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Hyderabad:
Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu is evidently a firm
believer in the saying "Health is wealth". The fitness conscious
Telugu Desam Party (TDP) president is putting party members through rigorous
health checks. This, he believes, is vital for the future of the party.
Soon doctors will recommend measures and prescribe medicines to tone up
the health of the 5,000 members of the party's general body. Naidu will
apparently consider the health profile while choosing candidates for various
slots both in the party and the government. That's certainly an incentive
for party workers to shape up.
Of course, it helps that NTR Bhavan, the party headquarters in Hyderabad,
is situated in front of the sprawling Kasu Brahmananda Reddy Park, which
has extensive walking tracks. Though Naidu initiated ministers and legislators
into yoga, meditation and other exercises within weeks after the last
assembly elections, only a few of them could keep up with their quick
stepping boss. But Naidu is not one to give up easily when it comes to
training-be it of the body or the mind. Besides exhorting TDP members
to be fit, he has urged them to hone their organisational and managerial
skills and use the latest gizmos. The last instruction has met with mixed
results-some ministers carry palmtops on which they note down appointments
that they do not keep. But TDP General Secretary Lal Jan Basha believes,
"All this is beneficial in having a youthful and alert party."
Naidu has let no grass grow under his sports shoes before announcing
his next pet project-providing all active TDP members with insurance cover.
"Happiness lies in good health and not in material wealth,"
he declares, pointing out that the rich live in fear of losing what they
have amassed, thus ruining their health. From Laptop Guru to Telugu Robin
Hood?
-Amarnath K. Menon
The Golden Pumpkin
Ashes
to ashes, dust to dust; if the Cowboy won't get you, the Mullah's dream
must. Mullah Omar, the world's most reported about one-eyed military leader
since Horatio Nelson, has apparently abandoned all plans of surrender
because of a "prophetic dream". Deep in sleep in his palace
(cave?) in Kandahar, the southern Afghanistan city where the Taliban is
mounting its last stand, Omar saw a happy vision "in which I am in
charge for as long as I live". The world came to know of the revelation
courtesy Ahmed Karzai, whose brother Hamid is a leading anti-Taliban Pashtoon
leader holding talks with the current occupiers of Kandahar.
While
Sigmund Freud in the heavens may have other interpretations of Omar's
dream, more down to earth analysts see the Mullah's "divine message"
as a convenient stalling mechanism. It gives the Taliban and its cohorts
enough time to escape from Kandahar to Pakistan and live to fight another
way, another day.
Mullah Omar-described as Osama bin Laden's father-in-law or son-in-law
or both-has other publicised dreams, notably the formation of a united
Islamic emirate stretching from Europe to Asia with Africa and, for all
it matters, Antarctica thrown in. His worst known nightmare is compulsory
college education for women.
SIGNPOSTS
AWARDED:
The Indira Gandhi Prize for Peace, Disarmament and Development for 2000,
to UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson, for opposing racism
and highlighting cultural diversity.
DIED: M.V. Chandrashekhara Murthy, Congress MP from Kanakapura
in Karnataka, after a battle with cancer. He was 61. Murthy was union
minister of state for finance in the P.V. Narasimha Rao government.
MENTIONED:
In the Guinness Book of Records, 68-year-old Delhi Assembly Speaker Prem
Singh, for winning elections from the same assembly seat without a break
in the past 43 years.
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