Tuesday 31 December 2013

NASA to send out New Year's Greetings from space


NASA astronauts are going to help ring in 2014 by sending greetings from space to the crowd gathered in New York's Times Square on New Year's Eve.

Astronaut Mike Massimino will introduce a video greeting from Expedition 36 flight engineer Karen Nyberg, who returned from the ISS in November, and from three of the astronauts currently on board the space station: NASA's Rick Mastracchio and Mike Hopkins, and Koichi Wakata of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.

The New Year's countdown would be shown from 6 p.m. to 12:15 a.m. EST on the Toshiba Vision screen atop One Times Square, right below the New Year countdown ball.

Eddie Temistokle, senior manager of corporate communications and corporate social responsibility for Toshiba America Inc., will welcome Massimino to the stage at 9:47 p.m.

Mastracchio, Hopkins and Wakata are part of a six-member crew currently on the orbiting laboratory, along with Oleg Kotov, Mikhail Tyurin and Sergey Ryazanski of the Russian Federal Space Agency.

Prominently positioned below the world-famous Times Square New Year's Eve Ball, the dual LED screens will allow revelers in Times Square to see this special greeting from space. 

Education

The landmark passing of the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education (RTE) Act 2009 marks a historic moment for the children of India.  For the first time in India’s history, children will be guaranteed their right to quality elementary education by the state with the help of families and communities. 

Few countries in the world have such a national provision to ensure child-centered, child-friendly education to help all children develop to their fullest potential. There were an estimated eight million six to 14-year-olds in India out-of-school in 2009. 

The world cannot reach its goal to have every child complete primary school by 2015 without India.
India’s education system over the past few decades has made significant progress. According to India’s Education For All Mid Decade Assessment, in just five years between 2000 and 2005, India increased primary school enrolment overall by 13.7 per cent and by 19.8 per cent for girls, reaching close to universal enrolment in Grade 1. 

Even with these commendable efforts, one in four children left school before reaching Grade 5 and almost half before reaching Grade 8 in 2005. Learning assessments show the children who do remain in school are not learning the basics of literacy and numeracy or the additional skills necessary for their overall development. 
Fast Facts
Out-of-School Children: The number of out-of-school children has declined from 25 million in 2003 to 8.1 million in mid–2009. The most significant improvements have been in Bihar, Jharkhand, Manipur and Chhattisgarh. The percentage of out-of-school children in highly populated states like Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Orissa and Bihar remains a cause of concern.
Social Inclusion: Although there have been significant improvements in the proportion of children from socially disadvantaged groups in school, persistence gaps remain. Girls are still less likely to enroll in school than boys; in 2005, for upper primary school (Grades 6-8) girls’ enrolment was still 8.8 points lower than boys, for Scheduled Tribes (ST) the gender gap was 12.6 points and 16 points for Scheduled Castes (SC).  

In addition, ST and SC children are less likely to access their right to 8 years of schooling; the drop-out rate for ST children being 62.9% and 55.2% for SC children compared to a national average of 48.8% leaving school before completing Grade 8. 
Teachers: Children have the right to have at least 1 qualified and trained teacher for every 30 pupils. Currently, the national average is about 1 teacher to every 34 students, but in states such as Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh and West Bengal 1 teacher works with more than 60 students.  

Approximately 1.2 million additional teachers need to be recruited to fill this gap. Currently, about 1 in 5 primary school teachers do not have the requisite minimum academic qualification to ensure children’s right to quality learning.
Sanitation: 84 out of 100 schools have drinking water facilities overall in India. But nearly half the schools in Arunachal Pradesh, Assam and Meghalaya do not. Sixty-five out of 100 schools have common toilets in India; however only one out of four schools in Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Chandigarh, Delhi, Jammu & Kashmir, Jharkhand, Orissa and Rajasthan have this facility. 

Fifty-four out of 100 schools have separate toilets for girls. On average, only one in nine schools in Assam, Meghalaya, Manipur have separate toilets and one in four schools in Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jammu & Kashmir, Jharkhand and Orissa.
Key Issues
The RTE Act will be in force from 1 April. Draft Model Rules have been shared with states, which are required to formulate their state rules and have them notified as early as possible. 

RTE provides a ripe platform to reach the unreached, with specific provisions for disadvantaged groups, such as child labourers, migrant children, children with special needs, or those who have a “disadvantage owing to social, cultural economical, geographical, linguistic, gender or such other factor.” 

RTE focuses on the quality of teaching and learning, which requires accelerated efforts and substantial reforms. 
Creative and sustained initiatives are crucial to train more than one million new and untrained teachers within the next five years and to reinforce the skills of existing teachers to ensure child-friendly education. 

