Thursday, June 24, 2010

wagonr's new look
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The audio system plays USBs via a separately sold adapter and features a front AUX input. The VXi variant we drove is pretty loaded what with four door-mounted speakers, power windows all round, tilt adjustable steering, remote central locking, internally adjustable ORVMs, ABS and front airbags. However I rued the lack of an anti-glare rear-view mirror. The silver-finish plastic inserts are cleverly used and look good too. Thankfully the new WagonR has a new steering wheel, and not the Swift one that adorns most of the Maruti range from the A-star to the Grand Vitara.
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Wednesday, June 23, 2010

SALMAN CHILDHOOD PICTURE
SHARUKH KHAN CHILDHOOD PICTURE
ACTOR SIDDHARTH IN CHILDHOOD

Simple.ID the kids..........SHAHID AND AYESHA TAKIA IN CHILD HOOD

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Indians play during high tide in the Arabian Sea in Mumbai.1 - 01_09_wip_june14th ...

1 - 01_13_wip_june14th ...Mon, Jun 14

A worker loads crushed stone onto a dumper truck at a construction site in the commercial Connaught Place area of New Delhi. The city looks like a messy construction site as many parts are under renovation ahead of Commonwealth Games which will start on Oct 3rd.

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Mon, Jun 14

A worker loads crushed stone onto a dumper truck at a construction site in the commercial Connaught Place area of New Delhi. The city looks like a messy construction site as many parts are under renovation ahead of Commonwealth Games which will start on Oct 3rd.

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Thu, Jun 17

View of the Green Point Stadium is seen as England soccer team players are training in Cape Town, South Africa. England are preparing for a soccer World Cup Group C match against Algeria.

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Thu, Jun 17

India's Virender Sehwag plays with a soccer ball during a practice session ahead of their Asia Cup ODI cricket match in Dambulla, Sri Lanka.

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Thu, Jun 17

Tourists watch as workers clean oil from the sand along a 700-yard long strip of oil that washed up on the beach in Gulf Shores, Ala. As cleanup costs escalate and lawsuits mount, the fear of the unknown is drowning out the voices of reason, causing BP's stock price to crumple in half.

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Thu, Jun 17

Security officers carry the body of an alleged female Maoist or Naxal fighter that was killed in a gunbattle with security forces in West Midnapore, West Bengal. At least eight Naxals were killed in the incident.

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Tue, Apr 27
Y! India News

Maker Aston Martin calls the Rapid the most beautiful four-door car in the world.'The Rapide is a sports car', says Ulrich Bez, the chief executive of Aston Martin. Normally, he wouldn't feel the need for such emphasis: expensive, hand-crafted British sports cars are Aston's business. But the £140,000 Rapide is something new, the company's first four-door, four-seater car since the Lagonda of the 1970s. Bez doesn't want this car to be misunderstood. It is not a rival for the Bentley Continental Flying Spur or the uber-sedans from Mercedes, BMW and Audi and it differs fundamentally from its most obvious counterpart, the Porsche Panamera.

Courtesy: Overdrive

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Tue, Jun 22

A security guard stands near the mascot of the Commonwealth Games 2010 Shera, which is modeled on a Royal Bengal tiger, outside Commonwealth Games headquarters, in New Delhi, India, Tuesday, June 22, 2010. The Queen's Baton Relay for the Commonwealth Games is to enter India from Pakistan via the Wagah border on June 25. The games are scheduled from Oct 2 to Oct 14, 2010.

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Tue, Jun 22

Indian Hindu priests rotate traditional lamps in circular movements as they perform evening prayers at Sangam, the confluence of the Rivers Ganges, Yamuna the mythical Saraswati, in Allahabad, India, Monday, June 21, 2010. Hindus across the country are celebrating Ganga Dussehra, devoted to the worship of the River Ganges.

Indian men sit in utensils filled with water to perform rituals to induce the onset of monsoon through Vedic techniques, in Ahmadabad, India, Tuesday, June 22, 2010. Northern India has been experiencing above normal temperatures in recent weeks, and many residents eagerly await the annual monsoon rains, which bring along with them cooler temperatures and are vital for the farm-dependent econom1 - photo220610_4 ...y.

