March 1, 2017 issue | |
In the News |
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INDIAN DIASPORA WORLD CONVENTION 2017 |
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Celebration of 100th Anniversary of Abolition of Indian Indentureship | |
Shared Heritage, Aspirations and Interests THEME: Global Indian Diaspora – Charting New Frontiers DATE: MARCH 17 – 20, 2017 VENUE: Radisson Hotel, Wrightson Road, Trinidad And Tobago |
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INTRODUCTION SUB-TOPICS: YOUTH SUMMIT TOURS: to be announced The following format should be used in sending proposals to the Conference Committee REGISTRATION TRAVEL AND ACCOMMODATION HOTELS 1. http://www.booking.com IMPORTANT DEADLINES: Dr. Primnath Gooptar |
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Indian man killed in hate crime in US bar, another injured |
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Srinivas Kuchibhotla | |
An Indian engineer was killed and another injured by an American who mistook them for "Middle Easterners" and yelled "Get out of my country" before shooting them at a bar. Srinivas Kuchibhotla, 32, was killed and Alok Madasani was injured when Adam W. Purinton, a white who earlier served in the US Navy, shot them at the Austins Bar & Grill in Olathe, Kansas state, on Wednesday night last week. Purinton reportedly got into an argument with the victims and hurled racial slurs. He yelled "get out of my country", "terrorist" before shooting them. Purinton, according to reports, provoked them into argument asking their presence and work in his country, and how they are better than him. To avoid unwanted scuffle, the bar management asked him to leave the place, only to find him back at the bar later with gun when he fired at the Indians. Ian Grillot, 24, an American who tried to save the Indians, was also shot at, media reports quoted police as saying. Grillot was recovering in a hospital while Madasani was discharged. The Hindu American Foundation (HAF) called it a hate crime. Police said Purinton, 51, fired multiple rounds and fled the bar. He was arrested on Thursday morning in Clinton city in neighbouring Missouri state when a bartender told police that he had bragged about killing "two Middle Eastern men", The Kansas City Star reported. The US "strongly" condemned the shooting and said it has reached out to Indian consular officials to offer support. The US Embassy in New Delhi expressed full faith in the US authorities investigating the matter. "We have full faith that US legal authorities will bring the case to justice," the statement said. Purinton has been charged with first-degree murder. "It was a tragic and senseless act of violence," Olathe Police Chief Steven Menke said. Kuchibhotla hailed from Hyderabad while Madasani is from Warangal town in Telangana. They were aviation programme managers at Garmin, an electronics manufacturer. Kuchibhotla is survived by his wife, Sunayana, in the US. She also works in Kansas. Madasani's wife is five months pregnant. According to his profile on LinkedIn, Kuchibhotla graduated from the Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University in Hyderabad in 2005. Madasani is a graduate of the Vasavi College of Engineering in Hyderabad. Kuchibhotla's family in India was in shock and sought help from the state and central governments to bring home his body. India's External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj on Friday expressed "heartfelt condolences to the bereaved family" and said she had spoken to the Indian ambassador, Navtej Sarna. The Minister said Consul R.D. Joshi had rushed from Houston to Kansas and Vice Consul Harpal Singh was also proceeding from Dallas to Kansas. They would meet the injured Madasani and help in flying back the mortal remains of Kuchibhotla. According to The Star, federal officials were investigating if the attack was a hate crime. The Hindu American Foundation (HAF) said the killing was "the first reported bias-motivated fatality in the US after the bitter Presidential election" that catapulted Donald Trump to office. "We call upon the US Department of Justice and local law enforcement to investigate this murder as what it is, a hate crime," said Jay Kansara, the HAF Director of Government Relations. The killing of the innocent engineer triggered dismay in India. Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu said he was saddened to learn about the attack. Meanwhile, a GoFundMe page created to collect money to help Kuchibhotla's family crossed its $150,000 goal, raising nearly $250,000 in 11 hours. More than 6,700 people, including Americans, donated $248,404 on the page created by Kuchibhotla's friend Kavipriya Muthuramalingam. Kuchibhotla is the second youth from Telangana to be killed in the US in February. Software engineer Vamshi Reddy Mamidala was shot dead by an alleged drug addict in Milpitas, California, on February 10, in the garage of his apartment building. |
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Muhammad Ali Jr. detained after officials asked if he was Muslim | |
Muhammad Ali Jr. , son of legendary boxing champion Muhammad Ali , said he was detained for nearly two hours at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport earlier this month by immigration officials who repeatedly asked if he is Muslim. Ali Jr., 44, was traveling with his mother, Khalilah Camacho-Ali, to Florida from a speaking engagement in Montego Bay, Jamaica, according to the Courier-Journal. He opened up about the February 7 incident to CBS News, noting that officials separated him from his mother immediately and repeatedly asked him about his religion. “Immigration came up to me and pulled me aside and asked me my name first and I said, ‘Muhammad Ali,’ Ali Jr. recalled. “He said, ‘What religion are you?’ and I said, ‘Muslim.’ He said, ‘Come with me.'” Ali Jr. told CBS News that the officer took him into a room and asked him his name and religion again – “It’s like he didn’t believe me,” Ali Jr. said. He noted that he was questioned for about an hour and 45 minutes and Camacho-Ali added, “I was scared.” Ali Jr’s family friend and lawyer, Chris Mancini, told the Courier-Journal that the Alis were taken aside because of their “Arabic-sounding names.” “This is an outrage,” Mancini told the Miami New Times. “I don’t know what is going on with Mr. Trump’s claim that his ban is not religion-based. We do not discriminate in this country based on religion.” Trump signed an executive order prohibiting travelers from seven predominantly Muslim countries from entering the U.S. on January 27. A federal judge in Seattle, Washington blocked the order a few days before Ali Jr.’s flight. A customs spokesman told USA Today that the agency does not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, sexual orientation or ethnicity. “We treat all travelers with respect and sensitivity,” the spokesman said. “Integrity is our cornerstone. We are guided by the highest ethical and moral principles.” Camacho-Ali showed officers a photo of herself with her boxing legend ex-husband and was not detained, according to the New Times. But Ali Jr. did not have a photo of his famous father, although he carried his U.S. passport. |
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