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CONTENTS
1. ThE uNfOldiNg Reconfiguring the Constituents of National Interest in Indias Foreign Policy: Reflections on the Emerging Perspectives and Concerns ........................................................................... 2 2. INTERVIEW-Deepak Singla Meeting the Stars............................................................... 16 2. NATIONAL BULLETIN National Green Tribunal: Path towards Sustainable Development.................................................................. 18 National News.................................................................. 20 3. INTERNATIONAL BULLETIN SCO-Expanding Role.......... ............................................ 26 Nepal Crisis ..................................................................... 27 International News............................................................ 28 4. BILATERAL BULLETIN Prime Ministers Visit to Myanmar ................................ 34 Bilateral News................................................................... 36 5. ECONOMY@ IP How Swiss Banks Operate?.............................................. 40 Economy News................................................................. 41 6. SCIENCE SPECTRUM Venus on the Sun ............................................................. 47 Science News................................................................... 48 Who Controls the Internet?.............................................. 53 7. HEALTH ISSUES Open Defecation: A National Shame................................ 54 8. ENVIRONMENT & ECOLOGY World Envionment Day..................................................... 56 7. PERSPECTIVES The IIT Debate................................................................. 57 8. INSPIRATION@IP Tiger of Madras-Vishwanathan Anand............................. 60 10. MOSAIC Indian Paintings ............................................................... 62 11. KNOW IT ALL................................................................. 66 1
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thE UNFOlDINg...
Reconfiguring the Constituents of National Interest in Indias Foreign Policy: Reflections On the Emerging Perspectives and Concerns.
The recent discourse on Indias foreign policy has taken account of the emerging complexities in identifying and pursuing Indias national interest. The Indian strategic community is engaging with the intricacies of defining the interests of a supposedly emerging global power, as India prepares to come to grips with the vagaries of international power politics. Such engagement has brought to fore diverse perspectives from the streams of thinking that are well entrenched in Indias foreign policy discourse- Nehruvian, neo- liberals and hyperrealists1 (see footnotes) - as well as some fresh analytical tools like the net assessment methodology (see footnote), used by Rajeev Kumar and R. Menon in their work The Long View From Delhi: To Define the Indian Grand Strategy for Foreign Policy. The Ministry of External Affairs also seems to be doing its homework on this aspect. The efforts for crystallizing and articulating Indias worldview was evident in the then Foreign Secretary Nirupama Raos speech on Indias Global Role at Harvard University, in September 2010 and recently in Ranjan Mathais address on Building Global Security at the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, New Delhi. More significantly, earlier when Shiv Shankar Menon was serving as the Foreign Secretary , the Ministry of External Affairs recognized the importance of rigorously defining national interest and aligning the countrys foreign policy to it and commissioned a full-fledged two year study on the subject.2 Thus, with an analytical as well as prescriptive objective, the study revisited the three conventional constituents of national interest ( see chart 1). The study has come up with a general policy prescription which emphasizes that for next two three ChARt 1
Indias National Interest
Security
Economic Prosperity
decades Indias national interest would be best served by single-mindedly pursuing the goal of achieving economic prosperity for the large masses3. Such prescription seeks to reconfigure the preferential hierarchy of the constituents of Indias national interest. By giving primacy to the component of economic prosperity, the study has concluded that Indias capacity to effectively address its security concern (to defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity) and ability to play a meaningful global role depends on achieving sustained and rapid economic growth.
1. The following three distinct sets of perspectives on issues concerning Indias foreign policy are identifiable. It should be observed that despite considerable consistency, some of the exponents may belong to different streams of thinking on different issues of foreign policy or in different phases of their evolution as commentators on foreign policy. Nehruvians and Indias foreign policy: They share the internationalist vision, non-alignment policy and, the pacifist and egalitarian outlook of Jawaharlal Nehru .They seek to articulate the moral premises or the idealist dimension of Indias foreign policy. Emphasis : (1) international cooperation - communication and contact through international institutions and laws and free intercourse between societies ( 2) international egalitarianism and concern for the well-being of the people across the world. India should: (a) recognise and reassert the relevance of non- alignment in the post cold war world order (b) promote a multilateral, non discriminatory and verifiable disarmament , but before such complete disarmament is achieved , India should retain nuclear weapons as deterrence against security threats (c) promote South-South (between developing countries) understanding and North-South ( between the developed and developing countries) understanding . Exponents: Muchkund Dubey, Praful Bidwai, V P Dutt, K Natwar Singh, , Ninan Koshy , Arundhati Ghose, M K Bhadrakumar, Mani Shankar Aiyar, etc. Neo- liberals and Indias foreign policy: They believe that economic strength has emerged as the most important arbiter of power in international relations. Indias economic growth and modernization, pursuit of free market policies and integration into a globalized economy will form the pillars of its strength in the world. Nuclear weapons are vital for Indias security but after conducting May 1998 tests and equipped with sufficient capability for constructing credible deterrent , India should seriously consider joining non- proliferation regime and negotiate a favourable deal with the international community which would give it access to dual use and advanced conventional weapons technologies. Exponents: C Raja Mohan, K Subrahmanyam (in the later phase of his strategic thinking), Sanjay Baru, etc. Hyperrealists and Indias foreign policy: Sometimes they are also called hawks. They believe that the reality of international politics remains unaltered and military power still retains its primacy as the source of all other forms of power. Accumulation of military power and the willingness to use force are required even for maintaining peace and stability. Strong military power must precede economic power. Nuclear disarmament is unattainable and India should work for further development of nuclear warheads until it reaches an all horizons capability. Exponents: Brahma Chellaney, Bharat Karnad , K Subrahmanyam ( in the early phase of his strategic thinking), etc. Net Assessment Methodology: It uses the method of anticipating the possible scenarios that may emerge in the future and the possible diplomatic equations that a country may face in the future. It attempts to assess a countrys national interest in the light of the possible outcomes of current trends in international politics.
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It is also relevant to note that the conclusions of the study are contextually premised on the continuity of the trickle- down model of economic growth, which India has adopted in the post liberalisation period. Thus, it can be inferred that the study has arrived at these conclusions within a neo-liberal policy framework. In the light of such attempts to redraw the contours of the national interest debate, it is important to do three exercises: (a) to have a look at the current concerns of the three main constituents of Indias national interest ( as articulated by the Indian government , and the perspectives offered by foreign policy analysts and other observers) (b) To review some assessments of the possible scenarios that India may have to deal with (c) To determine the ethical centre for anchoring Indias pursuit of national interest.
ChARt 2
Security
Security threats
External threat
Internal threat
Fundamentalism
tenorism
Arms External Importance of Runing Intelligence Indigenous and Drug Defence Capability trafficking
Conventional
NonConventional
Space
Security geographies
how the Ministry of External Affairs is identifying the current security challenges and security interests for India. Quotes from both the speeches on different aspects of security have been mentioned below: (a) On terrorism and extremism
SECURIty
Consensus has eluded the strategic community in defining the nature and intensity of our security challenges as well as our security interests. Hawkish elements have tended to exaggerate some threats but conversely, there have been instances of downplaying of some obvious security challenges. The Indian government has also shown a marked inconsistency in its approach to some crucial security issues. However, any attempt to identify the current issues concerning Indian security has to address the factors and linkages as depicted in chart 2. the Indian governments assessment of the current security concerns and security interests of India: former Foreign Secretary Nirumpma Raos Harvard speech and present Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathais address on Building Global Security at the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, New Delhi in 2012 had some clear references to
Our vision of an enhanced South Asian cooperation for development is challenged by violent extremism and terrorism, which originates in our region and finds sustenance and sanctuary there. Terrorists have Building Global Security requires repeatedly sought to undermine our the international community to sovereignty, security and economic come together and forcefully progress, aided and abetted by combat the use of terror as state forces beyond our borders. policy by countries as well as root Terrorism is often used not just out safe havens for terrorists. to impose a political agenda but This requires action at the global to force unacceptably backward level through a CCIT and through codes of life and governance on multilateral cooperation in every democratic societies. It invariably region affected by terror. There must translates into meaningless and be concerted action by security horrific incidents of violence. forces and political consensus that The 2008 Mumbai attacks were terrorism as a means is not justified symbolic, striking at everything by any ends. Improved governance India has been able to achieve is a common goal of all of us but economic success, openness to ending terrorism has to take priority the world, freedoms, conventional in operational terms. defence capabilities and pluralism Terror groups implacably opposed to in society. The targets were carefully India continue to recruit, train and chosen. Fortunately despite killing plot attacks from safe havens across 164 people and wounding at least our borders. There is increased
308, the terrorists could not blow India off its path or diminish our international exposure. Recently, the United States has announced $10 million for information leading to arrest of Hafiz Mohammad Sayeed and Abdul Rahman Makki under the Rewards for Justice Programme. We welcomed the notification as it sends a strong signal to LeT and its patrons that the international community remains united in combating terrorism.
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infiltration from across the border. Open democratic societies such as India face particular challenges in combating the threat of terrorism. (b) On the threat to internal security from neighbourhood Any visualization of Indias global role must begin in our immediate neighbourhood because situational factors in that environment affect our internal security and therefore merit our greatest attention. (c) On Pakistan Our relationship with Pakistan has been complicated by the issue of terrorism and the need for Pakistan to take ameliorative action to eradicate terrorism against India. We are determined to persevere in our dialogue with Pakistan in order to resolve outstanding issues so that our region will be stable. (d) On Afghanistan and Af-Pak region India has a direct interest in Afghanistan, not because we see it as a theatre of rivalry with Pakistan but because of the growing fusion of terrorist groups that operate from Afghanistan and Pakistan and their activities in India. Developments in Afghanistan over the past few years have demonstrated in ample measure that peace, security and prosperity in todays world is indivisible, and that therefore, the international community in Afghanistan must stay the course. Afghanistan is currently in the process of transition and transformation in a region which is the epicenter of world terrorism. Virtually all dangerous acts of terrorism in the world recently can be traced back to the Af-Pak region. Any perception of lack of will on the part of the international community to deal firmly with terrorist groups will risk Afghanistan sliding back to being a safe haven for terrorist and extremist groups that threaten the region and beyond. During his visit to Afghanistan in May 2011,
The challenges of nuclear terrorism and nuclear security have to be addressed. We have been affected by clandestine nuclear proliferation in our neighbourhood. We are naturally concerned about the possibility of nuclear terrorism given the security India believes the international situation in our neighbourhood. On 26-27 March 2012, 53 countries community must remain engaged with Afghanistan in the decade and four international organizations, ahead. External Affairs Minister, Shri namely the UN, IAEA, EU and NATO, S.M. Krishna led our delegations to attended the Second Nuclear Security the two International conferences Summit at Seoul, South Korea. The organized on Afghanistan in Summit focused on one of the foremost Istanbul and Bonn in November challenges of our times; the danger and December, 2011 respectively. of nuclear explosives, materials and These conferences were aimed technology falling into the hands of at generating international and terrorists. The Final Communiqu of regional consensus for long term the Summit listed nuclear terrorism as engagement of the international one of the most challenging threats to community - and the region - with international security. Prime Minister Afghanistan, in the backdrop of of India attended the Summit in Seoul, the announcement of withdrawal as he did in Washington D.C. in 2010. of NATO forces from a combat role During the Seoul Summit, Prime Minister in Afghanistan by the end of 2014. emphasized that nuclear terrorism and While the transition dividend clandestine proliferation continue to did not emerge clearly in these pose serious threat to international conferences, there will be further security. He announced a contribution opportunities in Kabul and Tokyo of $ 1 million for IAEAs Nuclear to ensure continued support for Security Fund. Clandestine Nuclear modernization and stability in proliferation is one of the gravest Afghanistan. We recognize that threats to global security as it enables regional economic cooperation this greatly destructive technology involving all the countries of the to fall into the hands of irresponsible actors. India shares and supports the area also has a role to play non-proliferation objectives of the (e) On China international community. We have an The complicated history of the impeccable non-proliferation record outstanding boundary question and have in place a stringent export entails that discussion to resolve control system in line with the highest it cannot be of short duration with international standards. easy fixes. Chinas growing ability The more fundamental problem to project its military strength, its is the one which deals with the issue rapid military modernization, and its of nuclear weapons themselves. very visible economic capabilities, India has also been steadfast in its introduce a new calculus in the support for the goal of universal,
Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh announced additional assistance of US $ 500 million, over and above the existing commitments of US $ 1.5 billion. Indias assistance programme is spread across Afghanistan and spans almost the entire gamut of economic and social developmental activities from schools and hospitals to trade, power lines and hydroelectric projects. Construction of Afghanistans new Parliament building, a symbol of the common commitment of both countries to pluralism and democracy, is also progressing.
security situation in the region. India is also alert to the continuing and close security relationship between China and Pakistan. These factors serve to further underscore the complexity of the India-China equation, today. (f) On nuclear security and threat of nuclear terrorism
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non-discriminatory and verifiable of world trade is transported by four years ago. In 2008, the UN elimination of nuclear weapons, leading sea. The continuing threat of piracy Security Council passed a series of to global disarmament in a time-bound raises the cost of trade directly and measures targeting Somali piracy, framework. The then Prime Minister indirectly. Examples of direct effects culminating in the unanimous Shri Rajiv Gandhi had put forward the are robbery and ransom payments, approval of US-led Resolution Rajiv Gandhi Action Plan of 1988 which losses of ships and cargo and 1851. The move authorized states offers a comprehensive plan to take additional pay for crews. Indirect with navies deployed in the Gulf of this process forward. In a 2006 working effects are the security costs Aden to take action against pirates paper on nuclear disarmament in the UN incurred in the fight against piracy and armed robbers within Somalia. General Assembly, India made specific and higher insurance premiums in India has committed its full support proposals towards achieving this goal, the dangerous areas. to international anti-piracy efforts. including negotiating a Nuclear Weapon The cost of trade is further pushed Our Navy has been conducting antiConvention. We believe the goal of up by the need to take longer piracy patrols in the Gulf of Aden nuclear disarmament can be achieved by alternative routes to avoid pirate since October 2008. Our naval ships a step-by-step process underwritten by infested sea-lanes and the need provide security escorts to both a universal commitment and an agreed for convoys and naval protection. Indian and foreign flagged ships. multilateral framework that is global The threat posed by piracy attacks We participate actively in the antiand non-discriminatory. The issues in to maritime traffic and seafarers piracy efforts of the Contact Group Iran and DPRK need to be seen in this continues to be a major problem. As on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia. context as well as in the framework of a result of these challenges, many We believe that a more robust tackling proliferation. These are major ships have begun to hire armed strategy is required to effectively subjects with would require a separate guards as a deterrent for woulddeal with the problem of piracy. address. Suffice it for me to say today be attackers. However, there is not Such a strategy should involve an that we support the P5 + 1 dialogue yet a process or an internationally UN-led anti-piracy force to conduct with Iran and the Six-party engagement accepted regulatory framework for naval operations. This would help in with DPRK. We feel there is vital need regulating these guards, creating greater coordination of anti-piracy to find diplomatic solutions conforming legal complications. Presently, there operations by various naval forces. with relevant UN resolutions with the are around 27 Indian seafarers in The shipping industry and national overriding need for these countries to the captivity of pirates. Their wellgovernments must coordinate their keep to commitments taken on by them being and early release is a priority response better to combat this themselves in the past. for our government. resurgent threat of sea piracy. (g) On Indian Ocean and Maritime security Piracy on the high seas is as old as the history of seafaring itself. Piracy is a resurgent threat which has come to the fore in recent times. Concerns over maritime security have been not only centered around piracy in the Gulf of Aden, but also in the Malacca Straits and the Mozambique Channel. Somali pirates, by far the greatest global piracy threat, have increasingly pushed farther off the Somali coast. They have moved deeper into the Indian Ocean. Todays pirates are not swashbuckling raiders of the past but trained fighters aboard speedboats, equipped with satellite phones and global positioning systems, armed with automatic weapons and rocket propelled grenades. According to the International Maritime Organisation almost 90% The numbers are not surprising as one out of every 10-12 merchant mariners, on any ship, is an Indian, irrespective of the flag of the ship. Some countries believe the problem is limited to Somalia and the waters nearby and insurance companies dont seem to be complaining. As Adenauer said wir leben alle unter dem gleichen Himmel aber wir haben nicht alle den gleichen Horizont (We all live under the same sky but do not have the same horizon or perspective). But the seas are open and everybody is getting affected; recent incidents have highlighted the need for international cooperation to evolve a common strategy to combat the global scourge of piracy at sea. The international community has of course taken a number of steps to tackle piracy since Somali pirates emerged as a threat to international maritime security Dialogue and cooperation are thereby essential to evolve a stable; transparent maritime security system so as to ensure that a cooperative framework is evolved for the management of the Indian Ocean and its resources. (h) On the nature and status of Indo-US relations The bilateral civil nuclear agreement in 2008 was a major milestone. The range and the depth of our bilateral relations and strategic global partnership is truly transformational in nature as described by US Secretary Clinton. There are, as President Obama defines it, new wellsprings in our cooperation with each other. In the year since President Obamas visit to India in November 2010, the two countries have sustained an unprecedented level of bilateral engagement, launched new strategic
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consultations that cover key regions of the world; begun first trilateral consultation with Japan; advanced our cooperation on non-proliferation and nuclear security; deepened counterterrorism and intelligence cooperation; launched a new Homeland Security Dialogue; made steady progress in our partnership on export controls, non-proliferation and nuclear security; concluded the largest defence deal yet in our bilateral relations, sustained exercises and broadened defence strategic dialogue; taken forward the incipient cooperation for development in third countries, especially Africa; held a very successful Higher Education Summit in Washington DC; and, made innovation driven progress in areas such as clean energy, food security and healthcare. We resumed negotiations on a Bilateral Investment Treaty and expanded opportunities for economic cooperation through measures like the Infrastructure Debt Fund and tariff reductions on products with potential for bilateral trade.
When important decisions, from arms procurement to policy changes, Further, India is too large a country are often tainted by corrupt to be dovetailed into alliance considerations, it is inevitable type of relationships. In order to that national security will get modernize our country we need to, compromised. and we have succeeded in, forging If India today is widely seen as well-rounded strategic partnerships a soft state, much of the blame with all major powers. must be pinned on the corrupt Contours of the Security Strategy Debate in Indias Foreign Policy Some eminent strategic commentators have not been impressed with Indias assessment of security concerns, the preparedness of its security architecture and its security administration structures. Serious doubts have been raised regarding Indias s capacity to work out an effective security strategy. One of the doyens of Indias strategic thinking, K Subrahmanyam, observed that Indias strategic naivet was a national weakness. He sought to embed Indian foreign policy discourse with a strategic culture. Noted strategic analyst Brahma Chellaney has lamented that India is devoid of an articulated national security strategy or a defined defence policy, or a declared counterterrorism doctrine, as he argues4: and the compromised that lead it. Such softening of India has made the country a tempting target for those seeking to undermine its security.5 Some analysts are of the opinion that the siege mindset of certain sections of the strategic community has led to the overplaying of the threats of Chinese encirclement* and the bogey of strategic devices like string of pearls* There have been suggestions for a nuanced shift in Indias security policy and the need to integrate it with larger objectives of Indias foreign policy. In his recent article in the American journal Foreign Policy, C Raja Mohan has stressed that along with other interests, Indias security interests will also be better served by moving from strategic autonomy to strategic cooperation with the relevant powers.6
autonomy are factors of external security, internal security, the need for sustained economic growth, our energy security, maritime security and access to technology and innovation.
and identified corruption and governance deficit as the insidiously emerging concerns for national security, as he remarks:
There are, of course, tangible issues in the U.S., worries about the commercial implementation of the civil nuclear agreement and lingering disappointment with one major defence contract; In India there is wariness that relationship may be turning transactional, with an emphasis on immediate returns rather than upward trends. There is anxiety about protectionist trends in the U.S., especially in the IT industry that has been the bridge between our two economies so far. And, in both countries, developments in West Asia have raised questions whether our approaches, if not interests, are consistent, at least in the immediate future. It is important to address these issues.
Further articulating his views India is the only large country dependent on other powers to meet in another article, he has remarked: basic defence needs. Indias own security perimeter has Instead of seeking to build a first- widened rapidly and its interests are rate military with strategic reach more widely dispersed around the world. and an independent deterrent, Autonomy is for weak powers who are India has allowed itself to become trying to insulate themselves from the a money-spinning dumping ground regimen defined for them by the great for weapons it can do without. powers. For many decades, India has India has emerged as the worlds seen itself as a weak developing state top arms importer in the past that must protect its territory, interests (i) On maintaining strategic decade, even as its capacity to and freedom of choice from being autonomy trampled upon by the great powers. If decisively win a war erodes. Driving our foreign policy priorities India itself were to emerge as a great Interestingly, he has questioned the and our desire for strategic power, it is not impossible to see that value system of security administration
Chinese strategic encirclement: As perceived by observers, the objective of Chinas strategic encirclement is to prevent India from acquiring the ability to challenge Beijings regional influence. China seeks to attain this objective by putting constraints or encirclement of Indias strategic options. String of pearls: It is viewed as a part of Chinese strategic encirclement, and it aims to build port facilities in Bangladesh, Burma, Pakistan and Srilanka for the deployment of the Chinese navy to protect the shipping lanes from west Asia and Africa to China. Such expansion of Chinese military can be seen in Hainan Island, Woody Island (300 nautical miles east of Vietnam), Chittagong (Bangladesh), Sittwe (Myanmar) and in Gwadar (Pakistan).