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Tue, Apr 20

Stormy Mix at Iceland Volcano

Photograph by Marco Fulle, Barcroft/Fame Pictures

Pictured Sunday, lightning at the Eyjafjallajokull volcano branches off in many directions-an interesting phenomenon, according to the University of Florida's Uman.

Every bolt has a direction that it travels, Uman explained: A spark begins in electrically charged spot and then travels either up, down, or sideways until it reaches an oppositely charged area.

White-Hot Show at Iceland Volcano

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Photograph by Peter Vancoillie, Your Shot

A blast of white-hot lightning crackles over Iceland's Eyjafjallajökull volcano on Sunday. Clouds of volcanic ash from Eyjafjallajokull have snarled European air traffic for nearly a week.

National Geographic Your Shot submitter Peter Vancoillie took the photograph from about 18 miles (30 kilometers) away from the volcanic lightning storm, which not "unlike a regular old thunderstorm," said Martin Uman, a lightning expert at the University of Florida in Gainesville.

The same ingredients are present: water droplets, ice, and possibly hail—all interacting with each other and with particles, in this case ash from the eruptions, to cause electrical charging, Uman said.

The volcanic-lightning pictures are 'really very sensational,' Uman said. 'Somebody ought to be up there with an HD movie camera—it's ready for the IMAX theater.'

(Courtesy: National Geographic)

Reduction in Antarctic glacier ice could increase sea level’
on June 23rd, 2010



article-1288328-0A21B4CA000005DC-3_468x247Reduction of the ice mass in the Pine Island Glacier in the Antarctic Ocean could cause 10 percent of the global rise in sea level, experts have said.

A study conducted by scientists from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS), Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and the National Oceanography Centre (LDEO) said thinning ice in this region is the main cause of global sea level rise, Prensa Latina reported.

Pine Island Glacier is the largest ice stream flowing into the sea. It is grounded on a 984,25 feet underwater ridge, which slows down its flow into the sea. But, in recent decades, the glacier has thinned and become disconnected from the ridge, allowing the ice to move more rapidly from the land to the sea.

This disconnection has caused continuous thinning and acceleration of the glacier, the study said.

The scientists, however, do not know as to what kickstarted the beginning of the retreat from the ridge. But they did find out that it started some time prior to 1970, the study’s lead author Adrian Jenkins of British Antarctic Survey, said.

The study has been published in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Your brain structure determines personality
on June 23rd, 2010



head_and_brainYour personality is related to the size of different parts of brains, says a study.

Colin DeYoung at the University of Minnesota (UM) and colleagues wanted to find out the correlation between different personality factors and brain structures.

For the study, psychologists divided all personality types into five factors: conscientiousness,extraversion, neuroticism, agreeableness, and openness / intellect. Then, 116 volunteers answered a questionnaire to describe their personality, followed by a brain imaging test that measured the size of different parts of the brain.

The researchers used a computer program to warp each brain image to compare the relative sizes of different structures. Several links were found between the size of certain brain regions and personality.

For example: “Everybody, I think, has a common sense of what extraversion is – someone who is talkative, outgoing, brash. They’re more motivated to seek reward, which is part of why they’re more assertive,” says DeYoung.

That quest for reward is thought to be a leading factor in extraversion. Earlier studies had found parts of the brain that are active in considering rewards.

So DeYoung and his colleagues reasoned that those regions should be bigger in people who are more extraverted.

Indeed, they found that one of those regions, the medial orbitofrontal cortex – it’s just above and behind the eyes – was significantly larger in study subjects with a lot of extraversion.

The study found similar associations for conscientiousness, which is associated with planning; neuroticism, a tendency to experience negative emotions that is associated with sensitivity to threat and punishment.

And agreeableness, which relates to parts of the brain that allow us to understand each other’s emotions, intentions, and mental states.

Only openness / intellect didn’t associate clearly with any of the predicted brain structures.

“This starts to indicate that we can actually find the biological systems that are responsible for these patterns of complex behaviour and experience that make people individuals,” says DeYoung, said a university release.

However, he points out that this doesn’t mean that your personality is fixed from birth; the brain grows and changes as it grows. Experiences change the brain as it develops, further changing the personality.

