Although politics and the movie world are well connected in Tamil Nadu, film action heroes appear to have lost out this time around in the state assembly polls. The actor-turned-politician leader of All India Samathuva Makkal Katchi R. Sarathkumar lost in Tiruchendur constituency against his DMK rival Anitha R. Radhakrishnan. At Ulundurpettai, Captain, DMDK leader A. Vijaykant came in third polling 26,950 votes and trailing far behind the candidates from AIADMK (63,906 votes) and DMK (57,850 votes). Away, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, under fire for getting involved in an unprecedented physical fracas in Parliament, said that he was only human and in a high pressure job but promised there would be no repeat of his actions. Trudeau, impatient at what he saw as stalling tactics by the opposition ahead of a vote on Wednesday evening, crossed the floor in the House of Commons to grab one legislator and drag him to his seat, accidentally elbowing another in the chest. He has apologized three times already and said he would accept any punishment meted out by a special committee of legislators examining the incident. "But I think at the same time, a big part of recognizing strengths and weaknesses is when you make a mistake you admit it, you make amends, you ask for forgiveness and you make sure it never happens again." Now back to Tsai – when Taiwan’s new president takes the oath of office this week, two vital constituencies—one at home, the other across the strait in mainland China—will be listening hard, but for different things. She heads a political party nominally in favor of Taiwan’s independence from China, a red line for Beijing that would formalize a split from a stalemated civil war more than six decades ago. At Friday’s inauguration, she is expected to reiterate her campaign pledge to maintain the status quo, even though many voters who propelled her to a landslide election victory want her to check China’s growing sway over the island. Beijing, meanwhile, has increased pressure on Ms. Tsai Ing-wen by obstructing Taiwan’s participation in international meetings, stopping cooperation on cross-border criminal investigations and hinting at economic retaliation—all to extract assurances that she will pursue policies more to China’s liking. China’s Taiwan Affairs Office didn’t respond to requests for comment on the government’s tactics. Since Ms. Tsai’s election in January, the office has said Beijing will work with any political group that opposes Taiwan independence and supports “one China.”
Bad relations between Taipei and Beijing can exact a toll on the island’s economy. Tensions also threaten to enmesh the U.S., which by law is supposed to help Taiwan maintain its defense capability and whose credibility in the region could be at risk if it abandons the democratic island to pressure from China. Taiwan’s departing president, Ma Ying-jeou of the Nationalist Party, managed to keep relations with China on an even keel. Tsai's Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) won parliamentary and presidential elections by a landslide in January on voter backlash against creeping dependence on China. There were massive protests in 2014 against a trade pact with China that the previous government had sought to push through. The DPP, which has traditionally favoured independence from China, takes over after eight years under China-friendly Nationalist Ma Ying-jeou. Tsai's inauguration speech at 11.10 am (0310 GMT) will be widely watched for any hint of anti-China sentiment, which could sour economic ties further. ‘Buddha in a Traffic Jam’ is an autobiographical film based on its writer and director Vivek Agnihotri's life. The film is about a subject that is fiercely topical - the alleged links between India's premier educational institutions with militant ultra-leftist movements and organisations. It has had its detractors and supporters already – in the end, it is only a film, a commercial one at that !! With regards – S. Sampathkumar.
20th May 2016.