    23 Jothi Krishnan, Bangalore, India
    24 PSB Bharath, Chennai, India
    25 Vijeesh S, Chennai, India
    26 Nimeesh, Chennai, India
    27 Iqbal Ahmed, Kolkata, India
    28 Sanchita Chanda, Chennai, India
    29 Kaushik Borbora, Chennai, India
    30 Priyanka Mishra, Bangalore, India
    31 Amit Kumar Sinha, Bhubaneswar, India
    32 Joydeep Mondal, Bhubaneshwar, India
    33 Kaustub h Krishna Srivasta va, Pune, India
    34 Shatrughan Tamaskar, Pune, India
    35 Manjul Chawda, Pune, India
    36 Vinit Puri, Pune, India
    37 Vivek Goyal, Pune, India
    38 Rajesh Kumar, Bangalore, India
    39 Pramesh Mandraha, Bangalore, India
    40 Indrajeet Singh, Hyderabad, India
    41 Amit Kumar, Mumbai, India
    42 Ashish Agarwal, Pune, India
    43 Supriya , Pune, India.
    44 Atul Jain, Indore, India...
    45 Tanmay Singhal, Indore, India.
    46 Ankur Agarwal, Mumbai, India
    47 Murtuza Shiyaji, Mumbai, India
    48 Murtuza Rohawala, Calcutta, India
    49 Arti Syal, Chandigarh, India
    50 Sheeja Bhaskaran, Bangalore, India
    51 Homa Roy Choudhury, Bangalore India
    52 Soumya Nanda Mohanty, Bangalore, India
    53 Capt Abhilash Sahoo
    54 Rajat Madhok, UK
    55 Himmat Singh, Delhi, India
    56 Anuja Gill, Delhi, India
    57 B rig. (Retd.) A. K. Sa nyal, VSM, Pune, India
    58 Abhishek Amal Sanyal, Pune, India
    59 Sudhir Jatar
    60 Rahul Bhajekar, Thane, India
    61 Atul S Pathak, Mumbai, India
    62 S. Narayanan, Chennai, India
    63 Capt. Suman Banerjee
    64 Arjun Wallia, Delhi, India
    65 Vivek N Gour, Gurgaon, India
    66 Nidhi Sekhar, New Delhi, India
    67 Priyanka Ray, Mumbai, India
    68 Pragya Dayal, Delhi, India
    69 Soumya Dayal, Delhi, India
    71 Vandana Sehgal, Bangalore, India
    72 Pooja Raswant, New Delhi, India.
    73 Pronita Roy, New Delhi, India
    74 Neeraj Gupta, New Delhi, India
    75 Rajesh Sharma, Mumbai, India.
    76 RS Anand, Mohali, India.
    77 JR Sharma, Mohali, India
    78 Manmohan Singh, Mohali, India
    79 Ram Chet, Chandigarh, India
    80 GS Bakshi, Chandigarh, India
    81 Parminder, Chandigarh, India
    82 JS Sethi, New Delhi, India
    83; Navtej Singh, Kota, India
    84 SS Dulat, Sangrur, India
    85 Sudeesh Kumar, Kerala, India
    86 Leelamma Jose, Kerala, India
    87 Abilash Kumar, Kerala, India
    88 JS Pannu, Amritsar, India
    89 Lt..Col KS Sidhu, Retd, Amritsar, India
    90 GS Dhaliwal, Ludhiana,India
    91 Nitu Marwah, Germany
    92 Ravi Sharma, Bottrop, Germany
    93 MS Pannu, Chandigarh, India
    94 Deepak Mehan, Chandigarh, India
    95 Lt. Col GS Dhillon, Chandigarh, India
    96 Lt.Col K C Singh, Chandigarh, India
    97 Brig.. Bhagwant Singh (Retd), Panchkula, India
    98 Lt.Col Gurdev Singh (Retd), India
    99 Lt Col Sudesh Sharma, Chandigarh, India
    100 NS Aulakh, Chandigarh,India