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Delhis task will be to contribute to the management of the international order and not seeking autonomy from it.7
ECONOMIC PROSPERIty
As discussed earlier, in terms of policy priority, the study commissioned by Some analysts, like Raja Karthikeya the Ministry of External Affairs has , are of the view that the recent trends identified economic prosperity as the indicate that India is already following engine for empowering India as a the policy of Omni-alignment a term force to reckon with in global power that refers to Indias effort to identify architecture. The growing importance the most relevant powers for the next of economic diplomacy in recent years half-century and cultivate strong is becoming evident in Indian foreign bilateral ties with each of them.8 K policy. The process of identifying the Subramanyam believed that India had issues on the economic agenda of the capacity to improve relations with Indias strategic thinking is a subject all global power centres in a polycentric of intense policy debate .However, the world ( he used this term in place of issues shown in chart 3 would find a multipolar world).9 place in any such agenda. A section of strategic thinking is the Indian governments of the view that though the necessity articulation of the economic of forming interest- based strategic dimensions of Indias foreign policy: alliances cannot be denied, Indias core Former Foreign Secretary Nirupma interests should be non- negotiable in Raos Harvard speech reflects on some making any alliance. important aspects of Indias economic However, the need for India to preserve as well as reassert its strategic autonomy has been articulated by some commentators. They insist that India should reinvigorate the policy of nonalignment and realize its relevance in the post cold war world order, for countering hegemonic designs , and promoting North- South dialogue, South- South dialogue and an egalitarian world order. On questions of geopolitical strategy and security, they have stressed the need for independent diplomacy. For instance, in his analysis of the geopolitical scene in the Af- Pak region, former diplomat M.K. Bhadrakumar suggested that India should chart its own course and avoid taking US as an ally in the region, as he wrote: It (the power struggle in Af- Pak region) has all along been a slowmotion geopolitical confrontation for gaining regional dominance. In sum, India needs to rethink and reassess its interests. New Delhi should trust its innate capacity to conduct its discourses with Kabul and Islamabad bilaterally.10 worldview, as she said (a) On Indias self- perception of its economy and future of the economic growth :
When we talk of Indias economic transformation, we expect India, at an average growth of a minimum of 7.5% growth in GDP per year to achieve a ten-fold increase in per capita income in the next 30 years and join the ranks of the developed countries; at this rate of growth, by 2020, we should be able to be categorized as a middle income developing country. (b)0n Indias economic challenges : India does not underestimate the challenges that it faces of meeting the education, health, energy and infrastructure needs of its population, 66% of the Indian population live in the rural sector which at present contributes only around 20 per cent of the countrys GDP. The issue of increasing agricultural productivity, planning urban growth, ensuring sustainable development while controlling and reducing emissions intensity as
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poverty alleviation, climate change, a proportion of our GDP, reducing (d) On the objectives of Indias disaster management, womens income inequalities, meeting the economic diplomacy empowerment, and economic surge in education demand and A fundamental goal of Indias foreign development. ensuring that education access policy is to create an external becomes a driver of equality, environment that promotes the Today, with sustained high economic increasing power generation, and growth rates over the past decade, fulfillment of its economic growth building infrastructure roads, India is in a better position to offer targets and ambitions. And, these railways, airports and ports better a significant stake to our neighbours include three dimensions capital management of water resources, are in our own prosperity and growth. inflows, access to technology and all challenges that India has to We have made unilateral gestures innovation, as well as the promotion meet on the road ahead. and extended economic concessions of a free, fair and open world India has to ensure that growth is such as the facility of duty free trading system that recognizes inclusive, equitable and empowers access to Indian market for imports the development imperatives of a the most disadvantaged sections from Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan country like India. of its population. This approach This requires a peaceful and and Sri Lanka. We have put forward has shaped and defined Indias role proposals multilaterally within the stable neighbourhood and on the global stage today, as the framework of the SAARC where external environment, a balanced policies that it seeks to articulate we have assumed asymmetric relationship with the major powers and endorse internationally are based responsibilities. and a durable and equitable on its own domestic experience. multilateral global order. (f) On trade with China having moderating effect on possibilities of (c) On the role of Indias foreign policy (e) On the economic diplomacy in Sino- India confrontation in removing mass poverty and fast the neighbourhood expansion of the Indian economy The Indian economy with its rapid Our trade with China is growing faster Speaking to the Indian Ambassadors growth and the impact this exerts than that with any other country. from around the world recently, the beyond its borders, is fast becoming Therefore, we need not see our relations Indian Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan an anchoring element in the region. with China as being only competitive. Singh spoke of the critical need to India has articulated a policy in (g) 0n broadening of the economic remove mass poverty in India for its neighbourhood that stresses agenda of Indo-US relations which it needs a fast expanding the advantage of building networks Today we are not only discussing issues economy. Where Indias global role, of inter-connectivity, trade, and such as strategic cooperation, counter and its foreign policy comes into this investment so that prosperity can terrorism, defence, high technology, growth story is to ensure that India be shared and that the region can civil nuclear and space sectors creates an external environment benefit from Indias rapid economic cooperation but also a broad range that is conducive to an increased growth and rising prosperity. of development issues that directly flow of capital into the country. India wants to create an economic and positively impact on the lives of India also needs to make increasing environment with its neighbours our citizens including cooperation in use of the modern science and so that they can work together to education, health, agriculture, weather technology to boost its development fulfill their common objectives of forecasting, innovation, etc. profile the import of such economic development. A peaceful Examining the significance of technology therefore becomes an neighbourhood is mandatory for economic growth for Indias Foreign important constituent in its quest the realization of its own vision of Policy to accelerate the pace of countrys economic growth. In the post cold war world order, socio-economic development. South Asian Association of Regional neo -liberals have used the arguments In Indias search for energy security, Cooperation or SAARC, compel of complex interdependence* and India must look not only at West increasing acknowledgement and expansion of global economy for Asia, but farther afield, to Africa, recognition of the common destiny explaining the importance of economic and to Latin America so that it can we share .The close and contiguous power as the central arbiter of global develop hydrocarbon resources in geographies we share with our seven powerplay. these regions and also import such neighbors who together with us make At the beginning of the last decade, resources for the successful pursuit up the South Asia when it comes to C Raja Mohan was articulating the of its development goals. issues such as food security, health,
Complex Interdependence: It is a theory propounded by Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye and it refers to the emergence of complex transnational connections and interdependencies between states and societies, and a noticeable decline in the use of military force as tool for power balancing( though it still remains important). The theory proposes that less use of military force as an instrument of foreign policy and the increase in economic and other forms of cooperation would lead to higher probability of cooperation among states, and consequently, less chances of confrontation.
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view that like China, Indias economic growth and modernization, and its integration into a globalized world economy would serve as its greatest strength in international politics .11 As the last decade came to an end, he was sticking to this view, along with other opinion makers of this persuasion, like Sanjay Baru.12 Using economic foresight for neighbourhood diplomacy has also been advocated by some analysts. Agreeing with Indias policy of offering asymmetric concessions to its neighbours , followed by the present Prime Minister ( but conceived by the former Prime Minister I K Gujral , hence called the Gujral doctrine), Rajeev Kumar envisages a logical extension of this policy. He is of the opinion that that this policy entails that India makes an unconditional offer to all its neighbours that it will accept any set of conditions stipulated by a multilateral development bank like the Asian Development Bank or the World Bank, in conserving water resources and developing the hydropower potential. Such diplomacy can be effective in solving the problem of energy shortages in the region. Though K Subrahmanyam worked tenaciously to articulate Indias security and defence policy, he assessed very early that the emergence of an economically interdependent world has made military conflicts obsolete in contemporary world. He was of the view that economic growth and internal strength have become vital components of national power. However, the global economy centric approach to strategic thinking has come under scathing attack, particularly from Nehruvians. Former diplomats sharing the Nehruvian worldview like Muchkund Dubey, Arundhati Ghose, M.K. Bhadrakumar, etc. , and commentators like Praful Bidwai , Amitabh Mattoo and Ninan Koshy have taken strong exception to such one- dimensional strategic thinking. They have warned that such line of thinking would result in the surrender of independent foreign
policy to neo-liberal prescriptions and the hegemonic agenda of the global capitalist forces. Apart from these critical observations, another set of objections have been raised by analysts like Brahma Chellaney and Bharat Karnad against the over emphasis on economic growth as the only arbiter of global power today. They argue that such exaggerated perceptions show gross misreading of history and nature of international politics. Not convinced with primacy to economy in strategic thinking, they have asserted that military power remains the prerequisite for other sources of power to have any sustained relevance.
public goods are centered around the following issues (see chart 4) Indian government s assessment of the issues concerning global public goods: Former Foreign Secretary Nirupama Raos speech at Harvard University and present Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathais address on Building Global Security at the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies comprehensively articulated Indias perspective on some crucial questions concerning global commons. Percepts from these speeches are: (a) On Indian Ocean
The Indian Ocean is central to Indias economy and its security, and it is also a region of growing global strategic attention. India does glOBAl PUBlIC gOODS not want to see this ocean emerge (glOBAl COMMONS) as a contested common or remain Indias self-perception as a rising power vulnerable to natural disasters, of global relevance entails a shift piracy or instability in coastal or in the nature and terms of its global littoral states. For this reason, engagement. Global public goods or we not only have robust bilateral the global commons have emerged as economic and security relationships major challenges for Indian diplomacy in the region, but through regional and even the civil society has actively initiatives like Indian Ocean Naval engaged with articulating the Indian Symposium and the IOR-ARC, we are approach to some of the questions seeking to promote comprehensive concerning the global public goods. economic cooperation. However, the range of issues concerning Maritime security, more broadly, has global public goods is widening and emerged as a key national security Indian diplomacy has to take account priority. We believe that maritime of the emerging concerns. Indias security requires, first and foremost, present concerns regarding global
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The Unfolding
a collective affirmation of the principles of freedom of navigation, unimpeded commerce and peaceful settlement of maritime disputes, in accordance with international law. The Indian Ocean has a palpable human dimension, as one Indian strategic analyst put it recently, given the fact that millions of people from Saudi Arabia to India to Indonesia, live in close proximity of the Ocean. The demography of its littoral States and the hydrocarbon energy index associated with it give the Indian Ocean a distinctive identity. The strategic relevance of this area derives from the vast hydrocarbon resources in West Asia, the connectivity provided by the SuezMalacca route, and the geo-political imperatives flowing from this reality. (b) On the Security of global Commons Rules of the road are also required for managing the security of the global commons which cover outer space, our oceans, cyberspace and global transport and communication networks. New dimensions of security like cyber security require to be addressed internationally especially since information technology has become critical to our needs in development, infrastructure, defence and security. (c)On United Nations (UN) and Indias case for permanent membership of a reformed Security Council (SC) International security is a function of the measures taken by nations and international organizations, such as the United Nations, to put in place systems which ensure respect for concerns of countries and lead to mutual survival and safety. These measures include military action and diplomatic agreements such as treaties and conventions. International and national securities are invariably linked. International security is national
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security or state security in the membership is based not only on global arena. In the UN, the Security its strong credentials and factors, Council enjoys the unique position such as its population, size, GDP, among the principal organs of the economic potential, civilizational UN, as it is devoted to the objective legacy, political system but also maintaining and preserving global contribution to the activities of peace and security. It is also the UN and its profound conviction bestowed with the unique authority that a more representative Council to undertake actions under Chapter can genuinely contribute to global VII of the UN Charter with respect security. Our priority in upholding to threats to the peace, breaches of the United Nations system has been a the peace, and acts of aggression to leitmotif of our foreign policy and our maintain and restore international global role. However, the world today peace and security. However, the is a very different one from that at Security Council has hardly changed the end of the Second World War. since the establishment of the UN in 1945 though the membership of (d) 0n g-20: the UN has grown from original 51 The 2008 global economic and financial crisis triggered the further members in 1945 to 194 in 2011. Its evolution of the G20, of which non-representative character and India is a key constituent. At the somewhat opaque working methods Pittsburgh Summit, the G-20 was have been criticized by the wider designated as the premier forum for membership of the UN. The efforts international economic cooperation. for the Security Council reform We see the G-20 process as a move have, however, been thwarted by towards a more representative the lack of consensus which has mechanism to manage global been thwarted by the veto powers economic and financial issues. enjoyed by the Permanent Five members over the UNSC reform The Group has taken some positive process and the high procedural steps in this direction, for instance bar for reform involving Charter by committing a shift in IMF amendments and their subsequent quota share to dynamic emerging ratification. markets and developing countries. Simultaneously, the new global India has been at the forefront of realities require that we revisit this move, seeking an enhanced and reorganize existing governance global role as a permanent models which were put in place over member of the reformed Security six decades ago. Council, commensurate with its size, capabilities, contribution to G-20 needs to retain its focus on UN peacekeeping operations and economic issues and conditions impeccable track record in upholding for ushering economic growth the UN system. India is seeking an worldwide. While the Eurozone expansion in both the permanent and difficulties need attention, in the non-permanent membership of the long term it is the recovery of Council and permanent membership growth worldwide and the reform of of an expanded Security Council. It international financial institutions has also called for an improvement that can contribute to a global in the working methods. India in architecture of governance which collaboration with Brazil, Japan and enhances security. Germany (together known as the The creators of the Bretton Woods G-4) has proposed expansion of the multilateral system had designed an membership of the United Nations international economic architecture Security Council from fifteen to to deal with the causes of the twenty-five by adding six permanent global financial breakdown in the and four non-permanent members. 1930s and with the economic and Indias claim for permanent
INDIA PREPARES
The Unfolding
We are concerned that the developed countries often tend to ignore, implicitly, the huge adaptation challenge that we face with climate change. Today we (e) 0n WtO and multilateral trade spend 2% to 2.5% of our GDP on India is fully cognizant of the negotiations meeting adaptation needs, but this safety and security implications India is often mentioned in the is not adequate. There is need for arising from the expansion of the context of the ongoing Doha Round stable and predictable financing peaceful uses of nuclear energy. of multilateral trade negotiations from the developed countries, and We are working together with our being conducted in the WTO. Our this we believe should not solely partners to help reduce the risk of commitment to the WTO, which rely on market mechanisms but, nuclear proliferation. We believe we joined as a founder-member in rather, on assessed contributions. that the challenges of nuclear January 1995, is rooted in our global There is also need for a global terrorism and nuclear security have approach to international trade. India mechanism whereby climate friendly to be addressed. We have been was one of the 23 original members technologies can be disseminated affected by clandestine nuclear of the GATT, which preceded the to the developing countries. We proliferation in our neighbourhood. WTO, and played an influential role need to redouble efforts in these We are naturally concerned about in shaping the non-discriminatory, multilateral negotiations to ensure the possibility of nuclear terrorism equitable, rule-based system that full, effective and sustained given the security situation in our the WTO today represents. implementation of the UN Framework neighbourhood. It is a measure of our commitment to this vision that in September 2009, India took the initiative to convene a mini-Ministerial meeting of WTO members in New Delhi to break the deadlock in the negotiating process. Even as we discuss the shape of the next era of integration of world markets, India is proactive in upholding the integrity of the WTO system, inspiring other countries to join her in implementing the objectives of the WTO Agreement. Convention and its Kyoto Protocol, We have, therefore, taken the lead and to conclude these negotiations at the UN General Assembly on an with a balanced, comprehensive and effective law-based international above all, an equitable outcome, response including on WMD with equal emphasis on all four terrorism. India has joined the pillars mitigation, adaptation, Russia-U.S. led Global Initiative to finance and technology transfer. Combat Nuclear Terrorism. The first
security problems they thought would follow World War II. The policy prescriptions of the IMF, be it the Structural Adjustment Programme or the so called Washington Consensus as coined by the economist John Williamson in 1989, with the focus, amongst others, on Fiscal policy discipline, Tax reform, Trade liberalization, and aggressive Deregulation often ended up exacerbating the situation in the affected borrowing countries. Many of the painful financial crises in Africa, Latin America, East Asia, Russia, and Turkey have been attributed to the above measures. It has been argued that a greater voice to the developing world in International Financial Institutions would have allowed for modulating policies, which would have been in consonance with the requirements of developing countries.
(f) On climate change A major issue facing the international community today is climate change. The issue is critical for us as the steps we take will need to be intrinsically linked with the growth prospects and development aspirations for our people. Nationally, we have taken several steps to improve energy efficiency and ensure sustainable growth. It is important to note that despite our accounting for 17% of the global population, our own GHG emissions are currently only 4% of the global emissions. Even with 8-9% growth per annum, our energy use has been growing at less than 4% per annum.
cooperation between India and the United States signed in 2008) by calling into question Indias policy on nuclear non-proliferation and disarmament. The constructive and forward-looking approach that was adopted towards India in September 2008 by the Nuclear Suppliers Group has enabled full international civil nuclear cooperation with India as also our nuclear energy cooperation agreements with major partners including the United States, Russia, France and the UK. These constitute not only a long overdue recognition of Indias standing as a country with advanced nuclear technology and responsible behaviour but have also opened up significant opportunities for technical collaboration. It is equally important to see the relevance of these developments in the context of Indias energy requirements and challenges of climate change.
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(g) On Indias recent nuclear initiatives and Indias nonproliferation and disarmament policy
Nuclear Security Summit hosted by President Obama in April 2010 was an important milestone in our efforts.
Some have sought to undermine Indias long-standing commitment to global, non-discriminatory and this major initiative (i.e. the verifiable nuclear disarmament. We agreement on civilian nuclear energy have identified some initiatives
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The Unfolding
that could be explored further as building blocks of a new global, verifiable nuclear disarmament framework. These include: a global agreement on no-first-use of nuclear-weapons and non-use against non-nuclear weapon states; measures to reduce nuclear danger through de-alerting, reducing salience of nuclear weapons in security doctrines and preventing unintentional or accidental use; a Nuclear Weapons Convention prohibiting development, production, stockpiling and use of nuclear weapons and on their destruction.
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Global commons constitute an intensely contested subject in international (h) On Asian cooperation and diplomacy. As a rising power and regional responsibilities a country with a population over a India stood shoulder to shoulder billion, Indias position on the crucial with the developing countries of issues concerning global commons has Asia, Africa and Latin America as become very important for international they fought for political freedom community. Some analysts, like Raja from colonial yoke. Once this Karthikeya have attributed it to fundamental freedom was attained, Indias stakeholder power implying India shifted focus aiding fellow that Indias importance in addressing countries in their social development transnational challenges , like from and capacity building, even within climate change to pandemics to the constraints of India itself being international trade regime has made a developing country. Towards its presence almost indispensable for this end, the Indian Technical We believe that there is a need taking any decisions on these issues. and Economic Cooperation (ITEC) to evolve a balanced, open and India is realizing that its global Programme was instituted by a inclusive framework for Asian role would also be judged by its decision of the Indian Cabinet on countries and major non-Asian participation in global governance 15 September 1964 as a bilateral players to interact and cooperate structures, as evident in Indias efforts programme of assistance of the to address traditional and nonfor securing the permanent membership Government of India. traditional security challenges. of United Nations Security Council Prime inister awaharlal ehru, ho Our Look East policy, articulated (UNSC). However, some commentators M J N w also served as the External Affairs in 1992, has enabled us over the have observed that India is misplacing Minister, was the main architect past two decades to integrate its priorities in its fervent efforts to of the ITEC programme though it our geo-economic space with our win the permanent seat in UNSC. They actually came into being after his neighbours in South East Asia. have questioned the efficacy of UNSC lifetime. After their independence, The ASEAN Regional Forum has in influencing the unilateral actions the most important task facing provided a useful model for such of the major powers like the US. In the developing countries of Asia, cooperation based on dialogue and his article in the American journal Africa and Latin America was the consensus in diverse areas such as Washington Quaterly , Thomas G. promotion of social and economic counter terrorism, trans-national Weiss has remarked that the efforts advancement of their people which crimes, maritime security, disaster of the UNSC to control US actions are had been retarded and in most relief, pandemics and nuclear non- as ineffective as the Roman Senates cases reversed during the years efforts to control the emperor.13 proliferation and disarmament. of colonial rule. Skilled manpower On the issue of climate change, an and experts, financial resources Our participation in events such as important multilateral conference has the East Asia Summit has enhanced and transfer of technology were our role in our continent, which in made some headway since Nirupama the bottlenecks to be overcome. turn influences our global role today. Rao spoke about the subject at Harvard To meet the challenges of socio-
economic development, cooperative efforts of the developing countries were as important as assistance from developed countries and international organizations. India has made substantial progress and gained useful experience in industrial and technological development after it regained its freedom in 1947. It has extended assistance for infrastructure, industrial, agricultural and capacity building, programmes in other developing countries particularly in South Asia. These projects along with the wider ITEC schemes are an earnest attempt by India to share the fruits of its socio-economic development and technological achievement with other developing countries. It is about cooperation and partnership for mutual benefit. We hope that such cooperation between countries will go a long way in promoting prosperity and enhancing security in the developing world. We are now seeking to improve the quality of Indias assistance program by creating a separate agency within MEA to give specialized attention to the task.
As the world witnesses the resurgence of China and India, and the balance of global political and economic power shifts to Asia, we are determined to ensure that there is more interaction between India and South East Asia and East Asia. The new, transnational dimensions of regional security also demand that we build an open, inclusive, plural and flexible architecture to deal with them.
INDIA PREPARES
The Unfolding
University. The 16th Conference of the Parties ( COP 16) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) was held at Cancun in Mexico. The critics blamed the Indian government for conceding a lot of space to the global North (the developed countries) by accepting Long- term Cooperative Action. They think that the Cancun Agreements sacrificed the binding commitments of the developed countries for the second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol beginning 2013. Praful Bidwai has described Indias decision of signing the Cancun Agreements as a violation of its non- negotiables-
finds mention in the text. 3. Indias formulation on international consultation and analysis (ICA) of developing country actions in a manner that is non-intrusive, nonpunitive, and respectful of national sovereignty was a key input that broke a seemingly unbreakable deadlock. 4. India played a major role in the formulation on development and transfer of technology to developing countries, a major win for developing countries.
originates from one of the power centres of the world, which India is not.17 Ironically, at a time when realist considerations seem to have convinced India to put the issue of nuclear disarmament on the backburner, the Quartet (or the Quad) of former American officials George Shultz, William Perry , Sam Nunn and Henry Kissinger are advocating disarmament from a realist perspective.
5. India ensured that there was neither a mention of a specific peaking Anticipating the possible scenarios that year nor a quantitative target for can emerge in the future and defining 1. a second term for the Kyoto emissions reduction by 2050 in the national interest in the light of such Protocol final text.16 assessment, is a methodology that Raja 2. accelerated delivery of fast-start On the issue of nuclear Menon and Rajiv Kumar have introduced support for the global South disarmament, the pacifists are in Indias strategic thinking in their (developing countries) disappointed that India has not done recent work. They have attempted to 3. technology transfers without enough for following the moral agenda use the net assessment methodology Intellectual Property Rights of mobilising the world opinion to for anticipating the trajectory that restrictions. He is of the view that realize Action Plan for Ushering in other global players will take in the India compromised these tenets Nuclear-weapon free and Non-Violent coming years by working out possible due to a combination of external World Order proposed by the then scenarios for countries that are regarded pressure and its own shrewd Prime minister Rajiv Gandhi to the as important for our strategic interests calculations that these agreements Third Special Session on Disarmament and anticipating possible outcomes on impose light obligations on India ( of the General Assembly of the United global issues also.18 though it let the global North off the Nations in June 1988. The proposed For instance , Raja Menon and hook with very mild obligations.).14 plan aimed at the elimination of all Rajiv Kumar have worked out the four But in an article published in nuclear weapons , in three stages by possible scenarios ( the fourth scenario the Economic and Political Weekly, 2010 and placed emphasis on nuclear has been worked out only by R Kumar) Varad Pande, who was part of Indias disarmament that is global, universal on the anticipated evolution of two delegation to the Cancun, defended and non- discriminatory in nature. big powers, US and China, as they think Indias stand at the Cancun conference Articulating this concern, Rekha that US-China-India triangle is the and argued that Cancun conference Chakravarthi , from the Institute of most important strategic relationship in witnessed the emergence of India as a Conflict and Peace Studies, Delhi, the years to come. The following chart confident dealmaker confident in its has observed that post 1998 shows the four possible scenarios. actions and steadfast in its resolve.15 nuclear tests there has not been any India s interests vis-a vis USHe listed five contributions made serious domestic political debate on China- India triangle by India to the text of the Cancun disarmament. She goes on to argue that using the pretexts of security threats India is trying to identify its interests Agreements: and a discriminatory non- proliferation in dealing with these two major 1. The concept of equitable access regime, India has positioned itself as a powers. The recent commentary on to sustainable development, reluctanct nuclear power. Indias foreign policy has witnessed an Indian formulation, found It seems that that India is trying to considerable engagement with this prominent mention in the text. shift the responsibility by using a line theme and analysts have proposed 2. India ensured that developed of thinking that Admiral Raja Menon their policy prescriptions for India to country actions will be subject had alluded to almost a decade ago in deal with the emerging equations of to enhanced scrutiny the term his work A Nuclear Strategy for India this triangle. Kishore Mahbubani has international assessment and , as he wrote : the chances of creating observed that to secure the comfortable review of developed country actions a new world order are far higher if it middle position in the US-Chinaalong with concomitant procedures India geopolitical triangle , India will
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INDIA PREPARES
The Unfolding
14
have to simultaneously strengthen its relations with both US and China.19 By middle position, he means that if Indias relations with both US and China become better than than the USChina bilateral relationship, this will give India a significant geopolitical advantage. He has also asked India to not allow itself to be played by the US as a counter to China. The use of the expression Goldilocks Problem in context of
Indias position in this triangle is interesting. C Raja Mohan has used the term Goldilocks Problem to describe his assessment that Indias main concern regarding US-China relationship is that India does not want relations between US and China to be either too warm or too cold.20 He suggests that India needs to develop strong political and economic leverage with both US and China for avoiding the negative effects of either collaboration or conflict between Beijing and Washington.
