Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Thursday, 12 March 2026

Forced Poisoning in UP

Forced Poisoning in UP

Forced Poisoning in UP: A Daughter’s Death

I write this with a heavy heart. The news that a teenage girl in Uttar Pradesh was allegedly forced to consume poison by members of her immediate family because of an interfaith relationship is a story that should not be possible in a modern, plural and constitutional democracy. I want to record the facts as they are publicly reported, name the social problems this incident exposes, and suggest practical steps readers and institutions can take to prevent further tragedies.

Summary of the incident

According to local news reporting, law enforcement investigators recovered evidence that a young woman died after being coerced into ingesting a poisonous substance. Police later arrested two members of her family in connection with the death. Reports say the motive was the family’s anger over the young woman’s relationship with someone from a different faith. The reporting is careful to limit identifying details; I will do the same.

Known facts (what is reported)

  • The incident took place in a village in Uttar Pradesh and became a police case after investigators examined location and call records and other evidence reported by the local station.
  • Authorities say the accused are close family members of the victim and that steps were taken to apprehend them after analysis of the investigative trail.
  • The case has been registered and a post-mortem and forensic inquiries were initiated as part of the legal process.

These are the contours of the publicly reported record. As is often the case early in investigations, finer details and final legal characterisations may change as evidence and formal charges are completed.

Legal developments

Police have instituted criminal proceedings and detained persons suspected of participation or complicity. Investigating agencies have relied on call-detail records and other routine forensic steps. In such matters, sections of the Indian Penal Code that address homicide, assault, and abetment may be invoked depending on what investigators establish. The courts and prosecution will determine charges and whether the evidence supports offences such as culpable homicide or murder, and whether there was a conspiracy or role played by multiple parties.

Context: honour-based violence and interfaith stigma

This incident sits within a broader pattern we have seen in different parts of the country: families or communities sanctioning violence when an intimate relationship crosses perceived boundaries of religion or community. Honour-based violence is not a single crime defined in our lawbook; rather it takes forms—physical harm, coercion, forced marriage, threat, and in the worst cases, murder. The stigma and policing of personal relationships is rooted in social norms about caste, religion and family ‘honour’, and is reinforced by fear of reputational loss, social ostracism, and sometimes the failure of local institutions to protect vulnerable individuals.

I have written previously about the pressures young people face when their choices run against conservative social expectations, and about how parental or communal shame can translate into coercion and tragedy.Kota: our suicide capital

Paraphrased comments from authorities and experts

A senior investigating official, in media briefings, described the case as under investigation and emphasised that forensic and digital records were being used to build the timeline. Mental-health professionals who have worked with survivors of family coercion remind us that victims are often isolated, afraid to seek help, and that early intervention by neighbours, teachers, health workers and counsellors can change outcomes. Legal experts note that timely registration of FIRs, thorough evidence collection and witness protection are essential if cases are to reach conviction.

Mental-health and crisis resources

If any part of this account triggers distress—because it evokes personal memories or fears—reach out for help. Here are organisations and contacts that provide emotional support and counselling:

  • AASRA: website www.aasra.info, email aasrahelpline@yahoo.com — a long-standing emotional support helpline in India.
  • iCALL (TISS): email iCall@tiss.edu — a counselling helpline run by the Tata Institute of Social Sciences.
  • Sneha India Foundation: website www.SnehaIndia.org, email help@SnehaIndia.org — community mental-health support.

If someone is in immediate danger, contact local emergency services and the police. Support survivors by listening, believing them, and helping them connect to a trusted counsellor or lawyer.

What readers can do

  • If you are a neighbour, teacher or friend: notice sudden isolation, bruises, or changes in behaviour. Your intervention—calling a helpline, accompanying someone to a medical facility, or contacting local authorities—can save a life.
  • If you are a professional (health worker, educator, police): follow protocols that prioritise the safety, confidentiality and dignity of potential victims; document evidence carefully; and work with social services to provide protection and counselling.
  • If you are a lawmaker or activist: push for clear guidelines and resources so that police, hospitals and schools can respond quickly to threats of honour-based harm.