    101 Gursimran Sandhu,Sacramento, USA
    102 Sukhbir Singh, Sacramento, USA
    103 Manjit Sandhu, Sacramento, USA
    104 Inderpreet Sheina, Antioch, USA
    105 Shalu Suri, Parwanoo, H.P , INDIA
    106 Ashwani Sabharwal. Chandigarh, India.
    107 RK Kakar, Bhopal, India
    108 Anuradha Manna, Kolkata, India
    109 Neha Nigam, New Delhi, India
    110 Mamta Meena, New Delhi,India
    111 Nalini Singh, Ranchi, India
    112 Capt Malay Mishra , 4 JAT
    113 Ruchi Mishra, TCS Gurgaon.
    114 Neetu Mathew, TCS, Gurgaon
    115 Nishtha Dwivedi, IBM PUNE
    116 Shailesh Pandey, QA InfoTech, Noida
    117 Prashant Gour NIC Pune
    118 Narendra Singh Rajput NIC Pune
    119 Rishi Sohaney, Quark, Chandigarh, India
    120 Gagan Chawla
    121 Rohit Kalia, Quark, Chandigarh
    122 Sukhendra Ra i, HCL Technologies, Noida, India
    123 Swati Agarwal, GE Capital, Gurgaon, India
    124 Rahul Shanker Saxena, CMC Ltd, Delhi.
    125 Ashish Tonk , CellNext Solution Ltd.
    126 Bhupesh Pant, Pune, India.
    127 Lokesh Malik, Delhi, India
    128 Vijay Kr Rajput
    129 Shubhangi Mishra, Noida
    130 Nitin Goyal, Noida, India
    131 Tavish Malhotra, Chennai, India
    132 Anoop Chaturvedi, Chenn ai, India
    133 Avdhesh Sharma, Chenna i, India
    134 Krishna Kumar, Noida, India
    135 Savita K B, Bangalore, India
    136 Sandeep Singh, Delhi, India
    137 Jaikishen Singh, Delhi, India
    138 Amol Batra, Delhi, India
    139 G Adityakiran, Delhi, India
    140 H Natarajan, Mumbai, India.
    141 Ruchi Srivastava, Mumbai, India.
    142 Anju Sharma, Mumbai, India.
    143 Nisha Chaube,Missouri,USA.
    144 Frany Shah,Missouri,USA.
    145 Alka Dharsandia, Surat, India..
    146 Ketan Mandani, Mumbai, India
    147 NARESH GURNANI,MUMBAI.
    148 Ashish Bhageria, Mumbai.
    149 Chirag Shah, Mumbai.
    150 Kateel.Ajay.Kumar ,Kampala,Uganda.
    151 K.V.Udaya Prakash, Wipro Bangalore, India
    152 Yogesh B Kale - Wipro Bangalore - India.
    153 Major AR Satish, Wipro Technologies, Gurgaon
    154 Major Gaurav Arya, Wipro Technologies, Gurgaon
    155 Disha Gutam, Wipro Technologies, Gurgaon
    156 Shilpy Mittal, Wipro Technologies, Gurgaon
    157 Shivani Katoch, TCS, Noida, U.P.
    158 Ni tin Saxena,TCS ,Noida
    159 Lakshmi Nara yanan K,TCS,B'lore
    160 Kavith a S.Patil, TCS,B'lore
    161 Amit Mohanty, TCS, Bangalore.
    162 Vishnu..S , TCS-Bangalore
    163 A. Krishna Kumar, TCS-Chennai
    164 Rahul Gupta, TCS, Bangalore
    165 Jayakrishnan K R, TCS , Bangalore
    166 K.Balu , Satyam Computer services, Bangalore
    167 P.K.Sakthivel, TCS,Chennai.
    168 S.P.Karthik, HTSL,B'Lore
    169 Deepak V.M , Honeywell, Bangalore.
    170 Senthil kumar.S,Chennai.
    171 Vinoth, Chennai
    172 Sindhu Chander, Chennai
    173 Kaivalya Prasad, Chennai
    174 Amalthiya Prasad, VT, USA