Bringing eight million out-of-school children into classes at the age appropriate level with the support to stay in school and succeed poses a major challenge. Substantial efforts are essential to eliminate disparities and ensure quality with equity. For example, investing in preschool is a key strategy.
Families and communities also have a large role to play to ensure child-friendly education for each and every one of the estimated 190 million girls and boys in India who should be in elementary school today. 

School Management Committees, made up of parents, local authorities, teachers and children themselves, will need support to form School Development Plans and monitoring. The inclusion of 50 per cent women and parents of children from disadvantaged groups in these committees should help overcome past disparities.
UNICEF in Action
India’s past achievements in education indicate it is possible to reach the goals set forth in RTE. Building on the achievements of Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, UNICEF will continue to work with the government and other partners at community, state and national levels to promote child friendly schools and systems across the country through RTE.
UNICEF is committed to ensuring all children to have access to quality education and complete their schooling. UNICEF works with its partners to improve children’s developmental readiness to start primary school on time, especially for marginalized children. 

Technical support on education quality, school retention and achievement rates are also given. UNICEF is also working to reduce gender and other disparities to increase access and completion of quality basic education. In emergencies, UNICEF helps to restore education to affected populations.


Monday 30 December 2013

Namaste India

Name of the filmmaker: Jacob Proud
Country: UK
About the video: A short documentary montage that captures the vibrant energy and spirit of the people and places of North West India.

Sunday 29 December 2013

China offers satellite navigation system to other countries

China's homegrown satellite navigation system will bring untold economic, social and military benefits and other countries in Asia are welcome to use it, the director of China's satellite navigation agency said on Friday.
The year-old Beidou satellite navigation system is a rival to the US Global Positioning System (GPS) and Russian GLONASS. Beidou's 16 satellites serve the Asia-Pacific but the number of satellites is expected to grow to 30 by 2020 as coverage expands globally.
The system would bring benefits across the board, in both civilian and military applications, said Ran Chengqi, the director of the Satellite Navigation Office.
"The construction of the Beidou network should resolve the country's security issues, including economic security and the security of society-at-large," he said. "It's obviously a combined military and civilian infrastructure."
"What purpose it will have for national defense or armament, that's for the armament department or Defense Ministry to consider, but I think that its uses are many," Ran told a news conference.
The successful deployment of Beidou means the increasingly potent Chinese armed forces will have an accurate, independent navigation system - vital technology for guiding the missiles, warships and attack aircraft that allow Beijing to claim great power status.
Senior Chinese military officers have said Beidou is more important for the country than manned space flight or the Chinese lunar probes now under way, according to reports in the state-run media.
But the benefits are by no means limited to defense.
The government sees it as a commercial coup for fast-growing market satellite navigation services for cars, mobile phones and other applications.
China is encouraging other countries in Asia to adopt it by offering the service free, as the United States does with the civilian GPS network.
Stations are being built in Pakistan to improve service there and Thailand has signed up to use Beidou for disaster forecasting.
"It's completely open," Ran said. "Technology and service both."
"Even though we still do not provide global coverage, its applications are already spreading worldwide," he said.
This month, the cabinet approved a blueprint that envisioned Beidou capturing 60 percent of a projected 400 billion yuan ($ 65 billion) market for satellite navigation services in China, according to the China Daily.
The newspaper said 40 per cent of Beidou's satellite applications would be for military use.

Saturday 28 December 2013

NSA phone surveillance is legal, says Federal judge

The heated debate over the National Security Agency's bulk collection of millions of Americans' telephone records fell squarely into the courts when a federal judge in Manhattan upheld the legality of the program and cited its need in the fight against terrorism just days after another federal judge concluded it was likely not constitutional.

The ruling Friday by US District Judge William H. Pauley III and an opposing view earlier this month by US District Judge Richard Leon in Washington DC sets the stage for federal appeals courts to confront the delicate balance developed when the need to protect national security clashes with civil rights established in the Constitution.

Pauley concluded the program was a necessary extension of steps taken after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. He said the program lets the government connect fragmented and fleeting communications and "represents the government's counter-punch" to the Al Qaeda's terror network's use of technology to operate decentralized and plot international terrorist attacks remotely.

"This blunt tool only works because it collects everything," Pauley said. "The collection is broad, but the scope of counterterrorism investigations is unprecedented."

Pauley's decision contrasts with Leon's grant of a preliminary injunction against the collecting of phone records of two men who had challenged the program. The Washington, D.C. jurist said the program likely violates the US Constitution's ban on unreasonable search. The judge has since stayed the effect of his ruling, pending a government appeal.

Both cases now move to appeals courts for a conflict that some believe will eventually be settled by the Supreme Court. The chances that the nation's top court will address it increase if the appeals courts reach conflicting opinions or if the current use of the program is declared illegal.

Pauley said the mass collection of phone data "significantly increases the NSA's capability to detect the faintest patterns left behind by individuals affiliated with foreign terrorist organizations. Armed with all the metadata, NSA can draw connections it might otherwise never be able to find."

