Tuesday 31 July 2012

Auction for Sale of Government Stocks

Government of India have announced the sale (re-issue) of

(i) “8.19 percent Government Stock 2020” for a notified amount of Rs. 4,000 crore (nominal) through price based auction, 

(ii) “8.33 percent Government Stock 2026” for a notified amount of Rs. 7,000 crore (nominal) through price based auction,

iii) “8.28 percent Government Stock 2032” for a notified amount of Rs. 2,000 crore (nominal) through price based auction; and (iv) “8.83 percent Government Stock 2041” for a notified amount of Rs. 2,000 crore (nominal) through price based auction. The auctions will be conducted using uniform price method.

         Up to 5% of the notified amount of the sale of the stocks will be allotted to eligible individuals and Institutions as per the Scheme for Non-Competitive Bidding Facility in the Auction of Government Securities.

Rangachary Committee

Panel to revisit taxation on IT Inc

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has constituted  a committee to review taxation of development centres and the information technology sector in a bid to provide clarity on these issues. It will be headed by former N Rangachary, former chairman, Central Board of Direct Taxes as well as Insurance Development & Regulatory Authority.

The Rangachary panel will finalise the approach to taxation of Development Centres and the IT Sector by August 31, 2012. It will also suggest clarifications and changes that may be needed to remove ambiguity and provide clarity on taxation of the IT Sector.

The committee will engage in consultations with stakeholders and related government departments to finalise the `Safe Harbour provisions’  announced in Budget 2010 sector-by-sector. It will also suggest the approach to taxation of development centres.

The statement said the committee will finalise Safe Harbour Rules individually, sector-by-sector, in a staggered manner and submit draft provisions for three sectors/sub- activities each month starting September 30, 2012. All Safe Harbour provisions expected to be finalised by December 31, 2012. “The overall goal is to have a fair tax system in line with best international practice which will promote India's software industry and promote India as a destination for investment and for establishment of development centres.

Many multi-national firms carry out activities such as product development, analytical work and software development, through captive entities in India, it said. The reason for this large concentration of development centres in India is the worldwide recognition of India as a place for cost competitive, high quality knowledge related work, the statement said.

“Such development centres provide high quality jobs to our scientists, and indeed make India a global hub for such knowledge centres,”

Safe Harbour Provisions

1. A legal provision to reduce or eliminate liability as long as good faith is demonstrated.
2. A form of shark repellent implemented by a target company acquiring a business that is so poorly regulated that the target itself is less attractive. In effect, this gives the target company a "safe harbour."
3. An accounting method that avoids legal or tax regulations and allows for a simpler method (usually) of determining a tax consequence than those methods described by the precise language of the tax code.

More Explanation

1. In the first case, under SEC rules, safe-harbor provisions protect management from liability for making financial projections and forecasts made in good faith.
2. When trying to scare away sharks, it sometimes helps to stink up the water.
3. Here's an example of an accounting safe harbor: a firm is losing money and therefore cannot claim an investment credit, so it transfers this claim to a company that is profitable and can therefore claim the credit. Then the profitable company leases the asset back to the unprofitable company and passes on the tax savings.

For example the safe harbour rules stipulate that the margin in a particular industry is 20%, and if the transfer price declared by a company, engaged in the that industry, is not less than the margin, the I-T authorities would accept the return without questions.

However, experts feel that the margins should not be rigid.  "If a company reports a margin which is less than the stipulated benchmark, the authorities should give the enterprise an opportunity to defend its case."

The rules, once introduced, will lend an investment friendly image to India. It will also put an end to the requirement of collecting huge amount of data regarding transfer pricing transactions, thereby saving time and energy.

Tax regimes of many developed nations such as Australia, New Zealand and Canada have incorporated safe harbour rules in their tax laws to provide clarity on the tax liability of multi-national companies operating in their countries.

Rangachary Committee

Monday 30 July 2012

Red Ribbon Express

Red Ribbon Express is an AIDS/HIV awareness campaign train by the Indian Railways. The motto of the Red Ribbon Express is “Embarking on the journey of life

Red Ribbon Express (RRE) is one of the flagship initiatives under the National AIDS Control Programme that was successfully implemented twice in the past. Based on the overwhelming response received during the last two phases, the third phase of RRE was flagged off from Delhi on 11th January 2012, the National Youth Day. On a year long journey the special train will pass through 23 states covering 162 railway stations. RRE entered West Bengal on 16th July 2012. It is scheduled to halt at 12 stations for 22 days in the state.