A call for justice and reforms

Justice in individual cases matters: prosecution that is meticulous, timely and fair helps restore public trust and deters future violence. But prevention requires more than arrests. It requires:

  • public education that challenges the stigma around interfaith relationships and individual autonomy;
  • strengthened local protection mechanisms and safe shelters for those at risk;
  • helplines and pro bono legal aid accessible to young people; and
  • training for police and medical staff to treat such cases as protection and human-rights concerns rather than purely family disputes.

This incident is a reminder that social prejudice can have lethal consequences. We must hold accountable those responsible through the legal process while also addressing the cultural drivers that make such crimes possible.

Sources

  • Times of India, "19-year-old forced to consume poison over interfaith relationship in UP; mother, brother arrested" (news report summarising investigation and arrests): https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/allahabad/19-year-old-forced-to-consume-poison-over-interfaith-relationship-in-up-mother-brother-arrested/articleshow/129499377.cms
  • My earlier reflections on youth distress and suicides: "Kota: our suicide capital" (myblogepage): http://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2024/10/kota-our-suicide-capital.html

Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

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BeiDou and Iran’s Accuracy

BeiDou and Iran’s Accuracy

Why this question matters

I keep returning to a simple, uncomfortable thought: in modern war the invisible infrastructure — satellites, signals, encryption keys — can matter as much as factories and missiles. Lately reporters and open-source analysts have been asking whether Iran’s recent improvement in strike accuracy is explained not by better rockets alone but by guidance fed from China’s BeiDou navigation system. I want to walk you through what is plausible, what is confirmed, and what still sits in the realm of reasonable conjecture.


What BeiDou is, in plain terms

BeiDou is China’s global navigation satellite system — an alternative to the U.S. GPS, Russia’s GLONASS and Europe’s Galileo. It delivers positioning, navigation and timing (PNT) signals worldwide. Like other GNSS systems, BeiDou has civilian open signals and higher‑assurance signals intended for authorised users. Some features often highlighted in reporting:

  • Dual- and multi-frequency signals (better geometry, reduced ionospheric error).
  • Military / authorised signals with stronger anti-jamming and authentication features.
  • A short-message service that can send limited text-like updates to users beyond simple positioning.

These capabilities are why analysts say access to BeiDou can materially improve the in‑flight corrections and resistance to jamming that long-range weapons rely on How China’s BeiDou system could be shaping Iran’s missile accuracy in US-Israel war.


The technical path from a satellite signal to a more accurate strike

Missiles and cruise weapons typically combine two navigation layers:

  1. Inertial Navigation System (INS) onboard (self-contained but drifts over time).
  2. Satellite navigation to correct INS drift during flight, shrinking circular error probability.

If a missile can receive a resistant, authenticated GNSS signal mid‑flight, its terminal accuracy improves dramatically. Multiple constellations help too: if GPS is jammed or spoofed, a weapon using BeiDou and other systems can keep its corrections Is Iran using China's BeiDou system to launch 'accurate' missile strikes?.

Another wrinkle: BeiDou’s short-message capability could enable limited mid‑course updates or re‑tasking in flight — something older, purely pre‑programmed ballistic doctrines don’t typically allow. That capability, if used in practice, changes how flexible a strike can be.


What open reporting says about Iran specifically

So: plausible and reported by multiple outlets, but not an unequivocal admission from Tehran in public sources.


Caveats and limits — why we should be careful

  • Access controls: the most precise and jam‑resistant BeiDou signals are authorised services. Those require bilateral arrangements and technical integration. A state can have access, but that access may come with limits.

  • Dependency and leverage: using BeiDou’s authorised services may create new dependencies. China controls the satellites, ground infrastructure, and cryptographic keys. That gives Beijing a theoretical ability to throttle or deny service — a geopolitical lever unlikely to be exercised lightly but not impossible.

  • Not a single cause: improved accuracy can come from many things beyond GNSS access — better INS, improved seekers, revised tactics, updated maps, better launch procedures, or even lessons learned from previous conflicts.

  • Electronic warfare is still a contest: anti‑jam signals improve resilience, but adversaries pursue countermeasures (directional jamming, ground‑based spoofing, or kinetic attacks on launch infrastructure). The battlefield remains dynamic.