The research appears in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.



Pawan’s ‘Komaram Puli’ in dubbing stages!
on June 23rd, 2010



Kommaram-Puli

It is well known that power star Pawan Kalyan and director SJ Surya are again joining hands after ‘Kushi’ for this latest forthcoming much waited film ‘Komaram Puli’. The film shooting is progressing at brisk pace and currently the dubbing works are going on Sabdalaya Studios, Hyderabad. Pawan is busy working on the dubbing part as the director is very particular about the dubbing works. It is being produced by Singamala Rameshand has music by A R Rahman. Geetha Arts will be releasing the film world-widely.

Nikisha Patel is playing the female lead in the film. Binod Pradhan is the cinematographer and Vijayan is the fight master. The makers of the film are planning to release the film world wide with highest number of prints. The film revolves around the story of a police-officer. It is expected to release soon but the confirmed date was not announced.

Let’s wait and see whether this combo will repeat the ‘Kushi’ magic or not!

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Rana to romance Samantha in Gautham Menon’s film!

Rana,Samantha‘Leader’ fame hero Daggubati Rana is all set to work for a new film under the direction of ace filmmaker Gautham Menon. It is said to be a bilingual film to be made in both in Tamil and Telugu.

Sources also said that the Rana’s bilingual film to be made with Selva as said before has been dropped due to some differences. They adds further that it looks like Gautham has also dropped his ‘Ye Maya Chesave’ Hindi remake and fully concentrates on this Rana’s bilingual project.

The gorgeous beauty Samantha who played a lead role in ‘Ye Maya Chesave’ is going to pair up with Rana in this film. A photo shoot has been held on Rana and Samantha yesterday and the shooting will commence in July. This is yet to be titled and the other details of the film will be announced soon.

It’s very interesting to see Rana, Samantha and Gautham Menon working together for a film.

REALYSTIC HERO FOREVERదస్త్రం:Pavan kalyan..jpg

Pavan Kalyan, A Powerful Headlong Plunge into Celluloid

- Satavahana

In any field, we can find a countable few trend-setters. In those trend-setters we can grade out persons who will be innovative and unique in their works attempting to bring out best of their talents in diversified angle.

While others keep on taking the beaten track, these trendsetters beat out a new track of their own. Similar to any other field the rule applies to the celluloid or the glittering silver screen rather film field also.

General trend of the field is to take one or the other success formula, proved commercially by some one else and with some twists and turns the formula is presented again. This is with an idea, generally ingrained into the minds of producers, directors, and even the lead role players ‘why to take risk, let us follow the proven success formula’.

The attitude, if taken their shoe that are investing crores of rupees into the film might seem true to us for some time. These kinds of producers and directors can never give a common audience the entertainment for which they get into a movie theatre spending his time and money. The lead role players, heroes, too think a while for doing innovative and different roles coming out of their “image” circuit. The scare in the heroes is that if this role conks out, the career graph might sink and the future may become a big question.

Under these prevailing circumstances, we have one who is committed to show out the best in him and prove to be ‘not one among the lot’. Initially, he was eclipsed by the big shadow of his brother and mega star Chiranjeevi. Gradually he proved his mettle with his own dedication, commitment, decency, and diplomacy and walked out of his brother’s shadow after creating his own ‘craze and image’ in the spectators. The strength of the fanfare is of course the yardstick for any personality’s performance in his or her respective arena.

Yes, indeed, we are speaking about the unique, successive success star Pavan Kalyan. He is the one in the present times who is attracting house-full collections with major participation of the youth. The attributions of ‘his’ brother, son, grandson, and what not can be helpful giving an entry. But the entrant should prove himself and create a platform of his own to stand to the test of time. The distinction will be touching the person’s feet only if he or she is incessant hard and smart worker. The ceaseless efforts with a zeal to learn every flip of a second made Pavan rob the young and old hearts.

He can be given a distinction, especially when famous film personalities' sons, daughters, brothers and grandsons are foraying with celebration and disappearing much earlier than the echo of the celebration stopped. Pavan always took his profession to be devotion, a tradition, and not just a passion. He is now not a person in the glittering celluloid field; he has turned into an energetic power to drive the audience to the movie house.