He added: "As the Sept. 11 attacks demonstrate, the cost of missing such a threat can be horrific."

Pauley said the attacks "revealed, in the starkest terms, just how dangerous and interconnected the world is. While Americans depended on technology for the conveniences of modernity, al-Qaida plotted in a seventh-century milieu to use that technology against us. It was a bold jujitsu. And it succeeded because conventional intelligence gathering could not detect diffuse filaments connecting al-Qaida. "

The judge said the NSA intercepted seven calls made by one of the Sept. 11 hijackers in San Diego prior to the attacks, but mistakenly concluded that he was overseas because it lacked the kind of information it can now collect.

Still, Pauley said such a program, if unchecked, "imperils the civil liberties of every citizen" and he noted the lively debate about the subject across the nation, in Congress and at the White House.

"The question for this court is whether the government's bulk telephony metadata program is lawful. This court finds it is. But the question of whether that program should be conducted is for the other two coordinate branches of government to decide," he said.

A week ago, President Barack Obama said there may be ways of changing the program so that is has sufficient oversight and transparency.

In ruling, Pauley cited the emergency of the program after 20 hijackers took over four planes in the 2001 attacks, flying two into the twin towers of the World Trade Center, one into the Pentagon and a fourth into a Pennsylvania field as passengers tried to take back the aircraft.

"The government learned from its mistake and adapted to confront a new enemy: a terror network capable of orchestrating attacks across the world. It launched a number of counter-measures, including a bulk telephony metadata collection program â?? A wide net that could find and isolate gossamer contacts among suspected terrorists in an ocean of seemingly disconnected data, "he said.

Pauley dismissed a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union, which promised to appeal to the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan.

"We're obviously very disappointed," said Brett Max Kaufman, an attorney with the ACLU's National Security Project. "This mass call tracking program constitutes a serious threat to Americans' privacy and we think Judge Pauley is wrong in concluding otherwise."

Justice Department spokesman Peter Carr said: "We are pleased the court found the NSA's bulk telephony metadata collection program to be lawful."

NSA spokeswoman Vanee Vines declined to comment.

In arguments before Pauley last month, an ACLU lawyer argued that the government's interpretation of its authority under the Patriot Act was so broad that it could justify the mass collection of financial, health and even library records of innocent Americans without their knowledge, including whether they had used a telephone sex hotline, contemplated suicide, been addicted to gambling or drugs or supported political causes. A government lawyer had countered that counterterrorism investigators wouldn't find most personal information useful.

Pauley said there were safeguards in place, including the fact the NSA cannot query the phone database it collects without legal justification and is limited in how much it can learn. He also noted "the government repudiates any notion that it conducts the type of data mining the ACLU warns about in its parade of horribles."

The ACLU sued earlier this year after former NSA analyst Edward Snowden leaked details of the secret programs that critics say violate privacy rights. The NSA-run programs pick up millions of telephone and Internet records that are routed through American networks each day.

Pauley said the fact that the ACLU would never have learned about an order authorizing collection of telephony metadata related to its telephone numbers but for Snowden's disclosures added "another level of absurdity in this case."

"It cannot possibly be that lawbreaking conduct by a government contractor that reveals state secrets â?? Including the means and methods of intelligence gathering â?? Could frustrate Congress's intent. To hold otherwise would spawn mischief," he wrote.

Pauley also rejected the ACLU's argument that the phone data collection program is too broad and contains too much irrelevant information.

Friday 27 December 2013

Modi to share his thoughts on Gujarat riots judgement today

The BJP's prime ministerial candidate and Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi is likely to "share his thoughts" on Friday on the Gujarat court's verdict in the 2002 Gujarat riots case in which criminal charges had been filed against him. 

Modi said that he would share his thoughts on the judgement today on twitter.
On Thursday, the court had rejected a petition by Zakia Jafri, whose husband Ehsan Jafri was burnt alive during the riots. In her petition, Zakia had asked for Modi to be prosecuted for conspiracy in the communal violence that had rocked the state in 2002. 

Thursday's order comes as a huge relief to Modi who is the BJP's prime ministerial candidate. 
Modi was in Goa when the judgement was announced. Upon hearing about it, Modi tweeted, "Satyamev Jayate! Truth alone triumphs."
This tweet was followed up with a quote from Mahatma Gandhi.

Reacting to the judgement the BJP had said that it was a moral victory for the BJP and Narendra Modi.

Thursday 26 December 2013

US drone kills 4 militants in Pakistan's North Waziristan


A US drone strike targeted a house in Pakistan's restive North Waziristan tribal region killing at least four suspected militants.
Local officials said the drone attack took place late last night and targeted a house in Qutab Khel village, five kilometres from Miranshah, the main town of North Waziristan.
The area is a stronghold for Taliban and al-Qaeda-linked militants.
The identities of those killed in the strike were not immediately known but officials suspect that they were of Afghan origin.
Pakistani government criticises drone strikes as a violation of its sovereignty and counterproductive to anti-terror efforts.
NATO supply routes continue to remain blocked in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province due to protests over strikes from the CIA-operated spy planes.