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Since 1992, when the comprehensive National AIDS Control Programme was launched in all States in the country. Since then, there has been a considerable expansion of the services for HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment, care and support. The HIV estimates 2010 show an overall reduction in HIV prevalence and incidence in India. The estimated number of new annual HIV infections has declined by more than 50% over the past decade. It is estimated that India had approximately 1.2 lakh new HIV infections in 2009, as against 2.7 lakh in 2000. This is a significant indicator of the impact of the various interventions and scaled-up prevention strategies.

The third phase of RRE is being organized in collaboration with Ministry of Railways, NRHM and key mainstreaming partners in order to further strengthen the on going mainstreaming efforts. This time, it was launched on 11th January, the birthday of Swami Vivekananda which is celebrated as the National Youth Day. Besides disseminating information regarding primary prevention and services, RRE-III aims at reducing stigma & discrimination against People Living with HIV/AIDS and strengthening people's knowledge, while focusing on youth in particular, about the measures to be taken to prevent HIV/AIDS and adopting preventive health behaviour.

Sunday 29 July 2012

Jharkhand amends Naxal Surrender Policy

The amended policy envisages free education in private institutions to reformed Maoists and their wards, with certain conditions

Ranchi: In order to lure hard core cadres of the left wing extremists into national mainstream, the Jharkhand Government has revised its existing Naxal Surrender Policy to provide conditional free education in private institutions to reformed Maoists and their wards.

So far, the policy allows only the surrendered Maoist cadres to get education in the government institutions only.

The revised surrender policy envisages provision for allowing the surrendered Maoists to get education upto the age of 24 years or upto graduation. For women Naxals, it would be till the age of 24 or graduation or their marriage.

Pandey said the policy, however, is extended to only such private institutions having a monthly tuition fee of not more than Rs 1,000.

Scores of Maoists have surrendered in Jharkhand since the State government announced one of the best surrender policies in the country.

As per the redone policy, leftwing extremists, who give up arms, would get Rs 50,000 immediately, besides benefits like a plot, healthcare, education for their children in government institutions and money on weapons they deposit with the police

Govt sanctions one model school for every block

Seventy five per cent expenditure of these schools will be borne by the Centre

The government has sanctioned one model school for every block across the country to ensure quality education.

"In every block of the country, a model school is being set up, for which 75 per cent aid is being given by the central government. Uttar Pradesh has given permission for 148 such schools to be set up," UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi said at a meeting in Rae Bareily.

Addressing a function after laying foundation stone for a project of widening and strengthening Lucknow- Rae Bareily- Allahabad highway, she emphasized to expand of education for comprehensive development of society as well as country.

Jharkhand bans gutkha & pan masala

Showing concern about the increasing number of oral cancer cases, the state cabinet of Jharkhand has approved a complete ban on the manufacture, storage and distribution of all types of gutkha and paan masala which contain tobacco and nicotine. The ban has been imposed under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006. Since 2006, the state has witnessed around 30 % surge in the number of oral cancer cases, a major chunk of which were pertaining to tobacco and related products.

Which state was the first to ban gutkha and paan masala?
Madhya Pradesh.

How many states have banned tobacco containing products or gutkha & paan masala?
Till date six states namely Madhya Pradesh, Kerala, Goa, Bihar, Himachal Pradesh and Rajasthan have banned these products.

Syria

Exercise Cougar 12

France and Britain will be participating later this Summer in war games codenamed Exercise Cougar 12 [2012]. The games will be conducted in the Eastern Mediterranean as part of a Franco-British  “Response Force Task Group” involving  Britain’s HMS Bulwark and France’s Charles De Gaulle carrier battle group. The focus of these naval exercises will be on amphibious operations involving the (planned simulated) landing ashore of troops on “enemy territory”.

A decisive battle being over Aleppo

Map picture

The escalating conflict in Syria, which is spiralling border tensions with Turkey, has reached a decisive stage with government forces and the armed opposition locked in a high intensity battle over control of the city of Aleppo, the country’s largest.

It is the “mother of all battles” has commenced in Aleppo, Syria’s commercial capital, not far from the border with Turkey, which is an active supporter of the anti-regime Free Syrian Army (FSA). The daily, citing a western diplomat, claims that Syrian security forces are battling around 12,000 militants, originating mainly from Libya, Tunisia, Egypt and Afghanistan. Given the opacity of the conflict, the figure could not be independently confirmed. The opposition fighters were using “advanced European and Turkish arms” to gain military advantage, in anticipation of establishing Aleppo as a “secure area” to which the Syrian refugees that had crossed the border into Turkey could return. Fighting over Aleppo is acquiring a particularly sharp edge after government troops flushed out most of the fighters from Damascus, which was rocked to the core last week when a devastating bomb blast wiped out the top layer of security establishment.