    175 Praveen Varghese Isaac, Muscat, Oman
    176 Thomas P. Varghese.
    177 Koshi Thomas, Mumbai
    178 Ajit Dabholkar, Mumbai
    179 Padmakar Rao, Mumbai
    180 Ravindra Sarawate,NYK Mumbai,India
    181 Pradip Upadhyaya, Mumbai, INDIA.
    182 Bhadresh Bhatt , Mumbai . India.
    183 Ajay Rathod , Mumbai India
    184 Vivek Kotai, Mumbai , India
    185 Arindam Datta, India
    186 HOMI J. TREASURYVA LA, MUMBAI.
    187 GOPAL SRINIVAS INDIA.
    188 Sudhir Chandran, Mumbai, India
    189 Shubha Chandran, Mumbai, India
    190 V S. Pherwani, Mumbai, India
    191 a rajendra, mumbai, india
    192 Andrew Williams, Mumbai,India
    193 Nimit Gulati, Mumbai, India
    194 Srikanth.N, N.Delhi,India
    195 Aravind N, N.Delhi
    196 Shiwani Sikri, N.Delhi
    197 Sanjiv Kumar Das, N. Delhi
    198 Sachin Joshi, Kota rajasthan
    199 Mayank Keshar wani, INDIA
    200 Keshav Bapat, INDIA
    201 Rahul Bhide, Mumbai,INDIA
    202 Nikhil Thadani
    203 Sandeep S. Agrawal
    204 Ajay Kejriwal, Mumbai, India
    205 Vivek Didwania, Mumbai, India
    206 Sanjay Yadav, Mumbai, India
    207 Gayatri Samant, Mumbai, India.
    208 Rupendra Raj, Mumbai,India.
    209 Michelle Suradkar, Mumbai
    210 Ashwin Jayaram, Singapore
    211 Dr. Satya Jayaram, Delhi, India
    212 Pooja Jayaram, Mumbai , India
    213 Archana Bhatti, India
    214 Saumya Ravi, Toronto,Canada
    215 Nimisha Rawat Vohra, Noida, India
    216 Dhruv Hoon, New Delhi, India
    217 Kavita Hoon, New Delhi India
    218 Vikram Sikand, Pune India
    219 Gobind Singh Gurgaon, India
    220 Cmde J Postwalla (Retd)
    221 Cmde FH Dubash, VSM (Retd)
    222 Cmde DR Acharya, VSM (Retd)
    223 Lt Cdr P arijat Sinha   +9... 
    224 Gargi Sinha Roy  +9...
    225 Lt Cdr Susheel Menon, Jakarta, Indonesia
    226 Lt Cdr Rahul Shankar, Mumbai
    227 Lt Cdr H S Chahal and Mrs Preeti Chahal, Mauritius ,Ph-00230-6869771
    228 Capt RB Pandit Pune
    229 Cdr. T Venkataramani
    230 Cdr JN Vivek Miranda
    231 Joseph R Kishore - Chennai   + 91 98400 94905  
    232 B. Barnabas Rex, Chennai   +91 98400 30028  
    233 Sivaraman R, Chennai
    234 Sivakumar N K , Chennai
    235 Kritivasan.V, Chennai
    236 Subha Vaidyanathan , Chennai
    237 S Radhika , Chennai
    238 Jagannathan S. Sattur.
    239 Marinstine Fernando, Pune
    240 Vijay Kumar R.P.,Pune
    241 Vamsee Krishna G, Bangalore
    242. Jyothi K, Bangalore
    243. K arthik B, Bangalore
    244. Vinutha T, Bangalore
    245. Padmapriya Y. V , Bangalore, India.
    246. C.S.S.RAJA BANGALORE
    247. Suganyaa.S ,Chennai
    248. Ravisankar.G, Chennai
    249. Anju Mathews..K,Mysore
    250. Abhishek Chadda; Mysore
    251. Ajaikumar. A, Mysore
    252. Santhosh Chandran;Bangalore
    253. Balakrishnan.K , Chennai
    254. Brij Lal, Dari-Dharamsala, Himachal Pradesh
    255. Amit Katoch, Palampur (HP). India