In this context, the prospect of a tacit American acceptance of Chinas parity with Americas hegemonic power status has also been identified as a serious concern for India. David Fidler and Sumit Ganguly are of the view that any prospect of US accepting Beijingsparity with Washington (the prospect of joint hegemony) would worry India as it would affect Chinese calculations vis- a- vis India and Indias interests in Asia.21
INDIA PREPARES
The Unfolding
Conclusion
the present statesmanship deficit in The emerging contours of the Indias foreign policy , it is introspective contemporary discourse on Indias to recall what Jawaharlal Nehru wrote foreign policy suggest that multiple as early as 1946 in The Discovery of imperatives are shaping the quest India : No nation can isolate itself for identifying and reordering India or be indifferent to the political and national interest in the sphere of economic fate of other nations. If there international relations. However, the is no cooperation, there is bound to be preponderant thrust of realism and friction with its inevitable results expedient economic diplomacy , in No nation and(its) people are going to pursuit of aspirations of becoming a tolerate domination and exploitation major global power, are shrinking the by another, even though this is given distinct moral universe and undermining some more pleasant name. Nor will the independent foreign policy which they remain indifferent to their own defined the formative years of post poverty and misery when other parts independent Indias engagement with of the world are flourishing . That was only possible when there was ignorance the world. of what was happening elsewhere.22 The architect of Indias foreign policy after independence, Jawaharlal References Nehru, had defined its guiding 1. Kanti Bajpai, India and the World, principles with an imprint of his own in Niraja Gopal Jayal and Pratap personality internationalist, pacifist, Bhanu Mehta (edited), Oxford humanist, egalitarian and independent. Companion to Politics in India, Such visionary leadership gave India Oxford University Press, New Delhi, a distinct moral voice in the comity 2010. of nations. Unfortunately, today the 2. Rajiv Kumar, Taking a long view, foreign policy discourse in India is Seminar, January 2011. dominated by naked global aspirations, narrow nationalism, xenophobic 3. IBID. populism and one- dimensional 4. Brahma Chellaney, Perils of priorities. For instance, it is a grim becoming a republic of scandals, reminder of the blinkered agenda of The Hindu, 6 December 2010. Indias foreign policy think tank that it has not addressed the seminal issue of 5. IBID. exploring international cooperation, 6. C Raja Mohan, Indias Strategic and using diplomatic leverage for Future, Foreign Policy, realizing UN Millennium Development 4November 2010 . Goals of liberating the humanity 7. C Raja Mohan, Indias new role in from the abject and dehumanising the Indian Ocean, Seminar, January conditions of extreme poverty. 2011 Indias foreign policy needs to revisit the point of its departure and must link Indias tryst with destiny to the fate of humanity. In context of the 8. Raja Karthikeya, Raising Multipolar Stakes, The Times of India, 4 January ,2011 .
9. Sidharth Varadrajan , Strategic thinker par excellence, The Hindu, 3 February 2011 10. M K Bhadrakumar, Afghanistantime for irrevocable decisions, The Hindu, 26 January 2011. 11. C Raja Mohan, Trade as Strategy:Chinese Lessons, The Hindu, 16 August 2001. 12. Sanjay Baru, National Security in an Open Economy, in Sanjay Baru (edited), Strategic Consequences of Indias Economic Performance, Academic Foundation, New Delhi, 2006. 13. Thomas G Weiss, The Illusion of UN Security Council Reform, Washington Quaterly, Autumn 2003. 14. Praful Bidwai, Letdown at Cancun, Frontline, 14 January 2011. 15. Varad Pande, India at Cancun : The Emergence of a Confident Dealmaker, The Economic and Political Weekly, 22 January 2011. 16. IBID. 17. Raja Menon, A Nuclear Strategy for India, Sage , New Delhi, 2000. 18. Rajeev Kumar, op.cit. 19. Kishore Mahbubani, The Trouble that comes in threes, The Indian Express, 31 December 2010. 20. C Raja Mohan , Hu,US and us, The Indian Express, 19 January2011. 21. Sumit Ganguly and David P Fidler, Shadow of Sino-US new normal falls on India, The Times of India, 23 January 2011. 22. Jawaharlal Nehru, The Discovery of India, The Signet Press, Calcutta( now Kolkata), 1946
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INDIA PREPARES
Interview
INTERVIEW...
How did you hear the good news? I checked the result on UPSC website and I was very excited to see my name on 55th rank in my very first attempt. Why did you opt for civil services? What made you switch over from the Private sector? Ans: It was my dream to join the civil services from 10th class only as this job offers you wide social recognition for your work and at the same time allows you to work at grassroot level on mass scale. I was not getting job satisfaction in the private sector despite a huge pay packet, so I decided to switch over from my private sector job and started preparing for civil service exam.
Q3. Ans:
Which subjects did you chose during the mains and why? What are the factors which one should look into while deciding for the subjects? My optionals for mains were Commerce & Public Administration. Commerce was my obvious choice as I am a chartered accountant and I chose Public Administration because of overlapping syllabus with commerce, easy availability of material and practical utility for civil services. How did you prepare for the exam? For GS paper, I took coaching from Vajiram & Ravi. For commerce & public administration I prepared myself. For commerce, I studied my books from CA course and for public administration I read basic books like Fadia & Fadia, Prasad & Prasad and Rajni Arora & Goyal. I also joined a test series for public administration and GS paper for writing practice. You did not take any coaching. Do you think coaching institutes are relevant? I took coaching only for GS but not for any other paper. I think coaching can only give you a direction. A candidate have to put his/her efforts rather than relying merely on the coaching institutes. Did you face any difficulty when you first came to Delhi to prepare for this exam? The biggest difficulty I faced in Delhi was for accommodation as prices for a single and decent room here are quite high and food is also a big problem for outsiders. For preparation part, I didnt face much difficulty as I was clear about my strategy and I studied with the complete dedication. What was your strategy for Optionals and Essay? For commerce paper, I relied on my books of CA course and prepared from those books only. For Public Administration paper, I read basic books and joined a test series for writing practice also. I used to write atleast one question daily for Pubic Administration paper and that helped me a lot in answer writing. For essay paper, I didnt prepare anything special rather relied on my knowledge from GS paper. For writing practice, I wrote two essays and got them evaluated from my teachers. I wrote essay with simple language with basic clarity of topic and with good analysis for the same. Creativity is necessary for essay paper means your thought should be logical and original. How did you prepare for this exam- selective, intensive or extensive studies? For prelims I adopted extensive approach but for mains I adopted combination of both intensive and extensive approach depending on the study area. What were your strong points which enabled you to achieve this success? Following were my strong points which enabled my success in this exam: 1. Well planned and time tested strategy
Q4. Ans:
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Q5. Ans: Q6. Ans:
Q7. Ans:
INDIA PREPARES
Interview
2. Self Belief and Self Confidence 3. Guidance from successful candidates 4. Right attitude towards life and exam 5. Discipline 6. Regular revision of class notes 7. Limited books but multiple revisions. Q10. Ans: How was the interview? Can you recall any questions from the board members? Any interview tips for IAS aspirants. My interview board was of Mr. P. K. Mishra and it lasted for 35-40 minutes. I was satisfied with my interview. Questions were asked from diversified field and related to my profile also like What is Mongoose bat ( Cricket is my hobby), Demographic Dividend, Difference between 2G, 3G & 4G, Difficulty faced during my job, questions on budget and problems of agriculture in our country. My tip for IAS aspirants is to thoroughly prepare on your profile and generate as many questions as possible as board expect you to come prepared for the interview. Be original in your answer, do not bluff during interview and maintain eye contact while answering the questions. Always keep a smile on your face throughout your interview as it gives positive vibes to the board members. How did you prepare for the interview? My job experience was very helpful for my interview preparation as I had already appeared for 4-5 interviews for my corporate job and I was successful in most of the interviews. Still, I took 4 mock interviews before the final interview and they also helped me to some extent. My main preparation for interview focused on complete understanding of my own profile and generating as many questions possible on my own profile. This process helped me during my interview. I also updated myself on my optionals subject apart from current affairs part. Do you have any priority areas where you would like to see you making a difference in the administrative services? I think every area in administration is equally important and I will try to emphasize equally on all the areas so as to benefit all the sections of society. What are your views regarding the changes that UPSC has made at the preliminary stage? I think by introducing CSAT, UPSC has given a level playing field to all the candidates. Similar initiative should be taken for mains exam also to remove the biasness for any particular optional. Your message to future CSE aspirants Dedication & Enjoyment are two basic principles to clear this exam. A candidate should study with full dedication and enjoy this process of new learning. Self belief is the key to clear this exam. One should come with positive mindset and give his/her 100% efforts and rest leave on the Almighty. Best of Luck.
Q11. Ans:
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INDIA PREPARES
National Bulletin
NAtIoNAl bullEtIN...
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INDIA PREPARES
National Bulletin
speedy environmental justice and help reduce the burden of litigation in the higher courts. The Tribunal is mandated to make and endeavour for disposal of applications or appeals finally within 6 months of filing of the same. Initially, the NGT is proposed to be set up at five places of sittings and will follow circuit procedure for making itself more accessible. New Delhi is the Principal Place of Sitting of the Tribunal and Bhopal, Pune, Kolkata and Chennai shall be the other 4 place of sitting of the Tribunal.
of ninety days, if it is satisfied that the appellant was prevented by sufficient cause from filing the appeal. The act empowers the Green tribunal to award compensation and unlike other environmental protection Acts, this Act bestows ample power on the Green Tribunal if its order are not complied with; the penalty may be either three years prison or up to ten crores penalty and for companies it may extend up to twenty five crores.
a major contributor to pollution load. The Act prescribes differential time frames for approaching the Tribunal: Section 16 states 30 days for challenging an order under the Tribunals appellate jurisdiction. Section 14(3) states six months on disputes of substantial questions related to environment. Section 15(3) states five years for seeking compensation and relief. Such arbitrary and limited time frame defeats the whole purpose of the Act because impact on environment is a continuous process. The specification of the desirable qualification for being a member of the NGT has been criticized by the civil society who believes that this will facilitate backdoor entry for the retired bureaucrats. The Act considers higher degrees in Science, Engineering, Technology and experience in Administration only as technical qualifications. On the flip side, there is no provision for ecologists, sociologists, environmentalists, expert in public health, occupational health and civil society / NGOs who have been proactive in the field of environment protection.
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Conclusion
National Green Tribunal is thus a new beginning for Indias struggle between development and environment. Despite some inherent flaws, NGT is a significant initiative by the Government and the rightful implementation of the law would certainly usher the country towards the path of Sustainable Development and guarantee a harmonious relationship between the environment and society. The working of the NGT so far suggests that the countrys move towards Sustainable development has begun.
INDIA PREPARES
National Bulletin
NAtIoNAl NEwS...
lEGAl/ CoNStItutIoNAl ISSuES
Supreme Court refuses to stay quota order
The Supreme Court has refused to stay the Andhra Pradesh High Court order that quashed 4.5 per cent sub-quota for minorities in central educational institutions such as the IITs, and ticked off the government for the way it had handled the complex and sensitive issue. The apex court expressed its unhappiness that the Centre was blaming the High Court when it had itself failed to produce documents to support its case. A Bench of Justices K.S. Radhakrishnan and J.S. Khehar was critical of the Ministry of Human Resource Development rushing to the apex court with the appeal against the May 28 order of the High Court without documents to justify the policy of carving out 4.5 per cent sub-quota within the 27 per cent OBC reservation. It may be recalled that just prior to the Uttar Pradesh Assembly elections, the Central government issued two separate orders declaring that the religious minorities would be given 4.5 per cent sub-quota from among the 27 per cent reservation existing for OBCs. This has been challenged by the Andhra Pradesh BC Welfare Association president R. Krishnaiah and others.
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INDIA PREPARES
National Bulletin
In a late development, A Group of Ministers (GoM) has given its approval to the Madhya Pradesh government for disposing of 350 tonnes of Union Carbide toxic waste in Germany. The Centre will pay Rs. 25 crore towards the cost of airlifting the waste which will be removed within a year. The whole procedure of removing the waste will be completed within a year. According to Madhya Pradesh government officials, the disposal would be carried out by German agency GIZ IS.
winding up the debate in the Lok Sabha on the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Bill, 2011. Tirath said all below 18 years would be treated as child and efforts have been made to keep provisions of the bill child-friendly. It contains provisions for in-camera trial of offences, she said. Dismissing concerns over misuse of the law, Tirath said, provisions have also been made to deal with offences of false complaints.
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INDIA PREPARES
National Bulletin
Introducing the Bill, Human Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal said poor artistes had been left in the lurch, as producers cornered all royalties, but the new law would help them live a good life even in old age, as they would continue to get their dues for their work. Citing the examples of shehnai exponent Bismillah Khan and music composer Ravi, to press home the point that the condition of such excellent artistes was pitiable, as they werent able to pay even house rent and hospital charges, Mr. Sibal said the Bill made it mandatory for broadcasters both radio and television to pay royalty to the owners of the copyright each time a work of art was broadcast. It bans persons from bringing out cover versions of any literary, dramatic or musical work for five years from the first recording of the original creation. The Bill provides for exemption from copyright for any work prepared for the physically challenged in special formats such as Braille. It also permits compulsory licence to be granted for a certain number of copies in non-special formats to non-profit organisations working to help disabled persons.
To cope with the problem being faced by over six States, which have completed their PMGSY targets, the Ministry of Rural Development is evolving new guidelines to put PMGSY II in place, to provide them funds which have, obviously, been stopped. The Ministry of Rural Development intends to address the concerns of Andhra Pradesh, Haryana, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Nagaland and Rajasthan, by allowing upgradation of rural roads on a cost-sharing basis. While the Centre favours a 50:50 sharing arrangement, the States were willing to meet 25 per cent of the expenditure, and want the Centre to foot the remaining 75 per cent of the cost. In contrast, Bihar was allocated funds after a gap of twoand-a-half years, after resolving the irritants that had stalled the sanction of projects and resources. In the first tranche, Rs 915 crore has been provided for construction of 1,900 km of roads in seven LWE districts of Aurangabad, Gaya, Jehanabad, Arwal, Jamui, Rohtas and Nawada. For the remaining 31 districts, the Ministry is likely to sanction the proposals received for constructing 1,350 roads and 96 bridges, totalling 3,840 kms, at an estimated cost of Rs. 2,440 crore.
GovERNANCE
union Cabinet approves road links to all tribal and border habitations 22
The Centre has initiated the process to connect all tribal habitations and villages in border districts with roads under the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY). The Union Cabinet also approved a Rs. 8,500-crore special package for connecting 6,000 habitations in 78 Left wing extremist-affected districts and entrusted the Union Ministry of Rural Development with the job of preparing the estimates for the two projects. Panchayati Raj and Tribal Affairs Minister Kishore Chandra Deo underlined the problems of the tribals who lived in scattered habitations of less than 250 people, and hence were still deprived of road connectivity. The Cabinet directed Rural Development Minister Jairam Ramesh to conduct a survey to establish the number of such habitations in all the Schedule V areas that needed to be covered, and prepare the estimate for taking a final decision on extending this basic facility to the tribals living in remote forests and hills. Similarly, the Cabinet was sympathetic to the problems of the people residing in villages in border areas that Union Road Transport and Highways Minister C.P. Joshi batted for. The Ministry of Rural Development will study all the 362 border blocks located along Pakistan, China, Nepal, Bangladesh and Myanmar. Mr. Ramesh has ordered a survey to establish the number of villages under the two categories, and the money that would be required to construct roads under the PMGSY, the allocation for which has been raised to Rs. 24,000 crore for the current financial year.
INDIA PREPARES
National Bulletin
Abdul Kalams brainchild, PURA, which was initially aimed at providing city amenities to villages. In its latest avatar, PURA 2.0 is focussing on the development of 50 to 60 potential growth centres such as census towns. Initial pilot projects have begun in Kerala, with eight other projects awaiting final approvals from State governments. Earlier this week, the Rural Development Ministry invited expressions of interest for 10 to 15 more projects. Under the scheme, the Central government will grant Rs. 40 crore for each project with the private player expected to invest Rs. 20-30 crore. Another Rs. 80 crore is expected to come from the convergence of existing schemes. Gram panchayats will sign agreements with private players to build and maintain the infrastructure for a 10-year period during which they can recoup their investment, says the Ministrys advertisement.
The total sanitation campaign will now be known as Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan, Mr. Ramesh said. At present, out of Rs.3400 allocated for individual toilets, the Centre gives Rs.2100, each States share is Rs.1000 and Rs.300 comes from the beneficiaries, while Rs.1200 is leveraged through MGNREGA works as was approved last year. But after the Cabinet approval, the Centre has to dole out Rs.3200, the state Rs.1400 and families have to provide Rs.900 while MGNREGA funds will be to the tune of Rs.4500.
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REPoRtS/ CoMMISSIoNS
task Force on National Security presents report The Union Government runs seven National Institutes dealing to PM
The Task Force set up by Government in July 2011 to review the working of the national security system has called on the Prime Minister and presented their Report. The Task Force was headed by Shri Naresh Chandra, and included retired government servants, former armed forces officers and experts in aspects of national security. The Task Force was mandated to review existing processes, procedures and practices in the national security system and to suggest measures to strengthen the national security apparatus. The Task Force has made an assessment of the security scenario facing the country and made recommendations to the Government. The Report of the Task Force is now with Government for its consideration.
INDIA PREPARES
National Bulletin
Articles of the Constitution of India to the state extended after 1952. The report of the interlocutors--Dileep Padgaonkar, Radha Kumar and M M Ansari--which was made public today, proposed a New Compact with the people of Jammu and Kashmir, having three components--political, economic and social and cultural --forming a single package which cannot be accepted on a selective basis. Under the political component, the report deals with CentreState relations and internal devolution of powers and suggests a road map listing confidence-building measures that includes review of Disturbed Areas Act and re-appraisal of application of controversial AFSPA. The report, which was handed over to Home Minister P Chidambaram on October 12 last year, also favoured resumption of the dialogue process between the Centre and Hurriyat Conference at the earliest. On Centre-state relation, the report calls for review of all Central Acts and Articles of the Constitution of India extended to the state after 1952 Delhi agreement.
HEAltH ISSuES
the Sixty Fifth world Health Assembly Adopts Resolution Moved by India on Mental Health 24
India`s leadership role in promoting the global debate on the need for urgent national action for the promotion of mental health was acknowledged by the World Health Organization at the 65th World Health Assembly. An important resolution calling on Member-states and the WHO to develop an action plan was moved by India and received warm support before being approved. The Government of India has been separately working on strengthening interventions in the 12th Plan for the care of persons with mental illness, including emphasis on family and community care and training of health and community workers, and short and long stay homes. Government has begun a major exercise to develop a mental health policy for the country and also expects to shortly introduce new legislation to replace the Mental Health Act, 1987, to bring India into conformity with international commitments to protect the rights of persons with mental illness. The World Health Assembly (WHA) is the forum through which the World Health Organization (WHO) is governed by its 194 member states. It is the worlds highest health policy setting body and is composed of health ministers from member states. The members of the World Health Assembly generally meet every year in May in Geneva, the location of WHO Headquarters. The main tasks of the WHA are to decide major policy questions, as well as to approve the WHO work programme and budget and elect its Director General.
INDIA PREPARES
National Bulletin
At the same time, V.B. Mathur, Dean of the Wildlife Institute of India, Dehra Dun, pointed out that the WGEEP primarily dealt with the ecology of the Ghats areas outside the national parks and protected areas. The serial sites are either national parks or wildlife sanctuaries, which have an effective management mechanism in place. The Ministry had effectively implemented all the suggestions made by the IUCN earlier, he said. Stressing the need for respecting the existing indigenous institutions, IUCN also noted that there were some 40 different Adivasi/indigenous peoples in several States of the Ghats region. The agency also stated that it was made aware of continued significant concerns about the nomination and rights issues from sections of the indigenous local community. The report stated that it was important that governance mechanisms were not externally imposed but respect existing indigenous institutions for decision-making consistent with the U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The Western Ghats starts from Maharashtra and runs through the states of Maharashtra, Goa, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala ending at Kanyakumari, at the southern tip of Indian peninsula.
R&D needs of developing countries for Type II and Type III diseases tuberculosis, malaria, leprosy, kala-azar, yellow fever, sleeping sickness, chikungunya and other neglected tropical diseases. The CEWG report, presented at the 65th World Health Assembly in Geneva recently, will change the way research and financing for drug and development takes place. Generation R&D outcomes as public goods, freely available for further research and production, would delink R&D costs from product prices. This binding agreement would facilitate drug discovery and development which will be relevant to the diseases which afflict the poor and the vulnerable in the developing countries, India said in its intervention.Taxation aspects Without mentioning any specific form of tax, the CEWG report says: Countries should first consider at national level what tax options might be appropriate to them as a means of raising revenue to devote to health R&D. However, the CEWG highlights two taxes Financial Transaction Tax and Tobacco Solidarity Contribution as potential new sources of funding that could be channelled through international mechanism to supplement national resources. It recommends that all countries should commit themselves to spending at least 0.01 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP) on government funded R&D devoted to meeting the health needs of developing countries. A WHA resolution has impressed upon the member-states the need to establish or strengthen mechanisms for improved R&D coordination in collaboration with the WHO and other relevant partners, and calls upon the private sector, academic institutions and non-governmental organisations to increase investment in health R&D related to Type II and III diseases and the specific R&D needs of developing countries in relation to Type I diseases like diabetes. All-members are required to spell out their road map at the next WHA in 2013. Some developed countries are opposing the move on the ground that their contribution to health research is adequate. In 2010, three diseases received most of the global funding for R&D: HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria. Despite being the leading child-killer in developing countries, diarrhoeal diseases received less than 5 per cent of global R&D funding in 2010. Leprosy, Buruli ulcer, trachoma an eye infection that can lead to irreversible blindness and rheumatic fever are among the neglected diseases of poverty that occur in overcrowded, remote and poor areas. They received less than $10 million each. In 2010, eight of the top 12 governments that provided public funding for R&D in neglected diseases (including HIV/AIDS, malaria and TB) cut their spending, according to the G-FINDER (Global Funding of Innovation for Neglected Diseases) survey.
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INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
INtERNAtIONAl bullEtIN...
Indias interest
The External Affairs Minister, S.M. Krishna, went there to attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit. India has been an observer since 2005. Mr. Krishna indicated Indias desire to be a full-fledged member of the six-member security grouping. Addressing the extended session of the 12th summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), External Affairs Minister S M Krishna said India admired the grouping which comprised of China, Russia and Central Asian states of Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. India has said that it backed the six-member Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) security grouping to play a greater role in Afghanistan, and expressed its interest to coordinate more closely with the group in combating terrorism in the region. Citing the development of relations that were moving smoothly and had turned the corner after years of hiccups, Indian and Chinese officials discussed expanding the ties in new areas, from taking forward talks on Central Asia and trans-boundary rivers to looking into opening new consulates to boost engagement. The two countries confirmed that they would discuss the issue of trans-
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Conclusion
In the dynamic Asian geopolitics, role of SCO has increased substantially. Keeping this in view and the desire of New Delhi to play greater and substantial role in this Asian drama, Indias involvement in SCO is very important. Through this grouping India eyes greater economic gains as well as energy security. The central Asian republics are not only emerging markets but also potential source of energy. The security arrangement and the anti terrorism policy of the grouping will strengthen Indias stand on the issue. Thus the interest shown by Indian establishment in SCO is backed by the long term imperatives.
INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
INtERNAtIoNAl bullEtIN...
NEPAl CRISES
What is the Political History of Nepal?
JANANDOLAN I in 1990 has transformed Nepal from absolute monarchy to constitutional monarchy with parliamentary democratic system. It was happened because of the public corruption and negligent attitude of monarchy towards people welfare. Then JANANDOLAN II IN 2005 was happened with maoists armed rebels as the driving force for the revolution. During that time maoists held most of the rural areas, which has the potential to paralyze Nepal economy. At the end of janandolan II COMPREHENSIVE PEACE AGREEMENT was signed with Maoists in 2006. According to which maoists agreed for the ceasefire and accepted for elections to the Constituent Assembly (CA) for drafting new constitution. This transformed Nepal into republic, secular, federal state from monarchic, Hindu, unitary state. In 2008 elections, maoists emerged as the dominant party in 601- member CA but didnt have clear majority to form the government. So, there is a need to form the national unity government to run the state institutions and the tenure for the CA was only for 2 years i.e from May 2008 to may 2010. many as 20 is also present in CA. so, the biggest challenge is to evolve the political consensus among them in various issues. alliance with Madheshi parties.
What is uNmIN And What Role It Did for Peace building in Nepal?
UNMIN is the United Nations mission in Nepal by the international community for peace reconciliation and facilitation for democratic transition. The role of UNMIN is to act as the neutral agency between Nepal army and maoists army. Maoists surrendered all the arms to the UNMIN, so that ceasefire will come into effect and there will be development of trust on maoists for their commitment to democracy. The mission was ended in January 2011 after the number of extensions.
Why CA unable to Promulgate Constitution by may 2011 and What are the Key Demands of Political Parties?
The CA is unable to promulgate the constitution because of lack of political consensus among different parties in federalism issue. Most of the text of constitution was agreed like adopting French model of presidential and parliamentary system but the crucial issue of federalism is not resolved yet. The demands of the political parties were grouped into two. On one side maoists and Madheshi parties were stubborn in their demands for ethnic identity based states, political rights and right to self determination for them. Regarding number of states, they want two states in terai region and accepted the proposal of either 10(proposed by CA committee) or 14(proposed by state restructuring commission). This is because of the fear that minorities may not get benefit from the ruling elite and the history also has lit of injustice done by ruling elite. So they want ethnicity based states.