True implications if the reporting is broadly accurate

If Iranian strike accuracy benefits materially from BeiDou integration, we should expect:

  • A diffusion of contested‑space thinking: GNSS is infrastructure of strategic consequence; states will treat access as part of their deterrent calculus.
  • A harder-to-control theatre: opponents can no longer assume GPS denial alone will blunt precision effects; redundancy matters.
  • A technology arms race: more focus on anti‑jamming, authentication, alternative PNT (terrestrial, celestial, signals of opportunity), and hardened seekers.
  • Geopolitical ripple effects: GNSS choices become another vector of alignment or assurance between supplier and recipient states.

What I would watch for next (signals to separate fact from speculation)

  • Direct technical indicators in open imagery/reports: presence of BeiDou-capable ground stations or certified military receivers inside Iran.
  • Procurement traces: open‑source tracking of BeiDou‑capable receiver chips, modules or training exchanges that suggest practical uptake.
  • Operational patterns: whether strikes continue to show improved precision even under deliberate GNSS-contest conditions (which would suggest resilient multi‑constellation solutions or other guidance improvements).

Also, as I noted in earlier writing about navigation and strategic dependence, we’ve been watching the rising importance of alternative GNSS systems for years — the concern I raised then about who “rules the sky” feels more prescient now Will China rule the Sky?.


My bottom line

Based on open-source reporting and how satellite navigation is used in modern weapon guidance, it is plausible that BeiDou has contributed to improved Iranian strike accuracy. The technical reasons are straightforward: authenticated, multi‑frequency signals plus short-message capability materially raise the baseline accuracy and resilience of in‑flight corrections. That said, public confirmation from the Iranian side about specific military‑grade BeiDou use is limited in open sources, and improved accuracy can come from many converging factors.

So: probable contribution, not a single smoking‑gun proof in public reporting. The more important takeaway for me is not the headline but the structural change — that navigation constellations are now strategic tools in conflict, and access to them reshapes deterrence, escalation dynamics, and the calculus of military planning.


If you want the short, policy-minded takeaway: nations can no longer treat GPS as the only PNT game in town; planners and policymakers must treat GNSS diversity, resilience and control as central national-security issues.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
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Shadow Voyage

Shadow Voyage

I watched a shadow voyage

I still remember the quiet relief that rippled across a city that depends on steady fuel flows. A Liberia-flagged Suezmax tanker carrying Saudi crude slipped through the conflict-haunted Strait of Hormuz and arrived in Mumbai after briefly turning off its tracking systems — a tactic the industry calls "going dark." That journey has stuck with me not because of spectacle, but because it exposed a fragile truth about how the modern world keeps its lights on: risk, improvisation, and invisible choices made at sea.

What happened, in short

  • The tanker Shenlong Suezmax loaded crude at Ras Tanura and later berthed at Mumbai’s Jawahar Dweep terminal, discharging roughly 135,335 metric tonnes of oil for local refineries (Times of India, NDTV).
  • Maritime trackers show the ship’s Automatic Identification System (AIS) signals disappeared while it crossed the high-risk stretch of the Strait of Hormuz and then reappeared after the danger was passed (Hindustan Times).
  • The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the planet’s most consequential chokepoints, moving the equivalent of roughly a fifth of global oil consumption on any given day — which is why what happens there matters to every refinery and every commuter pump.

Why a ship would ‘go dark’ — and why that unsettles me

Going dark is not a technological novelty; it's a human decision under duress. Captains and companies sometimes disable AIS to avoid becoming easy targets in conflict waters. I accept that decision as understandable in extremis, but it carries layered consequences:

  • Safety vs. security: AIS exists to prevent collisions and enable search-and-rescue. Turning it off reduces targeting risk but raises the chance of accidents or delayed help.
  • Rules and norms: International maritime regulations expect AIS to be active for safety. Deviations reflect the breakdown of norms under military pressure.
  • Invisible risks to crew and commerce: The lives of seafarers and the continuity of supply chains are held together by improvised choices that rarely make headlines until something goes wrong (and then everyone asks whether the system failed or did what it had to).

The structural problem beneath the headline

What struck me most is how a single shadowy passage reveals strategic dependencies. India — like many nations — still depends heavily on seaborne oil that passes through narrow chokepoints. When conflict makes those routes precarious, the immediate consequence is tactical improvisation; the longer-term consequence is systemic vulnerability.

