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New Delhi, NCR of Delhi, India
I am an Indian, a Yadav from (Madhepura) Bihar, a social and political activist, a College Professor at University of Delhi and a nationalist.,a fighter,dedicated to the cause of the downtrodden.....

Monday, January 11, 2010

Best Wishes for 2010:Boycott Chinese Goods,Save India

राकांपा ने किया चीनी उत्पादों का दहन

Jan 01, 01:33 am

मधेपुरा। राष्ट्रवादी कांग्रेस पार्टी के नेता प्रो.सूरज यादव के आह्वान पर गुरुवार को शहर के मुरहो मार्केट के समक्ष चीनी सामग्रियों की होली जलाकर भारत और भारतीय अर्थव्यवस्था की रक्षा करने का प्रण लिया गया। भारत माता की जय, चीनी आक्रमण का मुआवजा हो, जैसे नारों के साथ आयोजित इस कार्यक्रम को संबोधित करते हुए प्रो.यादव ने कहा कि एक ओर चीन भारत की सीमा फौज इकट्ठा कर अपनी सामरिक स्थिति मजबूत कर कभी भी आक्रमण करने के मूड में है जबकि दूसरी ओर चीन द्वारा घटिया मोबाइल, खिलौने, बैट्री, कलम, साफ्टवेयर एवं इलेक्ट्रानिक की घटिया सामग्रियों को सस्ते दरों पर यहां लगातार निर्यात बढ़ाकर भारतीय अर्थव्यवस्था को बर्बाद किया जा रहा है। यह स्थिति असहनीय है क्योंकि केन्द्र सरकार इस समस्या की अनदेखी कर रहा है। भारत को फिर से गुलाम बनाने की साजिश को हम भारतवासी बर्दाश्त नहीं करेंगे। इसलिए सभी भारतीय का कर्तव्य है कि चीनी सामग्रियों का बहिष्कार करें। इस अवसर पर राकांपा के जिला प्रभारी अंगद यादव ने भी चीनी घटिया सामग्रियों को बेकार बताते हुए इनके बहिष्कार का आह्वान किया। इस अवसर पर वार्ड आयुक्त मुकेश कुमार, जिला महासचिव अशोक कामती, वार्ड आयुक्त ध्यानी यादव, हेमेन्द्र कुमार, गुगल पासवान, संतोष वत्स, संजय यादव, अमरेन्द्र यादव, शैलेन्द्र कुमार, दिलीप पेंटर, नीरज साह, तेजनारायण यादव आदि दर्जनों राकांपा कार्यकर्ता उपस्थित थे।
BEST WISHES FOR NEW YEAR 2010.
People of Madhepura (Bihar) joined me in bidding Good Bye to 2009 by burning Chinese Goods flooding Indian Markets without any regulation and completely ruining Indian business and workers. They pledged to boycott Chinese products devoid of any standard, Economic regulation and safeguard.
While Indian Government is sleeping over Chinese economic conspiracy and massive military built up along the border, a repeat or worse than 1962 is inevitable.
Please give your kind attention to this problem in 2010.
SURAJ YADAV,
Assistant Professor,Delhi University.
National Convenor, Media Department,
Nationalist Congress Party.

7 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  3. Madhepura, 7th January,2010.

    The people of border districts of Madhepura,Saharsa and Supaul have at least one thing in common with metro population as far as daily entertainment goes, and that is listening to Radio. Though FM channels popularity have made people in big cities turn to radio, the people residing in far flung areas of India have not much of chioce than radio as reach of television,internet etc have lots of limitations.

    However, for people in far flung areas it is not just for their entertainment that Radio is important, but it is for News i.e., keeping in touch with India, that Radio matters. The sensitivity of this has always been acknowledged by Government of India in its files and discussions at highest levels.

    The people in districts of Madhepura , Saharsa, Supaul, Purnea, Katihar, Araria and Kishanganj, i.e.,the districts which bore the brunt of Kosi floods of 2008, are facing peculiar problem while tuning to All India Radio Stations. Almost all AIR stations
    are intruded by overlapping Chinese Radio Stations, so much so that irritated listeners prefer to tune in to Radio Nepal to listen to Hindi film songs ans BBC Hindi service to listen to News. AIR Evening News had always been popular, but now BBC is preferred because it can be heard better.AIR Vividh Bharati was most trusted for those in love with Hindi Film songs but now FM of Radio Kantipur has taken its place.Interestingly Chinese do not obstruct Nepal Radio or BBC and even broadcast Hindi Film songs from their Radio stations!

    People of Madhepura joined NCP leader Prof Suraj Yadav on Dec 31,2009 in burning Chinese Goods and calling for their boycott.Says Prof Yadav,"While Chinese are going ahead with massive military built up along the border,and their Government has lost no opportunity in objecting to building road in Laddakh,PM and Dalai Lama visit to Arunachal,they have conspired to fill Indian market with their products which are devoid of any government regulation or quality,India is facing onslaught worse than1962 and its economy is most vulnerable now."However the villagers in the area dont seem to mind Chinese mobiles than intrusion in their entertainment.Says Chetan Yadav of Murho village "I enjoyed listening to music on radio but even my buffallo has reduced milk after some people in terrible language inurrupt Lata and Rafi !"

    The Government of India had planned strengethening Radio waves in border areas by providing more radio relay stations in districts like Madhepura and strengthening the broadcasting power of existing ones, but the decision is yet to come out of govt files and get implimented. While the Chinese continue their planned exercise,the Government of India repeats its oft given statement that "there is no need to worry". Something like what Mohammad Shah Rangeela said on the news of approaching invader Nadir Shah,"Delli Doorahst,Delli Doorhast!"(meaning Delhi is still far away,Delhi is still far away!) .

