Indian army battles manpower crisis

February 14, 2009

 

T-72 tank

The army is now seen as less than attractive by many potential recruits

“Your mission is to move to the area marked Charlie Papa One Six and fire on receiving the command.”
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Maj Amit Sood sits on top of his Russian-designed T-72 tank surrounded by soldiers from his unit, as he traces his finger across a map mounted in front.

“Does anyone have any doubts?” he asks his men, all dressed in olive-green battle fatigues.

“No Sir,” they shout in unison before scrambling off to board their tanks.

Ear splitting explosions

We’re in the Rajasthan desert in western India, less than an hour’s drive from the Pakistan border, witnessing an Indian army training exercise.

 

What motivates recruits at India’s top military academy?

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Minutes after the order, the tanks roar across the sandy landscape, their giant wheels churning up dust, as they zero in on their target.

A burst of ear splitting explosions follow – and then plumes of smoke to denote a perfect hit. The “enemy” had been eliminated.

As tensions rise with Pakistan after the Mumbai (Bombay) attacks, the movements of the Indian army have taken on a new urgency.

No one actually believes a confrontation will take place but the intent to signal a state of readiness is clear.

All this at a time when the Indian army, the world’s fourth largest, is also facing a major crisis, one that could affect its battle-readiness.

It’s facing a shortage of more than 11,000 officers – many of them from middle ranks such as Maj Sood, men who would actually lead it in battle.

That is something of major concern to the government. On Monday, the Indian army chief, Gen Deepak Kapoor, said he felt the armed forces were no longer an attractive career option for young Indians.

Maverick Scotsman

“Post-independence, our youth would forego much higher paying job opportunities to serve in the military,” the Press Trust of India quoted him as saying.

 

Maj Amit Sood 

It’s feared there may not be enough officers to lead men into battle

“But some of [that] ethos has perhaps undergone a bit of change.”

It’s the spirit of adventure and sense of history that have drawn men like Maj Amit Sood to the army.

He serves in the Skinner’s Horse regiment, one of the oldest in the Indian army which was set up by a maverick Scotsman in 1803.

His father also served in the same regiment and a large portrait of him adorns the regiment’s ornate mess, which also has regalia from the various campaigns the unit has fought through the years – the Boxer Rebellion in 1900 and the Anglo-Afghan campaigns of the 19th Century.

But increasingly, you also find people like Maj Amar Kwatra.

A fourth-generation, highly-decorated army officer whose grandfather fought for the Royal Indian army in World War I, he has left the army to fly private jets for the rich and famous.

As he casts his eye over a gleaming Hawker 750 eight-seater aircraft in a private hanger at Delhi airport, Maj Kwatra talks about his frustration with the army.

“I was disillusioned – there were many things that bothered me.

“I mean, no one joins the army for the money but you have to draw the line somewhere. You need a basic minimum to maintain your standard of living.”

Like many officers, Major Kwatra believes that it takes too long to make your way up the ranks and that the armed forces no longer command the respect they used to.

National pride

At the stately Ministry of Defence headquarters in Delhi, it’s something that has not gone unnoticed.

“We have taken a number of measures including improving pay and taking on board recommendations that would help improve career prospects,” says India’s Minister of State for Defence, Pallam Raju.

 

Soldier receives counter-insurgency training 

Many army recruits forego much higher paying job opportunities

But he acknowledges that the government can never compete with the private sector.

“The economic downturn has meant that jobs in government or the armed forces may still be attractive. But we cannot take it for granted. Eventually when the economy improves, the private sector becomes a much more attractive option,” he says.

Many Indians joined the army after the country’s independence because of a sense of national pride but also because it offered a stable income.

The army also offered a relatively comfortable life in large cantonments with plenty of institutional support – hospitals, schools and subsidised rations.

‘Straight into battle’

That’s one reason why quite a few Indians still head to the elite Indian Military Academy (IMA), set up during British colonial rule along the lines of the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst.

 

Indian cadets are put through their paces

The cadets are initiated into a tough, regimented life – that includes waking up at 0430, military drills, commando training, 11km (6.9 miles) cross-country runs carrying a 10kg load and plenty of firing practice.

“When he is finally commissioned from here, the cadet will have the qualities of leadership and intellect imbibed in him,” says Lt Gen RS Sujlana, who heads the IMA.

“From here they’ll go straight into battle – in Jammu and Kashmir and the north-east,” he adds, referring to counter-insurgency operations almost exclusively conducted by the army.

Increasingly, and especially after the Mumbai attacks, the focus is shifting towards counter-terrorism and counter-insurgency operations, which is reflected in the cadets’ training.