Ba’ath takeover

1961-63

Following another military coup led by Abd al-Karim al-Nahlawi September 28, 1961 Syria secedes, re-establishing itself as the Syrian Arab Republic

Several other overthrows and end in a coup on March 8, 1963 engineered by the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, just a month after the party’s Iraq version took reins in Baghdad

Members of the Ba'ath Party, which has been active in Syria and other Arab countries since the late 1940s, dominate new Cabinet

1966

A group of army officers on February 23 carry out a successful intra-Ba’ath overthrow, jails President Amin Hafiz and abrogate a provisional constitution

Coup creates a rift between a pan-Arab Ba’ath and a regionalist one; group installs a civilian Ba'ath government on March 1

Conflict over the cultivation of disputed lands sparks into aerial clashes between Israel and Syria in April

1967

Syria joins war as Israel launches strikes on Egypt

Syria loses control of the entire Golan Heights at the end of the six-day war

1970

On November 13, Minister of Defence Hafez al-Assad effects a bloodless coup following a rift in Ba’ath leadership and thus begins the near-complete Ba'ath domination of the country’s affairs till date

1971-73

Hafez al-Assad consolidates power through Ba'ath-nominated legislature

National referendum” in March 1972 confirms him as President for a seven-year term

n March 1973, a new Syrian constitution goes into effect, defining Syria as a secular socialist state with Islam as the majority religion

In October 6, 1973, Syria and Egypt begin the Yom Kippur War, only to taste defeat once again and allowing Israel into Syrian territory beyond the 1967 boundary

Golan Heights is still under Israeli occupation

Invasion of Lebanon

1976

Syria invades Lebanon amidst and gets involved in the bloody civil war and begins the thirty-year military occupation.

1982

Hafez al-Assad government crushes uprising led by Muslim Brotherhood-inspired Sunnis in Hama, leaving between 10,000 and 25,000 people either dead or wounded. Sunnis object to rule by the “heretical” Alawite sect, to which the al-Assad family belongs

1990

Lebanese civil war ends in 1990, after the Syrian-sponsored Taif Agreement

Syrias backing of the U.S. coalition in Gulf War I marks a watershed in its ties with the West

Hafez al-Assad dies

2000

Hafez al-Assad dies on June 10, after 30 years in power

Parliament amends Constitution, reducing the minimum age of the President from 40 to 34, allowing Hafez al-Assad’s son Bashar to take over

Bashar al-Assad becomes President after a referendum in which he ran unopposed, garnering 97.29% of the vote

Damascus Spring

2001

Bashar al-Assad’s takeover inspires hopes for reform; an intense political and social debate dubbed “Damascus Spring” took place from July 2000 to August 2001

“Damascus Spring” ends in August 2001 with the arrest and imprisonment of leading activists who had called for democratic elections

2005

Syria withdraws forces in April as the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri was blamed on Damascus

Syrian uprising

2011

Hasan Ali Akleh, inspired Tunisian Mohamed Bouazizi’s suicide protest, set himself on fire January 26, effectively triggering the events now collectively called as Syrian uprising. in the same way had in Tunis on 17 December 2010.

On February 3, activists, through Facebook and Twitter, call for a “Day of Rage” from February 4-5; Hundreds march in Hasan Ali Akleh’s hometown Al-Hasakah, but Syrian security forces disperse the protest and arrest dozens

On March 15, simultaneous demonstrations take place in major cities; Daraa becomes focal point of the uprising

On March 25, at least 20 protesters were reported killed in Daraa as over 100,000 take part in a protest

Protests spread to other cities, including Homs, Hama, Baniyas, Jassem, Aleppo, Damascus and Latakia; toll crosses 70

On March 27, government announces release of 200 political prisoners

Uprising intensifies in April; scores of protesters get killed at the hands of security forces; rift in the ranks of security forces surface; U.S. imposes sanctions against Syria

On April 22, sharpshooters kill 112 demonstrators during anti-government protests across the country, activists say, calling it the Good Friday Massacre. The day is the bloodiest since the protests began.

In May, Syrian army enters Baniyas, Hama, Homs, Talkalakh, Latakia, the Al-Midan and Douma districts of Damascus, and several other towns

Forces continue the siege of Daraa throughout June

On June 6, 120 security force members are killed in the northern town of Jisr al-Shughour, according to government, which attributes the deaths to extremists. Opposition activists in exile claim the soldiers were shot by government loyalist troops for refusing to open fire on civilians.