Tuesday 24 December 2013

Devyani episode: A spy case that went awry?

Devyani’s father, Uttam Khobargade, now suspects that the maid Sangeeta Richard was a CIA agent. Foreign office sources say that as deputy consul general in New York, Devyani was not privy to any strategic secrets. So if an agent was planted in her house it was only to cultivate her for the ‘long run’. After all in the long run, Devyani would only go in one direction in her career – upwards.

There is no gainsaying that intelligence agents are not planted in the house or office of every foreign service officer. That leads to the question: why was Devyani chosen? Indian intelligence analysts say that this was possible because US intelligence agencies perceived – rightly or wrongly – that  Devyani had many weaknesses. The first weakness was that she had married an Indian-American who at least till they got married had a US citizenship. Under the rules applicable to Indian foreign service officers, they cannot marry foreign citizens. In the present case, Devyani’s husband would have to give up his citizenship and take up Indian citizenship. I do not know whether Devyani’s hubby Aakash Singh Rathore has done this. For those who came in late, as reported in TOI, Aakash is a professor of philosophy who takes deep interests in wine matters. It is not clear whether Aakash has taken up Indian citizenship or taken up a PIO (Person of Indian Origin card). But what is strange is that in the whole matter concerning his wife he is nowhere to be heard or seen. He is obviously keeping a studied silence. Aakash did not migrate to the US recently; he was born in New York, so it was probably his father who moved to the US. 
This leads to Devyani’s second weakness: likely inclination to continue in the US for long to be with her hubby. Devyani’s name has cropped up in the Adarsh scam. This is another weakness. Foreign agents love to cultivate officers who are vulnerable even if it is in their domestic country. Reports also indicate that she had used pressure to get her foreign language training in German at the cost of some of her batchmates who had a higher rank and that this was a subject matter of dispute in court. Subsequently, Devyani was posted in Berlin. She is believed to have met Aakash while undergoing German language training at the Goethe Institute in that country.

Foreign service officers who worked with Devyani assert that they strongly believe that she had political ambitions and would have certainly contested elections in the future (now the possibility increases with all the sympathy she is garnering). This would have made Devyani a rather attractive proposition for any spy agency. What better than have an upward mobile officer who could become a future lawmaker, in their pocket?

Devyani also committed a blunder by paying Sangeeta less than what she promised to pay her. This is precisely what officially the case is all about.

The most important issue is, why did Sangeeta Richard then give up her cover and focus attention on Devyani? There are no easy answers but it is conceivable that Devyani realized that she was being watched and put pressure on Sangeeta to sing pointing out that she was vulnerable because her family was still in India. If this is the case, then kudos to Devyani for being smart enough to realize that she was being targeted. As pressure mounted on her Sangeeta first ran away and then put counterpressure on Devyani by filing a case. She possibly had help also from a US diplomat at whose whom she worked in New Delhi.

Devyani went to meet Sangeeta’s lawyer but what transpired is not known. Meanwhile, to protect Sangeeta, US agencies went an extra mile to evacuate Sangeeta’s husband and two kids before arresting Devyani. There is no gainsaying that Indo-American Preet Bharara (who as a neo-convert is trying to be more loyal than the king; he was born in Ferozepur) overdid his bit and the US agencies handcuffed and strip-searched Devyani. This has caused a furore in India and has gone against the Americans whether they admit it or not.

Domestic politics is making foreign minister Salman Khurshid overreact. The fear of Modi looms large: Khurshid expects Modi to shout from the rooftops that the Indian government can’t even protect its women diplomats from humiliation abroad. If the pitch is raised, the move has the potential to cost Congress valuable votes in the forthcoming elections. Modi has, however,  done nothing of the sort, but Khurshid can’t take him for granted (don’t forget Modi has been denied a US visa). In the process, Khurshid has done something that leaves Devyani vulnerable. She has been withdrawn from the New York consulate, where she had limited diplomatic immunity and posted to the UN, where she will get full diplomatic immunity. But this full immunity will be applicable to her from the date that the US government accepts her as a diplomat accredited to the UN. In the interim, she is left without any diplomatic cover.

So, in the ultimate analysis, is it a case of spying gone awfully wrong?  