In a new drill conducted at a special facility at the IMA, top recruits are trained in close-combat fighting.

Armed with Insas rifles they burst into a building. Moving from room-to-room in semi-darkness they fire at cut-out models representing militants holding hostages.

“It is to train them for operations in built-up, urban centres, something which is increasingly relevant in the present environment,” says their instructor, Lt Col Gunpal Singh.

It’s a role that represents a new challenge for the Indian army. The question is – can they still find the men to lead them in battle?

G7 finance ministers vow to avoid protectionism

February 14, 2009

ROME: Group of Seven (G7) finance leaders vowed to avoid protectionism as they seek to stabilise the tumbling world economy and financial markets, a draft statement at talks here said Saturday. 

“The stabilisation of the global economy and financial markets remains our highest priority,” according to a draft declaration of G7 finance ministers obtained by AFP as the delegates held high-stakes talks in Rome. 

So far, “we have collectively taken exceptional measures to address these challenges,” it said, without specifying concrete proposals on the table at Saturday’s talks. 

“We affirm our commitment to act together using the full range of policy tools to support growth and employment and strengthen the financial sector,” the draft said. 

It also reflected comments by several top delegates that protectionism – when countries take measures that favour their own economies at the expense of others – was a threat to stability. 

“G7 remains committed to avoiding protectionist measures, to refraining from raising new barriers” to world trade, the draft said. 

The financial leaders were working to hammer out an action plan to confront deepening recession, amid mounting warnings of the talks’ grave economic stakes. 

International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn set the tone when he said advanced economies were in a “deep recession” ahead of the crisis talks in Rome, which kicked off with a working dinner on Friday. 

Delegates from the G7 grouping of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States plus Russia were comparing notes on stimulus packages and seeking consensus on the next steps, including possible new rules for global finance. 

Us Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner was set to discuss his vast US financial stabilisation plan, which received a sceptical reaction in the United States and has prompted calls for details. 

More grim data emerged on Friday showing that the eurozone economy slumped by 1.5 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2008. The European Union overall and several individual EU countries – including G7 host Italy – are also in recession. 

Ahead of the talks, several delegates voiced alarm over protectionism which they fear may undermine efforts to ease the downturn. 

German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck warned Friday that “the world (should) not make the same mistake that it made in the 1930s” at the time of the Great Depression, when protectionist measures prompted tit-for-tat reprisals that deepened the global crisis. 
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Recent proposals by France and the United States have sparked charges of protectionism. 

The Italian finance ministry said in a statement that as president of the talks it would also push for “a minimum basic set of rules” on world financial regulation and discuss “food security issues.”

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Price of petrol creeps up in 2009

February 14, 2009

he price of petrol at the pump has been steadily rising since the start of January, figures have shown.

The average price of a litre of petrol is now 90.48p and diesel 100.74p, analysts Experian Catalist said.
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This compares to a recent low on 6 January of 85.89p for petrol and 98.06p for diesel.

However, the price of crude oil is now 40% lower than the last time petrol cost 90p a litre, back in March 2007, according to the AA.

Oil prices have tumbled by more than $110 since July last year. US light, sweet crude is currently trading at about $34 a barrel.

Angry motorists

The AA says it has been receiving calls from drivers asking why prices are going up.

“We can see from wholesale price data for last year that gasoline [petrol] market prices fell by 5-10% in January last year, yet petrol prices [at the pump] rose in the same period,” said Edmund King, the AA’s president.

“There may be perfectly valid reasons for the current price rises, but a repetition of last year’s behaviour should not be happening again in times of dire family finances.”

In October the top four supermarkets and other petrol retailers announced they were cutting their pump prices.

However, the AA fears that without the Christmas incentive to compete on price and attract customers, retailers will allow fuel costs to rise.

The UK Petroleum Industry Association said it did not comment on current pump prices.

But it said in general prices are influenced by “a number of factors, including taxes, crude oil and refined product prices, exchange rates and competition”.
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Hiddink refuses to concede title

February 13, 2009

New Chelsea coach Guus Hiddink insists the Blues are still capable of winning the Premier League this season.
If leaders Manchester United beat Fulham next Wednesday, Chelsea will be 10 points behind with 13 games left.
“There’s a 10-point difference but things can happen in the final stages of the championship,” said Hiddink.
“The players are very committed, but sometimes you can have a little bit different approach to get even more efficiency out of the players.”
The 61-year-old Dutchman, who has taken charge of the Blues until the end of the season, made his comments to Chelsea TV after being shown around the club’s training ground on Thursday.
He was greeted at Cobham by chief executive Peter Kenyon, who gave the former Australia and South Korea coach a tour of the main building and met some of the players in the treatment room.
He then accompanied chairman Bruce Buck out on to the training field to watch the main session, led by Ray Wilkins. They were later joined by Abramovich and director Eugene Tenenbaum.