    256. Tarun Kumar, Chandigarh (U.T.)
    257. ROMESH RAINA, CHANDIGARH
    258. NARENDRA KUMAR, BHOPAL
    259. Sandeep Bansal, Panipat
    260. AJAY SINGLA, PANIPAT
    261. Puneet Abrol (Panipat, Haryana)
    262. Aman Khurana,Punjab(India)
    263. Sanjay Sharma, Delhi, India.
    264.. Dipankar Dasgupta, Delhi,India
    265. Prachi Dubey, New Delhi, INDIA
    266. Sameer Sharma, New Delhi, INDIA
    267. Subhash Chandra, New Delhi, India
    268. Dinesh Kumar, New Delhi, India
    269. Siddharth Khosla, New Delhi, India
    270. Subhash Rathee, Rohtak, Haryana, India
    271. Rishi Aggarwal,Delhi,India
    272. Amit Garg,TX, US
    273.. Ashutosh Rastogi Texas,USA
    274. Anjana Rastogi Texas , USA
    275. Sonal Gupta, New Delhi, India
    276. Rohit Sharma, New Delhi,India
    277. Nikhil Salvi, Mumbai, India
    278. Suraj Komnak, Mumbai, India.
    279. Raman Saroya, Mumbai, India
    280. Gurmanjot Kaur Bains, Punjab, India.
    281. Tejpreet Singh Dulat, Punjab, India
    282. Hardeep Singh Kamboj,Punjab,India
    283. Harpreet Dheendsa,Brampton,Canada
    284. Suninder deep,chandigarh india
    285. Vishwas Thakur,Oviedo,Florida,USA
    286. Varun Sodhi,Gurgaon,Haryana,India
    287. Priti Chawla,Jalandhar, Punjab, India
    289. Navneet Sharma, Pune
    290. Nitesh Kumar, Pune
    291. Sumit Kumar, KPIT Cummins Infosystems Ltd., Pune, India
    292. Ninad Deo KPITCUMMINS Infosystems Ltd., Pune, India
    293. Abhay Gomarkar
    294.. Neha Raste
    295. Tejas Vaidya Pune , India.
    296. Poonam Jeevan, Pune
    297. Gaurav Dhawan, pune
    298. Joyjit Bhattacharya , New Delhi, India
    299. Manoj Verma, G urgaon, BHARAT
    300. Anoop Kumar Rawat, Noida, India
    301. Shovick Bhattacharya, Noida, India
    302. Rajesh Kumar Singh, Noida, India
    303. Hardeep Singh, Gzb, India
    304. Vikas Chaudhary, Gzb, India
    305. Capt Girish Kumar Gandhi, India
    306 Gaurav Narang, Delhi, India
    307 Arvinder Singh, Delhi, India
    308. Jitender Singh, Delhi, India
    309. Arvind Gupta, Ahmedabad, India.
    310. Amritpal Singh -- Nerul, Navi Mumbai
    311. Kavita Mohan, Mumbai - India
    312. Mohan Sahasranaman, Mumbai - India
    313. Ratna Mukundan, Mumbai - India
    314. K Mukundan, Mumbai- India
    315. Apurva Parekh, Mumbai, India.
    316. Pooja A Singh, Mumbai, India.
    317. Capt. Harrsharanjit Singh, Mumbai, India.
    318. Naina Kapur,Mumbai India
    319.Amandeep Singh, Mumbai, INDIA
    320. M.K.Karunakaran , Mumbai, INDIA
    321. Shenthil Elango, Trichy, INDIA.
    322.C.V.S.Bharadwaj , Hyderabad, INDIA.
    323. Srinivas A, Bangalore, India
    324 sunil kelahatti , Bangalore, India< BR>325
    Kavyashree, Bangalore, India
    326 Divakar B.S., Bangalore, India
    327 Madhusudhana Rao.D Bangalore INDIA.
    328. PaniBhushana Chary.K.R
    329.