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What are the Key Political Parties Dominating the Present the Political Scenario?
1. Unified Communist Party of Nepal(Maoists) is the largest party in the CA 2. Nepali congress 3. Communist Party of Nepal(unified Marxists-Leninists) 4. United Democratic Madheshi Front These are the four major political parties which are dominating the present political scenario of Nepal. Apart from these there are lots of small parties based on ethnicity. As
INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
But on the other side Nepali Congress and UML wants to promulgate the constitution within May 2011 and left the federalism issue to parliament to resolve. They also opposed to the ethnicity based states because they felt that it may endanger the Nepal unity in the future. Both sides were demands and so middle path and In the meantime, expired. stubborn in their unable to find the political consensus. CA tenure was also
that time it was unable to draft the constitution. So all the political parties extended the tenure to one more year i.e upto May 2011.even after the extension it is unable to finish the task. Again they extended its tenure for one more year i.e may 2012.but again they are unable to finish the task. This time they tries to extend the tenure for one more year but it was strike down by the supreme court and asked the government to call for fresh elections for the CA. as politicians were failed repeatedly to deliver the constitution to the people of Nepal, so it is better to get the mandate from the people for new CA, thus strengthens the democratic process.
What is the Reaction from the unity Governement for the Supreme Court Verdict?
The unity government accepted the Supreme Court verdict and called for fresh elections in November 2012.
INtERNAtIoNAl NEWS...
GCC cool to Riyadhs meet-Iran-threat plan 28
Saudi Arabia formally launched the process for a closer political integration of the six Gulf monarchies as a hedge against the perceived threat from Iran and to counter any challenge posed by the possible intrusion of the Arab Spring into this energy rich zone. After a day-long meeting in Riyadh, Saudi Foreign Minister Saud Al Faisal announced that the attempt at political consolidation among the six countries belonging to the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates was still on course. I am hoping that the six countries will unite in the next meeting, Prince Saud observed optimistically. Analysts point out that Saudi Arabia has been the chief advocate of the federation, to stand up as a bulwark against the tide for change that has been sweeping across West Asia and North Africa. The Saudis have identified Iran as the chief challenge to regional stability, and have along with Qatar tried to undermine the Tehran supported regime in Syria. The perceived interference of Iran last year became the backdrop of the movement of Saudi troops, as head of a GCC force, into Bahrain to crush an uprising that seemed to threaten the ruling monarchy there. On the flip side, Hispanics, African-Americans, Asians and mixed-race infants, comprised 50.4 per cent of the total again an unprecedented statistical majority. This is up from 49.5 per cent in the 2010 census, according to the CB, which defines a minority as anyone who is not single-race white and not Hispanic. Within the category of minorities, Asians, numbering 18.2 million nationally in 2011, were the second fastest-growing minority group with a 35 growth rate since 2010. Their growth was outranked only by Hispanics, whose population increased by 3.1 per cent during the same period. The share of the white population has slid steadily since the post-War baby-boomer generation. While the latest CB results relate to the number of live births, the relative shares of whites and ethnic minorities in the adult population are not expected to reflect a similar balance until about 2040. In 2011 there were 114 million minorities in total, representing 36.6 per cent of the U.S. population, whereas in 2010, it stood at 36.1 per cent.
INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
different allies - satellites, ships, radars and interceptors - under NATO command and control. It will allow us to defend against threats from outside the Euro-Atlantic area, Rasmussen said in Chicago yesterday after first session of the North Atlantic Council in Heads of State and Government format. He also called the system an interim capability. We have decided to develop a NATO missile defence system because we consider the missile threat a real threat and against a real threat, we need a real defence to protect our population effectively, Rasmussen said, adding that NATO would continue to have dialogue with Russia in this regard.
of the Ground Lines of Communication (GLOC/NATO supply lines). In the summit declaration, NATO countries reiterated their resolve to remain engaged with Afghanistan after 2014 when the country enters what Mr. Karzai described as the transformational decade. Stating that NATO would continue to provide strong and long-term political and practical support through our Enduring Partnership with Afghanistan, the declaration articulates member countries willingness to work toward establishing at the request of Afghanistan a new post-2014 mission of a different nature to train, advise and assist the Afghan National Security Forces including the Afghan Special Operations Forces. Meanwhile, just ahead of the meeting in Chicago, the Taliban reportedly hinted a willingness to return to the negotiating table. In a statement faxed to The Express Tribune, Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid was quoted as stating that the Islamic Emirate has left all military and political doors open. It wants to secure the rights of the Afghan nation through all possible ways, the statement said while also asking NATO to withdraw at the earliest or stay on in Afghanistan at its own peril. Welcoming the progress on transit arrangements with central Asian partners and Russia, the declaration said NATO continued to work with Pakistan to reopen the GLOC as soon as possible.
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INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
last September when the missile crashed a few kilometres from the launch site. The new intercontinental ballistic missile is intended to strengthen Russias Strategic Missile Forces, including its capabilities for overcoming anti-missile defences,.
use funds from the EU or any other organization, he said. Meanwhile, talks on eurowide deposit guarantees and bank resolution schemes went nowhere, despite Hollandes insistence. Nor does Berlin seem amenable to the idea of helping Greece or Spain by giving them more time to meet EU deficit targets.
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We hope the package that we put on the table is attractive to them so they will react positively, Mike Mann, spokesman for the head of the European Union delegation that is leading the talks, told reporters. Its up to them to react.
INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
their early departure, saying Afghan troops are ready to take over.
to ratify a strategic partnership agreement with the United States signed last month, lawmakers said. President Barack Obama paid a surprise visit to Kabul to sign a deal with his Afghan counterpart Hamid Karzai that will cement post-war ties with Kabul after 2014, when NATO-led combat forces leave Afghanistan. The pact foresees the possibility of American forces staying behind to train Afghan soldiers and pursue the remnants of Al-Qaeda but does not commit Washington to specific troop or funding levels. The pact alarmed Afghanistans neighbours including Iran, and lawmaker Bakhtash Seyawash said that the Islamic republic had attempted to sabotage the vote.
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INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
event in Edinburgh. It is billed as the biggest communitybased campaign in Scotlands history and Mr. Salmond says he wants at least one million Scots to sign a declaration in support of independence. By the time we enter the referendum campaign in autumn 2014, our intention is to have one million Scots who have signed the independence for Scotland declaration. Friends, if we achieve that, then we shall win an independent Scotland, he said. Several smaller parties, including the Greens, are supporting the campaign but the three main national parties Labour, a big political force in Scotland, the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats are campaigning for a No vote. Sensing the public mood of scepticism, they want the ballot paper to carry only one question, Yes or No, hoping that confronted with a stark choice voters are likely to plump for No.
unilateral action if peace talks with the Palestinians remain stalled, a move which could involve a withdrawal from parts of the West Bank along the lines of a 2005 pullout from the Gaza Strip. Defence Minister Ehud Barak told a high-profile security conference that inaction was not an option and Israel could not wait forever to reach an accord. Israel cannot afford to tread water, Mr. Barak said. If a deal proves to be impossible, we have to consider a provisional arrangement or even unilateral action. The statement reflected a growing sense of urgency in Israel about ending its 45-year entanglement with the Palestinians, even if no peace deal is possible. Two decades of on-again, off-again peace talks have failed to yield an agreement, and negotiations have been frozen for more than three years. And as time passed, a shift of thinking has quietly occurred in Israel the occupation of Palestinian lands may ultimately be bad for Israel simply because ruling millions of Arabs will demographically sink the Jewish state.
In a victory for India and China, WHo evolves mechanism to define counterfeit drugs
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has put in place a mechanism to define counterfeit medical products. The set of definitions of sub-standard, spurious, falsely labelled, falsified and counterfeit products will be globally accepted and help to bring about uniformity in identifying such drugs, without interrupting worldwide supplies. The decision to establish a member state mechanism was taken at the World Health Assembly, the WHOs policymaking body. The meeting also limited the WHOs role to public health issues, taking it off Intellectual Property Rights matters in the context of defining counterfeit drugs. India was backed in this effort by Brazil, Thailand, Russia, China and South Africa, besides the South East Asia Region Organisations nations. An earlier working group of member states had recommended that a storm enforcement network be set up as an informal group led by Interpol in collaboration with the WHOs Western Pacific Regional Office to strengthen collaboration among relevant agencies in combating counterfeit medical products and other pharmaceutical crimes in Asia Pacific. But there was no consensus on defining what these products were.
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INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
Hundreds of people, who had lined up along the route of the procession waving replicas of the Union Jack, cheered as the open-topped coach carrying the Queen, Prince Charles and his wife, the Duchess of Cornwall, wound its way to Buckingham Palace past some of Londons most famous landmarks. Later, flanked by Prince Charles, the Duchess of Cornwall, Prince William, his wife Kate, and Prince Harry, she appeared on the balcony of Buckingham Palace and greeted the crowds outside. People whistled, blew kisses, sang songs and television presenters went berserk as the Queen emerged on the balcony. A special flypast was held to signal the end of the celebrations.
Bruke said, Make no mistake, if I were to deal with a report which does not fully address the environmental issues ... then there are serious repercussions for the soundness of the decision which follows. Because the Queensland Government has not provided a sound assessment, I will be required to obtain the information that Queensland has failed to provide. This will result in unnecessary and costly delays for the project, he added.
uNICEF report says diarrhoea and pneumonia are top killers of children
India is listed among the top five countries across the world which lose a majority of the two million children worldwide who die each year to easily preventable diseases -- pneumonia and diarrhoea states the United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF) report released on Friday. The report adds that nearly 90 per cent of all these deaths are due to unsafe water and poor hygiene. Pneumonia and diarrhoea are among the top causes of childhood deaths around the world and together they kill more than two million children each year and accounts for more than one-fourth of all deaths of children under the age of five, notes the report. About half of childhood deaths in the world due to diarrhoea or pneumonia take place in five countries: India, Nigeria, Democratic Republic of Congo, Pakistan and Ethiopia, said the report. Poverty is a major factor in the spread of both diseases, with Pakistan, India, and several countries in sub-Saharan Africa making up the worst-hit nations. Simple steps like washing hands with soap and water can dramatically reduce the incidence of both pneumonia and diarrhoea in children, noted UNICEF executive director Anthony Lake in a release. The report urges the 75 countries with the highest mortality rates to aim to treat poor children with diarrhoea and pneumonia the same way they do those from the top 20 per cent of households, a so-called equity approach. Pneumonia is responsible for 18 per cent of childhood deaths worldwide each year and diarrhoea is linked to 11 per cent. In contrast, AIDS is responsible for two per cent of global childhood deaths annually and malaria for seven per cent, according to the report.
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INDIA PREPARES
Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
bIlAtERAl bullEtIN...
Agreements Signed
India and Myanmar signed 12 MoUs (Memorandums of Understanding) on matters of mutual concern, wherein development and connectivity were the key watchwords. The understanding is that improved connectivity would lead to greater access between the two countries, while cooperation in fields such as agriculture, trade, education and information technology would address Myanmars developmental needs. One of the important agreements reached was regarding cooperation between a Myanmar and an Indian University and cooperation between a Myanmar Ministry of Foreign Affairs think tank (MISIS) and two Indian think tanks, one of which is the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses. Cooperation among strategic studies think tanks is especially welcome because while MISIS is connected with the ASEAN network of think tanks, it has no such link on an institutionalised basis with the think tanks of India or of the South Asian region. Stability along the Indo-Myanmar border depends in large measure on economic stability that comes through planned development. For instance, Myanmar has many missing road and
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mous Signed
Regarding $500million Line of Credit Airline Services Agreement between India and Myanmar: with more carriers and more destinations (extending to other Southeast Asian cities) India-Myanmar Border Area Development Establishment of Joint Trade and Investment Forum Establishment of the Advance Centre for Agriculture Research and Education (ACARE) Establishment of Rice Bio Park at the Department of Agricultural Research in Naypyitaw Setting up Myanmar Institute of Information Technology Cooperation between Dagon University and Calcutta University Cooperation between Myanmar
INDIA PREPARES
Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
Institute of Strategic and trade and connectivity between International Studies and Indian India and Myanmar, the objective of much needed development in Council of World Affairs Indias North Eastern states could Agreement on Cooperation between be achieved. Myanmar was viewed Myanmar Institute of Strategic and as a land-bridge to the rest of South International Studies and Institute East Asia. for Defence Studies and Analyses Cultural Exchange Programme A second important factor in India(2012-2015) Myanmar relations is the need to control the activities of insurgent Establishing of Border Haats across the groups in their bordering states. border between Myanmar and India Thirdly, India is located between background the Golden Crescent in the west The two decades between Indias and the Golden Triangle in the open support for the pro-democracy east and thus is confronted by the forces in the 1988 movement and the arms-drug nexus and faces a silent recent exchange of bilateral visits emergency. Given this, India and at the highest levels have clearly Myanmar need to take steps keeping demonstrated New Delhis desire to in mind a holistic view of security. pursue its strategic and economic Fourthly, India and Myanmar also goals in Myanmar. However, it has left need to work together to prevent the unresolved the dilemma of how to pursue spread of epidemics across borders its stated goals without compromising especially considering the threat of its commitment to human rights and HIV/AIDS and recent outbreaks like democratic principles. swine flu and bird flu. A realisation began to dawn in New Delhi soon after 1988 that Indias Finally, flowing from all the above factors is the need to ensure the support for the pro-democracy forces in development of Indias North the August 1988 uprising failed to find Eastern states. favour with the State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC) regime. other Interactions It was only in 1991, however, that a The dynamics of Myanmar is such decision was taken to discontinue that interlocutors are forced to make criticism of the Myanmar regime in All adjustments to the evolving situation India Radios (AIR) Burmese broadcasts. in that country, which itself is in a The visit to Yangon (then Rangoon) perpetually evolving/transitioning by the Indian Foreign Secretary in mode. Be that as it may, it is important 1993 started the process of improving that India not lose the momentum it relations between the two countries. has imparted to this relationship lest The Indian Government also made it surrenders whatever gains that have an attempt to curb the anti-SLORC been made so far. activities of Myanmar students in India. At the bilateral level, right These adjustments in Indo-Myanmar through the phase of transition, the relations occurred in the backdrop of momentous changes on the Indian flow of official visits between India and economic horizon. Liberalisation had Myanmar did not cease, although at been introduced in the early 1990s the Prime Ministerial level India could and the Look East Policy too had its be labelled a laggard. beginnings around the same time. In July 2010, SPDC Chief Than These developments helped in defining Shwe came to New Delhi. When Indias objectives in Myanmar. President Thein Sein representing the To begin with, Myanmar was seen new civilian government visited as an important part of Indias Look in October 2011, two important East Policy for the simple reason documents were signed: first, an that it is the only South East Asian MoU on the upgradation of Yangon nation with which India shares a Childrens Hospital and Sittwe General land border. By ensuring smooth Hospital; and second, a programme for
Cooperation in Science and Technology for the period 201215. India also extended a $500 million line of credit to Myanmar. In December 2011, the Speaker of Myanmars Lower House of Parliament, Thura Shwe Mann, led a high level parliamentary delegation to India to learn about the functioning of Indian democracy. Foreign Minister Wunna Maung Lwin visited India in January 2012. Besides meeting the PM and the External Affairs Minister, he also gave a lecture at a think tank in the capital. Meanwhile, military-to-military cooperation continued with the Indian Army Chief visiting Myanmar in January 2012 and assuring a higher intake of Myanmar cadets in the NDA, among other things. India and Myanmar have also continued to interact at the regional and subregional levels through ASEAN, BIMSTEC, the Mekong Ganga Cooperation forum and SAARC (Myanmar is an Observer since 2008). Myanmar became a BIMSTEC member in December 1997. It took over as the chair of BIMSTEC from India in 2006.
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Conclusion
India has quite dexterously handled the ongoing phase of transition in Myanmar based on its conviction that it needs to engage with the regime in power while gradually attempting to bring about a desirable change in the country. Given its deeper understanding of the ground situation as well as a policy that seeks to aid sustainable development and harmonious growth, India is likely to continue to enjoy a special position in Myanmar. Much goodwill will be generated if India were to work towards addressing the real needs of the people of Myanmar. This, in particular, implies strengthening the health and education sectors in that countrys border areas. There are many things that should work in Indias favour including geographical proximity, common colonial legacy, common cultural bonds, Indias democratic credentials and membership of common organisations/forums, which can be used by both countries to transform their experience of the past into a common strength.
INDIA PREPARES
Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
Bilateral/Multilateral News...
Move To Rework Bilateral Treaties
With six firms, including Devas Employees, Telenor, Vodafone, Loop Telecom and Sistema, having served notices on India for breach of Bilateral Investment Protection Agreement (BIPA), the Industry Ministry has set in motion the process for review of BIPA, paving the way for re-negotiation under changed circumstances. The notices are the fall-out of the cancellation of 122 licences by the Supreme Court in the 2G scam and the decision of the Manmohan Singh Government to amend, with retrospective effect, the taxation case against Vodafone involving recovery of Rs.20,000 crore in tax. The retrospective amendment, which had already been approved by the Lok Sabha, would undo the victory achieved by Vodafone in the tax case pertaining to its acquisition of Hutchison in Hutchison Essar in a $11.2-billion deal in 2007. The basic objective of BIPA is to promote and protect the interests of investors of either country in the territory of other nation. Such agreements increase the comfort level of the investors by assuring a minimum standard of treatment in all matters and provides for justifiability of disputes with the host country. India has so far signed BIPAs with 82 countries. Out of which, 72, including that of with Russia, Germany, the U.K. and the Netherlands, have already come into force and the remaining agreements are in the process of being enforced. Natural Gas R.P.N. Singh, during which he was told that India would favourably consider the proposal for gas exploration and training.
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Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
Mahaparinibbana Sutta , penned in the fifth century BC, one portion of the relics was handed to the Sakyas of Kapilavastu. These came to be known as the Kapilavastu relics.
in India and so deep rooted is the goodwill that our relations and engagement enjoy a national consensus. Minister Nath added that India and Japan together can be the engines of the Asian economic community. The significant areas for further co-operation sought from Japan included interalia urban monorail projects, intelligent transport systems and Regional Rapid Transit Systems (RRTS). Explaining the need for safe, reliable, economical, quick, comfortable and effective mass public transit system, monorail projects were discussed as feeders for metro rail in bigger cities as well as stand alone systems in tier II cities. The high speed rail based RRTS would enable people living in the suburbs of metropolitan cities, say within radius of 100 kms, to commute for work thereby easing the pressure on the infrastructure services within the metropolitan city. The other issues discussed included the need for closer cooperation and sharing of knowledge in the areas of Transit Oriented Development along Mass Transit Corridors. Proper development in transit corridors implies densification in these areas thereby reducing the overall travel demand and generating substantial urban space. Capacity building including design of Metro Stations to do multimodal integration and revenue generation was also discussed. Other aspects of urban infrastructure such as water supply, waste management and sewage disposal also formed part of discussion.
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Indo-Japan Meet
Kamal Nath, Urban Development Minister, speaking at the India Japan Business Summit, said, The strategic partnership between India and Japan holds tremendous potential to bring prosperity and progress to our two Nations. So significant has been the contribution of Japan
INDIA PREPARES
Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
Meanwhile, the World Health Organisation, in a resolution, has impressed on member-states with polio virus transmission to declare it a national public health emergency, making polio virus eradication a national priority programme, requiring the development and full implementation of emergency action plans, to be updated every six months, till such time the virus transmission has been interrupted. The resolution declares completion of polio virus eradication a programmatic emergency for global public health, requiring full implementation of the existing and new eradication strategies, the institution of strong national oversight, and accountability mechanisms for all areas affected with the virus. The members have been asked to eliminate unimmunised areas and maintain very high population immunity against polio viruses through routine immunisation. Where necessary, they should supplement immunisation activities, maintain vigil for polio virus importation and emergence of circulating vaccine-derived polio viruses, and to make available urgently the financial resources required for the full and continued implementation, till 2013, of the strategic approaches to interrupt polio virus transmission globally, and to initiate planning for financing to the end of 2018 the polio endgame strategy.
billion. The agreement was signed by the Bahrain delegation led by Prince Salman Bin HamadAl-Khalifa, the Crown Prince of Bahrain and chairman of the Bahrain Economic Development Board (EDB) and representatives from Bahrain Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BCCI). In addition to the Tax Information Exchange Agreement, a number of commercial and economic cooperation agreements were signed, including a memorandum of understanding (MoU) between the Bahrain Chamber of Commerce and the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) to promote mutually advantageous commercial and industrial interests. The scope for cooperation, which comes into force with immediate effect, includes regular exchange of market information, business opportunities and economic delegations for promoting trade, investment and commercial exchange. The formation of the India-Bahrain Business Council, with the objective of developing economic, trade and technical relations between India and Bahrain, was also announced. An MoU between Bahrain and India to undertake a sustained effort to boost joint ventures and initiatives in ICT, including measures on e-commerce, e-government and information security was also signed.
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Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
Ocean. The development came after Sri Lankan powerful Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa held meetings with Indian Defence Minister A K Anthony and Gen Martin Dempsey, the US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on the margins of the Shangri-La security summit in Singapore. As two key strategic partners of Sri Lanka, both the US and India responded positively to a request made by Secretary of Defence for enhanced training opportunities for capacity building of defence personnel in their institutes of repute, the External Affairs Ministry said. Punjab to tie up with Israeli co to promote dairy farming The Punjab government will tie up with Israel-based Afimilk company to provide technical support to states farmers in order to promote dairy farming. A decision to this effect was taken by Punjab chief minister Parkash Singh Badal at a meeting with a delegation of an Israeli company and members of Progressive Dairy Farmers Association. Afimilk provides technical support to dairy farming sector world over and it also has worlds highest yielding cows with 12,000 litres of milk per cow per year through intensive use of advanced technology. Badal asked the delegation to provide their technical support to the dairy farmers in Punjab. He also said that government would also constitute districtlevel committees to aware and assist the farmers and other interested ones about setting up of dairy farms.
it was like a peep into the future. The External Affairs Minister, here to attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit, where India has been an observer since 2005, said he indicated Indias desire to be a full-fledged member of the six-member security grouping. It was indeed very heartening to hear from Vice Premier Li that the modalities of admitting new members is being worked out, the process is on, he said. We have moved in a more positive direction of finalising the modalities. Among the modalities, Indian officials said, was agreeing on a third working language for the grouping, which now deals in Chinese and Russian. Asked about comments made by a senior Chinese official who ruled out a timetable for granting membership and called on members to work hard, Mr. Krishna said, We are working indeed very hard to comply with the modalities. We have shown our seriousness, otherwise nobody would be coming to attend these meetings since 2005. This is my third meeting as foreign minister of a huge county like India. Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan, which was appointed an observer to the group on Wednesday, were, however, represented at the summit by their Presidents. Mr. Krishna, however, said that the lot of strength that India brought when it joined a grouping will have to be evaluated. Mr. Krishna said he courted Chinese investment in the massive expansion of our infrastructure development, and addressed Chinese concerns on perceptions that security threats were hindering the entry of Chinese companies. Mr. Krishna said India was willing to create a level playing field and total transparency in terms of international bidding, evaluation and then ultimately decision-making. He also stressed that trade had to be more balanced, with the deficit reaching a record $ 27 billion last year. The two countries also confirmed that they would discuss the issue of trans-border rivers next month, when a working group would meet to carry forward the earlier discussions, in which they had agreed to share hydrological data. At past meetings, China had sought to allay any Indian concern at the diversion of the Brahmaputra, stressing that it had so far built only one run-of-the-river project at Zangmu in Tibet and had not embarked on any diversion projects. Chinese officials also expressed their interest in opening a third consulate in India, and expanding Chinas diplomatic presence beyond the consulates in Mumbai and Kolkata, and the embassy in New Delhi.
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With view to the future, India, China plot way forward for ties
External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna discussed the future of Indias relations with China with the Chinese leader widely expected to become the countrys next Premier, seeking closer economic ties with Beijing but also engaging with new challenges facing the relationship such as the South China Sea and the changing security situation in the AsiaPacific. We discussed the bigger picture, and the vision that the Vice Premier has for the India-China relationship and what he believes to be the agenda for the next decade. So I think
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Economy@IP
EcoNomy@IP...