I’ve written about energy dependence and the moral clarity of investing in resilient alternatives before. Years ago I urged a serious shift toward domestic solar and decentralised energy solutions as practical ways to reduce strategic exposure and conserve scarce resources (Sun is THE SOLUTION). That argument feels less abstract today.

Not just geopolitics — human stories

Behind the tanker’s arrival are crews, port workers, logistics teams and families. Every time a vessel chooses a riskier route or a captain makes a split-second security call, real people bear the consequences. Worse still, when an attack occurs — as other ships in the region have suffered — the human cost is immediate and tragic.

What we should learn and do next

  • Diversify energy sources: Build speed and scale in renewables, storage, and alternative fuels so supply shocks in a single corridor matter less.
  • Protect seafarers: Strengthen international cooperation to establish safe corridors and rescue protocols that prioritise human life over geopolitics.
  • Reimagine logistics resilience: Rethink stock buffers, alternative shipping routes, and strategic reserves with modern modelling — not as emergency politics but as ongoing policy.

I keep returning to a simple idea: if a society’s normal operations can be disrupted by a single narrow sea lane, then the problem is not merely tactical — it is civilisational. We must plan for the mundane contingencies and the extraordinary crises with equal seriousness.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

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  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
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Can AI Please Fix This?

Can AI Please Fix This?

On a joke that reveals a wish

I heard the line and smiled: Elon Musk referralprogram@tesla.com — half‑joking, half‑wishful — saying something like, “My back still hurts a little bit, I am like, can AI please…”

That throwaway sentence landed like a small parable. It makes visible a modern reflex: when something hurts — physically, mentally, socially — our first instinct is increasingly to ask a machine to fix it. The machines we build are brilliant at pattern recognition and optimization, but they are also mirrors of what we ask of them.

Why the line matters

  • It’s intimate. Back pain is a bodily, embarrassing, deeply human complaint. Hearing a public figure frame it as something AI should solve highlights how quickly personal vulnerability becomes a product brief.
  • It’s practical. Elon Musk referralprogram@tesla.com has spoken before about Neuralink and high‑bandwidth brain interfaces; the idea of technology stepping into the role of healer is consistent with that trajectory.
  • It’s revealing. We want AI to be a repair kit — for our bodies, our attention, our loneliness, our grief. That’s not wrong; it’s natural. But the expectation that a single class of tools will simply “fix” messy human problems hides deeper social and ethical choices.

Three tensions behind the quip

  1. The medical vs. the mechanical

    Technology can assist surgeons, diagnose earlier, and deliver therapies at scale. Even so, the history of medicine teaches humility: simple surgical fixes that feel miraculous for an individual may be complex at population scale (see debates about disc replacement and patient outcomes) Elon Musk's notes on disc replacement and back pain. Technology is necessary but not sufficient.

  2. The magical thinking problem

    We risk turning AI into a deus ex machina. Ask it to mend a back, soothe a troubled mind, or solve systemic inequality, and we might confuse availability with adequacy. Tools inherit our incentives, mistakes, and biases. The “can AI please…” attitude risks outsourcing responsibility without redesigning the systems that produced the pain.

  3. The social contract and expectations

    When someone like Elon Musk referralprogram@tesla.com publicly frames personal needs as technological problems, it shapes cultural expectations. That matters: it drives where capital flows, which problems get prioritized, and which structural fixes (workplace ergonomics, affordable healthcare, mental‑health access) get deferred.

What I’ve written before, and why it’s relevant

I’ve argued for practical, human‑centred approaches to AI: that machines should augment emotional intelligence and front‑office interactions rather than replace the human judgement that binds communities together. See my earlier reflections on AI as a partner in customer‑facing roles and on empathetic virtual agents Hitching an AI Ride and the idea of Virtual Therapists arriving in a measured, ethical way (Virtual Therapist: A Revolution in Conversational AI). Those conversations matter here because a joke about a sore back is connected to how we design, deploy, and govern care technologies.