‘Akkada Ammayi Ikkada Abbayi’ gave Pavan an opening to flash on the screen. And he never turned around since then. Every single movie, "Gokulamlo Seetha", "Suswagatham", "Tholi Prema", "Thammudu" and "Badri" moved viewers' hearts and built his fanfare that is growing day after day and show after show. Now it is the turn of "Khushi". The Pavan’s name is chanted and enchanted with resounding Mexican waves in the jam-packed movie houses. The star who is born just yesterday marks his growth with the spectator filled compounds of the theatres and people reserving their show in advance.

Khushi recently completed 50 days of houseful exhibition and is advancing rapidly towards 100 days fete. At this juncture, Pavan shares his thoughts and expressions with us.

Q: Did Kushi give a satisfaction to you, Pavan?

A: Yes, Ahh! In fact, it gave me a bigger satisfaction.

Q: What will be your experience while acting in a film and when it is due to release?

A: I compare acting to attempting an examination. In my childhood I never attended school properly. Then how could I go confident with the examination? I used to sit very calm with a fear, whether I can clear the examination or not. Even now, I treat acting in every frame as an examination. With the habituation of sitting quite and calm, I do the same, of course not with any fear but now with confidence. I’m not afraid of failures. I transform my fears as sharp swords burning them in the fire of hard work and dedication.

Q: Are you in similar moods during release of all the movies in which you took lead role?

A: No. I have varied moods. For example, when Badri was on the release I was too tense. This was because film was based on an innovative story line. My confidence while doing that film was boosted with the reception of audiences.

Q: Your career graph itself reflects your research in the field. Are you passionate with any other hobbies?

A: I have a musician and a painter in me, besides a successful actor. I am practising Violin and painting these days. My attempt is to bring out both of them in one stretch.

Q: Is that all….or some thing else…?

A: Yeah, one more interesting hobby. I am fond of roses. I am getting varieties of roses from various places and nurturing them. It keeps me happy and fresh.

Q: Have you done something to be different in your life?

A: It is a natural process to be different. Only then one could be successful in being different. One can never be different just by a thought.

Yes of course, Pavan Kalyan is different right from his childhood. Innovative, different, experimenting and many others are inborn qualities in his blood and respiration. Even though he is offered with many films, he carefully selects only one picture per annum and does it to his perfection.

Pavan is also venturing into production and probably into direction too. He recently put up his own banner – “Pavan Kalyan Creative Works”. People are waiting for his next film’s release, anxiously. Why not? It can also be his own creative work.

-- Satavahana

ATTITUDE.....ITS VERY IMPORTANTAttitude
SUCCESS IS A JOURNEY. I Success is a Journey
Risk:THERE ARE NO SHORTCUTSRisk
OPPORTUNITY Opportunity
inspired
A single flower can change ur life
Feeling Sleepy
Signs of Falling in Love
Challenges

Why Indian Movies are not winning Oscars?
on March 8th, 2010



_40755131_trophy203It is an every Indian’s question that, “why Indian films are not being selected for Oscars?” Oscar is a dream award for every technician, working for films. However, the glittering 13.5-inch statuette of a knight holding a crusader’s sword on a reel of film is continuing to evade India from many years. Although, the creativity, talent, script, and technology every thing is improving, Indian cinemas are still unable to cross some of the barriers.

The Oscar jury selects American and British language films for all section of awards other than Best Foreign language films. Since all the countries across the world compete only for this particular category, it is hardest for any country to achieve the award. Foreign language film award at Oscars, where only one picture was accepted from each country, do not do justice to such a large industry

Although, Indian movies cannot match the Hollywood standards, the film-makers these days are trying hard for a healthy development in terms of financially and technically. The makers are not getting compromised with the quality and art these days. Bollywood also has great actors like Amitabh Bachchan, Shahrukh khan, Aamir and other directors who are world-wide famous. Indian films follow rich culture and tradition while, the hollywood come up with innovative ideas in scripts. The film industry is able to produce large number of box office hits even across the world.

Although, India is submitting the films since1957, very few of them have managed to get the nomination into final five races. It seems that, the academy tends to favor European films with France leading the foreign language film since, out of 61 years of nominations, 51 Oscars were won by European films while, just 5 won by Asian films.