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allegation before a governmental agency, especially a foreign one, can gain access to account information. Tax evasion, for example, is considered a misdemeanor in Switzerland rather than a crime.
federal law relating to International Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters. Debt recovery and bankruptcies Assets can be frozen and handed over Criminal proceedings (money to the foreign authorities concerned. laundering, association with a Assistance in criminal matters follows criminal organization, theft, tax the principles of dual criminality, fraud, blackmail, etc.) specialty and proportionality. According to the Swiss Bankers International mutual legal Association Web site, however, there conclusion assistance proceedings is also a duty for bankers to provide Switzerland is required to assist It is basically the combination of all information under the following the authorities of foreign states in above factors that Swiss banks are circumstances: considered as a safe haven for stashing Civil proceedings (such as criminal matters as a result of the 1983 illegal money.
inheritance or divorce)
Economy News...
Panel for flexibility in LNG transportation
Keeping in mind the continued shortfall in domestic gas production and the mounting demand for gas, an inter-Ministerial Committee has pitched for flexibility in transportation of LNG and keeping in abeyance the guidelines of Director-General (Shipping) for grant of licence to LNG vessels. at different forums. Consultations give the parties an opportunity to discuss the matter and to find a satisfactory solution without proceeding further with litigation. After 60 days, if consultations fail to resolve the dispute, the complainant may request adjudication by a panel.
cabinet clears signing of pact for buying gas from turkmenistan This decision follows the report of the inter-ministerial
committee on Review of existing LNG shipping policy, which felt that the DG Shipping guidelines for grant of licence to LNG vessels should not be implemented at this juncture as it could hamper the free import of the muchneeded LNG. The guidelines stated that LNG vessel should be Indian flag vessel; Indian shipping entity to own 26 per cent; employ minimum two Indian officers and two trainee officers/cadets; LNG importer cannot fix spot vessels for more than 10 per cent of the total annual imports and transfer technology to Indian partner within five years.
In what could prove to be a major corridor for energy sourcing in the future, the Union Cabinet, on Thursday, approved the signing of the agreement for buying gas from Turkmenistan through the $7.6 billion Turkmenistan-Aghanistan-PakistanIndia (TAPI) pipeline. The approval has given a concrete shape to the pipeline which could prove to be a big boost to the relations between India and Pakistan and bring good news to the region.
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The contentious issue of transit fee was also resolved with India agreeing to pay both Afghanistan and Pakistan a However, the committee decided that to provide flexibility transit fee of $0.50 per million metric British thermal unit in the transportation of LNG, the DG Shipping guidelines for (mmBtu) for allowing passage of gas through their respective grant of licence to LNG vessels should be kept in abeyance. territories. This was one of the major points that had been a bone of contention between the three neighbouring India to move wto against U.S. visa fee hike countries. India will seek consultations with the United States under The Cabinet approved signing of the Gas Sale and Purchase the aegis of World Trade Organisation (WTO) this week on Agreement (GSPA), officials in the Petroleum and Natural Gas visa fee hike for professionals, which discriminates against Ministry said. India will pay a price linked to fuel oil for the Indian software companies that send employees to the U.S. natural gas, which, at current oil prices, translates into a rate on short-term contracts. of $8-10 per mmBtu. India would also pay a transportation We have finalised our case. The U.S. visa fee hike is a discriminatory move against Indian IT firms. This week, we will formally file the complaint and seek consultations under WTO, a senior Commerce and Industry Ministry official told PTI. As per the procedure of WTO, consultation is the first stage of a complaint filed with the global trade body. The U.S. had raised visa fee in 2010 to fund its enhanced costs on securing border with Mexico under the Border Security Act. India has been protesting against the measure charge for wheeling of natural gas from 1,735-km long pipeline, which is likely to be operational by 2016. The pipeline will run from Turkmenistans Yoloten-Osman gas field to Herat and Kandahar province of Afghanistan, before entering Pakistan. In Pakistan, it will reach Multan via Quetta before ending at Fazilka Punjab in India.
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Economy@IP
project in Gujarat, GAIL (India) is all set to establish a firm hold in the green energy sector and plans to set up 100 MW wind energy generation project (WEG) in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka and six other states at a cost of Rs.620 crore. The company is setting up another 14 MW WEG project in Gujarat partly for captive use in the State and part;y for sale to the State utility. GAIL is also in the process of setting up a 100 MW WEG project in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu for commercial use. The wind potential states such as Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Rajasthan are also on the radar of GAIL to expand its presence in the wind energy sphere, according to an internal plan document of the company. It says, the increasing prices of fossil fuel and the growing concern over global warming due to green house gases (GHG) emissions by fossil fuel-based power generation, have led to interest around the world for harnessing renewable sources for power generation. Based on the current trend in prices of wind mills along with associated activities, the cost of the proposed 100 MW wind energy project of GAIL is estimated at around Rs.620 crore. The initial projects in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka are envisaged to be commissioned during 2012-2013, it states.
will set the tone for an equitable, transparent and a more efficient economy, there is much that we could do, both individually and collectively, to strengthen the moral fibre of our society. The Paper suggested four-pronged strategy to curb generation of black money. These include more incentives for voluntary compliance of tax laws, reforms in vulnerable sectors of economy and creation credible deterrence. It mentioned that reform of financial and real estate sectors would help in reducing generation of black money in long term as freeing of gold imports had helped in checking smuggling. Fine tuning of financial regulation remains one of the key areas in creating deterrence against generation of black money and detecting black money in the process of being laundered...Strengthening of other reporting regimes can allow appropriate systems for flagging of dubious transactions in future and improve the probability of their timely detection and prevention, it added.
The expansion of information exchange network at the However, further action in the monetary policy front would international level will help in curbing cross-border flow be constrained by inflationary pressures and limited spare of illicit wealth, he said, adding while these measures capacity, OECD said, adding that spending pressures, notably
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Economy@IP
for estimation of the poverty and identification of the poor, Economic worries over the past few months like rupee Minister of State for Planning Ashwani Kumar said. He said depreciation, high inflation and current account deficit have that the expert group is expected to give its report in 7-9 acted as big dampeners for the India growth story, which months. was seeing a growth rate of 8-9% during pre-global crisis. Outlining the need for revisiting the methodology for The Indian economy has slowed owing to weakness estimating poverty, Mr. Kumar said, Peoples perspective in manufacturing and investment spending. Meanwhile, about poverty has changed. Therefore, we need to take a softening external demand and rising imports have resulted fresh look into the methodology for estimation of poverty in a widening current account deficit (CAD). CAD arises when in the country. The Commissions estimates, based on a countrys imports are more than exports. CAD stood at Tendulkar Committee methodology, that people consuming around $45.9 billion, or 2.7% of the GDP in FY11. The CAD is more than Rs. 28.65 per daily in cities and Rs. 22.42 in rural projected to be around four% (or $77 billion) of the national areas are not poor, had triggered a controversy which even rocked the Parliament. GDP in FY13.
The members of expert group which would suggest alternative methods of estimating poverty are Mahendra Dev, Director, Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research, K. Sundaram, Mahesh Vyas from Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy and former Advisor, (Perspective Planning) Planning Commission, K L Datta.
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The government, announced the constitution of a committee under the chairmanship of C. Rangarajan, Chairman, Prime Rangarajan to head panel for reviewing Ministers Economic Advisory Council, to review the existing poverty line production sharing contracts (PSCs) in light of the recent spat The Planning Commission constituted an expert group headed between Reliance Industries Ltd. (RIL) and the Petroleum by noted economist C. Rangarajan to review the Tendulkar Ministry. Committee methodology for estimating poverty. The review comes after the Comptroller and Auditor General Government has decided to set up an expert technical (CAG) in its draft report had asked the Petroleum Ministry to group chaired by Chairman of Prime Ministers Economy carry out a comprehensive review of the PSCs to protect the Advisory Council C. Rangarajan to revisit the methodology interests of the Government.
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Economy@IP
It will also explore various contract models with a view to minimising monitoring of expenditure of the contractor without compromising, firstly, on the hydrocarbons output across time and, secondly, on the governments take; suggest a suitable mechanism for managing the contract implementation of PSCs which is being handled at present by the representation of regulator/government nominee appointed to the Management Committee and come out with suitable governmental mechanisms to monitor and to audit Government of India (GOI) share of profit petroleum. The committee will look into the structure and elements of the guidelines for determining the basis or formula for the price of domestically produced gas, and for monitoring actual price fixation; and any other issues relating to PSCs.
since broadband penetration has been an abysmal policy failure. The policy aspires to make India a global hub of domestic manufacturing, though not much detail on how this mammoth objective will be achieved is available. The draft policy had mentioned preferential market access for Indian vendors as one of the tactics to ensure a boost to telecom manufacturing in India. This drew severe criticism from the Commerce Ministry on grounds that it violated Indias commitments at WTO and GATT. The DoT was forced to give an explicit commitment that WTO and GATTs concerns would be kept in view while issuing guidelines on operationalisation of the policy.
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The NTP 2012 expects to take Indias rural teledensity from 39 to 70% in the next 5 years with the target that every New telecom Policy seeks to abolish roaming single Indian will have a phone by 2020. The policy also gets charges a formal approval of the new unified licensing regime which The Union Cabinet approved the National Telecom Policy allows companies to provide ISP, fixed line, international long (NTP) 2012, which has been released after a delay of over distance, national long distance, and a few other services a year. through a single licence, whose cost has been proposed by Originally intended to be NTP 2011, the draft policy was the DoT at Rs. 10 crore. So far, very few companies, if any, released for public comments only in October 2011, forcing have shown a desire to acquire the new unified licence. it to be rechristened NTP 2012. The actual timelines for the Ioc, mRPL may be roped in to run HPL implementation of individual announcements within the To save the ailing Haldia Petrochemicals Ltd. (HPL), a new telecom policy are yet to be spelled out. proposal is being mooted to put two oil sector PSUs IOC With the new policy in place, consumers who use national and MRPL in charge of running the company, which is roaming can now expect to pay local call charges though it now grappling severe cash crunch which has jeopardised its is unclear when free roaming will be initiated. At present, operations. consumers pay local call charges and a premium when travelling outside their service area. The policy also allows Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) already holds over 8 per cent national number portability, but again, with no visible equity in the joint venture HPL in which the West Bengal Government and The Chatterjee Group (TCG) have major timelines. equity holdings. IOC had, years back, shown interest Other forward-looking propositions like resale of services in taking up a major role in the petrochemical company, could become critical in the backdrop of the Supreme Courts which met with resistance from the private sector promoter cancellation of 122 licences, which will cease to exist as Purnendu Chatterjee (of TCG). of August 1, 2012. A sharp reduction in the competition level from 14 operators currently to 7-8 operators could be The acrimonious relationship between the two main promoters made up by allowing mobile companies to set up resellers. triggered by this incident has spilled over from the previous Services resale is universally recognised as a way to government to the present with Mr. Chatterjee moving to increase competition without duplicating infrastructure or take matters to an International Court of Arbitration. These fragmenting the spectrum. Additionally, it mentions cloud uncertainties, coupled with adverse market conditions and high computing, next generation networks, IPV6 and Voice over naphtha prices, have brought a gamut of problems for HPL. Internet Protocol (VoIP) as thrust areas all of which are forward-looking and embrace future technologies. It Slew of measures to rev up exports remains to be seen whether average Internet users will be Faced with uncertain global environment, the Central allowed to use VoIP, especially since this move has been Government, on Tuesday, announced a slew of measures, opposed vehemently over the last 5 years by cellular mobile including extension of two per cent interest subsidy by one year, as part of seven-point strategy to achieve 20 per cent operators. increase in exports to $360 billion in the current fiscal.
Policy promises broadband for all with minimum download speed of 2 megabits
Unveiling the annual supplement to the five-year Foreign Trade Policy, Commerce Ministry Anand Sharma said the The National Telecom Policy (NTP) 2012, approved by the government would soon come out with new guidelines to Union Cabinet, promises broadband for all with a minimum revamp special economic zones (SEZ) and export-oriented download speed of 2 megabits. But it will be a challenge unit (EOU) schemes to further boost the shipments.
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Economy@IP
As part of the seven-point strategy to boost exports, the government has accepted the key demand of industry to extend the two per cent interest subsidy till March, 2013. We have now decided to extend the scheme for another year till March, 2013, and expand its coverage to include other labour-intensive sectors, namely, toys, sports goods, processed agricultural products and ready-made garments, he said. India Inc, including the exporters community, welcomed the measures, saying that these initiatives would help tide over the problem being faced by exporters on account of global demand slowdown.
To encourage exports, the government had come out with an interest subvention scheme, which ended on March 31, 2012. We have taken a decision now to extend it (zero duty EPCG scheme) up to March 31, 2013. We have also decided The quantum jump in investment in these sectors, with to enlarge the scope of the scheme, he said, adding that significant private sector participation through PPP (publicthe EPCG scheme was operational till March, 2012. private partnership) mode, is expected to provide a massive At present, benefits under the scheme are not available to boost to overall manufacturing activity in allied sectors in units which are availing themselves of benefits under the a scenario when, after achieving a remarkably high growth Technology Upgradation Fund Scheme (TUFS) and the Status rate over the past eight years, the Indian economy is now Holder Incentive Scheme (SHIS). To give a thrust to labour- running into more turbulent weather. intensive exports, the government is doing away with the Participating in the brainstorming session were Ministers condition of maintaining the average level of exports for and Secretaries of key infrastructure Ministries of Power, sectors such as carpets, coir and jute. Roads, Shipping, Civil Aviation and Coal, in which Planning In order to reduce transaction costs, the government has introduced a new post-export EPCG scheme, which will provide flexibility to exporters for importing capital goods. Under this, exporters will be entitled to obtain duty-free scrip in proportion to the actual exports.
Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia made a presentation on how these targets were finalised and the explained the high level of ambition they represent.
Explaining the rationale for increased investment in the core sector, Dr. Singh said that development of infrastructure To promote manufactured exports of green technology would always be an integral part of any strategy for fast products, export obligation under the EPCG scheme is being economic development. In the short term, development of reduced for 16 products, including solar cells, wind turbines, infrastructure will boost investment rates across the economy. water treatment plants, electrically operated vehicles. In the long run, it will remove the supply constraints that To promote manufacturing activity and generating affect industry and trade, he said pointing out that the employment in the northeastern States, the government has government alone would not be able to meet the vast reduced the export obligation under the scheme for exporters investment needs of over $1 trillion in the next five years of those areas. Under the market diversification scheme, this and, therefore, it is important that we involve the private year, the government has added seven new markets to the sector in our efforts, through Public Private Partnerships. Focus Market Scheme (FMS) and same number to the Special cabinet nod for Rs.632-cr capital infusion in Focus Market Scheme. The new markets include Austria, RRBs Myanmar, the Netherlands Ukraine, Morocco and Uruguay. Forty six new items were being added to the Market-Linked The Union Cabinet, approved a capital infusion of Rs.632 Focus Product Scheme. It was extended till March, 2013, crore into the cash-starved regional rural banks (RRBs) to for export to the U.S. and the EU in respect of the apparel improve their capital adequacy norms and capacity to lend to the farm sector. sector, Mr. Sharma said. To boost manufacturing, SHIS scripholder may transfer the scrip to another SHIS holder, who has a manufacturing facility. The SHIS allows import of capital goods for technology upgradation in specified sectors. Further, it has been decided that exports shipped through courier and e-commerce platform will be eligible for export benefits if shipments are effected from Delhi and Mumbai. At its meeting chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, the Cabinet also decided to extend the scheme of recapitalising weak RRBs by another two years as all the States have not contributed their share in the capital infusion process as yet. As a result, capitalisation has been completed for only 16 banks till March this year. Announcing the Cabinet decision, an official statement said: The Union Cabinet, on Thursday, approved the release of 50 per cent share of the Central Government for
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recapitalisation of the remaining RRBs to improve their capital to risk weighted assets ratio (CRAR) The release of Central Government share is subject to the release of State Government and sponsor bank share.
India is the eighth biggest exporter of marine food products to the fast-growing China market, where consumption has rapidly grown with rising prosperity. Indian exports of frozen fish products grew to $155.7 million in 2010, before falling In 2009-10, based on the recommendations of Reserve Bank to $148.8 million last year on account of the suspension of Deputy Governor K. C. Chakrabarty, the government had orders. Exports reached $35 million in the first four months initiated the process of recapitalising 40 financially weak of this year. RRBs to help them in providing credit to the rural and farm Indias import bill jumps 40% to $140 billion sectors. Indias oil import bill leaped 40 per cent to a record $140 Under the scheme, while the Centres share in the capital billion in Financial Year 2011-12 as high oil prices shaved infusion is pegged at 50 per cent, the State Government off much of the nations GDP growth rate, Oil Minister S and the sponsor bank concerned have to chip in with their Jaipal Reddy said. contribution of 15 per cent and 35 per cent, respectively. Speaking at the 5th OPEC International Seminar in Vienna, china clears way for Indian marine products Reddy said it was estimated that a sustained $10 increase Indias growing exports of marine food products to the in oil prices lead to a 1.5 per cent reduction in the GDP of lucrative $5.5 billion China market have received a boost developing countries. after Chinas quarantine authority granted approval to Indian We have seen evidence of this in our own country: Indias exporters, ending more than a year of uncertainty after the GDP grew at 6.9 per cent during the last financial year (201112) down from the 8 per cent plus growth rate experienced introduction of new regulations. Chinas General Administration of Quality Supervision, in the past few years, he said. Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ) last week announced that it had given the green light to 37 countries to export marine products, after orders had been suspended last year following a revision of safety regulations. Reddy, whose speech copy was released by his office, said between the 2010-11 and 2011-12, the worlds fourth largest oil importer saw its average cost of imported crude oil rising by $27 per barrel, making Indias oil import bill rise from Countries were given one year to comply with the new $100 billion to $140 billion dollars. regulations, put in place to ensure greater safety and in the Higher international oil prices lead to domestic inflation, wake of concerns over imports from Japan after the nuclear increased input costs, an increase in the budget deficit scares at Fukushima. According to the rules, consignments which invariably drives up interest rates and slows down the had to be accompanied with certificates issued by the economic growth, he said. Also, net oil importing countries relevant country that met the new AQSIQ regulations. like India experience a deterioration in their balance of payments, putting downward pressure on exchange rates.
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Science Spectrum
ScIENcE SPEctRum...
Venus is the third brightest object in the entire sky (after the sun and the moon). The planets orbits Sun in elliptical orbits. Mercury and Venus are the Although Venus is most definitely first two planets according to radial not a star, it appears more than 10 planets outside the solar system. distance from the sun. Being nearer times brighter than the brightest to Sun than the earth when Venus star, Sirius. Measuring dips in a stars brightness passes through directly between The planets brightness stems from caused by Venus transiting the the Earth and Sun, then the transit Sun will help astronomers find the fact that, unlike Mercury, Venus occurs. Geometrically the event is exoplanets. is highly reflective with an albedo similar to solar eclipse. of over 0.7 that is more than 70 Measurements made of the apparent They occur in a pattern that generally per cent of the sunlight reaching diameter of Venus during the transit, repeats every 243 years, with pairs of Venus is reflected back into space. and comparison with its known transits eight years apart separated Most of the sunlight is reflected diameter, will give scientists an by long gaps of 121.5 years and from the clouds high in the planets idea of how to estimate exoplanet 105.5 years. The periodicity is a dense atmosphere. sizes. reflection of the fact that the ratio Venus rotates very slowly once Spectrographic data taken of the of orbital periods of Earth and Venus about its own axis in 243 days- and well-known atmosphere of Venus are close to 8:13 and 243:395. spins clockwise - opposite of the will be compared to studies of The last transit of Venus was on 5 earth. exoplanets whose atmospheres are and 6 June 2012, and was the last It orbits sun in 224.65 days. thus far unknown. Venus transit of the 21st century; Venusian atmosphere The Hubble Space Telescope, which the prior transit took place on 8 The cannot be pointed directly at the experiences super-rotation. That is June 2004. The previous pair of Sun, used the Moon as a mirror - the whole atmosphere circles the transits was in December 1874 and to study the light that had passed planet in four Earth days, on a body December 1882. The next transits of through the atmosphere of Venus in that turns around just once in 243 Venus will be on December 1011, order to determine its composition. Earth days. 2117, and in December 2125. This will help to show whether a The planets Venus and Mercury, Research importance of similar technique could be used to seen from the earth, are too small transit of Venus: study exoplanets. to cover the sun completely; their Researchers also took a close look at shadow cones fall far short of Transit of Venus was one of the Venus itself during the transit, used first methods used to measure the reaching the surface of the earth. the occasion to probe the middle mean distance from the earth to The appearance of a transit is that layers of the planets atmosphere - Sun called astronomical unit of a black dot slowly crossing the its mesosphere. (AU) by measuring the transit time disc of the sun from east to west. in different places of earth. Several Overall, it is one of the most The shadow of Mercury against the astronomers calculated the distance celebrated phenomena in astronomy sun is too small to see without a in 1874 and 1882 transit. as many astronomers of yore have telescope. The Shadow of Venus can be observed without telescope by The importance of Venus transit lamented that they could never hope projection or through proper filters 2012 is particularly important for to see one in their lifetime. to protect the eye. research about exo-planets, the
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Science Bulletin
ScIENcE NEwS...
SPAcE AND AStRoNoMy
ISRo plans to launch satellite for Navy in a few months
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has built a dedicated satellite for the Navy which will be launched in a few months by an Ariane-5 rocket from the Kourou Island in French Guiana. The communication satellite that weighs 2.5 tonnes is currently undergoing thermo-vacuum tests at the ISRO Satellite Centre in Bangalore. But the space organisation has not so far officially acknowledged that the satellite is meant for the Navy and has given it an innocuous name, GSAT-7. The GSAT series, built by the ISRO, are communication satellites which cannot be used for surveillance. The Navy will use GSAT-7 to communicate with its submarines, frigates, destroyers and aircraft from its centres on the shore. The ISROs annual report for 2011-12 has sparse information on GSAT-7. It merely says, GSAT-7, a multi-band satellite, is planned to be launched on board a procured launcher during 2012. The report, in another place, adds, The satellite employs the standard 2.5 tonne bus platform with the power handling capability of around 2,600 W and a lift-off mass of 2,550 kg. All the mainframe and the payload elements have been delivered. The satellite will be ready for shipment for launch during 2012. The ISROs 2010-2011 report is a little more liberal with information. It says, GSAT-7 is a multi-band satellite carrying payloads in UHF [ultra-high frequency], S-band, C-band and Ku-bandThe configuration of the satellite has been finalized and the design of the new payload elements is completed. The platform systems are under fabrication and payload sub-system realisation is on-going. Although the ISRO planned to launch GSAT-7 in 2011 onboard an indigenous Geo-Synchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV) from Sriharikota, it has been forced to go abroad because of its failures with its GSLV in April 2010 and December 2010. The GSLV could not put GSAT-4 into orbit in April 2010 after its indigenous cryogenic engine failed to ignite. The next GSLV flight in December 2010, with a Russian cryogenic engine, failed too. It was to have hoisted into orbit GSAT-5P. These failures and the long time that is being taken to build the GSLV-Mark III rocket with an indigenous cryogenic engine have delayed the launch of Chandrayan-II and the ISROs efforts to send an Indian astronaut into space. With the GSLV with an indigenous cryogenic engine yet to prove its mettle and its performance with a Russian cryogenic engine below par, the ISRO does not want to take chances with GSAT-7.
