Dear Friends:

It is good to see news relating to the NRIs wherever it takes place. I noticed 
five in the Times of India this evening. The first one concerns Indian-American 
Doctors which I reproduce below. Race is such a sensitive issue that here in 
the United Kingdom the present British Prime Minister himself has got involved 
in fighting discrimination. In case of the rest of the news, I just give the 
headlines.

2. Indian American appointed to key Republican post in Florida (Akshay Desai 
has been appointed to serve as the chairman of Finance committee of the 
Republican party of Florida. He is currently the chairman of the Board, 
President and CEO of Universal Health Care Group Inc)

3.The IRS form affecting Indian Americans.

4. US tax-filing :Help  for NRIs on how global income is taxed.

5. Indian jailed in UK for driving text offence

Now the Court Case :

HOUSTON: Three Indian-American doctors, who were derogatorily called "the 
Indians" and treated as "second-class citizens" by the CEO of a medical center 
in the US, have won a racial discrimination case in a Texas court.

The US Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals found that Citizens Medical Center in 
Victoria had violated the equal protection rights of the doctors.

The court ruled in favour of Ajay Gaalla, Harish Chandna and Dakshesh Parikh, 
the Victoria Advocate reported.

In February 2010, the medical center filed a resolution that would allow only 
cardiologists with contracts at the hospital to exercise clinical privileges in 
the cardiology department or part of the hospital's heart programme.

The cardiologists fought back with a lawsuit stating they were being barred 
from practicing not based on their merit and expertise, but because of 
economical and racial reasons.

This not only affected them, but their patients who were denied the right to 
see the physician of their choice, according to the court documents.

The hospital claimed the resolution was based on the doctors' disruptive 
behavior and issues with Dr Yusuke Yahagi, a cardiovascular surgeon at the 
hospital.

Court documents also showed that the three cardiologists were derogatorily 
referred to as "the Indians."

The cardiologists also cited a comment from David Brown, the hospital chief 
executive officer, as saying the hospital was working on a plan for "getting 
the Indians off the reservation."

The cardiologists said the resolution hospital placed violated their equal 
protection rights - and now the Fifth Circuit has voted in their favor.

Brown would not comment until he could become familiar with the details, a 
hospital spokesperson said.

The three doctors said they were consistently treated like second-class 
citizens, removed from committees and pushed out of laboratory posts 
arbitrarily, or overlooked in favor of "less-qualified" cardiologists CMC hired.

For now, the case is in stay, or on hold, according to Monte James, the lead 
attorney for the cardiologists.

He expects the federal court will take it off hold, and it will proceed to trial

-bhuban
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