In a message dated 5/17/2006 7:51:59 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
He is
mainly interested in cell phone usage rather  than infant mortality, etc.
<><><><><><>><><><><><><><><><><><><><>><><><><><><>>><><>><><
Correct,  this is typical of the apologists of neo-lib policies in the third
world: to  focus in "big achievements" such as Internet usage, video and
computer games, i  pods, cell phones, financial innovations,strong  stock 
markets,
etc.Never  mind they  affect less than one third of the population usually,
while the  rest  remains mired in hunger, illness and illiteracy. Cuba has
gotten rid  of these inhumanities long time ago.
Today for instance the NYT reports via  Reuters, but ignored by Ulhas, on how
neo-lib India is still ridden with the  shameful caste system.


Doctors Block Roads in India Caste Quota  Protests

By REUTERS
Filed at 4:31 a.m. ET

AHMEDABAD, India  (Reuters) - Doctors and medical students blocked roads and
skipped work across  large parts of India on Tuesday as protests spread
against a controversial  government move to reserve more college seats for lower
castes.

Medical  care at state-run hospitals in the western state of Gujarat and West
Bengal in  the east was disrupted, leaving thousands of patients stranded
without  treatment.

In the national capital New Delhi, students, striking interns  and doctors
set up makeshift treatment centres in the open. The move was aimed  at making
sure some patients were treated while underlining the protest, they  said.

Despite the protests, the government has said it would go ahead  with its
move to more than double the proportion of seats reserved for lower  castes and
tribes.

If the decision becomes law, it will see nearly half  the places in top
educational institutes reserved for the country's  traditionally underprivileged
groups.

This has sparked fury among upper  caste students, especially medical
students, who have to compete fiercely on  merit for limited seats in medical,
engineering and management  schools.

``If the government does not care for us, why should we work for  them?''
said Keyur Panchal, a pediatrician on strike from work at a  government-run
hospital in Ahmedebad, Gujarat's main city.

In other  cities of Gujarat, students washed cars at traffic intersections on
Wednesday to  highlight their protest as bemused motorists looked on. On
Tuesday in the  central city of Bhopal, some shaved their heads.

Though India has  officially banned caste discrimination, the ancient Hindu
social system is still  extremely powerful and raises intense passions.

In 1990, many upper caste  students burned themselves to death to protest a
move to reserve more government  jobs for lower castes.

Lower caste students entering much-sought-after  higher education schools
through quotas need lower admission  marks.

``We've had enough reservations,'' said medical student Sujata  Mukherjee in
Kolkata in West Bengal where thousands are protesting.

``Now  is the time to focus only on merit, nothing else.''

Junior doctors and  interns are on strike in the eastern state, causing
widespread disruption to  medical services.

In Siliguri town, over 500 km (300 miles) north of  Kolkata, hundreds of
students and doctors blocked a national  highway.

They burned the effigies of the Human Resources Development  Minister Arjun
Singh, seen as the architect of the quota move.

Lower  caste groups who support Singh said students from their communities --
who face  social discrimination and a lack of educational opportunities --
need state help  to enter elite educational institutions.

As the row escalated, patients  were caught in the middle.

``There are no doctors to attend to my son,''  Falgun Dave, a retired
government official, said in Ahmedabad, trying to get  treatment for his son 
who was
injured in a motorcycle crash.

``I asked  some junior doctors to help me but they refused as they are on
strike,'' an  anxious Dave said, waiting outside a state-run hospital's 
emergency
unit with  his son.

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