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Science Bulletin
global Internet traffic. It will be able to survey the sky more than ten thousand times faster than ever before. The 1.5bn-euro (1.2bn) SKAs huge fields of antennas will sweep the sky for answers to the major outstanding questions in astronomy. They will probe the early Universe, test Einsteins theory of gravity and even search for alien intelligent life. The project aims to produce a radio telescope with a combined collecting area of one million square metres - equivalent to about 200 football pitches. To do this, it will have to combine the signals received by thousands of small antennas spread over thousands of kilometres. The SKA will have 3,000 antennas across a vast semi-desert part of South Africa known as the Karoo. The site is already home to seven massive Gregorian dish antennas that form part of the Karoo Array Telescope, or Kat7. South Africa is also pressing ahead with a 64-dish project, Meerkat, which is a precursor to SKA. The SKA will map precisely the positions of the nearest billion galaxies. The structure they trace on the cosmos should reveal new details about dark energy, the mysterious negative pressure that appears to be pushing the Universe apart at an ever-increasing speed. The telescope will also detail the influence of magnetic fields on the development of stars and galaxies. And it will zoom in on pulsars, the dead stars that emit beams of radio waves that sweep across the Earth like super-accurate time signals. Astronomers believe these dense objects may hold the key to a more complete theory of gravity than that proposed by Einstein. The SKAs members include the UK, Netherlands, Italy, China, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. India has associate member status.
flawless, beginning with the May 22 launch aboard the SpaceX companys Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral and continuing through the space station docking three days later and the departure a scant six hours before hitting the water. Musk(Man who founded SpaceX), the billionaire behind PayPal and Tesla Motors, aims to launch the next supply mission in September under a steady contract with NASA, and insists astronauts can be riding Dragons to and from the space station in as little as three or four years. The next version of the Dragon, for crews, will land on terra firma with helicopter precision from propulsive thrusters, he noted. Initial testing is planned for later this year. President Barack Obama is leading this charge to commercial spaceflight. He wants routine orbital flights turned over to private business so the space agency can work on getting astronauts to asteroids and Mars. Toward that effort, NASA has provided hundreds of millions of dollars in seed money to vying companies. NASA astronauts are now forced to hitch rides on Russian rockets from Kazakhstan, an expensive and embarrassing outsourcing, especially after a half-century of manned launches from U.S. soil. It will be up to SpaceX or another U.S. enterprise to pick up the reins. Several companies are jockeying for first place. SpaceX or more properly Space Exploration Technologies Corp. plans to hustle off a few returning items while still at sea to demonstrate to NASA a fast 48-hour turnaround. That capability would be needed for future missions bearing vital experiments. This was only the second time a Dragon has returned from orbit. In December 2010, SpaceX conducted a solo-flying shakedown cruise. Like the Dragon before it, this capsule will likely become a travelling exhibit. Russias Soyuz capsules for carrying crews also parachute down but on land, deep inside Kazakhstan. All of the governmentprovided cargo vessels of Russia, Europe and Japan are filled with station garbage and burn up on descent. NASA lost the capability of getting things back when its shuttles were retired last July. Rival Orbital Sciences Corp. hopes to have its first unmanned test flight off by years end, launching from Wallops Island in Virginia. It, too, has a NASA contract for cargo runs. The grand prize, though, will involve getting American astronauts flying again from U.S. soil and, in doing so, restore national prestige. The Commercial Spaceflight Federation considers the Dragons success a critical stepping stone. Its a seminal moment for the U.S. as a nation, and indeed for the world, said its chairman, Eric Anderson.
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DEfENcE tEchNology
Surface-to-air Akash missile
Boosting its air defence shield and re-validating operational
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Science Bulletin
efficacy, India in may 2012 successfully test fired its indigenously-developed surface-to- air Akash missile from the Integrated Test Range at Chandipur, about 15 km from Balasore (Odisha). The user-specific trial, which formed part of the countrys routine air defence exercises, was successful, said a Defence Research Development Organisation (DRDO) official associated with the Akash missile project. The Akash weapon system was inducted into the armed forces in 2008. The missile, which has a strike range of 25 km with a warhead of 60 kgs, was test fired from a mobile launcher from launch complexIII of the ITR, defence sources said. Akash, an antiaircraft defence system, can simultaneously engage several targets with Rajendra radar developed by the Electronics and Radar Development Establishment (LRDE), a DRDO laboratory in Bangalore. Rajendra does the surveillance, tracks the target, acquires it and guides the missile towards it. The development of Akash missile took place during 1990s under the countrys Integrated Guided Missile Development Programme (IGMDP) and after many trials, it was inducted into the armed forces. An airforce version of the Akash missile has also been developed by the DRDO. Rajendra is a passive phased array radar It is a multifunction radar, capable of tracking as many as 64 targets and controlling up to 12 missiles simultaneously.
On May 31, the military tested a version of the Hatf-VIII cruise missile with a range of over 350 k.m. The military said this test had helped Pakistan achieve strategic standoff capability on land and at sea.
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Defence experts have compared Akash missile system with the American MIM104 Patriot surfacetoair missile system. They claim that similar to the MIM104, the Akash is capable of neutralising aerial targets such as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), fighter jets, cruise missiles and air tosurface missiles.
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Science Bulletin
The researchers, who detailed their work in the journal Nature Climate Change, found that the shrubs grew most in years with warm Julys.
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INfoRMAtIoN tEchNology
googles campaign in Indian languages
Google has introduced a new campaign, titled Good to know in a few Indian languages to help Indian users understand and protect their online information, a release from the tech giant stated. This site, which focusses on how to stay safe online, will have information in Hindi and several other Indian languages. Everyone wants to stay safe online, so were making the campaign available in dozens more languages Were also incorporating the Google Family Safety Center website, which has included online safety tips since 2010, into Good to Know to make all this information available in one place, the release added. Information provided on these sites will include tips on safe browsing, insights into how user data is used on Google and around the Web, and on managing your familys online experience. For example, you can find out how to choose a strong password, recognise a phishing scam and double your account security with two-step verification. Cyber superweapon targets Iran A Russian computer firm has discovered a new computer virus with unprecedented destructive potential that chiefly targets Iran and could be used as a cyberweapon by the West and Israel.
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Science Bulletin
Kaspersky Lab, one of the worlds biggest producers of antivirus software, said its experts discovered the virus known as Flame during an investigation prompted by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). Iran appears to have been the main target of the attack and the announcement comes just a month after the Islamic Republic said it halted the spread of a data-deleting virus targeting computer servers in its oil sector. Kaspersky said the virus was several times larger than the Stuxnet worm that was discovered in 2010 and targeted the Iranian nuclear programme, reportedly at the behest of Western or Israeli security agencies. It said the main task of Flame is cyber espionage, meaning it steals information from infected machines including documents, screenshots and even audio recordings. It then sends the data to servers all over the world. While Stuxnet was designed for outright sabotage, Flame is described as an espionage virus, possibly intended to give its creators a detailed blueprint of Natanzs industrial computer control designs. Similar to its drone programme, the U.S. has never admitted using cyber weapons against other nations, although it is said to have recently acknowledged developing them. One of the most alarming facts is that the Flame cyberattack campaign is currently in its active phase, and its operator is consistently surveiling infected systems, collecting information and targeting new systems to accomplish its unknown goals, Alexander Gostev, chief security expert at Kaspersky Lab, said on the companys Web site. Meanwhile, Iran has confirmed that Flame had caused substantial damage and massive amounts of data had been lost in what may be most destructive cyber attack on the nation. The virus also damaged centrifuges operating at
its uranium enrichment facility at Nantaz as reports said that even computers of high-ranking officials had been penetrated. The alleged use of Stuxnet and Flame against Iran may, however, give pause to countries such as India, which have in recent months felt the heat of U.S. and Israeli pressure to cut down on Iranian oil imports and fall in line with bilateral sanctions. This pressure has been predicated on the presumed two-track approach which, in reality, would be a three-pronged approach if the cyber-attacks are confirmed as true.
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Science Spectrum
SCIENCE SPECTRum
Two Arguments
There are two sides to this debate: one that purely deals with the technopolitical aspect of the control of the Internet, and the other that deals with social and political policy debates. In purely technological terms, this debate revolved around the DNS root name servers or the Internet Domain Name System, which forms the backbone of communication on the Web. The DNS is a large database used by Internet applications to map or translate Web URLs to a unique IP address. All the generic names and the IP addresses for all top level domains (for the purpose of mapping) are stored in what is called a root zone file. What really matters here is who controls the root zone file. This file contains the domain names and IP addresses that enable the querying-mapping process. The root zone file, and access or authority to edit it, is what is crucial in this debate because finally the architecture of the DNS system, and in essence the Internet, is dependent on how this file is handled. So, a domain is valid only if it is there on this file. As of now, this root zone file is controlled by the ICANN. And here lies the main problem. ICANN continues to be a non-profit registered in the U.S., one that is subject to decisions and laws made by the U.S. government. For instance, under the pretext of enforcing an IP regime, the U.S. can enforce alterations to the DNS system, as was proposed in the SOPA legislation, which was retracted after web companies and tech activists lobbied against it, earlier this year.
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Science Spectrum
keeping with the increasingly common Northern efforts at undermining U.N./ multi-lateral frameworks in other global governance arenas like trade, IP, etc. For instance: trying to keep global financial systems out of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Developments (UNCTAD) purview at the recent Doha UNCTAD meeting, and bringing in the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) as a new instrument of extra-territorial Internet Protocol (IP) enforcement by the OECD, bypassing World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO). The developing worlds point of view is that the UN bodies have a better track record as far as democratic methods go, where countries can sit together and vote. Which is why the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) countries are pushing for more equal control of the Internet as it is a global resource. Last year, Vladimir Putin, who was Russian Prime Minister at the time, stated his goal, to impose international control over the Internet through the International Telecom Union, a treaty-based organisation under the auspices of the U.N. Echoing this view, Houlin Zhao, Director of the ITUs
Telecommunications Standardization Bureau and former Chinese government official, said, The whole world is looking to a better solution to Internet governance, unwilling to maintain the current situation. Before this, China, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan had introduced a U.N. General Assembly resolution proposing a code of conduct for the global information society.
Conclusion
Thus, Internet should be governed on the principles of human liberty, equality and fraternity. It should be based on the accepted principle of the indivisibility of human rights; civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights, and also peoples collective right to development. Enhanced cooperation must be implemented through innovative multilateral mechanisms that are participatory. Internet policymaking cannot be allowed to remain the preserve of one country or clubs of rich countries. If the Internet is to promote democracy in the world, which incidentally is the much touted agenda of the U.S. and other Northern countries, the Internet itself has, first, to be governed democratically.
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HEALTH ISSuES...
INDIA PREPARES
Science Spectrum
Karnataka, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Chhattisgarh are some States that will meet the MDG target in the coming 25 years, while Madhya Pradesh is expected to achieve the goal in 2105 and Orissa in 2160 unless special strategies are adopted to speed up the progress, the report has said. The world has pledged to reduce by half the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation by 2015 from 1990 figures. Though India has already achieved impressive results on water supply, with 85 per cent of its people having access to safe drinking water, 51 per cent or 626 million people in the country defecate in the open, accounting for 60 per cent of the worlds total open defecations. India has seen an improvement in the sanitation figures from 1990, when 75 per cent people defecated in the open as against 51 per cent in 2010. But this improvement is seen only in the urban settings, where 28 per cent had no access to toilets in 1990 as against 14 per cent in 2010. In the rural areas, 91 per cent had no access to sanitation in 1990 as against 67 per cent in 2010, indicating that it was the rich who had more access to sanitation.
According to the report, about half of Indian households lacked access to sanitation facilities in 2008-09. More than 60 per cent of households in Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan and Uttarakhand were without toilets.
trillion or about 6.4 per of its gross domestic product. Diarrhoea alone claims four lakh lives annually, of which 90 percent are children. But tragically enough, the annual central budget is just Rs. 2000 crore which is just about two percent of the entire budget for Rural Development which is close to Rs.1 lakh crore.
Consequences
This habit of the countrymen makes the people prone to water-borne diseases, increasing the burden on the economy. India had an astounding number of 58% people defecating in the open. China and Indonesia are a distant second with just 5% of their population not having toilets. Pakistan and Ethiopia were third with 4.5% such people. Since most of the defecating places double up as playgrounds for rural children, chances of direct exposure also are high. Vectors like flies can bring the microbes into drinking water or food. The practice also creates a security risk for rural women besides it being a matter of dignity. Diarrhoea, a major illness spread through contaminated water, kills around 800 children below the age of 5 every day in the country. Out of the 555 million pre-school children in developing countries, 32 per cent have stunted growth and 20 per cent are underweight. These two conditions together cause the death of one in every five children before they turn 5 years of age. For those alive, the long-term consequences are severe poor performance in school, dropping out, intellectual deficits and therefore lower economic productivity as adults. Before Humphrey, doctors and public health specialists assumed that such stunting, underweight, and lower cognitive abilities in children are due to lack of enough nutrition or bouts of diarrhoea, or both.
Initiatives
What is needed is a political and social movement to cope with the problem and it could not be just an administrative programme. Stung by the fact that over 626 million Indians do not have access to toilets, Minister Jairam Ramesh has initiated the Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan (NBA) or Total Sanitation Campaign, which would attempt to banish open defecation within a decade. Haryana, considered to be having a patriarchal society, had taken up the challenge in a big way with the slogan sauchalaya nahi to dulhan nahi (no bride if there is no toilet),. Sulabh Shauchalaya, initiated in many cities by Mr. Bindeshwar Pathak, has been a boon to hundreds of thousands of people. The Gramalaya group in Tiruchi has now gone beyond towns and helps Anganwadis in some parts of Tamil Nadu. Another notable effort is that of the renowned nutrition scientist Dr. Mahtab Bamji and the gynecologist Dr. Devyani Dangoria, both of Hyderabad, have been working with several villages in the Narsapur area in Medak district. They work with the women there on matters of maternal and child health, nutrition, kitchen gardens for vegetables and greens, education of children and adults, and sanitation. However, the officials who are working at grass root level say that there was stiff opposition in most villages when they tried advocating the use of toilets. They believed a change in cultural behaviour of the people was the only way out.
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Economic impact
According to another report, the economic impact of inadequate sanitation costs India about Rs. 2.4
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Perspectives
PERSPEctIvES...
Opposing views
However, this ambitious plan to introduce a single entrance test for centrally funded engineering institutes, including NITs and IIITs hasnt gone down too well with lot of people including IIT faculty members and alumni. According to these dissenting voices the HRD Minister, Mr Kapil Sibal, is trying to replicate the US SAT without trying to understand the reality underlying the system. All of them have offered various reasons for their objections, but the underlying theme is that the Ministry has pushed the proposal through in undue haste, without factoring in the relevant concerns. While Union Minister for Human Resource Development Kapil Sibal claims that the IITs were on board in the decision to switch to a common admission test for all engineering institutes including the IITs, it does not appear to be the case. Else, why would IIT-Kanpur have rebelled against the move and announced its own test for 2013? Wiping out all other entrance exam and making ISEET the only
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Governments view
According to the MHRD, this formula appears very promising for 4 major reasons It is the much needed stress-buster for all the engineering aspirants It is promising solution for those who cant afford to apply to many of these tests. It brings more uniformity and transparency into admission process. It reduces the emphasis on coaching culture and enhances the participation of school education. This proposal may appear to have
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Perspectives
technical Education
Technical Education is one of the important pillars of Higher Education sector as it imparts practical knowledge to its students to build infrastructure for tomorrow. Besides generating skilled manpower, increasing industrial productivity, and improving the overall quality of life for the people, Technical Education also creates professionals in architecture, management, applied arts & crafts, hotel management and catering technology. The spread of education in society is at the foundation of success in todays globalized world, where the real wealth of a country is not in its tangible natural resources but in knowledge; as it is the driver of the economic development If a country wants its human resources to be highly-developed, it needs to invest in quality Technical Education for its youth. If a country wants economic prosperity, it has to strengthen its Technical Education system. This system creates skilled manpower, enhances industrial productivity, and, ultimately improves the quality of life. The Eleventh Plan, had envisaged major expansion in the Technical Education sector. This was done through increasing the number of the Centrally funded Institutions. During this Plan, 8 new IITs, 10 new NITs, 3 new IISERs, and 7 new IIMs were established. The enhancement of the numbers of these Institutions is expected to provide a solution to the major challenges of the system, which are:accessibility, quality maintenance, inclusiveness, etc. Some of the major initiatives that were launched to augment quality Technical Education in the country are as follows: Technical Education Quality Improvement Program (TEQIP), which is assisted by the World Bank Indian National Digital Library For Science And Technology (INDEST) technical Education Quality Improvement Programme Technical Education Quality Improvement Programme (TEQIP) was conceived and designed as a long term project to be implemented over a period of 10-12 years in 3 phases. The main aim of this programme is to support excellence and transformation in Technical Education in the country. tEQIP-I The first phase of TEQIP was implemented with the assistance of World Bank as a centrally coordinated Central and State Sector Project with a total cost of Rs. 1339 crore. Out of this, Rs. 306 crore was Central Component and the remaining Rs. 1033 crore was State Component. The programme became effective in March, 2003 and the closing date of the programme was March 31st, 2009.
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tEQIP-II Based on the achievements made during TEQIP Phase- 1, TEQIP Phase-2 is being implemented as a Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS) with the assistance of the World Bank at a total cost of Rs 2430 crore. The Central contribution will be Rs 1895.50 crore, out of which Rs. 1395.50 crore will be reimbursed by the World Bank. The State share will be Rs 518.50 crore and the Share of Private Unaided institutions will be Rs. 16 crore. The funding pattern will be 75:25 between the Centre and the participating States. However, for the North Eastern States, the funding pattern will be on a ratio of 90:10. tEQIP coverage The programme basically covers the following two components: 1) Improving Quality of Technical Education in selected Institutions. This component further has two more parts: Strengthening Institutions to improve learning outcomes and employability of graduates. Scaling-up Post Graduate Education and Demand-Driven R&D&I.
2) Improving System Management. The TEQIP-II project is for the duration of 4 years, during which it seeks to cover 200 institutions based on competitive funding to be selected as shown in the table given on the next page. Under subcomponent 1.1, the Government has selected 63 government/government aided and 25 private Institutions. Under subcomponent, 59 government aided and 14 private Institutions have been selected. The TEQIP is expected to provide the much-needed impetus to the dissemination of quality Technical Education to the students and for now, it seems to be doing its job. The Indian National Digital Library in Engineering Sciences and Technology (INDEST) Consortium was first set up in 2003 by the Ministry of Human Resource Development after an Expert Group recommended the same. The Expert Group was appointed by MHRD during the National Seminar on Knowledge Networking in Engineering Sciences and Technology held at IIT Delhi in November 2002. IIT Delhi has been designated as the Consortium Headquarters and it coordinates all the activities on behalf of INDEST. The core members of the Consortium are IITs, IISc Bangalore, NITs, IIITs, IISERs, IIMs, and a few other Institutions, which received funds from the Ministry to subscribe to electronic resources. However, it is not as if only the core members can benefit from the subscription to electronic resources. This facility is extended to all educational institutions under its open-ended proposition. The total number of members in the Consortium has gone up to be more than 750. In December 2005, the Consortium was renamed INDEST-AICTE Consortium with the AICTE playing a pivotal role in enrolling its approved engineering colleges and institutions as members of the Consortium for selected e-resources at much lower rates of subscription.
INDIA PREPARES
Perspectives
been fully endorsed even by the expert committee consulted for the purpose. The new scheme adds percentile marks in the board exam to actual marks being obtained by students in the new JEE exam. Percentile is indicative of rank while actual marks give a value based on the test performance. Adding the two in this way without a proper analysis is mathematically absurd. Further, the students should have an idea of how the percentage scores would be mapped to percentiles. How is it possible to standardise the marks of 36 state boards? In the school boards of Maharashtra and Goa, for example, students get almost 100 per cent marks, while in Bihar, Jharkhand and Uttar Pradesh, even 7080 per cent is quite difficult to score. This puts students of some states at a disadvantage for no fault of theirs. Whats more, the standard of education in state board schools, which cater mostly to the poor and underprivileged, is not uniform. There are schools that lack even basic facilities. So equating children from state board schools with those from elite schools will certainly go against the underprivileged lot in the national competition. The new JEE system will, in fact, alienate them quite effectively. What logic suggests that we inject something that is plagued by different kinds of unfair practices (board exams) paper leaks, mass copying, corruption, schedule glitches and revaluations into an entrance system that is currently working without these influences? IITs have become what they are because they have been allowed to function independently, and set standards in carrying out their academic responsibilities. The IIT Council proposal, if implemented, will seriously compromise the autonomy so essential for IITs to remain what they are. Perhaps its not the time. Our Union Minister should initiate wider consultations with all stakeholders of the IITs professors, students and the alumni to find solutions. The current system of selecting candidates for IITs is surely not perfect.
Far from it. There have been growing murmurs from the IIT faculty itself about the quality of students filtering through the system. A thriving industry has sprung up in coaching and training aspirants to crack the IIT entrance. So you have a growing number of students who have managed to score outstandingly in the entrance exam by simply familiarising themselves with the pattern of questions and yet flounder in actual coursework.
Another unfortunate aspect of the JEE debate is that it obfuscates the real issue facing IITs. The future of IITs does not depend on the selection process of undergraduates. No matter what process is adopted they will do well. Within a decade IITs will have little to show for as academic institutions unless policymakers and faculty members start taking pride in the MTech and PhD programmes. It is worth remembering that BTechs comprise less than half of IIT graduates every year. The majority are MTech and PhD degree holders. They make a huge contribution to technological development in India in the public and private sector. It is this group that needs constant improvement, encouragement and recognition. This will not happen unless IITs transform from mid-20th century, narrow-visioned technical institutions to modern, multidisciplinary research universities.
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Inspirations@IP
INSPIRATIoNS@IP...
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Young Talent
Viswanathan Anand started playing chess at the young age of 6. He learned the game from his mother because his siblings did not have the patience to play chess with him. His mother taught him how to play. In fact, she used to do a lot for his chess. His family moved to the Philippines. There they had a TV program that was on in the afternoon, when he was in school. So his mother would write down all the games that they showed and the puzzles, and in the evening they solved them together and sent in the answers. They gave the prize of a book to the winner. Over the course of many months, Vishwananathan Anand won so many prizes. Like any other person Viswananthan Anands life is full of twists n trails.
The triumph in Moscow, where Anand has a matching number of admirers and critics, was also significant for another reason. For years, the Russian chess fraternity, in particular, has belittled Anands achievements. Even in the days leading to the clash against the Belarus-born Gefland, there was criticism in the regional media which said that Anand lacked hunger and his game had weakened in the recent past. But the genial Indians triumph in every format knockout, round-robin, classical and now in a rapid tie-break finish should silence the cynics. Surely, Anands consistency has been second to none. He has stayed in the worlds top 10 since 1991 and he is one among seven players ever to hold the topmost ranking in 40 years. Anand holds a Bachelors degree in Commerce from Loyola College in Chennai, India. Previously, he attended High School at Don Bosco. In August 2010, Anand joined the Board of Directors of Olympic Gold Quest, a foundation for promoting and supporting Indias elite sportspersons and potential young talent. In 2010 Anand donated his World Championship gold medal from his successful 2008 title defence to the charitable organisation The Foundation to be auctioned off for the benefit of underprivileged children. Anand has been described by
INDIA PREPARES
Inspirations@IP
Lubomir Kavalek as the most versatile world champion ever, since Anand is the only player to have won the world chess championships in many formats including Tournament, Match, Rapid, and Knockout chess. In an interview in 2011, Vladimir Kramnik (ex-World Champion 2000 to 2007) said about Anand: I always considered him to be a colossal talent, one of the greatest in the whole history of chess; and I think that in terms of play Anand is in no way weaker than Kasparov.
history Maker
A thorough gentleman in the sporting circle around the world, Anand virtually broke the monopoly of Russia in the world chess circuit and established India among one of the top chess playing nations with his numerous titles. Anand won the Linares-Morelia in 2007, a tournament in which world`s top players had participated, and became the undisputed King of Chess for the first time. Though the legendary Garry Kasparov had retired by then, not all accepted Anands greatness as he hadnt won a title in Matchplay. Then he took on Kramnik, the man who had dethroned fellow Russian Kasparov and won against him. One of the reasons why Anand is regarded as the greatest ever chess player is the fact that he is the only player to have won world titles in three different formats. Nobody, not even Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov have done it. But there is something more to Anand. He is a gentleman, tense underneath, but calm still. He has been regarded as an unassuming person with a reputation for refraining from political and psychological ploys and instead
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focusing on his game. This has made him a well-liked figure throughout the chess world for two decades, evidenced by the fact that Garry Kasparov, Vladimir Kramnik, and Magnus Carlsen, of whom
the former two were rivals for the World Championship throughout Anands career, each aided him in preparing for the World Chess Championship 2010.
one Step
Foolish people with all their other thoughts, have this one too: They are always getting ready to live, but never living. Your success will start when you begin to pursue it. To reach your goal or to attain success, you dont need to know all of the answers in advance. You just need to have a clear idea of what your goal is. Dont procrastinate when faced with difficult problems. Break your problems into parts, and handle one part at a time. Develop tendencies toward taking action. You can make something happen right now. Divide your big plan into small steps and take that first step right away. Everyone who ever got where they are had to begin where they were. Your big opportunity is where you are right now. A journey of a thousand miles begins with one step. Take it.