Monday 23 December 2013

India test-fires nuclear-capable Agni-III missile

India on Monday test-fired its nuclear-capable Agni-III ballistic missile with a strike range of more than 3,000 km as part of a user trial by the Army from Wheeler Island off Odisha coast, defence sources said.
The operation of the surface-to-surface missile was carried out by the Strategic Forces Command of the Indian Army with logistic support from the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO).
The indigenously developed missile was flight-tested from a mobile launcher at launch complex-4 of the Integrated Test Range at about 1655 hrs, defence sources said.
"It was the second user trial in the Agni-III series carried out to establish the 'repeatability' of the missile's performance," a DRDO official said.
For data analysis, the entire trajectory of today's trial was monitored through various telemetry stations, electro-optic systems and sophisticated radars located along the coast, and by naval ships anchored near the impact point, the sources said.
The Agni-III missile is powered by a two-stage solid propellant system. With a length of 17 metres, the missile's diameter is 2 metres and launch weight is around 50 tonnes. It can carry a warhead of 1.5 tonne which is protected by carbon all composite heat shield.
The sleek missile, already inducted into the armed forces, is equipped with hybrid navigation, guidance and control systems along with advanced on-board computer. The electronic systems are hardened for higher vibration, thermal and acoustic effects, a DRDO scientist said.
Though the first developmental trial of Agni-III carried out on July 9, 2006 could not provide desired result, subsequent tests on April 12, 2007, May 7, 2008 and February 7, 2010 as well as the first user trial on September 21, 2012 from the same base were all successful.

Sunday 22 December 2013

Bhagat Singh-inpired Pakistanis take on Hafiz Saeed in Lahore

It is "heartening" to see some liberal Pakistanis resisting opposition from "Hafiz Saeed and ilk" to rename the roundabout in Lahore where Bhagat Singh was hanged after the freedom fighter, Union minister Manish Tewari on Sunday said.
"Heartening - liberals in Lahore fighting to rename the spot where Bhagat Singh was martyred in his honour resisting opposition from Hafiz Saeed and ilk!" Tewari said on his Twitter handle.
Some progressive Pakistanis-including members of the Awami Workers Party, trade unionists and journalists-have taken up the issue of renaming Fawara Chowk or Shadman Chowk in Central Lahore after Bhagat Singh.
Singh was hanged 82 years ago by the British along with Sukhdev and Rajguru for his revolutionary activities during the freedom struggle.
Reports state that while the Lahore administration was in agreement with this demand but Jamat-ud Dawa Chief Hafiz Saeed and other extremists are vehemently opposed to the demand.

Saturday 21 December 2013

Corruption is bleeding people, it is unacceptable: Rahul Gandhi at FICCI meet

Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi interacted with India Inc at the FICCI annual general meeting (AGM) in New Delhi on Saturday.

Rahul Gandhi termed corruption as the biggest issue that was "bleeding people" and said the UPA government had passed the Lokpal Bill to fight it.

While delivering a valedictory address to the AGM, the Congress vice-president put forward his party's strategy for the economy as well as inclusive growth.

Speaking at the FICCI meet, a clean-shaven Gandhi said: "The biggest issue is corruption. It is bleeding people. It is unacceptable."

He said the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government has faced a lot of criticism, "but it has done more to combat corruption than any other government".

"Our education system does not do justice to youngsters," Rahul said. As part of his 2014 roadmap, Rahul said we need to connect our youngsters to global market.

Expressing thanks to the industry for their feedback, Rahul said over the last decade we have registered highest economic growth.

Gandhi also said the regulatory system in the country needs to be overhauled.

Wednesday 18 December 2013

features of Lokpal bill


1. Lokayuktas: The new bill mandates states to set up Lokayuktas within 365 days. States have the freedom to determine the nature and type of Lokayukta.

 2. Constitution of Lokpal: The Lokpal will consist of a chairperson and a maximum of eight members, of which fifty percent shall be judicial members. Fifty percent members of Lokpal shall be from among SC, ST, OBCs, minorities and women.

3. Selection of Lokpal: The selection committee will have prime minister, Lok Sabha speaker, leader of the opposition in Lok Sabha and the Chief Justice of India. A fifth member of the selection committee for selection of Lokpal under the category of "eminent jurist" may be nominated by the president on the basis of recommendation of the first four members of the selection committee.

4. Religious bodies and trust: The new bill includes societies and trusts that collect public money, receive funding from foreign sources, and have an income level above a certain threshold, it excludes bodies creating endowments for or performing religious or charitable functions.

5. Prosecution: In the new version, before taking a decision on filing a charge sheet in a case upon consideration of the investigation report, the Lokpal may authorise its own prosecution wing or the concerned investigating agency to initiate prosecution in special courts.

6. Central Bureau of Investigation: For independence of the CBI, in the new bill a directorate of prosecution will be formed. Appointment of the director of prosecution will be on the recommendation of the Central Vigilance Commissioner.

7. Hearing: The new bill says a government servant will get a hearing before a decision is taken by the Lokpal.
8. Prime Minister: The prime minister will be under the purview of the Lokpal with subject matter exclusions and specific process for handling complaints against the prime minister.