On June 20, Bashar al-Assad promises reforms, new parliamentary elections greater freedoms

On June 30, large protests erupt in Syria's second largest city Aleppo

In mid-July, pro-government protesters attack U.S. and French embassies in Damascus

On July 31, security forces kill at least 136 in Hama

Arab League and several Gulf Cooperation Council member states led by Saudi Arabia condemn the Syrian government in August; Syrian Navy joins offensive and killings continue; on August 30, thousands demonstrate in Homs, Daraa and Damascus, security forces kill nine people marring the , Eid ul-Fitr celebrations

Gunmen assassinate Kurdish rights activist Mishaal al-Tammo in October; activists blame Syrian government

On November 3, government accepts an Arab League peace plan, but continues crackdown

On December 19, security forces kill up to 70 army defectors as they were deserting military posts near the Turkish border

On December 23, suicide bombs hit security facilities in Damascus, killing at least 40; regime blames it on al-Qaeda

2012

On January 11, a mortar attack on a pro-regime rally in Homs kills a French journalist and seven others

On February 1, Free Syrian army claims “50 per cent of Syrian territory is no longer under the control of the regime”

On February 4, Syrian forces unleash a barrage of mortars and artillery in Homs killing more than 200 people

On February 10, powerful bombings in Syria's most populous city Aleppo expand conflict

On February 22, at least 57 die across the country, most of them in Homs; Two western journalists are killed in a shelling attack | Veteran reporter Marie Colvin killed

On March 17, three bomb attacks on government buildings in Damascus claim more than 30 lives; Assad regime blames “terrorists.”

On April 12, the Syrian government and the Free Syrian Army enter a U.N.-mediated ceasefire period; By April 15, reports of ceasefire violations emerge

On April 21, U.N. Security Council adopts resolution 2043 as basis for the United Nations Supervision Mission in Syria (UNSMIS) for an initial 90-day period

On April 23, at least 60 killed in a single day as violence continues unabated

On April 25, more than 100 people are reported by opposition activists to have been killed across the country; in Hama city alone, 71 deaths are counted after a rocket strikes after dark

On May 1, U.N. blames both sides for ceasefire violation

On May 10, between 55 and 70 die in a bomb attack in front of a military intelligence building in Damascus; government says the blast is the work of two suicide bombers

On May 25, more than 100 die as two opposition-controlled villages in the Houla region of Syria come under attack; regime denies role in Houla massacre

On May 30, Free Syrian Army sets a 48-hour deadline for Bashar al-Assad to abide by an international peace plan to end violence, marking the end of the ceasefire; 57 soldiers die in Syria, the largest number of casualties the military has suffered in a single day since the start of the uprising

On June 6, 78 civilians die in al-Qubair after government shelling; U.N. observers rush to probe the al-Qubair massacre, but retreat as they face roadblock and small arms fire

On June 22, Syria shoots down a Turkish fighter jet was shot down by Syrian government forces; Turkey vows retaliation and NATO condemns act

On June 27, Syrian opposition fighters attack a high-profile military facility and a pro-regime TV station near Damascus; Bashar al-Assad announces that his country is at war

On June 30, accepts international envoy Kofi Annan’s plan that calls for the creation of a transitional government; both the regime and the opposition reject the plan

On July 3, Human Rights Watch in a report says Syria has made torture a state policy against civilians

On July 6, Brig. Gen. Manaf Tlass, a member of the elite Republican Guards and a son of a former defence minister, abandons Bashar al-Assad’s regime; Friends of Syria conference in Paris

On July 12, Syria fires defected Ambassador to Iraq

On July 13, 200 massacred in Hama, claim Syrian activists

On July 18, suicide bomber kills Defence Minister, his deputy, and seriously injured several other top security officials including the Interior Minister and the intelligence chief

On July 19, Russia and China veto a new U.N. Security Council resolution that would have slapped new sanctions against President Bashar Assad’s regime; India and 10 other countries vote in favour

On July 20, Rebels launch all-out assault for control of Aleppo

On July 23, Syria warns of chemical weapons against “foreign aggression” | Arab League calls upon Bashar al-Assad to step down

US-NATO WAR ON SYRIA: WESTERN NAVAL FORCES CONFRONT RUSSIA OFF SYRIA’S COASTLINE?

US-NATO WAR ON SYRIA: WESTERN NAVAL FORCES CONFRONT RUSSIA OFF SYRIA’S COASTLINE?

While confrontation between Russia and the West  was, until recently, confined to the polite ambit of international diplomacy, within the confines of the UN Nations Security Council, an uncertain and perilous situation is now unfolding in the Eastern Mediterranean.

Allied forces including intelligence and special forces have reinforced their presence on the ground in Syria following the UN stalemate. Meanwhile, coinciding with the UN Security Council deadlock, Moscow has dispatched to the Mediterranean a flotilla of ten Russian warships and escort vessels led by the Admiral Chabanenko anti-submarine destroyer. Russia’s flotilla is currently stationed off the Southern Syrian coastline.