INDIA PREPARES
Mosaic
moSAIc...
INDIAN PAINTINGS
Indian paintings have a very long tradition and history in Indian art. The earliest Indian paintings were the rock paintings of pre-historic times, the petroglyphs as found in places like Bhimbetka, some of them from before 5500 BC. Indias Buddhist literature is replete with examples of texts which describe palaces of kings and the aristocratic class embellished with paintings, but the paintings of the Ajanta Caves are the most significant of the few survivals. The paintings at Ajanta are not frescoes as they are painted with the aid of a binding agent, whereas in fresco the paintings are executed while the lime wash is still wet which, thereby acts as an intrinsic binding agent. Smaller scale painting in manuscripts was probably also practised in this period, though the earliest survivals are from the medieval period. Mughal painting represented a fusion of the Persian miniature with older Indian traditions, and from the 17th century its style was diffused across Indian princely courts of all religions, each developing a local style. Company paintings were made for British clients under the British raj, which from the 19th century also introduced art schools along Western lines, leading to modern Indian painting, which is increasingly returning to its Indian routes. Indian paintings provide an aesthetic continuum that extends from the early civilization to the present day. From being essentially religious in purpose in the beginning, they have evolved over the years to become a fusion of various cultures and traditions. Around 1st century BC, the Sadanga or Six Limbs of Indian Painting, were evolved, a series of canons laying down the main principles of the art. Vatsyayana, who lived during the third century A.D., enumerates these in his Kamasutra having extracted them from still more ancient works. These Six Limbs have been translated as follows: mainly natural caves and rock-cut chambers. The highest achievements of this time are the caves of Ajanta, Bagh, Rupabheda, The knowledge of Sittanavasal, Armamalai Cave (Tamil Nadu), Ravan Chhaya rock shelter, appearances. Kailasanatha temple in Ellora Caves. Pramanam, Correct perception, Murals from this period depict measure and structure. mainly religious themes of Buddhist, Bhava, Action of feelings on forms. Jain and Hindu religions. There are Lavanya Yojanam, Infusion of grace, though also locations where paintings artistic representation. were made to adorn mundane premises, like the ancient theatre room in Sadrisyam, Similitude. Jogimara Cave and possible royal Varnikabhanga, Artistic manner hunting lodge circa 7th century AD of using the brush and colours. Ravan Chhaya rock shelter. (Tagore.) The pattern of large scale wall The subsequent development of painting which had dominated the painting by the Buddhists indicates scene, witnessed the advent of that these Six Limbs were put into miniature paintings during the 11th & practice by Indian artists, and are the 12th centuries. This new style figured basic principles on which their art was first in the form of illustrations etched founded. on palm-leaf manuscripts. The contents of these manuscripts included literature Genres on Buddhism & Jainism. Indian Paintings can be broadly classified as murals and miniatures. Murals are mughal Painting large works executed on the walls of Mughal painting is a particular style solid structures, as in the Ajanta Caves of Indian painting, generally confined and the Kailashnath temple. Miniature to illustrations on the book and done paintings are executed on a very small in miniatures, and which emerged, scale for books or albums on perishable developed and took shape during the material such as paper and cloth. The period of the Mughal Empire 16th -19th Palas of Bengal were the pioneers of centuries). miniature painting in India. The art of Mughal paintings were a unique miniature painting reached its glory blend of Indian, Persian and Islamic during the Mughal period. The tradition of miniature paintings was carried styles. Because the Mughal kings forward by the painters of different wanted visual records of their deeds Rajasthani schools of painting like as hunters and conquerors, their the Bundi, Kishangarh, Jaipur, Marwar artists accompanied them on military and Mewar. The Ragamala paintings expeditions or missions of state, or also belong to this school, as does the recorded their prowess as animal Company painting produced for British slayers, or depicted them in the great dynastic ceremonies of marriages. clients under the British Raj. Akbars reign (15561605) The history of Indian murals goes ushered a new era in Indian miniature back to ancient and early medieval times, from 2nd century BC to 8th painting. After he had consolidated his - 10th century AD. There are more political power, he built a new capital than 20 known locations around India at Fatehpur Sikri where he collected containing murals from this period, artists from India and Persia. He was the first morarch who established in
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India an atelier under the supervision of two Persian master artists, Mir Sayyed Ali and Abdus Samad. Earlier, both of them had served under the patronage of Humayun in Kabul and accompanied him to India when he regained his throne in 1555. More than a hundred painters were employed, most of whom were Hindus from Gujarat, Gwalior and Kashmir, who gave a birth to a new school of painting, popularly known as the Mughal School of miniature Paintings. One of the first productions of that school of miniature painting was the Hamzanama series, which according to the court historian, Badayuni, was started in 1567 and completed in 1582. The Hamzanama, stories of Amir Hamza, an uncle of the Prophet, were illustrated by Mir Sayyid Ali. The paintings of the Hamzanama are of large size, 20 x 27 and were painted on cloth. They are in the Persian safavi style. Brilliant red, blue and green colours predominate; the pink, eroded rocks and the vegetation, planes and blossoming plum and peach trees are reminiscent of Persia. However, Indian tones appear in later work, when Indian artists were employed.
mysore Painting
Mysore painting is an important form of classical South Indian painting that originated in the town of Mysore in Karnataka. These paintings are known for their elegance, muted colours, and attention to detail. The themes for most of these paintings are Hindu Gods and Goddesses and scenes from Hindu mythology. In modern times, these paintings have become a much sought after souvenir during festive occasions in South India. The process of making a Mysore painting involves many stages. The first stage involves the making of the preliminary sketch of the image on the base. The base consists of cartridge paper pasted on a wooden base. A paste made of Zinc oxide and Arabic gum is made called gesso paste. With the help of a thin brush all the jewellery and parts of throne or the arch which have some relief are painted over to give a slightly raised effect of carving. This is allowed to dry. On this thin gold foil is pasted. The rest of the drawing is then painted using watercolours. Only muted colours are used.
the drawing is made, decoration of the jewellery and the apparels in the image is done with semi-precious stones. Laces or threads are also used to decorate the jewellery. On top of this, the gold foils are pasted. Finally, dyes are used to add colors to the figures in the paintings.
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Tanjore Painting
Tanjore painting is an important form of classical South Indian painting native to the town of Tanjore in Tamil Nadu. The art form dates back to the early 9th century, a period dominated by the Chola rulers, who encouraged art and literature. These paintings are known for their elegance, rich colours, and attention to detail. The themes for most of these paintings are Hindu Gods and Goddesses and scenes from Hindu mythology. In modern times, these paintings have become a much sought after souvenir during festive occasions in South India. The process of making a Tanjore painting involves many stages. The first stage involves the making of the preliminary sketch of the image on the base. The base consists of a cloth pasted over a wooden base. Then chalk powder or zinc oxide is mixed with water-soluble adhesive and applied on the base. To make the base smoother, a mild abrasive is sometimes used. After
Rajput Painting
Rajput painting, a style of Indian painting, evolved and flourished, during the 18th century, in the royal courts of Rajputana, India. Each Rajput kingdom evolved a distinct style, but with certain common features. Rajput paintings depict a number of themes, events of epics like the Ramayana and the Mahabharata, Krishnas life, beautiful landscapes, and humans. Miniatures were the preferred medium of Rajput painting, but several manuscripts also contain Rajput paintings, and paintings were even done on the walls of palaces, inner chambers of the forts, havelies, particularly, the havelis of Shekhawati. The colours extracted from certain minerals, plant sources, conch shells, and were even derived by processing precious stones, gold and silver were used. The preparation of desired colours was a lengthy process, sometimes taking weeks. Brushes used were very fine.
Pattachitra
Pattachitra refers to the folk painting of the state of Orissa, in the eastern region of India.Patta in Sanskrit means Vastra or clothings and chitra means paintings.The tradition of Pattachitra is
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closely linked with the worship of Lord Jagannath. Apart from the fragmentary evidence of paintings on the caves of Khandagiri and Udayagiri and Sitabhinji murals of the Sixth century A.D., the earliest indigenous paintings from Orissa are the Pattachitra done by the Chitrakars (the painters are called Chitrakars).[6] The theme of Orissan painting centres round the Vaishnava cult. Since beginning of Pattachitra culture Lord Jagannath who was an incarnation of Lord Krishna was the major source of inspiration. The subject matter of Patta Chitra is mostly mythological, religious stories and folk lore. Themes are chiefly on Lord Jagannath and Radha-Krishna, different Vesas of Jagannath, Balabhadra and Subhadra, temple activities, the ten incarnations of Vishnu basing on the Gita Govinda of Jayadev, Kama Kujara Naba Gunjara, Ramayana, Mahabharata. The individual paintings of gods and goddesses are also being painted. The painters use vegetable and mineral colours without going for factory made poster colours. They prepare their own colours. White colour is made from the conch-shells by powdering, boiling and filtering in a very hazardous process. It requires a lot of patience. But this process gives brilliance and permanence to the hue. Hingula, a mineral colour, is used for red. Haritala, king of stone ingredients for yellow, Ramaraja a sort of indigo for blue are being used. Pure lamp-black or black prepared from the burning of cocoanut shells are used. The brushes that are used by these Chitrakaras are also indigenous and are made of hair of domestic animals. A bunch of hair tied to the end of a bamboo stick make the brush. It is really a matter of wonder as to how these painters bring out lines of such precision and finish with the help of these crude brushes. That old tradition of Orissan painting still survives to-day in the skilled hands of Chitrakaras (traditional painters) in Puri, Raghurajpur, Paralakhemundi, Chikiti and Sonepur.
Nurpur, Kullu, Garhwal, Kangra etc. Depiction of love in different form and style is the central theme of this painting. Its miniatures chiefly portrays the boy hood pranks of Krishna and his cowherd companions with Radha. This style originally developed in the state of Basohli of Raja Kripal Singh (16781694) Extensive sets, each comprising more than a hundred miniatures, were prepared Rasamanjari, the Bhagavata Purana, the Gita Govinda, the Baramasa and Ragamale themes.
Rajasthani Painting
Pahari Painting
As its name suggest, this sort of painting is mainly confined to the hilly, terrain of India especially Jammu,
The Rajasthani painting chiefly consists of the Marwar, Kishangarh, Jaipur, Bundi and Kota styles. The Marwar of Jodhpur style shows very bold type of expression with broad, which is fish eyes in human faces and highly stylish and similar to the Mughal style. The prominent architect of Kishangarh Painting are Raja Samant Singh (1748-64) and Nihal Chandra. Nihal Chandra developed an extraordinarily mannerist style which exaggerated the slender curves and almond eye on his figures. The facial type, though idealized, is extremely lyrical in its beauty content. The most popular subjects of this painting are the loves of Krishna and Radha. The Jaipur Style flourished during the reign of Swami Pratap Singh (1778-1803) which was a period of general lawlessness and insecurity, and laxity of morals and immense luxury. Therefore, it gave rise to new approach to religion for easing of the conscience. The painting reflects the Raslila of Krishna. The Bundi painting began to concentrate on court scenes under Rao Chattar Sal and Bhao Singh and many scenes of nobler, lover and ladies in modern Indian Painting palaces were produced throughout the During the colonial era, Western Seventeenth and Eighteenth centuries. influences started to make an impact on Indian art. Some artists developed Bengal School of Art a style that used Western ideas of The Bengal School of Art was an composition, perspective and realism influential style of art that flourished to illustrate Indian themes. Others, in India during the British Raj in the like Jamini Roy, consciously drew early 20th century. It was associated inspiration from folk art. Bharti Dayal with Indian nationalism, but was also has chosen to handle the traditional promoted and supported by many Mithila Painting in most contemporary British arts administrators. way and uses both realism as well The Bengal school arose as an abstractionism in her work with a lot
avant garde and nationalist movement reacting against the academic art styles previously promoted in India, both by Indian artists such as Ravi Varma and in British art schools. Following the widespread influence of Indian spiritual ideas in the West, the British art teacher Ernest Binfield Havel attempted to reform the teaching methods at the Calcutta School of Art by encouraging students to imitate Mughal miniatures. This caused immense controversy, leading to a strike by students and complaints from the local press, including from nationalists who considered it to be a retrogressive move. Havel was supported by the artist Abanindranath Tagore, a nephew of the poet Rabindranath Tagore. Tagore painted a number of works influenced by Mughal art, a style that he and Havel believed to be expressive of Indias distinct spiritual qualities, as opposed to the materialism of the West. Abanindranath Tagores best-known painting, Bharat Mata (Mother India), depicted a young woman, portrayed with four arms in the manner of Hindu deities, holding objects symbolic of Indias national aspirations. Tagore later attempted to develop links with Far-Eastern artists as part of an aspiration to construct a pan-Asianist model of art. Those associted with this Indo-FarEastern model included Nandalal Bose, Benode Behari Mukherjee, Vinayak Shivaram Masoji, B.C. Sanyal, Beohar Rammanohar Sinha, and subsequently their students A. Ramachandran, Tan Yuan Chameli, and a few others. The Bengal schools influence on Indian art scene gradually started alleviating with the spread of modernist ideas post-independence.
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of fantasy mixed in to both .Her work has an impeccable sense of balance, harmony and grace . By the time of Independence in 1947, several schools of art in India provided access to modern techniques and ideas. Galleries were established to showcase these artists. Modern Indian art typically shows the influence of Western styles, but is often inspired by Indian themes and images. Major artists began to gain international recognition, initially among the Indian diaspora, but also among non-Indian audiences. The Progressive Artists Group, established shortly after India became independent in 1947, was intended to establish new ways of expressing India in the post-colonial era. The founders were six eminent artists - K. H. Ara, S. K. Bakre, H. A. Gade, M.F. Husain, S.H. Raza and F. N. Souza. Though the group was dissolved in 1956, it was profoundly influential in changing the idiom of Indian art. Almost all Indias major artists in the 1950s were associated with the group. Some of
those who are well-known today are Bal Chabda, Om Swami, V. S. Gaitonde, Krishen Khanna, Ram Kumar, Tyeb Mehta, Beohar Rammanohar Sinha and Akbar Padamsee. Other famous painters like Jahar Dasgupta, Prokash Karmakar, John Wilkins, Narayanan Ramachandran, and Bijon Choudhuri also enriched the art culture of India. They have become the icon of modern Indian art. Art historians like Prof. Rai Anand Krishna have also referred to these works of modern artistes that reflect Indian ethos. Some of the new artists like Geeta Vadhera have had acclaim in translating complex, Indian spiritual themes into the canvas - Sufi thought, Upanishads and the Bhagwad Geeta, for example. From 1990 to till 2009 the Indian art has been growing with powerful expression. Third Eye Series, is a new style of painting brought out by Narayanan Ramachandran, during 1990 to 2010. Indian Art got a boost with the economic liberalization of the country since early 1990s. Artists from various fields now started bringing in varied
styles of work. Post liberalization Indian art thus works not only within the confines of academic traditions but also outside it. Artists like Chittrobhanu Majumdar, A Ramachandran, etc. have introduced newer mediums in art. In this phase, artists have introduced new concepts which have hitherto not been seen in Indian art. Devajyoti Ray has introduced a new genre of art called Pseudorealism. Pseudorealist Art is an original art style that has been developed entirely on the Indian soil. It takes into account the Indian concept of abstraction and uses it to transform regular scenes of Indian life into a fantastic images. In post-liberalization India, many artists have established themselves in the international art market like Anish Kapoor whose mammoth artworks have acquired attention for their sheer size. Many art houses and galleries have also opened in USA and Europe to showcase Indian artworks. Some artists like Bhupat Dudi, Subodh Gupta, Piu Sarkar, Vagaram Choudhary, Amitava Sengupta and many others have done magic worldwide.
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bIlAtERAl bullEtIN...
kNow It All
PlAcES/INStItutIoNS IN NEwS
Shanghais Tongji University, to set up what would be Chinas first all-English educational institution that will provide training in Information Technology (IT) and in the sciences. Manipal already operates overseas campuses in Dubai, Nepal, Antigua and Malaysia. The Chinese government has set up more than three hundred Confucius Institutes in 100 countries as part of a new push to boost its soft power. The centres are usually set up as a joint initiative among a host foreign university. India has so far not allowed the setting up of Confucius Institutes citing rules restricting the operation of autonomous educational institutions by foreign governments. There are as many as 70 such institutes in the United States alone, 13 in Britain and several dozen in Asia, located in Nepal, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia and other countries.
PERSoNS IN NEwS
Dalai lama
The two representatives of exiled Tibetan religious leader the Dalai Lama in on-going talks with the Chinese government have announced their resignation as of June 1, leaving uncertain the future of the talks that have remained in a stalemate for more than two years. The envoys said they felt that the Communist Party of Chinas (CPC) United Front Work Department, which represents Beijing in the talks, did not respond positively to a memorandum submitted in 2008 and a note presented in December 2010 to clarify certain points of difference. In their resignation letter, the envoys also pointed to seemingly hardening positions of CPC officials, as another reason for their decision. The statement from Dharamsala said there would be no change from the Middle Way approach seeking genuine autonomy and not outright independence and adhering to the framework of the Chinese constitution. The last communication between the two sides was a December 2010 note sent by Dharamsala to Beijing, which sought to clarify points of difference over the memorandum of genuine autonomy submitted in 2008. Chinese officials have said the memorandum amounted to disguised independence, particularly pointing to the demand for a central Tibetan administration that would govern matters of education and religion and have some legislative powers for Tibetans living both in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) and in neighbouring Sichuan, Qinghai, Gansu and Yunnan, where around half of Chinas six million Tibetans live. The area amounts to around one-fourth of Chinas total landmass. While Chinese officials said this
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It is recognized by Guinness World Records as the tallest tower, beating out the Canton Tower in China, which is 600 meters (1,968 1/2 feet). The worlds tallest structure is Dubais Burj Khalifa, which stands 828 meters (2,717 feet). Thats in a different category because its a skyscraper, not a tower. The Sky Tree will serve as a broadcast tower for television and radio, along with being a tourist attraction.
Gorakhnath temple
A historic 160-yearold Hindu temple in Peshawar city of northwest Pakistan, which was re-opened on the orders of a court last year, has been vandalised by unidentified men in the third such attack on the shrine in the past two months. The attackers burnt pictures inside Gorakhnath Temple and took away idols from the shrine located within an archaeological complex in Gor Gathri area, leaders of the Hindu community said.
chilika
The Zoological Survey of India (ZSI) would undertake a World Bank-funded detailed fauna expedition in the brackish water lake of Chilika in Odisha soon, a senior official has said. This is the third time ZSI is conducting a fauna expedition on the Chilika lake after in 1914-16 and 1984-86.
Manipal university
Manipal University is in talks with Chinese officials to open the first campus of an Indian university in China. The Karnataka-based private university is exploring a tie-up with two Chinese universities, Tianjin University and
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demand violated the Constitution, the note argued that the law on regional autonomy allows for this kind of modification of administrative boundaries if proper procedures are followed, adding that and many [former] Chinese leaders, including Premier Zhou Enlai, Vice Premier Chen Yi and Party Secretary Hu Yaobang, supported the consideration of bringing all Tibetan areas under a single administration. Chinese officials have also hit out in public statements at reported demands by the Dalai Lama to expel non-Tibetans residing in TAR and the four provinces. An article published by the official website of the TAR government in March said the demands were akin to building up a Berlin Wall of ethnic segregation and confrontation and were similar to Nazi policies. The note, however, clarified that the demand was only to regulate settlement of those who wanted to move to Tibetan areas, and was not seeking to expel non-Tibetans.
charles taylor
A U.N.-backed war crimes court sentenced the former President of Liberia, Charles Taylor, to 50 years in jail for arming rebels in Sierra Leone in return for blood diamonds. Mr. Taylor, 64, was convicted last month of all 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity for aiding and abetting Sierra Leones Revolutionary United Front during the countrys brutal 1991-2001 civil war. In return, the court said, he was paid in diamonds mined by slave labour in areas under control of the rebels, who murdered, raped and kept sex slaves, hacked off limbs and forced children to fight.
feet) summit from the northern side of the mountain in Tibet with four other team members, said Ang Tshering of the China Tibet Mountaineering Association in Nepal. Ms. Watanabe had climbed the Everest in 2002 at the age of 63, becoming the oldest woman to bring off the feat. She retained the title until she topped herself a decade later. The oldest person to climb the Everest is a Nepalese man, Min Bahadur Sherchan, who scaled the peak in 2008, at 76.
Arabinda Rajkhowa
A TADA designated court in Guwahati acquitted United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa in a murder case dating back to 1990. Rajkhowa was acquitted on the basis of benefit of doubt in the case relating to the murder of noted businessman Surendra Paul. The businessman was gunned down on April 9, 1990 in Tinsukia district in upper Assam by suspected ULFA militants. The case was being heard by Special Judge Designated Court, Assam, headed by Justice H Sarma.
A. Raja
After spending nearly 15 months in the Tihar Central Jail, the former Telecom Minister, A. Raja, facing trial in the 2G spectrum allocation case, was granted bail by a special CBI court. Mr. Raja was arrested by the CBI on February 2, 2011 and he was in its custody till February 17. After that he has been in judicial custody. Mr. Raja, who is the main accused in the case, is the last of the 12 accused to get bail. This was the first time since his arrest that he moved a bail application.
Suu kyi
Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi completed her first trip out of Myanmar in 24 years, a tour that highlighted her new freedom to explore the world and to return home. The long-time political prisoners trip was viewed as proof of her confidence in Myanmars new civilian government, whose political reforms contrast starkly with that of the former military junta. Ms. Suu Kyi, who spent 15 of the last two decades under house arrest, had previously refused to leave the country during brief periods of freedom for fear she would not be allowed to return. She used her trip to draw attention to the plight of her compatriots abroad from exploited migrant workers who moved to Thailand in search of jobs to war refugees who fled across the border in search of peace. Ms. Suu Kyi stole the spotlight at the World Economic Forum on East Asia, delivering her first speech before an international audience since becoming Myanmars crusader for democracy in 1988.
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Sam Pitroda
Sam Pitroda, advisor to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, has been conferred with an honorary degree by New York Universitys Polytechnic Institute, which is considered among the U.S. most prestigious and oldest private schools specializing in engineering and technology. Mr. Pitroda received a Doctor of Engineering, honoris causa, and joined a distinguished list of past honorary degree recipients including U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu.
tamae watanabe
A 73-year-old Japanese woman climbed to Mount Everests peak, smashing her own record to become the oldest woman to scale the worlds highest mountain. Tamae Watanabe reached the Everests 8,850-metre-high (29,035
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guilty by an Army court in the Sukna land scam case. The dismissal means that he will not get any benefits like pension and will not be entitled to use Army rank or any privilege attached with military service. Gen. Prakash is the seniormost officer to have been awarded this punishment by the Army.
obItuARY
Gajanan Verma
Eminent Rajasthani poet and lyricist Gajanan Verma passed away in his native town Rattangarh in Churu district of Rajasthan. He was 86. Mr. Verma was also one of the founder members of the Indian Peoples Theatre Association (IPTA) in Rajasthan. Music old-timers in Rajasthan remember the time when the then Prime Minister Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru launched the Putli Ghar Natya Shala, run by Mr.Verma, in Delhi. He was a regular participant of the all-India kavi sammelan at the Red Fort organised on the occasion of Republic Day. A collection of his folk songs, Bajare Ki Roti, was released in February this year. When the first President of the country, Rajendra Prasad, visited Rattangarh, Mr.Verma had recited a poem in his honour. In 2001 the Central Sangeet Natak Akademi had honoured him for his longstanding service to the world of music.