     

    HARIHARA SUBRAMANIAN <hsubram...@yahoo.co.in> Aug 04 11:14PM +0530 ^
     
    During the past few days the entire media controlled by the corporate sector and the Congress Govt in power have been trying to brainwash the public that the Narendra Modi's Govt in Gujarat has committed a henious crime, that an innocent couple belonging to the so called minority community had been brutally murdered in a fake encounter etc etc.
     
    Who is this Shorabuddin? It is time the public know the truth and what he really was.
     
    Complicated encounters
     
    Ajit Kumar Doval
    The writer is former director of the Intelligence Bureau 
    Aug 04 2010
     
    Beware of half truths — because you may be holding the wrong half. After having seen and read so much about the Sohrabuddin episode in the last five years, one might believe one knows it all. Sohrabuddin is now cast as an innocent victim of police excess.
     
    However, it would be worthwhile to explore the real facts about Sohrabuddin, the nature of police encounters, and the real issues at stake. Sohrabuddin was an underworld gangster who was involved in nearly two dozen serious criminal offences in states of Gujarat, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. He maintained transnational links with anti-India forces from the early ‘90s onwards, until his death in 2005. Working with mafia dons like Dawood Ibrahim and Abdul Latif, he procured weapons and explosives from Pakistan and supplied them to various terrorist and anti-national groups (had it not been for his activity, at least some terrorist acts could have been averted). Sohrabuddin was solidly entrenched in the criminal world for a decade-and-a- half. Around the time he was killed, the Rajasthan government had announced a reward on his head. In 1999, he had been detained under the National Security Act by the Madhya Pradesh government.
     
    In a 1994 case investigated by the Ahmedabad crime branch, he was co-accused along with Dawood Ibrahim and convicted for five years, for waging war against the Government of India, planning an attack on the Jagannath rath yatra in Orissa, and other offences under the IPC, Arms Act, etc. During the investigation, 24 AK-56 rifles, 27 hand grenades, 5250 cartridges, 81 magazines and more were seized from his family home in Madhya Pradesh. In 2004, a fourth crime was registered against him by Chandgad police station of Kolhapur district in Maharashtra under sections 302, 120 (b), and 25 (1) (3) of the Arms Act, for the killing of Gopal Tukaram Badivadekar. As fear of him often silenced people from reporting his whereabouts, let alone deposing against him, the Rajasthan government had to announce a reward on his head after he killed Hamid Lata in broad daylight in the heart of Udaipur, on December 31, 2004. So much for Sohrabuddin’s innocence.
     
    However, irrespective of who Sohrabuddin was and what he did, the use of unaccountable force against him is indefensible is the public view of many (often at variance with their private view). There are many who feel that there is a higher rationale for such actions in compelling circumstances, as the law of the land has repeatedly found itself helpless in dealing with individuals bent on bleeding the country. Their argument, that the rule of law is a means to an end and not an end in itself, often finds support in the jurisprudential principles of salus populi est suprema lex (the people’s welfare is the supreme law) and salus res publica est suprema lex (the safety of the nation is supreme law). Even the Supreme Court of India, in the case of D.K. Basu vs. State of West Bengal [1997 (1) SCC 416] accepted the validity of these two principles and characterised them as “not only important and relevant, but lying at the heart of the doctrine that
    welfare of an individual must yield to that of the community.” The validity of the principles of salus populi est suprema lex and salus res publica est suprema lex could have been part of an enlightened national discourse, and what could be the governing instrumentalities, empowerments, legal checks and stringent processes if these principles were to be invoked. It is better to accept reality as it is and then strive to change it for the better, rather than what we wish it to be. Feigned ignorance is the worst type of hypocrisy.
     
    But there is another vital question that needs to be addressed. While pursuing the Sohrabuddin case, was the government really serious about stopping the menace of fake encounters, or was it pursuing a different agenda? Encounters have been taking place all over the country under all regimes, at times degenerating into what are called fake encounters. Between 2000 and 2007 there have been 712 cases of police encounters in the country with UP topping the list at 324, and Gujarat figuring almost at the bottom with 17.
     