Back in August of last year, Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin warned that “NATO is planning a military campaign against Syria to help overthrow the regime of President Bashar al-Assad with a long-reaching goal of preparing a beachhead for an attack on Iran,…”  In relation to the current naval deployment, Russia’s navy chief, Vice Admiral Viktor Chirkov, confirmed, however, that while the [Russian] flotilla was carrying marines, the warships would “not be engaged in Syria Tasks”. “The ships will perform “planned military manoeuvres”, said the [Russian Defense] ministry” 

The US-NATO alliance has retorted to Russia’s naval initiative, with a much larger naval deployment, a formidable Western armada, consisting of British, French and American warships, slated to be deployed later this Summer in the Eastern Mediterranean, leading to a potential “Cold War style confrontation” between Russian and Western naval forces.

Meanwhile, US-NATO military planners have announced that various “military options” and “intervention scenarios” are being contemplated in the wake of the Russian-Chinese veto in the UN Security Council.

The planned naval deployment is coordinated with allied ground operations in support of the US-NATO sponsored “Free Syrian Army”(FSA). In this regard, US-NATO has speeded up the recruitment of foreign fighters trained in Turkey, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

Ebola virus disease

Ebola virus disease (EVD) (or Ebola hemorrhagic fever (EHF)) is the name for the imagehuman disease which may be caused by any of four of the five known ebola viruses. These four viruses are: Bundibugyo virus (BDBV), Ebola virus (EBOV), Sudan virus (SUDV), and Taï Forest virus (TAFV, formerly and more commonly Côte d'Ivoire Ebolavirus (Ivory Coast Ebolavirus, CIEBOV)). EVD is a viral hemorrhagic fever (VHF), and is clinically nearly indistinguishable from Marburg virus disease (MVD).

Ebola, which manifests itself as a hemorrhagic fever, is highly infectious and kills quickly. It was first reported in 1976 in Congo and is named for the river where it was recognised, according to the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.

Scientists don’t know the natural reservoir of the virus, but they suspect the first victim in an Ebola outbreak gets infected through contact with an infected animal.

Major Ebola outbreak in DR Congo

imageAn outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus in the Democratic Republic of Congo has been confirmed by the World Health Organization in Kasai province.

Mountain Lion Operating system

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Apple launched the next iteration of its operating system for its Mac range of personal computers,

The new OS is fully integrated into social networks such as Facebook and Twitter, bringing to its desktops (iMac) and notebooks (Macbooks) some salient features of its iOS mobile operating system.

Called OS X Mountain Lion,  It is compatible with most iMacs and Macbooks manufactured after 2007-08.

The upgrade is said to have over 200 new features compared to its predecessor the OS Lion. . Users will be able to tweet or post status messages on their Facebook walls even while browsing the web or viewing photographs.

Mountain Lion also brings the iMessage platform to iMacs and Macbooks. This will allow users to chat with other users who are running the program on either their Macs or other mobile Apple devices..

Saturday 28 July 2012

India deploys two new mountain divisions to counter China threats.

With an eye on China's growing military strength in Tibet, India has 'fully raised' two new mountain divisions with 30,000 troops in the northeast as a counter-measure and to shore up its mountain warfare capabilities.

'We have now fully raised the two new mountain divisions in the northeast. They are fully functional. Only some support elements may join them soon,' a senior officer at the Army Headquarters here told IANS.

The two new mountain divisions, raised at a cost of Rs 700 crore/ Rs 7 billion each, will be under the command of the Rangapahar-based 3 Corps in Nagaland and the Tezpur-based 4 Corps in Assam of the army's Kolkata-based Eastern Command.

The two divisions with 15,000 personnel each will further enhance the tactical strength of the Indian Army in the strategically important areas along the borders facing its traditional rival China, which claims the whole of Arunachal Pradesh as its territory.

The new mountain divisions have come up at a time when India's security top brass is warily watching the massive upgrade of Chinese military infrastructure along the 4,057-km Line of Actual Control (LAC) - the ceasefire line as there is no demaracated border - in all the three sectors - western (Ladakh), middle (Uttarakhand, Himachal) and eastern (Sikkim, Arunachal).

The other China-specific plans include the raising of the 'Arunachal Scouts' and 'Sikkim Scouts' that was given the nod last year.

India has also deployed a Sukhoi SU-30 air superiority fighter jet squadron in Tezpur as one of the aerial offensive measures apart from upgrading airfields and helipads in the northeast.The Cabinet Committee on Security had approved the raising of the two new divisions in early 2008 and preparations for raising the offensive infantry formations began the same year.

The army, out of its 35 divisions, already has 10 divisions dedicated to mountain warfare and another infantry division earmarked for high altitude operations.

Though the plan for raising the two new formations was to be in two phases over five years, the army has compressed timelines to have them in place within three years, primarily in view of the defence ministry's focus on building military strength in the northeast, the officer, who did not wish to be named, said.