The most prominent reason behind the academy failing to qualify as the best judge of films from all over the world is that the American academy that consists of only American jury members.

Oscars are monopolized by the westernized world by the standards of their own culture and the scenes pictured by their advanced technology, not giving much importance to the theme and story

Film Federation of India, responsible for selecting the official entry from India is not nominating right movies to the Oscars. Films like PAHELI and EKLAVYA are two such examples that were ruled out in the first stage of the competition. The problem with bollywood is that it is not proud of its best products. It is only proud of its star cast products.

Apart from Slum dog millionaire, directed by hollywood director Danny Boyle which is a Fox Searchlight pictures (not an Indian produced and directed movie), India scored duck in Oscars for the foreign film category.

Indian cinemas are still in learning stages of technologies in the cinematography field when compared to American and British level of film-making. Technical deficiencies is also one of the reason of not getting an Oscar

Indian films lacks from creativity and innovative ideas. The film-makers are opting for hollywood remakes instead of making new scripts. They were either making sequels to the movies or adopting ideas from hollywood scripts. The Indian film-makers focus on hero’s image rather than the importance of the scripts.

The Indian film-makers should also think in the point of winning awards rather than just concentrating commercially. Movies should also be made for laurels and not just for profits

The many lives of Amitabh Bachchan
on April 3rd, 2010



amitabh-bachchanIn the film “Dev” Amitabh Bachchan plays the role of an upright police officer who is horrified by the collusion between ruling politicians and a section of the police during a communal outbreak. The film provides a mirror image of the scene in Gujarat at the time of the 2002 riots. While it was being made, Amitabh might not have thought that he would become the state’s brand ambassador after a few years.

It is possible that he sees no connection between the two. After all, film stars play many roles, not all of which reflect their views and personalities. Problems can arise, however, as they have now for Amitabh, when a matinee idol is perceived as playing two roles — one in the tinsel world and the other in real life.

What is more, if the two performances tend to clash — for instance, if a hero on the silver screen turns out to be a villain in real life — they can have a jarring effect on his fans.

It is worth noting that such crossing of lines has been a feature of Amitabh’s life. A friend of the Nehru-Gandhi family — he gave an impromptu singing performance during Sanjay Gandhi’s wedding — Amitabh had even joined politics for a while before finding the profession to be a ‘cesspool’.

Inevitably, his proximity to India’s foremost political dynasty also meant that the Bachchan family would be involved in one of the major scandals which affected the Nehru-Gandhis — the Bofors deal.

It is not surprising that Amitabh’s less than pleasant experiences at the time made him distance himself from politics for some time and focus on doing what he does best, acting. But the glamour of the film world was evidently not enough for a larger-than-personality like him. Notwithstanding his unflattering perception of politics, he has never totally shunned politicians, presumably on the basis of the adage: hate the sin, not the sinner.

Arguably, however, he has not been wise in the choice of his political friends. In recent years, for instance, he has been close to the well-known gadfly of Indian politics, Amar Singh — an association which may have led to his rupture with the Nehru-Gandhis.

However, even that curious phase of his life — a superstar in the company of a maverick — held no lessons for him. For he has now chosen to be in Narendra Modi’s good books, which has further estranged him from the Congress and may even embarrass Amar Singh.

Amitabh’s explanation that his critics should also lambast industrialists like Ratan Tata and the Ambanis for associating with Modi shows that he is aware of the latter’s controversial persona. But it is one thing for companies to utilize the business opportunities provided by Modi for their own profits and quite another for someone with an iconic stature like Amitabh to act as an advertiser for Modi, who is currently being probed for his complicity in the riots.

It is possible, of course, that Amitabh has no serious political views of his own or that he is uninterested in the complexities of the “cesspool”.

His open mind must have been responsible, for instance, why he never hesitated to be on the right side of Bal Thackeray although, as a resident of Mumbai, he would have known that it would not be advisable to displease the Shiv Sena patriarch in any way.