9. Investigation: Inquiry has to be completed within 60 days and investigation to be completed within six months. Lokpal shall order an investigation only after hearing the public servant.

10. Penalty: False and frivolous complaints - imprisonment up to one year and a fine of up to Rs.1 lakh. Public servants - imprisonment up to seven years. Criminal misconduct and habitually abetting corruption - jail term up to 10 years.

Raghuram Rajan keeps interest rates unchanged



The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) unexpectedly kept the country's policy interest rate on hold on Wednesday despite calling current inflation too high citing the prospect of easing retail prices and its concerns about the weak domestic economy.

The RBI had been widely expected to lift its repo rate by 25 basis points but instead opted to keep the country's main lending rate at 7.75 percent.
"The policy decision is a close one. Current inflation is too high" said the RBI in its policy statement.
However the RBI also cited its reluctance to over-react given the "wide bands of uncertainty" surrounding the outlook for inflation amid signs of sharply falling vegetable prices and "the weak state of the economy."
Still the central bank said it would remain vigilant on inflation and that it would be ready to act even in between policy reviews should headline or core inflation not ease as expected albeit in a "calibrated" manner.
The RBI added it would gauge the impact of any decision by the U.S. Federal Reserve to withdraw its monetary stimulus. The U.S. central bank concludes its policy meeting later in the day.
"There are obvious risks to waiting for more data'' including the possibility that tapering of quantitative easing by the U.S. Fed may disrupt external markets and that the Reserve Bank may be perceived to be soft on inflation. The Reserve Bank will be vigilant" it said.

Tuesday 17 December 2013

Rahul Gandhi replies to Anna Hazare's letter

With the Lokpal Bill slated to come up in Rajya Sabha on Tuesday, Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi replied back to Anna Hazare's letter and thanked him for his encouragement in the passage of Lokpal Bill.
Congress Vice President Rahul Gandhi has assured social activist Anna Hazare that he is committed to provide a strong Lokpal to the nation.
"We are committed to provide a strong Lokpal system to the country," Rahul Gandhi said in a letter to Anna Hazare that was released to the media Tuesday.

"We respect your (Anna Hazare's) role and are grateful for your support," said Gandhi while replying to Anna's letter that was issued Sunday.
Anna Hazare said in his letter that he welcomed Rahul Gandhi's comment on the Lokpal bill.
He also requested Gandhi that the recommendation of the select committed of the Rajya Sabha should be included in the Lokpal bill.
"I welcome your commitment. I request you to include the recommendation of the select committee in the bill and include any other points to make the Lokpal bill strong," Anna Hazare said.

Monday 16 December 2013

Congress may declare Rahul Gandhi its PM nominee on Jan 17

In a bid to revive party's fortunes after its debacle in Assembly polls conducted in four out of five major states, Congress may declare party vice-president Rahul Gandhi its prime ministerial candidate on January 17.
According to reports, a formal announcement is likely to be made during the AICC meeting scheduled on January 17.
After the severe drubbing in four states, Congress has convened an AICC meeting in Delhi on January 17 to prepare the strategy ahead with Lok Sabha polls being just a few months away. The meet has been called at a time when Congress is facing an uphill task with the emergence of Narendra Modi and UPA appears to be shrinking.
The clamour for declaration of Rahul Gandhi as the party's PM nominee has been gaining momentum within the party.
AICC general secretary Digvijaya Singh said the party should ensure that Rahul is declared the PM candidate. Union power minister Jyotiraditya Scindia also made the demand immediately after the Congress was routed in the four Assembly elections.
Congress chief Sonia Gandhi, speaking to reporters after the poll debacle, had said, "People need not worry. At the opportune time, the name of our PM candidate will be announced." The Congress vice-president had too suggested that the party would undergo changes beyond imagination.
The announcement about the AICC meeting comes a day after DMK chief M Karunanidhi, who had parted ways with Congress-led UPA just a few months back, declared that it would not align with Congress in the Lok Sabha polls.
Mamata Banerjee's Trinamool Congress, which was the second largest constituent of UPA, left the alliance last year on FDI in retail issue. Besides DMK, Babulal Marandi's Jharkhand Vikas Morcha (Prajatantrik) and AIMIM are the two other parties that have left the ruling alliance at the Centre.

Saturday 14 December 2013

Narendra Modi’s dream project a “Statue of Unity” for Sardar Patel begins


The state unit of BJP has set a target of collecting 250 gm of used iron from farmers in each of the 8500 panchayats in Bihar for the proposed 'Statue of Unity" in memory of Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel in Gujarat, a dream project of party campaign committee chief Narendra Modi.

The grassroot units have been told to collect iron tools such as sickles, hoes and hedge clippers from farmers for the purpose, state party General Secretary Suraj Nandan Mehta said.