Under the first phase, the two new divisions' headquarters, along with a brigade each, have come up, including the headquarters' support elements such as signals, provost, and intelligence units. Implementation of the second phase will be completed in the first half of this year to make them operationally ready.

The divisions have been armed with state-of-the-art technology such as heavy-lift helicopters capable of carrying 50 troops each; ultralight howitzers that can be slung under the helicopters for transportation; missile and cannon-armed helicopter gunships; utility helicopters and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).

India is already in the process of purchasing 140 M777 ultralight howitzers worth $647 million through the foreign military sales route from the US under its Rs 12,000-crore ($2.7-billion) artillery modernisation plan.

The air assets, such as the helicopter gunships and attack helicopters, will provide the two divisions capabilities to carry out manoeuvres for countering the terrain impediments.

The gunships and attack choppers will be necessary for providing the two formations firepower in a mountain terrain, as the army will not be in a position to deploy tanks and armoured vehicles,' the officer pointed out.

The firepower in the third dimension (air) was required due to difficulties the army would face in using artillery guns in an operation over a mountainous terrain.

Indo-China border now under Arunachal Scouts

The Indian Army’s 1st Arunachal Scouts battalion, two years after its formation, has taken charge of providing security to the unmanned, inhospitable and porous international border in the land-locked Himalayan state.

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The battalion will help to maintain peace and tranquillity in the border areas, and will not only be eyes and ears, but also act as a force multiplier.

Arunachal Scouts is an infantry regiment with specialization in mountain warfare and was raised to defend India's border with Tibet in Arunachal Pradesh.

Arunachal has the longest international boundary among the states in the country with 1,680 km – 160 km with Bhutan, 1,080 with China and 440 km with Myanmar.

Led by commanding officer in the rank of a colonel, the battalion reached its headquarters at Riyang on Sunday, 30 km from Pasighat, to do the most onerous duty – assisting Arunchalees, who have been serving as sentinels of the eastern frontier of the nation since the army suffered a humiliating defeat at the hands of the Chinese in 1962.

The new battalion is born out of the Assam Regiment and will continue to be a part of the living symbol of martial strength and traditions of the Northeast.

Local recruits of the new force having inborn qualities will go a long way in ensuring the national integrity and will take the mantle of the other jawans to maintain vigilance in places that have varying altitudes from 1,500 feet to 2,400 feet of altitude from the sea level.

The proposal to raise the Arunachal Scouts along the lines of the illustrious Ladakh Scouts for defending the border with China was proposed by Governor J.J. Singh, a former army chief in 2008, who had pushed the proposal through Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. The Union Cabinet approved the proposal in 2009 and the 1st battalion was raised in 2010.

CCS Nod for Raising 2nd Battalion of Arunachal Scouts

The CCS meeting here, chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, cleared proposal to raise the second battalion of Arunachal Scouts to protect country's boundary with China in the north eastern state.

Coast Guard Station Karaikal commissioned

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Coast Guard Station Karaikal, the fifth CG station on the Puducherry-Tamil Nadu coastline was commissioned at Karaikal

A chain of static sensors along the mainland and island territories are being installed to bolster coastal surveillance and security under the Indian Coast Guard. The installations will be put in place on the mainland by September, and on island territories by March of next year,

36 radar stations on the mainland from Gujarat to West Bengal, and six radar stations in Lakshadweep group of islands and four radar stations in Andaman group of  islands.These radars would be remotely controlled from various key stations along the coast to keep track of ships, vessels and units.” The commissioning of the Indian Coast Guard station in Karaikal would mark the 35 CGS of the country, fifth CGS along Tamil Nadu Coast and second in Puducherry territory. ICGS Karaikal had ushered in an asset addition to the existing Coast Guard stations along the Tamil Nadu coast in Chennai, Tuticorin, Mandapam and Puducherry.

This envisaged marine environment protection, disaster management, medical emergencies, and anti-poaching operations, refugee repatriation alongside Search and Rescue Missions (SAR) and law enforcement at sea. With the expanded mandate, Indian Coast Guard assumed greater significance.

In addition, the private MARG Karaikal port would provide dedicated berthing facilities for Coast Guard inshore patrol vessels (IPVs), small ships and interceptor boats. The station would use existing helipads here.

Map picture

Exoplanet Atmosphere Blasted by Stellar Flare

An international team of astronomers using data from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has detected significant changes in the atmosphere of a planet located beyond our solar system. The scientists conclude the atmospheric variations occurred in response to a powerful eruption on the planet's host star, an event observed by NASA's Swift satellite.

The exoplanet is HD 189733b, a gas giant similar to Jupiter, but about 14 percent larger and more massive. The planet circles its star at a distance of only 3 million miles, or about 30 times closer than Earth's distance from the sun, and completes an orbit every 2.2 days. Its star, named HD 189733A, is about 80 percent the size and mass of our sun.