Winning the title would be a huge achievement. We will go for this title. 
Guus Hiddink
Brought in following the shock sacking of Luiz Felipe Scolari on Monday, Hiddink is confident Chelsea can still challenge for three trophies this season.
“The FA Cup is there, the Champions League and also the league. All the three roads are very important,” he said.
But he admitted he will have to work fast to ensure the Blues, fourth in the table behind United, Liverpool and Aston Villa, do not lose any more ground in the title race.
“I have to live, as soon as possible, in the depth of the club,” he said. “I am not just here to add to my experience with the club and Premier League, but also I want to see these results as soon as possible.”
Hiddink will watch Chelsea’s FA Cup fifth-round tie at Watford from the stands before officially taking charge on Monday.
Assistant manager Wilkins will look after the team at Vicarage Road on Saturday.
Hiddink, whose first test as a Premier League boss will be the game at Aston Villa on 21 February, will continue to lead Russia’s World Cup qualification campaign at the same time as attempting to revive Chelsea’s domestic campaign.
Russia’s next qualifying games are against Azerbaijan on 28 March and Liechtenstein on 1 April.

606: DEBATE
Hopefully we can qualify for the Champions League and Hiddink will get us there and then build from there 
grandbluephil
Hiddink initially said he only intended to coach Chelsea until the end of the season as a favour to club owner Roman Abramovich.
But he has now hinted he may remain at Stamford Bridge.
“What happens after May is unclear,” said Hiddink, who has a contract with the Russian FA until the end of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. “It’s difficult to make it work because the Premier League is challenging.”
Chelsea captain John Terry thinks Hiddink could be persuaded to stay at the club if his tenure is successful.
“We have six months to turn things around and if we do he will probably get offered the full-time job,” said the defender.
“It is down to us to put in the performances and get results for him and then hopefully something can be done in the summer.”
Hiddink has revealed that he is unlikely to make any big changes to Chelsea’s existing backroom staff.
“I’m not in favour of bringing in my group of people,” said the former PSV Eindhoven and Real Madrid coach.
“I like to adapt to what is required, make an analysis and if something is needed we can do it. I’m looking forward to having the co-operation of Ray Wilkins.”

Eriksson receives Mexico support

February 13, 2009

Mexico coach Sven-Goran Eriksson has been given the backing of the Mexican Football Federation after Wednesday’s 2-0 defeat by the United States.
BBC Sport understands that Eriksson, 61, is Portsmouth’s number one target after Tony Adams was sacked on Monday.
“There’s total support for Eriksson because we’ve a commitment with him to get to South Africa,” said MFF president Justino Compean.
Eriksson said: “I want to continue. If I left, I’d be a man with no courage.”
Wednesday’s match was the first in the six-team league that forms the final stage of the CONCACAF qualifying competition.
The top three will qualify for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa and the fourth-placed team will play off against a South American side for another place in the finals.
Mexico have failed to win in four away games since Eriksson was appointed in June.
Portsmouth keeper David James believes that former England manager Eriksson is exactly the sort of name the club should be pursuing.
“Having a former England manager as manager of Portsmouth I’m sure is something that the fans would never have envisaged,” said James.
“Somebody of his calibre would be a tremendous acquisition for us.”

Eriksson has been linked with Portsmouth following Adams’s, along with ex-Chelsea boss Avram Grant and former Charlton and West Ham manager Alan Curbishley.
Other names in the frame for the Fratton Park role include Croatia coach Slaven Bilic, ex-Sunderland boss Roy Keane and former England managers Terry Venables and Glenn Hoddle.
Portsmouth are 16th in the Premier League table – two places and one point above the relegation zone – and Paul Hart has been put in charge of the first team, starting with Saturday’s home game against Manchester City.

606: DEBATE
The club are now looking for a replacement but who do you think would fit into the tough job of stopping Portsmouth being relegated at the end of the season? 
BenUtd
Commenting on the club’s temporary boss, Pompey chief executive Peter Storrie told the club website: “Paul’s a strong character and at the moment I think it needs a strong character.
“The players will give him respect for as long as he’s doing it. He’s a good guy. He jumped at the chance to do it and I’m sure you’ll see quite a steadying hand.
“What we need to do is gel together, work as one, cut out the mistakes and just get going and get a couple of results. We really must do everything we can to make sure we stay in the Premier League.”
Eriksson led England at the 2006 World Cup before taking over as Manchester City boss. He only lasted 11 months at Eastlands but was named as Mexico coach just a day after leaving the Premier League club.