"The small pieces of iron have to be collected essentially from farmers because Sardar Patel was considered to be a great leader of farmers hence, his statue should be build from the iron contributed by them", he said.

The collected iron tools would be handed over to the block and finally to district units for transportation to Gujarat for erection of the giant size statue of the "Iron man", the Bihar BJP General Secretary said.

Former Deputy Chief Minister Sushil Kumar Modi had announced the plan on July 25 at the party's 'Viswashghat (betrayal) rally' at Biharsharif, headquarters of Nalanda district .

Mehta said the exercise to collect iron objects for sending it to Gujarat would begin after party's "Hunkar rally" on October 27 which will be addressed by Narendra Modi here.

Gujarat plans to erect the 182 metre statue, the world's tallest one, at Sadhu Bet, an island near the Sardar Sarovar Dam.

National Energy Conservation Day


Energy conservation refers to reducing energy through using less of an energy service. Energy conservation differs from efficient energy use, which refers to using less energy for a constant service. For example, driving less is an example of energy conservation. Driving the same amount with a higher mileage vehicle is an example of energy efficiency. Energy conservation and efficiency are both energy reduction techniques.

Wednesday 11 December 2013

Honourable President of India a very Happy and healthy birthday!


You have been the kindest and most determined person we have ever known. May God give you all the strength and good health to carry on & bring India to an enviable position in the world!

Tuesday 10 December 2013

Mizoram has highest child sex ratio of 971 followed by Meghalaya


Decreasing trend in the Child Sex Ratio (0-6) seen in India (927 in 2001 and 914 in 2011). Mizoram with 971 has the highest child sex ratio followed by Meghalaya with 970. Haryana has the lowest child sex ratio of 830. Only two States/UTs namely Himachal Pradesh and Andaman & Nicobar Islands have achieved the target set by the Planning Commission by 2011-12 during 11th plan.

Monday 9 December 2013

The Fall


An old TV spot for Tehelka shows a politician addressing a crowd in a village square in gobbledygook interspersed with random words such as "education" and "unemployment". As the speech goes on, the square gets infested by a murder of cawing crows, who sit on trees, electricity wires, and hand-pumps, until one of them perches on the microphone, forcing the politician to stop talking. The appearance of the tagline "Jhooth Bole Kauwa Kaate (utter a lie and the crow shall peck you)-an old Indian proverb" is followed by the grainy bearded face of Tarun Tejpal, printed on the top band of Tehelka, which was then a weekly tabloid. The implication is simple. The three Ts are synonyms-T for Tejpal, T for Tehelka, T for truth.
Tejpal's face once again monopolises front pages and prime-time news bulletin-not as a champion of truth but as a violator of the ideals he stood for. In a career which in retrospect was a performance that matched ideas with idealism, activism with attitude, romance with rebellion, flair with finesse, Tejpal starred as wordsmith, iconoclast, impresario, inquisitor, debunker, entrepreneur, aesthete, lie-buster, controversialist, and conscience keeper. His appearance as an alleged sexual offender marks the lowest point in the tale of a man who has excelled in creating his own mythology.

It all began in a scene befitting his profile. In a carnival of ideas on the sunny beachfront of Goa, showcasing global icons such as Robert De Niro and Garry Kasparov, the dark story of sexual assault allegedly played out on two occasions on November 7 and 8. Two years ago, in his opening remarks at the same festival, Tejpal had told the audience to eat, drink, be merry, and "sleep with whoever you want". Tejpal has been accused by a junior colleague-who had been assigned the enviable task of chaperoning De Niro-of forcing himself on her in an elevator despite her protest. It's almost surreal that one of the topics on Day 1 of the festival, on surviving rape, was 'The beast in our midst'.

In an email sent directly to the journalist on November 19, a day after she had reported the incident to Tehelka's managing editor Shoma Chaudhury, who has since resigned, Tejpal said, "The context that ill-fated evening, of our conversation, as you will recall, was heavily loaded. We were playfully and flirtatiously talking about desire... It was in this frivolous, laughing mood that the encounter took place. I had no idea that you were upset, or felt I had been even remotely non-consensual."

The next day, November 20, the 27-year-old woman, in her only direct correspondence with Tejpal since the charges became public, sent a stinging reply to his unofficial confession, in which she rebutted his version of the events point by point. She told Tejpal that the conversation on the night of November 7 was not "heavily loaded" or "flirtatious"-"you were talking about 'sex' or 'desire' because that is what you usually choose to speak to me about, unfortunately, never my work". She went on to write: "This is what non-consent constitutes: The moment you laid a hand on me, I started begging you to stop. I invoked every single person and principle that was important to us-Tiya (Tejpal's daughter), Geetan (Batra, his wife), Shoma (Chaudhury), (name deleted, her father who is Tejpal's former colleague), the fact that you were my employer-to make you stop. You refused to listen. In fact, you went ahead and decided to molest me again on the following night. We have often spoken of 'what turns men into beasts' at Tehelka edit meetings. It is this-not being able to take no for an answer."

