Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Indian-origin scribe attacked in Canada

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TORONTO: Police in Calgary, Alberta, are investigat­ing an alleged assault on an Indo-canadian journalist by supporters of a candidate vying for a ticket to contest provincial assembly elections next year.

The incident occurred during the Punjabi National Mela in the city on August 19.

Kumar Sharma, who hosts a radio show devoted to politics, alleged he was assaulted by a group of seven people who he claimed were supporters of Hardyal Singh Happy Mann.

Mann is among the candidates seeking the United Conservati­ve Party of Alberta’s nomination for the assembly elections.

During a press conference, Sharma, who has worked as a journalist since 1995, said his alleged attackers were angry over a Facebook post that criticised their candidate. He said they threatened him with “dire consequenc­es.”

“The situation became so tense that I feared for my safety. Because of that, I deleted the Facebook post right on the spot,” he said. As he was about to leave the venue where the open air concert was being held, he was “viciously attacked” by the men. He spent the next week recuperati­ng at home.

US flag atop the White House became the focus of national attention as the Trump administra­tion calibrated its response to the passing of Republican senator John Mccain, an unrelentin­g critic of President Donald Trump.

From flying at half staff since Saturday evening, when the Mccain family announced the senator’s passing, it climbed back to the normal full staff position on Monday and then dropped back to half mast after hours of mounting public outrage and derision.

No explanatio­ns were offered. “Despite our difference­s on policy and politics, I respect Senator John Mccain’s service to our country and, in his honor, have signed a proclamati­on to fly the flag of the United States at half staff until the day of his interment,” Trump said in a statement.

Mccain’s body will be laid to rest on Sunday, and flags on all government buildings – including the one over the White House and the adjoining office building – will fly at half staff until then.

Flags atop the two buildings were down at half mast after the senator’s passing on Saturday and stayed so through Sunday.

Mccain, a war-hero who suffered five and half years of torture during the Vietnam War, served six terms in the US senate and ran twice for president, is widely respected across the country, and across party lines.

Trump and Mccain did not get along. The president’s first response Mccain’s passing was a dry tweet that addressed the late senator’s family, not the departed leader: “My deepest sympathies and respect go out to the family of Senator John Mccain. Our hearts and prayers are with you!”

White House officials — chief of staff John Kelly and press secretary Sarah Sanders— had planned to put out a more detailed statement, and one that described Mccain as a war-hero.

The president overruled them and sent out the tweet as his response, according to news reports. The two men had differed on more than just policy and politics, the president conceded in his statement. . Trump’s antipathy for Mccain bordered on personal. He once questioned the senator being called a war hero because he got captured.

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