    In some of the cases there was not much on record, even to establish the criminal past of those killed. Settling political scores through security and investigative agencies like the CBI is not only bad politics, but also destructive for the nation’s security. To convey the impression (explicitly or implicitly) that Sohrabuddin was targeted for belonging to a particular community, thereby creating a sense of insecurity in a section of society, is detrimental to national interests. It is little known that a large number of Sohrabuddin’s victims were Muslims while a good number of his closest associates (including Tulsiram Prajapati, who was also killed in a similar encounter), were Hindu. William Blake could not have been more right when he said that “a truth that is pursued with bad intent beats all the lies you can invent”.
     
    The other negative impact of the Sohrabuddin case is the impression it is creating that all encounters in which police and security forces are involved, are fake. Society needs to be reassured that the majority of encounters are genuine and mostly in response to murderous attacks on security personnel. The fact that, on average, over 1,200 policemen get killed every year grappling with terrorists, insurgents, underworld mafia and other anti-social elements, bears ample testimony to this fact. Playing up a few aberrations and blowing them out of proportion and presenting them as the only truth is not in the national interest.
     
    The other downside of the publicity around such cases is that it erodes the people’s trust in governance. Administrations begin to be seen as instruments of repression and self-aggrandisement and politicians as perceived as manipulating their power for political and personal gains. This erosion can lead to a dangerous delegitimisation of the polity. Democratic politics is an exercise in regime-legitimisati on, and to lose the confidence of the governed would set the government on a self-destructive path.
     
    The writer is former director of the Intelligence Bureau 
     
     
    HSMani

     

    himanshu sharma <lic_hi...@yahoo.com> Aug 05 09:28AM +0530 ^
     
    Shoarabuddin is CANCER for India.
     
    --- On Wed, 4/8/10, HARIHARA SUBRAMANIAN <hsubram...@yahoo.co.in> wrote:
     
     
    From: HARIHARA SUBRAMANIAN <hsubram...@yahoo.co.in>
    Subject: [BST] Who is Soharabuddin?
    To: bharatswab...@googlegroups.com
    Date: Wednesday, 4 August, 2010, 11:14 PM
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    During the past few days the entire media controlled by the corporate sector and the Congress Govt in power have been trying to brainwash the public that the Narendra Modi's Govt in Gujarat has committed a henious crime, that an innocent couple belonging to the so called minority community had been brutally murdered in a fake encounter etc etc.
     
    Who is this Shorabuddin? It is time the public know the truth and what he really was.
     
    Complicated encounters
     
    Ajit Kumar Doval
    The writer is former director of the Intelligence Bureau 
    Aug 04 2010
     
    Beware of half truths — because you may be holding the wrong half. After having seen and read so much about the Sohrabuddin episode in the last five years, one might believe one knows it all. Sohrabuddin is now cast as an innocent victim of police excess.
     
    However, it would be worthwhile to explore the real facts about Sohrabuddin, the nature of police encounters, and the real issues at stake. Sohrabuddin was an underworld gangster who was involved in nearly two dozen serious criminal offences in states of Gujarat, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. He maintained transnational links with anti-India forces from the early ‘90s onwards, until his death in 2005. Working with mafia dons like Dawood Ibrahim and Abdul Latif, he procured weapons and explosives from Pakistan and supplied them to various terrorist and anti-national groups (had it not been for his activity, at least some terrorist acts could have been averted). Sohrabuddin was solidly entrenched in the criminal world for a decade-and-a- half. Around the time he was killed, the Rajasthan government had announced a reward on his head. In 1999, he had been detained under the National Security Act by the Madhya Pradesh government.
     
    In a 1994 case investigated by the Ahmedabad crime branch, he was co-accused along with Dawood Ibrahim and convicted for five years, for waging war against the Government of India, planning an attack on the Jagannath rath yatra in Orissa, and other offences under the IPC, Arms Act, etc. During the investigation, 24 AK-56 rifles, 27 hand grenades, 5250 cartridges, 81 magazines and more were seized from his family home in Madhya Pradesh. In 2004, a fourth crime was registered against him by Chandgad police station of Kolhapur district in Maharashtra under sections 302, 120 (b), and 25 (1) (3) of the Arms Act, for the killing of Gopal Tukaram Badivadekar. As fear of him often silenced people from reporting his whereabouts, let alone deposing against him, the Rajasthan government had to announce a reward on his head after he killed Hamid Lata in broad daylight in the heart of Udaipur, on December 31, 2004. So much for Sohrabuddin’s innocence.
     