Sunday 8 December 2013

@rohanrgupta આજે તમારા જન્મ દિવસ પર તમારા સ્વપ્નનું ભારત અને "તાકાત ભારતની" વિષે રજૂઆત કરવાની પ્રેરણા મને તમારા વ્યક્તિત્વ માંથી મળી.

"તાકાત ભારતની"

> સતત હરળફાળ ભરતી અર્થવ્યવસ્થા 
> તમામ ક્ષેત્રોમાં વધતી જતી ક્ષમતા 
> વિશ્વમાં સૌથી વઘારે ન્યુઝ ચેનલો ધરાવતો દેશ 
> જ્ઞાનના હબ તરીકે ઉદયમાન 
> વેશ્વિક પરીદસ્યમાં મજબુત હાજરી 
> વિશ્વની સૌથી યુવાન કાર્યશક્તિ 
> અપાર સૌરઊર્જાનો ભંડાર 
> નદીઓ અને ખનીજ તેમજ કુદરતી સંપતીઓથી ભરપુર દેશ 
> વિજ્ઞાનના ક્ષેત્રો માં  નીતનવી પ્રગતિ 
> દુનિયાનું સૌથી મોટું સૈનિક નેટવર્ક 
> આઈ આઈ એમ  અને આઈ આઈ ટી  જેવી શીક્ષન સંસ્થાના વિદ્યાર્થીઓની વિશ્વભરની        કંપનીઓમાં ભારે ડિમાન્ડ 
> સોફ્ટવેર અને સેવા ક્ષેત્રોમાં ભારત દુનિયામાં આગળ 
> સૌથી વધારે 35 લાખ વિદ્યાર્થીઓ નું નામાંકન કરનાર વિશ્વવિધ્યાલય "ઇગ્નુ " ભારતમાં   

Saturday 7 December 2013

South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC)



In the ending years of 1970s, the seven inner South Asian nations that included Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, andSri Lanka agreed upon the creation of a trade bloc and to provide a platform for the peoples of South Asia to work together in a spirit of friendship, trust and understanding. Efforts towards establishing the union was first mooted by the President of Bangladesh Ziaur Rahman on 2 May 1980 whilst talking to the media journalist in Dhaka. President Zia Rehman addressed official letters to the leaders of the countries of the South Asia, presenting his vision for the future of the region and the compelling arguments for region. During his visit to India in December 1977, President Zia Rehman discussed the issue of regional cooperation with the Indian Prime Minister, Morarji Desai. In the inaugural speech to the Colombo Plan Consultative Committee which met in Kathmandu also in 1977, King Birendra of Nepal gave a call for close regional cooperation among South Asian countries in sharing river waters.
 After the USSR's intervention in Afghanistan, the efforts to established the union was accelerated in 1979 and the resulting rapid deterioration of South Asian security situation. Responding to the President Zia Rehman and King Birendra's convention, the officials of the foreign ministries of the seven countries met for the first time in Colombo in April 1981. The Bangladesh's proposal was promptly endorsed by Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan and the Maldives but India and Pakistan were skeptical initially. The Indian concern was the proposal’s reference to the security matters in South Asia and feared that President Zia Rehman's proposal for a regional organization might provide an opportunity for new smaller neighbors to renationalized all bilateral issues and to join with each other to gang up against India. Pakistan assumed that it might be an Indian strategy to organize the other South Asian countries against Pakistan and ensure a regional market for Indian products, thereby consolidating and further strengthening India’s economic dominance in the region.
However, after a series of quiet diplomatic consultations between South Asian foreign ministers at the UN headquarters in New York from August to September 1980, it was agreed that Bangladesh would prepare the draft of a working paper for discussion among the foreign secretaries of South Asian countries.The foreign secretaries of inner seven countries again delegated aCommittee of the Whole in Colombo on September 1981, which identified five broad areas for regional cooperation. New areas of co-operation were added in the following years.
In 1983, the International conference held by Indian Minister of External Affairs PVN Rao in New Delhi, the foreign ministers of the inner seven countries adopted the Declaration on South Asian Association Regional Cooperation (SAARC) and formally launched the Integrated Programme of Action (IPA) initially in five agreed areas of cooperation namely, Agriculture; Rural Development; Telecommunications; Meteorology; and Health and Population Activities.

South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC)


Wednesday 4 December 2013

The Indian Navy






Indian Navy crest
Active
1947–Present
Country
Branch
Navy
Size
58,350 active personnel
190 aircraft
179 ships
Part of
Headquarters
New Delhi
Motto
शं नो वरुणः Transliteration: Sham NoVarunah
(May the Lord of the Oceans be auspicious unto us)
Anniversaries
Navy Day: 4 December
Engagements
Decorations