Kinnear set for lengthy recovery

February 13, 2009

Newcastle United manager Joe Kinnear will need to rest for at least two months after undergoing triple heart bypass surgery on Friday.
The 62-year-old has a history of heart trouble and was taken ill before Newcastle’s match at West Brom last Saturday, which the Magpies won 3-2.
He had a heart attack 10 years ago while in charge of Wimbledon and spent several years out of football.
If he does return after eight weeks he would be charge for six league games.
Chris Hughton, Kinnear’s assistant, took charge of the team on Saturday and will continue to do so, alongside coach Colin Calderwood.

606: DEBATE
Get well soon Joe and let’s hope it’s not serious 
lukajay
Earlier this month Kinnear delayed signing a contract extension, revealing he had been offered an improved two-year deal to stay at St James’ Park.
Kinnear took over as Magpies boss in September 2008, replacing Kevin Keegan.
He originally arrived as an interim manager and his current deal ends at the end of the season.

Oil prices rise despite US fears

February 13, 2009

Oil prices have risen to above $34 a barrel despite concerns about weakness in the US economy, which continue to cast a shadow over the commodity.
Analysts fear rising US unemployment will hit demand for oil.
The global slowdown has seen oil prices fall more than $110 off the highs seen in July last year.
US light, sweet crude rose 60 cents to $34.58 a barrel in Asia, having tumbled $1.96 in New York to settle at $33.98. London Brent rose $1.34 to $45.99.
“The economic indicators in the developed world remain weak and that’s impinging on oil demand,” said David Moore, a commodity strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney.
“It’s premature to say the fall in demand has bottomed.”
Weak demand
Earlier this week, the Energy Information Administration reported a seventh consecutive weekly increase in nationwide crude oil stocks as the economic crisis crushed business and consumer demand for fuel.
And rising unemployment has led to further fears of weakening demand for oil among US consumers.
New claims for unemployment benefit remain close to record highs.
The US jobless rate rose to 7.6% in January, up from 7.2% in December, according to official figures – the highest level since 1992.
The rapid rise in unemployment suggests the US recession is deepening.
Members of both houses of Congress have agreed a stimulus package, now worth $789bn (£549bn), including tax cuts and spending aimed at rescuing the US economy.
But analysts have questioned how much the oil price will benefit from it, with reduced production more likely to raise prices.
“We’re at the point where you start to see marginal producers have to shut down production,” said Peter Elston, a strategist with Aberdeen, a fund manager in Singapore.
“That gives you quite good support for prices.”

Beijing party that went horribly wrong

February 13, 2009

Spectacular explosions over Beijing heralded the end of the lunar new year.

But as the fireworks rose and fell, a new landmark building caught fire.

Parts of the building, which included the unfinished headquarters of state broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV), were quickly overwhelmed by flames.

Days later the damage can be seen from across the city, and fresh details have emerged as to what happened.

Officials from CCTV were using the new building – all sharp angles and gravity-defying engineering – as the backdrop for an illegal pyrotechnics display.

 

 CCTV is deeply remorseful 
CCTV presenter

They had bought the biggest fireworks they could get their hands on. At some point, one or more fireworks hit the hotel tower, which also houses a cultural centre. It was still under construction, so the sprinkler system was not switched on.Now it stands blackened and ruined. The windows in the five-star hotel which took up part of the building are cracked and gaping. The entire 33-storey block may have to come down.

No permission

Beijing’s fire chief said the state broadcaster did not have permission for such an elaborate display.

“They set off the fireworks at the south-west end of the building. That is pretty close to the building, maybe a dozen metres [40 feet] away. At that time, everyone was setting off fireworks – the same ones used for the Olympics, ones that are set off by computers.

“These are considered category ‘A’ fireworks. In Beijing you must get permission from the local government to set off such fireworks,” he said.

CCTV had not obtained that permission. Worse still, as a foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu pointed out, staff had been warned not to set off the powerful pyrotechnics.

“According to the initial investigation, the fire was caused when officials didn’t listen to police warnings, they persistently and illegally set off fireworks. The precise cause of the accident is still being investigated,” she told a briefing earlier this week.

Tourist hotspot

The CCTV site has always drawn stares. But now it is more of a tourist attraction than ever before.