A short guide for asking AI to help (without abdicating responsibility)

  • Start with the human problem, not the tech product. Define what “fixed” looks like in human terms — restored function, reduced suffering, better access.
  • Demand evidence. Don’t accept anecdotes as policy. Clinical validation, safety audits, and long‑term studies must precede widescale adoption.
  • Build layered solutions. Combine tech with social policy: worker protections, ergonomics, insurance design, and community care.
  • Design for agency. Use AI to expand choices and capability, not to make people dependent on opaque systems.

A final, personal note

I love the audacity of that throwaway line from Elon Musk referralprogram@tesla.com — it captures both our impatience and our imagination. We live in an era where we can plausibly ask machines to do extraordinary things. My hope is that we ask the right questions first: who benefits, who pays, who is protected, and who decides.

If the work of the next decade is to make intelligent tools that heal rather than numb, then we must pair engineering muscle with civic imagination.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What are the main ethical and social risks of treating AI as a quick fix for human physical or emotional pain?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




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When Tankers Become Targets

When Tankers Become Targets

The moment I couldn't un-see

I watched the grainy night footage the way I watch too many small tragedies now: slow, incredulous, then a tightness in the chest. A small, fast craft — what reporters call a "suicide" boat — slams into a US-linked crude tanker conducting transfers near Khor Al Zubair. Flames swallow the deck. Crew abandon ship. We learn, in the next hours, that at least one seafarer died and dozens were evacuated to Basra.Watch the footage and reporting.

This was not a theatrical escalation confined to a map. It was a human moment at sea: someone feeding their family, someone a colleague, someone who woke up that morning thinking about weather and schedules — now a casualty of geopolitics.


What the short clip tells us about a larger risk

  • The choice of target — a commercial tanker during a ship-to-ship transfer — is deliberate. Attacking commerce is a fast way to amplify strategic pain beyond the battlefield.
  • Maritime geography matters: attacks inside or near territorial waters (here, near Iraq's Basra) complicate response, rescue and investigation.
  • The human cost is immediate; the economic ripple — insurance spikes, re-routed voyages, port suspensions — is systemic.

These are not new patterns. What changes is how quickly a single clip can transmit fear and policy pressure around the world.


Why this should trouble anyone who cares about trade, safety and common sense

Global trade is built on fragile choreography: schedules, port slots, insurers, and, above all, seafarers who accept long separations from home for pay that rarely reflects the risks. When a tanker goes up in flames:

  • Energy markets wobble; prices spike and consumers feel it at the pump.
  • Ports and terminals in the region may suspend operations, disrupting supply chains for weeks.
  • Insurance premiums and the cost of security escorts rise — raising the cost of everything that crosses those waters.

We have to remember: the water is an international commons supporting livelihoods far from the front lines. A destroyed tanker isn't only a military message; it's a severed lifeline for millions.


What needs doing — practical, not political

  • Prioritize crew safety: faster medical evacuation protocols, better contingency planning for transfers, and robust search-and-rescue coordination among nearby ports.
  • Clear rules for ship-to-ship transfers during conflict: if transfers are permitted, neutral third-party escorts or monitored safe corridors should be mandated.
  • Transparency in investigations: to prevent escalation, independent inquiries into attacks must be allowed and findings shared quickly.
  • Financial cushions for seafarers' families: insurer and owner liability frameworks must be enforced so families are not left destitute while politics play out.

These are the kinds of operational fixes that reduce human suffering while the diplomats and strategists argue the larger questions.


Where my thinking comes from (a small continuity)

I've long written about the brittle seams that hold infrastructure and trade together. Years ago I wrote about the maritime economy and how port ecosystems, like the recycling and shipbreaking centers we rely on, are part of a broader supply-chain fabric that can be frayed by policy or conflict — not just by storms or markets.Alang: junkyard, scrapyard, saveyard. That continuity — infrastructure, people, and policy — matters now as much as ever.


A personal note

I don't pretend to have the final answer. What I do have is a sense of urgency: to treat seafarers as citizens with rights, to treat commercial sea lanes as commons that deserve protection, and to treat escalation as something that can and should be managed before it savages lives and livelihoods.

If we aim to survive the fog of modern warfare with any wisdom, we must start by protecting those who keep our lights on, our factories running and our hospitals supplied.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh hcp@recruitguru.com


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