Though a Communist, Solai transcended the barriers of politics and moved closely with four generations of political leaders even as he emerged as an outstanding Tamil journalist, shaping public opinion in the cause he had believed in. He knew E.V. Ramasamy, also called Periyar, and was political adviser to MGR. He was also a friend of DMK president M. Karunanidhi and penned a book on M.K. Stalin.
system around Uranus. The discovery was subsequently confirmed by the Voyager Mission, recalled a colleague, who served under him for several years. Professor Bhattacharyya steered the 234-cm telescope project to successful completion in 1986, which was the biggest optical telescope at that time in Asia and was inaugurated by the then Prime Minister, Rajiv Gandhi, at Kavalur on Javadi Hills, near Vellore in Tamil Nadu, said another colleague.
brahmeshwar Singh
Brahmeshwar Singh alias Mukhiyaji, chief of the Ranvir Sena, the dreaded private militia of upper caste landowners, was shot dead by unidentified gunmen while he was on a morning walk at Katira Mohalla, 71 km from Patna. Five private and government vehicles were set ablaze in the violence that broke out in the Bhojpur district headquarters town of Ara after the killing, the police said. Singh was in his early 70s. Singh who faced life imprisonment in several cases of carnage he had perpetrated on the lower caste landless poor including at Laxmanpur Bathe where 61 Dalits were massacred in December 1996 was acquitted and released from jail in April this year.
AwARDS
MS Swaminathan Award
Two agricultural scientists from ICAR institutions R. Sai Kumar of the Directorate of Maize Research (DMR) and N. Shobha Rani of the Directorate of Rice Research (DRR) were jointly awarded the fourth MS Swaminathan Award for outstanding agricultural research. The awards were given away by LSP president Jayaprakash Narayan and Director-General of ICRISAT William Dar. The award was given to R. Sai Kumar, Director of DMR, for his work as a maize breeder in the development and release of 14 maize hybrids and varieties. N. Shobha Rani, Principal Scientist, DRR, was selected for her contribution to genetic enhancement of Basmati and other quality rice varieties that lead to higher productivity.
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J.c. bhattacharyya
The former Director of the Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA), J.C. Bhattacharyya, passed away in New Delhi after prolonged illness. He was 81. He headed the institute from 1982 and retired in 1990. Later, he served as the Emeritus Professor of the institute. In 1997, he became a member of the institutes governing council and remained so till 2006. According to his colleagues at the institute, Professor Bhattacharyya was well known for his contributions to experimental astrophysics. From the ground based telescopes at Kavalur, he discovered in 1971 a thin atmosphere around Ganymede, a satellite of Jupiter. In 1977, he discovered through the lunar occultation technique an extended ring
k. Somasundaram
Veteran journalist and writer K. Somasundaram, well known as Solai in political and journalistic circles, died at the age of 81. A native of Madurai district, Solai graduated from American College and started his public life with the Sarvodaya Movement. He later worked closely with Vinoba Bhaves Boodhan Movement. He was brought to journalism by Communist leader P. Jeevanandam. His formative years in journalism were spent in Janashakthi , the official organ of the Communist Party of India (CPI).
award Banga Bibhusan. The legendary film star was, however, not present on the stage to receive the award as she continues to remain away from public eye. On her behalf, the 81-year-old
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actors daughter Moon Moon Sen and granddaughter Raima Sen received the award from Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee at a ceremony in Kolkata. Instituted last year to honour eminent people from different walks of life, Banga Bibhusan includes a citation and a cash prize of Rs. 2 lakh. Suchitra Sen had ruled the silver screen till the 1970s by acting in Hindi and Bengali films like Saat Paake Bandha, Saptapadi and Bimal Roys Devdas. Twice awarded the Filmfare award for best actress, she had refused the Dada Saheb Phalke Award in 2005 to avoid making any public appearance. The government honoured 15 other eminent persons in the sports and cultural world
competition. Snigdha became the fifth American of south Asian origin to win the venerable competition in as many consecutive years.
Palme dor
Austrian director Michael Haneke has picked up the Cannes film festivals top prize for the second time as Love is named winner of the Palme dOr. Haneke previously won the award in 2009 for The White Ribbon. Danish actor Mads Mikkelsen won the best actor prize for The Hunt, while the actress prize was shared between Cristina Flutur and Cosmina Stratan for Romanian movie Beyond the Hills. British director Ken Loach collected the Jury Prize for The Angels Share. The winners were revealed by the head of the jury, Italian director Nanni Moretti, on the final night of the 12day film festival. Hanekes film focused on an elderly couple whose relationship is tested when the wife suffers a series of strokes.
Horst Koehler led the bank between 1998 and 2000. Born in 1969 in Jalpaiguri, West Bengal, Mr. Chakrabarti has been serving as a permanent secretary in the U.K. Ministry of Justice since November, 2007.
Sudarsan Pattnaik
Internationally-acclaimed sand artist from Odisha Sudarsan Pattnaik has been congratulated by President Pratibha Patil and a host of other dignitaries for winning the Copenhagen Sand Art Championship 2012. Mr. Pattnaik won the first prize in the Copenhagen International Sand Sculpture Championship 2012, held in Denmark. Nine artists took part in the championship from various countries including Canada, Russia, Bulgaria, Ireland, England, Germany, Ukraine and Ghana. Mr. Pattnaik created a 20foot-high sand sculpture on Save the Ocean.
Justice V.S.Sirpurkar
Justice V.S.Sirpurkar, a retired Judge of the Supreme Court of India has assumed the charge as Chairman of the Competition Appellate Tribunal of India. Born on 22 August, 1946, Justice Sirpurkar, joined Judicial Services as Judge Bombay High Court in 1992 and later served as Chief Justice in the High Courts of Uttarakhand and Calcutta. He was elevated to Supreme Court in 2007. Justice Sirpurkar has taken the charge of the office after the retirement of Justice Arijit Pasayat on 9th May 2012, also a retired Judge from the Supreme Court.
APPoINtED/RESIGNED
Suma chakrabarti
India-born Suma Chakrabarti will succeed G e r ma ny s Thomas Mirow as the President of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), which has been supporting economic transition in former Eastern Bloc countries and Soviet republics for the last two decades. Mr. Chakrabarti, has won the race for the leadership of the bank by prevailing over four other candidates, including Mr. Mirow, who sought a second four-year term. With the election of Mr. Chakrabarti, a British national is for the first time at the top of the London-based East European Bank. Until now, the post was held alternatively by German and French nationals. Former German President
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Shafi Mather
Noted economist and policy analyst Shafi Mather has been appointed economic advisor to Kerala Chief Minister Oommen Chandy. Mather is presently convenor of the economic policy and planning committee of KPCC. He is also a visiting lecturer at the London School of Economics. He had earlier worked with the policy and planning wing of the AICC along with Sam Pitroda and Jairam Ramesh.
Spelling bee
Indian-Americans have swept this years prestigious spelling bee competition with the top three spots being bagged by them. Snigdha Nandipati (14), an eighth-grade student from San Diego, California, correctly spelled the French word guetapens to be declared the national champion for the year 2012, beating eight other finalists in the
Dmitry Medvedev
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Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev succeeded President Vladimir Putin as head of the ruling party, United Russia, in a follow up to their job swap in the Kremlin. Mr. Putin stepped down as the partys chairman following his return to the presidency earlier in May 2012. He argued that President in Russia by tradition is not affiliated with any party. United Russia, which has dominated the Russian Parliament since its establishment in 2003, has recently been losing support. It lost a quarter of its seats in Parliament in December elections, which were marred with massive falsifications and sparked the biggest anti-Kremlin protests in 20 years.
Justice lokur
Justice Madan Bhimarao Lokur has been sworn in as a judge of the Supreme Court. Prior to his elevation, Justice Lokur was Chief Justice of the Andhra Pradesh High Court. With this, the strength of the apex court has gone up to 26, still five short of the sanctioned strength of 31 judges. This is the first time that a judge, on his elevation to the apex court, was administered the oath during the summer vacation. Soon after his swearing in by Chief Justice S.H. Kapadia, Justice Lokur attended the court sitting with Justice K.S. Radhakrishnan and Justice J.S. Khehar on the vacation bench. Justice Lokur, as Chief Justice of the Andhra Pradesh High Court, had headed the bench that quashed the 4.5 percent reservation in educational institutions and government jobs for Muslims within the existing reservation quota.
hes bringing to the country. But the Opposition boycotted the vote and said it was orchestrated by the regime to strengthen Mr. Assads grip on power.
R. N. choubey
The Centre has appointed Rajiv Nayan Choubey, a senior bureaucrat, to head the Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH). Mr. Choubey, a 1981 batch IAS officer of Tamil Nadu cadre, will be the first bureaucrat to head the highly technical arm of the Oil Ministry, which has been marred by controversies in the past few years.
Justice Israni
Amid threats of renewal of the quota agitation from the members of the Gujjar community led by Gujjar leader Kirori Singh Bainsla, the Rajasthan Government has appointed retired Rajasthan High Court judge I. S. Israni as Chairman of the States Backward Classes Commission. Justice Israni headed the Commission once in the past also. Justice Israni has the onerous task of taking up the recent status report on the backward classes in Rajasthan, a study carried out by the Institute of Development Studies, Jaipur, after a directive from the High Court. The study submitted the previous month and the content of which have not been made public reportedly has a comparative analysis of the financial status of Gujjars with some 70-odd other backward communities in the State. The members of the Gujjar community are demanding implementation of five per cent reservation quota provided to the Special Backward Classes through legislation in the Rajasthan Assembly during the tenure of the previous Rajasthan Government. Justice Israni had headed the Commission appointed by the Ashok Gehlot Government in Rajasthan soon after coming to power to look into the police firing on agitating Gujjars which had claimed more than 70 lives during the previous regime.
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V.R.S. Natarajan
Even as V.R.S. Natarajan, Chairman and Managing Director of BEML, was suspended on the recommendation of the CBI to ensure fair investigation into the Tatra truck deal and other cases, the investigating agency got the Defence Ministrys approval to initiate proceedings against him. The CBI is expected to summon Mr. Natarajan for questioning in view of the documentary evidence gathered by it in the past few days and purported revelations made by retired and serving BEML officials. The CBI recommended Mr. Natarajans removal after it discovered
that all those BEML officials summoned for questioning were allegedly being tutored by him in advance. About a week ago, the Defence Ministry asked Mr. Natarajan to explain why he had served a legal notice for filing a defamation suit against the former Army Chief, General V. K. Singh. Mr. Natarajan said in Bangalore that he would come out clean in the cases against him. I respect the government decision and I will come out clean in this process, he said. The CBI has accused him of trying to influence witnesses in the case and requested the Ministry to keep him away from the process of ongoing investigation.
He is being questioned by the CBI in a case regarding alleged irregularities in procurement and supply of Tatra vehicles to the Army. The CBI is probing if the company had violated guidelines in buying and selling the trucks. It has also booked him for alleged cheating, criminal conspiracy and corruption in connection with the tendering process to hire a consultancy firm for BEML. General V. K. Singh had alleged in an interview to The Hindu in March that he was offered a bribe of Rs. 14 crore by a former senior Army officer to clear supply of 600 sub-standard Tatra trucks from BEML.
MEHDI HASSAN
Mehdi Hasssan died on 13 June 2012 after a protracted illness, in a private hospital in Karachi. Mehdi Hassan Khan was a Pakistani ghazal singer and a former playback singer for Lollywood. He is famously known as the King of ghazal, and was highly regarded in the Pakistan film industry. He was honoured with Tamgha-e-Imtiaz, Pride of Performance and Hilale-Imtiaz by the Government of Pakistan, and Gorkha Dakshina Bahu by the Government of Nepal. He remained a leading singer of film industry along with Ahmed Rushdi. Mehdi Hassan will be remembered for bringing Indians and Pakistanis together in a shared passion for his songs of unrequited love. The roots of Mehdi Hasans music, which inspired generations of ghazal singers in India, lay in the ancient tradition of dhrupad. A representative of the 16th generation of the Kalavant clan, Mehdi Hassan went from dhrupad, through thumri to ghazal and popular film music, retaining the purity of the medium until the end. Hindustani classical music pre-dates the Partition of India; it stems from the soul of the subcontinent and it is to this shared past that he belonged. His own family roots were in Rajasthan. He may have made his home in Pakistan but Rajasthan stayed with him. It was like love across the salt desert. And he made no secret of it. His concerts almost always featured Kesariya Balam, the timeless Rajasthani ode to the vastness of the desert. Mehdi Hassan often sang the compositions of Delhis resident poet Mirza Ghalib besides Faiz Ahmed Faiz and Mir Taqi Mir. His Urdu was untouched by any regional accent and stayed true to the true spirit of the language. In October 2010, HMV released Sarhadein in which probably the first and last duet song Tera Milana featuring Mehdi Hassan and Lata Mangeshkar was released. This song was composed by Hassan himself written by Farhat Shahzad. Hassan recorded it in Pakistan in 2009, and Lata Mangeshkar later heard the track and recorded her part in India in 2010, and later mixed together for a duet. Local and universal (The message of this book: familiarity with ones The Keys to the White House: Allan Jay natal cultural environment is the Lichtman (American political analyst) key to a good understanding of the world.): Sugata Srinivasaraju Muddling along (The book gives a good insight into the predicament Revisiting Tagore: Sabyasachi of Pakistan): Stephen P. Cohen Bhattacharya
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SPoRtS
Manvinder Bisla (89) and Jacques Kallis (69) helped Kolkata Knight Riders beat Chennai Super Kings by 5 wickets to win their maiden Indian Premier League title at MA Chidambaram stadium. Manoj Tiwary (9 not out) hit the winning boundary off Dwayne Bravo as Kolkata completed the massive chase of 191 with two balls to spare. The Indian Premier League (IPL) is a professional league for Twenty20 cricket championship in India. It was initiated by the BCCI, headquartered in Mumbai, and is supervised by BCCI
A life of exile (The work is a literary cRIckEt bequest of poetry and prose flooded with fond emotions as well as a kkR beat cSk to win moving critique of the violent history first Indian Premier league title of West Asia): Mahmoud Darwish
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Vice President Rajeev Shukla, who serves as the leagues Chairman and Commissioner. It is currently contested by nine teams, consisting of players from around the world. It was started after an altercation between the BCCI and the Indian Cricket League. sporting event ever to be broadcast live on YouTube in association with Indiatimes. Its brand value is estimated to be around US$2.92 billion in fourth season. However, the league has been engulfed by series of corruption scandals where allegations of cricket betting, money laundering and spot fixing were witnessed. Rajasthan Royals defeated Chennai Super Kings in a thriller and emerged as the inaugural IPL champions in 2008. In 2009 season, which was played in South Africa, Deccan Chargers defeated Bangalore Royal Challengers in the finals to clinch the trophy. In 2010, Chennai Super Kings defeated Mumbai Indians and last year Chennai Super Kings won their second consecutive title after defeating the Royal Challengers Bangalore by 58 runs in the final. This was the first time a franchise had won two titles. The top four teams qualified for the 2011 Champions League Twenty20, which the Mumbai Indians won.
former Head of Anti Corruption and Security Unit, ICC), head of BCCIs anti-corruption wing, would table his findings in 15 days.
billy Doctrove announces retirement from umpires Elite In 2010, IPL became the first Panel
West Indies umpire Billy Doctrove has announced his retirement from the International Cricket Councils (ICC) Elite Panel. Doctrove was due to officiate in the forthcoming ODI and Test series between Sri Lanka and Pakistan, starting in Pallekele from June 7, but has withdrawn from what would have been his last assignment as an elite panelist as he had to return to Dominica due to a family bereavement. As such, the second Test between New Zealand and South Africa in Hamilton in March has turned out to be Doctroves last appearance as an elite panelist. This brings down the curtain on an outstanding career in top-level umpiring in which the 56-year-old stood in 38 Tests, 112 ODIs and 17 T20Is, including the final of the ICC World Twenty20 2010 between England and Australia in Barbados. Doctrove, born July 3, 1955 in Marigot, Dominica, made his ODI debut April 4, 1998 in a match between the West Indies and England in Kingstown, St. Vincent, and two years later in Antigua stood in his first Test between the West Indies and Pakistan, a match which the home side won by one wicket. Doctrove was promoted to the International Panel of ICC Umpires in 2004 before being elevated to the elite panel in April 2006.
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on clay. The victory is Nadals third Italian Open victory in four years, with his winning streak interrupted last year by Djokovic. The win also moved Nadal back to No. 2 in the rankings, ahead of Roger Federer. Maria Sharapova retained the Italian Open title with a 4-6, 6-4, 7-6 (5) victory over Li Na in a match dominated by wild swings of momentum and interrupted twice by rain. Li appeared to be on course for victory as she stormed into a 6-4, 4-0 lead but 24 unforced errors from the French Open champion allowed Sharapova to take the next six games and the set. Italian Open title is the most prestigious red clay tennis tournament in the world after the French Open, with the mens competition being an ATP World Tour Masters 1000 event on the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) tour, and the womens competition being a Premier 5 event on the Womens Tennis Association (WTA) tour.
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Mixed Doubles: Casey Dellacqua and Scott Lipsky were the defending champions. Dellacqua chose not to participate this year while Lipsky partnered with Vladimra Uhlrov, but they were defeated in the first round by Virginie Razzano and Nicolas Devilder. Sania Mirza and Mahesh Bhupathi won the tournament defeating Klaudia Jans-Ignacik of Poland and Santiago Gonzlez of Mexico 76(73), 61 in the final. Sania Mirza and Mahesh Bhupathi of India won their second Grand Slam title and first French Open trophy together. wins by beating Tobias Kamke of Germany 6-2, 7-5, 6-3 in the first round of the French Open. Federer, who owns a record 16 major championships, is 233-35 at tennis top four tournaments, a .869 winning percentage. Connors was 233-49. and Chinas Zheng Jie at Brussels (Belgium). In a one-sided contest, the fourth seed Indo-American pair took an hour and 10 minutes to dispatch third seeded pair 6-3 6-2 in the final of the $637,400 clay court Premier event. Sania had won Pattaya Open with Anastasia Rodionova and had ended runners-up at Dubai and Indian Wells with regular partner Elena Vesnina of Russia, early in the season. It was for the second time that Sania played a final alongside Mattek on the Tour. In 2009, she had won Cincinnati Open with the American. ever ATP Challenger singles title of his career after scoring a facile straight set win over Israeli fourth seed Amir Weintraub in Fergana, Uzbekistan in May 2012.The unseeded Indian, ranked 297, recorded a 63 63 win in one hour and 20 minutes over the world number 185 in the summit clash of the USD 35,000 hard court event. The victory is expected to push Yuki into the top220 in the ranking, which will make him the highest ranked Indian in the ATP charts. Last week, the 19yearold had won his careers first ATP Challengers doubles title along with compatriot Divij Sharan in the Busan event.
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eventually missed a medal in womens air rifle following scores of 8.3 and 9.8 on the last two shots in the shooting World Cup in Munich in may 2012. The Sydney Olympics finalist Anjali, who had won the gold medals in the World Cup in Fort Benning and the World Cup Finals in Milan in 2003, recaptured the old magic following a series of 100, 100, 100 and 99. She missed a 10 on the 31st shot. With the reigning World champion Yi Siling of China on 400 and five others on 399, it was a tough fight for the medals, but Anjali had the bronze in her grasp after the eighth shot despite having started the finals with a 9.8. However, the 8.3 pulled her down and she eventually finished seventh. The young Mampi Das had shot 398, and had to endure a shoot-off with three others in the fight for the last spot in the final, but she eventually missed it by 0.2 points despite shooting 51.9. Earlier, it was almost a similar story for World Championship bronze medallist and World record-holder Gagan Narang as he shot 597 and missed the final by an agonising 0.5-point margin in the shoot-off in mens air rifle. Reigning Olympic champion and former World champion Abhinav Bindra continued to stay close behind the leaders as he shot 596 to be placed 14th in a strong field of 118 shooters. Wang Tao of China secured the gold, 0.2 points ahead of Youth Olympics silver medallist Illia Charheika of Belarus and the reigning World champion Niccolo Campriani of Italy.
In the womens section, China-1 won the ninth match in a row to deservingly win the gold medal while China-2 won the silver ahead of India with better tie-break. The Indian women had to be content with the bronze medal after a 2.5-1.5 victory over China-3 in the final round. In the last three editions, the Indian womens team had won the silver.
South Korea 3-0 in the final. South Korea, which beat China in the last Uber Cup final at Kuala Lumpur two years ago. The Uber Cup, sometimes called the World Team Championships for Women, is a major international badminton competition contested by womens national badminton teams. First held in 1956-1957 and contested at three year intervals, it has been contested every two years since 1984 when its scheduled times and venues were merged with those of Thomas Cup, the world mens team championship. The Uber Cup is named after a former British womens badminton player, Betty Uber, who in 1950 had the idea of hosting a womens event similar to that of the men.
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cHESS Indian men win silver; women take bronze in Asian Nations cup
Indian mens chess team thrashed Iraq 4-0 to win silver while their women counterparts bagged a bronze in the Asian Nations Cup that concluded in may 2012 at Zaozuang (China). Top-rated K. Sasikiran rested himself while P. Harikrishna, Parimarjan Negi, Abhijeet Gupta and G.N. Gopal completed an easy victory to collect 15 points to finish second to top seed China-1. China-1 beat Mongolia 3.5-0.5 to win the gold while China-2 won the bronze medal.
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six races of this season the first time this has happened in the history of the world championship. Webbers second win in the principality and the eighth of his career also marked Red Bulls third successive win at the Monaco Grand Prix. Webbers first race win this season lifted him to joint second in the drivers standings alongside teammate Vettel both three points behind leader Alonso on 76. Hamilton is fourth on 63 and Rosberg fifth with 59.
Indias first win against Britain in four recent matches. India lost 2-4 and 1-2 in the four-nation test event in London last month, and 2-3 in this competition. It is difficult to mask the feeling that India could have produced a far more commanding performance. Sixth in the last edition, Indias previous bronze came in 2007. Of course, a podium finish gives some consolation. Coach Nobbs said the team is showing a definite improvement.
Cuban hurdler Dayron Robles set the world record in Ostrava in the Czech Republic June 12, 2008. The former world record of 12.88 seconds was set by Liu in Lausanne on July 11, 2006. Liu, the 2004 Olympic gold medallist, blasted out of the blocks and led from start to finish Saturday with the help of a strong tailwind in front of a standing room crowd at Hayward Field. American world indoor champion Aries Merritt finished second in 12.96, while Jason Richardson was third in 13.11 in a field that boasted hurdlers holding five of the top six times in the world this year.
HockEY India takes third place in Sultan Azlan Shah Hockey tournament
India anchored a bronze, New Zealand its maiden trophy triumph and Argentina picked up silver as the 21st edition of the Sultan Azlan Shah Hockey tournament sailed into history at Ipoh (Malaysia) in June 2012. The Kiwis prevailed over the Argentines by a solitary goal, while, in a fightback that was quite remarkable, India beat Britain by three goals to one. Andy Hayward was New Zealands hero of the hour. One thundering penalty corner midway through the first half sealed the final for the Kiwis. The team was unlucky to enlarge the lead when a splendid attempt by Simon Child hit the upright and spun into play. He worked delectably to outrun the Argentine defenders for this effort. In a contest that swung from brilliance to the bizarre, India accomplished a podium finish. This was
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Russian Darya Pischalnikova was first with 66.38m in the meet held a Putting up an impressive show, Indias day after the two-day Diamond League Swapnali Yadav clocked an aggregate meeting at Eugene. Poonia, the Indian time 0:33:05s to win a silver medal in record holder with 64.76m, had taken the Junior International Triathlon 2012 the fourth place in the Eugene meet in Malaysia. with a throw of 62.11m. Thirteen-year-old Swapnali Rustam Sarang and chang finished second behind gold winner clinches the gold Zoe Bowden of the host nation, while Nuralia Mohammed Shamsir, also of Rustam Sarang clinched the gold in the Malaysia, won the bronze in the 15 mens 62 kg category and Himanshu Kumar Chang won the gold with a total years-and-under category for girls. of 270 kg in the junior mens overSwapnali did the 300m swim 105 kg category, as India wound up in 0:05:01 seconds, cycled 8km in its campaign in the Commonwealth 0:16:41 and the 2km run in 0:11:23 for weightlifting championship with a an aggregate time of 0:33:05 seconds record haul of 29 gold, 10 silver and at the Water Sports Complex. six bronze medals.
According to the information received from the Weightlifting Federation of India, the Indian men and women accounted for nine gold medals, while the boys and girls in the juniors and youth sections finished with nine and 11 gold medals respectively.
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Notes
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