 

Ruins of Beijing's Mandarin Oriental Hotel

The blackened ruins of the hotel have now become a draw for sightseers

“Even though the government spent money, this was a good building for ordinary people,” said Wang Yu Yin, who came to take photographs to send to friends outside of Beijing.”It’s like the Bird’s Nest [Olympic stadium]. It has become a tourist hotspot and Beijingers are proud of it. It is the same with this CCTV structure. I feel so sorry that this happened.”

As the building burned, people rushed to see it, and began posting pictures on websites – but some of those images were initially removed.

Later, as details emerged that it was its own staff who had accidently burned down the building, CCTV issued a rare apology.

“The fire caused serious damage to the state property, and CCTV is deeply remorseful. It also brought inconvenience to the people living nearby and caused traffic jams, and CCTV expresses sincere apologies,” a presenter said.

But many find that response unsatisfactory. CCTV may be powerful, and well funded, but the government’s propaganda mouthpiece is not held in high regard.

The main CCTV building is known as the “giant underpants”. Soon insults began appearing on websites: “Liar, liar, pants on fire.”

CCTV’s apology made no mention of the fireman who died, or the six others injured fighting the flames. Since then it has said very little.

But other parts of the state media have not been so quiet, and have warned of likely prosecutions.

On Thursday 12 people – including a CCTV official – were detained in connection with the fire.

Australian stimulus plan approved

February 13, 2009

Australia’s Senate has passed the Labor government’s A$42bn ($27bn; £19bn) stimulus plan after the bill was blocked during an earlier vote.

It was approved after the government reached a deal with an independent senator who had earlier joined the Liberal Party-led opposition.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says the bill is vital to boost the economy amid a global economic slowdown.

On Friday the Australian Senate backed the bill by 30 votes to 28.

Labor does not have a majority in the Senate, and some compromise had been expected.

‘National interest’

The approval came after the government agreed to A$1bn in extra funding for water projects.

“I’m pleased to say I believe we have been able to reach a compromise, which while not giving everybody what they want, may give everyone what they need,” said independent senator Nick Xenophon, who had blocked the plan a day earlier.

Treasurer Wayne Swan, who led the negotiations with Mr Xenophon, said: “We are prepared to act in the national interest.

“That’s what governs the fiscal stimulus package in the first place.”

The bill had already passed once through the House of Representatives, the Senate’s lower chamber, where Labor has a large majority.

It will now return to the lower house in its amended form for a further vote.

The plan proposes spending A$28.8bn on schools, housing and roads over four years.

In addition, it wants to dedicate A$12.7bn on tax breaks for small firms, and cash handouts for eligible workers and students.

The opposition has called the stimulus plan financially irresponsible.

Opposition leader Malcolm Turnbull had said the government was treating parliament with “disingenuous contempt”, accusing it of refusing to negotiate a less expensive package.

But business leaders had expressed their frustration at the Senate’s earlier rejection of the stimulus plan.

“No other nation’s parliament has refused a major stimulus package in the current environment of unprecedented global economic downturn,” said the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
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Sri Lankan in Philippines kidnap

February 13, 2009

A Sri Lankan peace advocate has been taken from his home by nine armed men in the south of the Philippines.

Omar Jalil, 36, was based in Lamitan on Basilan Island for the nonpartisan group Nonviolent Peaceforce, which has been monitoring the Muslim insurgency.

Militants are holding three teachers and a clerk on Basilan, and three Red Cross workers on nearby Jolo Island.

The kidnap of Mr Jalil was seen as surprising by locals as he was described as a Muslim preacher.

Lamitan city mayor Roderick Furigay told reporters that Mr Jalil had stayed on the island after other members of his group left.

“We are surprised the gunmen did not spare him for being a Muslim religious leader,” Mr Furigay was quoted as saying.

The Filipino caretaker at Mr Jalil’s house managed to escape the gunmen and is reported to be helping troops search nearby jungles.

Wave of kidnaps

The recent upsurge in kidnappings has been attributed by some analysts to the Abu Sayyaf Group of armed militants, renowned for high profile kidnappings in which large ransoms are demanded.

Philippine troops have been trying to reach the area on Jolo Island where the three Red Cross workers – Eugenio Vagni, Mary Jean Lacaba and Andreas Notter – have been held since they were grabbed on 15 January.

Earlier this week, clashes occurred in which the military says two militants were killed and nine marines wounded.

Brigadier General Gaudencio Pangilinan said the hostages were believed to be unhurt.

In phone calls and a radio broadcast last week, the hostages asked for a negotiated solution to their plight.
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