    However, irrespective of who Sohrabuddin was and what he did, the use of unaccountable force against him is indefensible is the public view of many (often at variance with their private view). There are many who feel that there is a higher rationale for such actions in compelling circumstances, as the law of the land has repeatedly found itself helpless in dealing with individuals bent on bleeding the country. Their argument, that the rule of law is a means to an end and not an end in itself, often finds support in the jurisprudential principles of salus populi est suprema lex (the people’s welfare is the supreme law) and salus res publica est suprema lex (the safety of the nation is supreme law). Even the Supreme Court of India, in the case of D.K. Basu vs. State of West Bengal [1997 (1) SCC 416] accepted the validity of these two principles and characterised them as “not only important and relevant, but lying at the heart of the doctrine that
    welfare of an individual must yield to that of the community.” The validity of the principles of salus populi est suprema lex and salus res publica est suprema lex could have been part of an enlightened national discourse, and what could be the governing instrumentalities, empowerments, legal checks and stringent processes if these principles were to be invoked. It is better to accept reality as it is and then strive to change it for the better, rather than what we wish it to be. Feigned ignorance is the worst type of hypocrisy.
     
    But there is another vital question that needs to be addressed. While pursuing the Sohrabuddin case, was the government really serious about stopping the menace of fake encounters, or was it pursuing a different agenda? Encounters have been taking place all over the country under all regimes, at times degenerating into what are called fake encounters. Between 2000 and 2007 there have been 712 cases of police encounters in the country with UP topping the list at 324, and Gujarat figuring almost at the bottom with 17.
     
    In some of the cases there was not much on record, even to establish the criminal past of those killed. Settling political scores through security and investigative agencies like the CBI is not only bad politics, but also destructive for the nation’s security. To convey the impression (explicitly or implicitly) that Sohrabuddin was targeted for belonging to a particular community, thereby creating a sense of insecurity in a section of society, is detrimental to national interests. It is little known that a large number of Sohrabuddin’s victims were Muslims while a good number of his closest associates (including Tulsiram Prajapati, who was also killed in a similar encounter), were Hindu. William Blake could not have been more right when he said that “a truth that is pursued with bad intent beats all the lies you can invent”.
     
    The other negative impact of the Sohrabuddin case is the impression it is creating that all encounters in which police and security forces are involved, are fake. Society needs to be reassured that the majority of encounters are genuine and mostly in response to murderous attacks on security personnel. The fact that, on average, over 1,200 policemen get killed every year grappling with terrorists, insurgents, underworld mafia and other anti-social elements, bears ample testimony to this fact. Playing up a few aberrations and blowing them out of proportion and presenting them as the only truth is not in the national interest.
     
    The other downside of the publicity around such cases is that it erodes the people’s trust in governance. Administrations begin to be seen as instruments of repression and self-aggrandisement and politicians as perceived as manipulating their power for political and personal gains. This erosion can lead to a dangerous delegitimisation of the polity. Democratic politics is an exercise in regime-legitimisati on, and to lose the confidence of the governed would set the government on a self-destructive path.
     
    The writer is former director of the Intelligence Bureau 
     
     
    HSMani
     
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Navneet Kumar Verma

unread,
Aug 15, 2010, 1:24:59 PM8/15/10
to bharatswab...@googlegroups.com
अहम् =मैं तव=तुम्हारा अस्ति=है आसीत्=था