Astronomers classify the planet as a "hot Jupiter." Previous Hubble observations show that the planet's deep atmosphere reaches a temperature of about 1,900 degrees Fahrenheit (1,030 C).

HD 189733b periodically passes across, or transits, its parent star, and these events give astronomers an opportunity to probe its atmosphere and environment. In a previous study, a group led by Lecavelier des Etangs used Hubble to show that hydrogen gas was escaping from the planet's upper atmosphere. The finding made HD 189733b only the second-known "evaporating" exoplanet at the time.

The system is just 63 light-years away, so close that its star can be seen with binoculars near the famous Dumbbell, or Apple Core, Nebula. This makes HD 189733b an ideal target for studying the processes that drive atmospheric escape.

When HD 189733b transits its star, some of the star's light passes through the planet's atmosphere. This interaction imprints information on the composition and motion of the planet's atmosphere into the star's light.

In April 2010, the researchers observed a single transit using Hubble's Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS), but they detected no trace of the planet's atmosphere. Follow-up STIS observations in September 2011 showed a surprising reversal, with striking evidence that a plume of gas was streaming away from the exo planet.

The researchers determined that at least 1,000 tons of gas was leaving the planet's atmosphere every second. The hydrogen atoms were racing away at speeds greater than 300,000 mph.

Because X-rays and extreme ultraviolet starlight heat the planet's atmosphere and likely drive its escape, the team also monitored the star with Swift's X-ray Telescope (XRT). On Sept. 7, 2011, just eight hours before Hubble was scheduled to observe the transit, Swift was monitoring the star when it unleashed a powerful flare. It brightened by 3.6 times in X-rays, a spike occurring atop emission levels that already were greater than the sun's. Astronomers estimate that HD 189733b encountered about 3 million times as many X-rays as Earth receives from a solar flare at the threshold of the X class.





Friday 27 July 2012

HAL Delivers ‘IFF-1410’ System to Navy for P-81 Aircraft

India’s premier aeronautic laboratory, the state-run Hindustan Aeronauts Limited (HAL) has delivered the first home grown production unit of Identification of Friend or Foe (IFF-1410) transponder for the Indian Navy’s Boeing P-8I reconnaissance aircraft. The IFF-1410 transponder which is designed, developed and produced by HAL has been handed over to the Indian Navy and will be integrated into the P-81 Poseidon aircraft.
 
The indigenous IFF-1410 transponder from HAL’s Avionics Division is also under evaluation and trials for Jaguar aircraft's Darin III upgrade and HAL's trainer aircraft HJT-36 Sitara besides getting integrated with P-81 aircraft.

Meanwhile, India’s HAL is gearing up to demonstrate a Combined Interrogator Transponder (CIT) MK XII system by mid-June 2013. HAL’s Hyderabad Division is also developing a production equivalent prototype of a software-defined radio which will also be revealed next year.
 
As for Aerospace Division of HAL, it is creating advanced avionics ranging from navigation equipment, data-link equipment and radio communication equipment. It is also creating Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radars for future Indian Armed Forces’ aircraft programmes such as Fifth generation Fighter aircraft (FGFA), Multirole Transport Aircraft (MTA) as well as HTT-40 trainer aircraft.

Voter Verified Paper Audit Trail

The concept of Voter Verified Balloting was created by Rebecca Mercuri.

rebecca mercuri
VVPAT
is the acronym of "Voter Verified Paper Audit Trail" and VVBP is the acronym of "voter verified paper ballot". The terms are equivalent and refer to a kind of "vote receipt" printed by an electronic voting machine that shows the elector his/her vote as it is being entered into the electoral system. The voter must be required to perform an action that confirms that their choices have been recorded correctly on the paper, hence making it a verified (rather than just "verifiable") ballot in a legal sense. The VVPAT/VVBP is kept by the election official, as the record of votes cast, for audit and recount purposes. Verification of a small percentage of VVPAT should to be activated when elections are close.

Voter-verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) or verified paper record (VPR) is a method of providing feedback to voters using a ballot less voting system. A VVPAT is intended as an independent verification system for voting machines designed to allow voters to verify that their vote was cast correctly, to detect possible election fraud or malfunction, and to provide a means to audit the stored electronic results.

The VVPAT offers some fundamental differences as a paper, rather than computer memory, recording medium when storing votes. A paper VVPAT is readable by the human eye and voters can directly interpret their vote. Computer memory requires a device and software which potentially is proprietary. Insecure voting machine records could potentially be changed quickly without detection by the voting machine itself. It would be more difficult for voting machines to corrupt records without human intervention. Corrupt or malfunctioning voting machines might store votes other than as intended by the voter unnoticed. A VVPAT allows voters the possibility to verify that their votes are cast as intended and can serve as an additional barrier to changing or destroying votes.

