Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

SITHARAMAN, GEN RAWAT TO FLY TO J&K TO MEET NEW GUV

- Shishir Gupta

good? Maybe. Do we have a reason to look east two years from now to Tokyo? Perhaps. Has this been India’s breakthrou­gh Asian Games? one certainly hopes so.

Not many outside the bridge circuit would have known Bardhan and Dey Sarkar. Not many would have had a clue as to why Pincky Balhara and Malaprabha Yallapa Jadhav were in Jakarta and whether kurash was a sport. Or that Manjit Singh had opted not to see his newborn in his quest for the 800m gold. They wouldn’t have heard about a village called Kalina in Meerut till a farmer’s son, Saurabh Chaudhary, 16, won the 10m air pistol gold with monklike calm reminiscen­t of Abhinav Bindra’s dispositio­n when he won the men’s 10m air rifle gold in the 2008 Olympics.

But like the gold winning Highest ever tally at the Asian Games men’s bridge pair, the girls who won a silver and a bronze in kurash, Singh and Chaudhary traded anonymity for what, hopefully, is more than 15 seconds of fame, Neeraj Chopra, Swapna Burman, Jinson Johnson, Rahi Sarnobat, Bajrang Punia, Vinesh Phogat, Rohan Bopanna and Divij Sharan added to their growing reputation by becoming gold medallists.

CONTINUED ON P 10 NEWDELHI: Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, along with army chief General Bipin Rawat, will be flying to Srinagar on Monday to call on newly appointed state governor Satyapal Malik to exchange notes on the security situation in the state and the forthcomin­g panchayat elections.

This will be the first meeting between the defence minister, army chief and the Jammu and Kashmir governor.

South Block officials said the visit of Sitharaman and Rawat comes at a time when indigenous militant group Hizbul Mujahideen has been pushed to the forefront of action by handlers across the Line of Control (LOC) to orchestrat­e unrest in the Valley by targeting innocent families of Jammu and Kashmir Police (JKP) personnel.

It has been seen in the past two decades that whenever key American leadership is visiting India or the sub-continent, violence is orchestrat­ed in the Valley in the name of the indigenous freedom struggle.

The US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is visiting India on September 5 after paying a fivehour trip to Islamabad.

CONTINUED ON P 10 LUCKNOW: Union home minister Rajnath Singh said on Saturday that Maoist rebels, who have hitherto operated from rural and remote areas, have entered the cities because of a crackdown by the central government and are now trying to influence public opinion and spread their ideology in urban India.

“From 126 districts earlier, Naxalite activities have now been restricted to just 10-12 districts because of the action taken by us. But now they [the Maoists] are adopting a new strategy. They have come to the cities and are trying to influence people,” Singh said at the Shikhar Samagam event organised in Lucknow by Hindi daily, Hindustan, a sister publicatio­n of HT.

“I have received this informatio­n through intelligen­ce agencies,” Singh said.

The arrest of prominent rights activists this week — P Varavara Rao in Hyderabad, Vernon Gonsalves and Arun Ferreira in Mumbai, Sudha Bharadwaj in Faridabad and Gautam Navalakha in Delhi — led to the coinage of the term ‘urban naxals,’ as Maoists are known in India after the Bengal village where a rebellion broke out in the ’60s.

The home minister justified the arrest of the five in connection with the January 1 violence in Bhima-koregaon. “Such arrests have been made before. The charges are serious, like conspiracy to destabilis­e the government, ideology to promote violence. But now the matter is before the Supreme Court and it will take a decision ,” Singh said.

When asked about government attempts to control social media, especially when it was the Bharatiya Janata Party that had made maximum use of it to come to power in 2014, Singh said, “We did not win because of social media but because of the work (PM Narendra) Modi did in Gujarat. We are not against social media, but our responsibi­lity is to stop fake news, pornograph­y, etc. How do we allow children to see such things?”

CONTINUED ON P 10

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