    Rudranarayan Yadav,
    District Correspondent,
    PTI

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  4. On appointment of Shivshankar Menon, couldn't help remembering the days of V K Krishna Menon as the Defense Minister of India. Isn't the Chinese threat looming large now ? For those who dont know the other Menon, here is an introduction- "Krishna Menon became a member of the Rajya Sabha in 1953. On February 3, 1956, he joined the Union Cabinet as Minister without Portfolio. In 1957 he was elected to the Lok Sabha from Bombay, and in April of that year he was named minister of defence under Prime Minister Nehru. He was behind the conception of Sainik Schools in India, under the aegis of Sainik School Society, which runs over 24 schools across India. However, after India's defeat in the Sino-Indian War of 1962, he resigned from office for the country's lack of military preparedness. In 1967 he lost his parliamentary seat but was re-elected in 1969 from Midnapore. Again he was elected to the Parliament from the Trivandrum. He died on October 6, 1974 in New Delhi."

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  5. Our army way behind China’s: Indian general
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    Arun Joshi, Hindustan Times
    Email Author
    Jammu, January 23, 2010
    First Published: 00:12 IST(23/1/2010)
    Last Updated: 01:26 IST(23/1/2010)

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    The Indian Army lags far behind China in military infrastructure along the Line of Actual Control (LAC).
    “We lag far behind in infrastructure development,” General Officer Commanding, Northern Command, Lieutenant General BS Jaswal, told Hindustan Times.
    China has built all-weather metalled roads leading right up to its border posts facing Tawang in Arunachal Pradesh and Demchok and Fukche in Ladakh. It can, thus, move troops and material very easily to the border.
    Indian troops, on the other hand, often have to march miles to the front. Roads, where they exist, are dotted with potholes, with long stretches of boulders and slush, leading to accidents that slow down movement.
    Better connectivity allows the Chinese to cover 400 km a day. The Indian army finds it difficult to cover more than 200 km a day in the forward areas.
    The Indian armed forces have activated three airfields at Daulat Beg Oldi, Fukche and Nyoma, about 220-250 km east of Leh since May 31, 2008. But only AN 32 transport planes can land there. “They have little operational value,” another senior army officer said.
    The only airfield near the China border from where India can deploy warplanes is at Tezpur in Assam, where it has stationed its frontline Sukhoi 30 planes.
    Chinese military aircraft, however, can reach Shimla, Chandigarh and Leh within five minutes and New Delhi within 20 minutes of taking off from their forward base in Gar Gunsa, across the border, from Demchok in Tibet.
    It has five such airfields in Tibet where it has stationed warplanes.
    After the 1962 India-China war, India pursued a policy not to develop infrastructure, especially roads, near the Line of Actual Control.
    Reason: in the event of Chinese troops breaking through Indian defences, they would be greeted by hostile roads and infrastructure.
    This strategy was reversed in 2005.
    Accordingly, the government of India woke up to the need to build infrastructure along the 4,057-km LAC from Ladakh in Jammu and Kashmir (north) to Himachal Pradesh (west), Uttarakhand (middle region) and Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim (east) sectors of the border with China.
    Twenty-seven projects for construction of roads were sanctioned, but only six of them have been commissioned.
    Each kilometer of road in the mountainous areas along the Line of Actual Control costs Rs 15 crore.
    “The Indian Army is improving its infrastructure and capacity building on a massive scale and we are prepared to meet any eventuality if the need arises,” the Northern Command chief said.

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  6. Arunachal students call for boycott of Chinese goods
    TNN, 3 February 2010, 02:54am IST
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    Topics:
    Students
    Chinese
    Arunachal
    Boycott
    ITANAGAR: Angry over China’s repeated claims on Arunachal, students across the state are targeting Beijing’s biggest economic weapon — exports —

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    albeit in a small way. A powerful students’ group on Tuesday called for a boycott of ‘Made-in-China’ goods from February 8.

    ‘‘The boycott is necessary in the backdrop of repeated Chinese claims over Arunachal,’’ a written appeal from All Arunachal Pradesh Students’ Union president Takam Tatung said. ‘‘Our activists will visit every shop to identify commodities made in China,’’ it added.

    Seeking the traders’ support in its movement, the apex students’ body said ‘‘enough time’’ was given to remove Chinese goods after last month’s request by Arunachal Chamber of Commerce & Industries (ACCI).

    The Aapsu chief added: ‘‘The Union government’s approach to the Chinese issue left a lot to be desired. One case in point is the alleged captivity of Chabe Chader, a villager of Gumsing Taying in Upper Subansiri’s Taksing Circle area, by the Chinese army.’’

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  7. Times of India 10th November,2010.In Parliament- NEW DELHI: The government on Tuesday agreed to discuss the possibility of a surprise `Chinese incursion' with a section of the Opposition insisting that the threat should not be overlooked.
    SP leader Mulayam Singh Yadav led his party members into vociferous protests in the Lok Sabha well as soon as the House opened for the winter session in the morning.
    Later making a statement in the House, Yadav claimed he had definite information that China was preparing to attack India eying huge tracts of its territory across several states.
    Yadav said that being a former defence minister he had access to information and warned the government not to take the threat lightly keeping the 1962 Chinese aggression in view.
    "Lakhs of kilometres of Indian territory are still under Chinese occupation and our subsequent governments have not been able to take that back," he said during zero hour.
    Yadav claimed that Arunachal Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Ladakh were particularly vulnerable as China viewed these regions as its own.

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