To many, it will seem that it is but one step from Thackeray to Modi. But saffron inclinations are clearly of no relevance in this matter where Amitabh is concerned. What is relevant is the indisputable fact that the latter’s political links create a greater stir than those of any other film personality. This, in turn, confirms Amitabh’s special status in the film world and outside.

Others in Bollywood like Dharmendra, Hema Malini and Sanjay Dutt, to name a few, can flit in and out of politics without hitting the headlines. But Amitabh’s forays into this field attract wide attention, especially if he is seen to be politically incorrect – or too adventurous – in the selection of his political friends.

Little wonder, therefore, that the responses to his involvement lack restraint. The Congress, for instance, has evidently gone overboard in its castigation of Amitabh, thereby underlining his importance. An attitude of disdain might have been preferable.

Modi, on the other hand, must be delighted. Facing a Supreme Court-ordained probe into his role in the riots — the first chief minister to take a stand in the docks — he will be glad to be seen in respectable company even if his companion is apparently a political innocent.

For Amitabh, however, it can momentarily seem as if he is courting bankruptcy again (as he once did over his financial ventures) in the matter of his countrywide popularity.


on May 31st, 2010



Is counting the caste good or bad? India is divided

caste3Is it good to ask the Indian his or her caste? The political class is divided although a vast majority of Indians carry their caste firmly etched in their names.

Ever since the Samajwadi Party and the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) ignited a storm by demanding that caste identity be included in the national census, political parties have been locked in a war of words.

The government’s initial reported decision to bow to the demand and then ask a panel of ministers to study the issue — effectively keeping the caste-count from the mammoth national census now under way — has added fuel to the fire.

The Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the two biggest parties in parliament, are divided within their ranks.

But Samajwadi Party’s vocal MP Dharmendra Yadav knows his mind. “Various welfare schemes of the central government use caste as a yardstick to provide benefits to weaker sections,” Yadav said. “It is important to get a proper enumeration of castes to get accurate data about their numbers.”

Those who want to put the caste back in the census — it was tabulated way back in 1931 when India was under British rule for the first and last time — say there is nothing wrong in counting the caste since Indians are asked their religion anyway.

However, there are dissenting voices.

Ajay Maken, a junior minister in the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government, has warned that a caste-based census would lead to demands from communities to be categorized as OBCs (other backward classes) — to gain official benefits available to people who are socially backward. He is mobilising younger and progressive MPs to lobby as a pressure group against caste-based census.

India’s Hindu community is home to hundreds of castes and sub-castes. The caste system forms the basis of a strict hierarchical society where the lower castes have been economically and socially oppressed for long, though this division is disappearing among the surging middle class as it pursues expanding professional and economic aspirations and integrates socially.

Some of Maken’s ministerial colleagues, including Law Minister M. Veerappa Moily, want caste to be included in the headcount of India’s population.

Opinion among MPs is divided.

BJP leader Arjun Munda, a former Jharkhand chief minister, said any decision on a caste count should be taken after thoroughly analysing its impact on politics, especially the experience of the past 20 years. “Having caste census has its merits and demerits. I am against caste politics and feel that an enumeration will accentuate caste identities and hence will have a negative impact,” he said.

Madhu Goud Yaskhi, a Congress MP from Andhra Pradesh who left a flourishing legal practice in New York to join politics in India, argued that India was a caste-based society anyway.

“One cannot avoid the caste system. Political parties give ticket on the basis of caste. They look at caste equations in a constituency. Caste is a factor in giving job and education opportunities to weaker sections.”

Like others, he said lack of reliable data on castes was a problem.

So why was his party colleague Maken opposed to Indians being asked their caste? Yaskhi replied that the minister belonged to the upper caste and could be addressing his own constituency.

The Communists are clear: cast away the caste.

Said Anup Kumar Saha, a Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) MP from West Bengal: “We are not free from the problem of casteism. A caste census will only complicate matters.”

Saha said even if the government wanted to get data on caste, such information should not be put in public domain as it would only strengthen caste identities.

A senior Congress leader said on the condition of anonymity that caste-based census would pose problems due to the possible clamour for inclusion among the OBCs. If more communities became OBCs, it could pose resistance from those sections already taking benefits of reservation.

Even as the government tries to buy time by referring the issue to a group of ministers, the debate rages on.