On 8/15/10, Pradeep.Bhandari Bhandari <pradeepk...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Dear All,
>
> I agree with the views express on the media by 'Shankar Dutt Fulara'. I
> generally don't watchTelevision except Aastha or Sanskar channel. If print
> and electronic media was vigilant our country would not have remain poor
> even after 63 years of Independence. The reason for saying is that media at
> the time of election says that country is not having any issue.
>
> One cann't have a bigger joke than this, issues exist everywhere in this
> country whether pertaining to water, electricity, road, law and order,
> corruption, unemployment, inflation and so on.
>
> If media was responsible perhaps they could have shown no. of times program
> on bharat Swabhiman to show the people of this country that this is the way
> forward.
>
> On Thu, Aug 5, 2010 at 10:54 PM, <

> bharatswabhima...@googlegroups.com<bharatswabhimantrust%2Bno...@googlegroups.com>


>> wrote:
>
>> Today's Topic Summary
>>
>> Group: http://groups.google.com/group/bharatswabhimantrust/topics
>>

>> - CWG - CORRUPTION WEALTH
>> GAMES<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_group_thread_0>[3
>> Updates]
>> - Sanskrit
>> Classes<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_group_thread_1>[1
>> Update]
>> - [bm] Indian Express - Who is
>> Sohrabuddin<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_group_thread_2>[1
>> Update]
>> - Please sign-up for receiving a daily quote of Swami
>> Vivekananda<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_group_thread_3>[1
>> Update]
>> - this one is really
>> important!!<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_group_thread_4>[1
>> Update]
>> - Who is
>> Soharabuddin?<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_group_thread_5>[2
>> Updates]
>> - And we say that we are working hard...
>> ???<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_group_thread_6>[1


>> Update]
>>
>> Topic: CWG - CORRUPTION WEALTH

>> GAMES<http://groups.google.com/group/bharatswabhimantrust/t/9a912740d6383762>


>>
>> Himanshu Bisht <spyhi...@gmail.com> Aug 05 12:03PM +0530

>> ^<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_digest_top>

>> ^<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_digest_top>


>>
>> shame
>>
>> shame.........................................................................CWG
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Mohan Lal <kusal...@gmail.com> Aug 05 08:31PM +0530

>> ^<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_digest_top>


>>
>> THANks. ive shared this & requested to all my frnds in Facebook to
>> share it
>> further.
>> Right now this is possible from me. let them at least be aware.
>>
>> rgds,
>>
>> Monu.
>>
>>
>>
>> Topic: Sanskrit

>> Classes<http://groups.google.com/group/bharatswabhimantrust/t/2e5f95a5c1fee4fa>


>>
>> dsp_d...@engineer.com Aug 05 07:00AM -0400

>> ^<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_digest_top>

>> Sohrabuddin<http://groups.google.com/group/bharatswabhimantrust/t/e67f2eeb155e4fa2>


>>
>> Aastha <divyaaa...@gmail.com> Aug 05 12:12PM +0530

>> ^<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_digest_top>

>> Vivekananda<http://groups.google.com/group/bharatswabhimantrust/t/870169ef93c99dd8>


>>
>> B P DOBHAL <dobh...@gmail.com> Aug 05 11:42AM +0530

>> ^<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_digest_top>


>>
>> kirpeya hindi mai baije
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Topic: this one is really

>> important!!<http://groups.google.com/group/bharatswabhimantrust/t/59c15ba39e334e22>


>>
>> HARIHARA SUBRAMANIAN <hsubram...@yahoo.co.in> Aug 05 10:41AM +0530
>>

>> ^<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_digest_top>

>> Soharabuddin?<http://groups.google.com/group/bharatswabhimantrust/t/4d019252a39922bf>


>>
>> HARIHARA SUBRAMANIAN <hsubram...@yahoo.co.in> Aug 04 11:14PM +0530
>>

>> ^<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_digest_top>

>> ^<https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=main,tlist&ver=vTter5asn-o.en.&am=!ITNDE7H6wbOxhb4a1PIWg0w2fozNxSr6V1sOcm9qFf8b8Sv1Mrc&fri#12a434837958f041_digest_top>

>> ???<http://groups.google.com/group/bharatswabhimantrust/t/a051a140e127a14d>


>>
>> Gopal Krishna <gopalkrish...@gmail.com> Aug 04 02:13PM -0400

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