www.theasianstar.com Vol 20 - Issue 42 By Umendra Singh
Saturday, December 4, 2021
Canada’s No Farmer, No Food rallies force Modi to withdraw controversial farm laws
C
anadians may have played a major role in forcing Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his BJP government to withdraw the controversial farm laws that saw protests all over the world. The Farm Laws Repeal Bill 2021 was passed by both the Houses of Indian Parliament on November 29, the first day of the Winter Session days after Prime Minister Narendra
Another Indian takes charge of major global tech giant Parag Agrawal is the new CEO of Twitter
Parag Agrawal, an alumnus of Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Bombay, was appointed as Twitter CTO on March 8, 2018. Parag Agrawal, the Chief Technology Officer of Twitter, (pictured) is now taking over from Jack Dorsey as the Chief Executive Officer. Dorsey will step down from his role, and the company’s board has been preparing for his departure since last year, according to news agency Reuters. Agrawal, an alumnus of Indian Continued on page 6
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the withdrawal of farmers’ protests. This is the fastest withdrawal of any laws or government initiative in India’s history. And this from a right wing Hindu government that never backs away from anything. Why? Neither
Modi, speaking on Gurpurab (November 19) assured the protesting farmers of rollback of the laws. With the Presidential assent, the bills have become history paving the way for
Modi nor his government have given a clear explanation for this unconditional surrender. There are two important state level elections pending in the states of Punjab and Uttar Pradesh but elections have never stopped BJP initiatives before. And the government and its strident cadre have been uncharacteristically silent as to Continued on page 8
India pushes renewed trade talks in aftermath of Canada-China tensions Canada and India are quietly setting the stage to reboot formal free-trade talks as the Trudeau government seeks economic alternatives to China following the dispute over the Meng Wanzhou-two Michaels affair. Trade negotiators from both countries have held four “consultative meetings” in the last year via video, and the most recent one in October saw the two sides trade preliminary proposals,
said Anshuman Gaur, India’s deputy high commissioner to Canada. “They talked about the approaches and the possible path forward,” he said in an interview this past week. The renewed engagement is a result of India’s aggressive new trade policy, dubbed “early harvest,” which has seen the country attempt to make incremental steps toward full-scale free-trade deals with Britain, the European Union, Australia, the
Continued on page 6
International students and offshore banking flagged in Canadian real estate money laundering In August 2012, a 19-year-old student from Guangdong arrived from the Dominican Republic to Montreal with $23,800 in euros and U.S. dollars stuffed into his backpack. Four months later, Zhang Guanqun purchased an 8,500-square-foot mansion in Coquitlam, B.C., for $2.1 million.
United Arab Emirates and now Canada. It also comes as the federal government emerges from the aftermath of its three-year diplomatic deep freeze with China after Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig were recently returned safely to Canada. They spent more than 1,000 days in Chinese prisons in what is widely viewed as retaliation for the RCMP’s arrest of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou on an
It was only one of Zhang’s many multimillion-dollar transactions while attending Coquitlam College. From about 2012 to 2015, Zhang would funnel at least $33.75 million in electronic funds and cash through Canadian and Hong Kong bank accounts. Continued on page 7
Thousands of chickens, cows, pigs and likely bees died in Fraser Valley amid recent rains and floods Farmers in Fraser Valley continue to face challenges to repair and restore their properties and livestock during recent rains and floods. Agricultural Minister Lana Popham said at a media briefing on Thursday with the drier weather and receding floodwaters, it will be critical for the removal of carcasses of animals who died in the flooding. “We know at this point there are 628,000 poultry reported dead, 420 dairy cattle deceased and approximately 12,000 hogs,” she said. “And also of note, there (are) 110 beehives that have been submerged.” It is not yet known how many bees could have died in the flooding.