Thursday 26 July 2012

Biomimicry

What is Biomimicry?        

Biomimicry (from bios, meaning life, and mimesis, meaning to imitate) is a new discipline that studies nature's best ideas and then imitates these designs and processes to solve human problems. Studying a leaf to invent a better solar cell is an example. I think of it as "innovation inspired by nature."

The core idea is that nature, imaginative by necessity, has already solved many of the problems we are grappling with. Animals, plants, and microbes are the consummate engineers. They have found what works, what is appropriate, and most important, what lasts here on Earth. This is the real news of bio mimicry: After 3.8 billion years of research and development, failures are fossils, and what surrounds us is the secret to survival.

Like the viceroy butterfly imitating the monarch, we humans are imitating the best adapted organisms in our habitat. We are learning, for instance, how to harness energy like a leaf, grow food like a prairie, build ceramics like an abalone, self-medicate like a chimp, create colour like a peacock, compute like a cell, and run a business like a hickory forest.

The conscious emulation of life's genius is a survival strategy for the human race, a path to a sustainable future. The more our world functions like the natural world, the more likely we are to endure on this home that is ours, but not ours alone





Looking at Nature as Model, Measure, and Mentor

If we want to consciously emulate nature's genius, we need to look at nature differently.  In bio mimicry, we look at nature as model, measure, and mentor.  

Nature as model:

Bio mimicry is a new science that studies nature’s models and then emulates these forms, process, systems, and strategies to solve human problems – sustainably.  The Bio mimicry Guild and its collaborators have developed a practical design tool, called the Bio mimicry Design Spiral, for using nature as model.

Nature as measure:

Bio mimicry uses an ecological standard to judge the sustainability of our innovations.  After 3.8 billion years of evolution, nature has learned what works and what lasts.  Nature as measure is captured in Life's Principles and is embedded in the evaluate step of the Bio mimicry Design Spiral.

Nature as mentor:

Biomimicry is a new way of viewing and valuing nature.  It introduces an era based not on what we can extract from the natural world, but what we can learn from it.

2012 Ramon Magsaysay Awardees

Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation

History

The Ramon Magsaysay Award was created in 1957, the year the Philippines lost in a plane crash a President who was well-loved for his simplicity and humility, his passion for justice, particularly for the poor, and his advancement of human dignity. Among the many friends and admirers of the late President around the world were the Rockefeller brothers. With the concurrence of the Philippine government, the trustees of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund (RBF) established the Award to honour his memory and perpetuate his example of integrity in public service and pragmatic idealism within a democratic society.

Supported with a generous endowment from the RBF, the Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation (RMAF) was organized in Manila in May 1957, with seven prominent Filipinos as founding members of the foundation's board of trustees. The Foundation has since implemented the Magsaysay Award program, pursuing the mission of "honouring greatness of spirit in selfless service to the peoples of Asia." The first Ramon Magsaysay Awards were given on August 31, 1958 to five outstanding individuals working in India, Indonesia, Philippines, Republic of China (Taiwan) and Sri Lanka, and a Philippine-based organization.

The awardees are:

Chen Shu-Chu from Taiwan.

She is being recognized for “the pure altruism of her personal giving, which reflects a deep, consistent, quiet compassion, and has transformed the lives of the numerous Taiwanese she has helped.”

Romulo Davide from the Philippines.

He is being recognized for “his steadfast passion in placing the power and discipline of science in the hands of farmers in the Philippines, who have consequently multiplied their yields, created productive farming communities, and rediscovered the dignity of their labour.”

Kulandei Francis from India.

He is being recognized for “his visionary zeal, his profound faith in community energies, and his sustained programs in pursuing the holistic economic empowerment of thousands of women and their families in rural India.”

Syeda Rizwana Hasan from Bangladesh.

She is being recognized for “her uncompromising courage and impassioned leadership in a campaign of judicial activism in Bangladesh that affirms the people’s right to a good environment as nothing less than their right to dignity and life.”

Yang Saing Koma from Cambodia.

He is being recognized for “his creative fusion of practical science and collective will that has inspired and enabled vast numbers of farmers in Cambodia to become more empowered and productive contributors to their country’s economic growth.”

Ambrosius Ruwindrijarto from Indonesia.

He is being recognized for “his sustained advocacy for community-based natural resource management in Indonesia, leading bold campaigns to stop illegal forest exploitation, as well as fresh social enterprise initiatives that engage the forest communities as their full partners.”

The six 2012 Magsaysay awardees join 290 other laureates who have received Asia’s highest honour to date. This year’s Magsaysay Award winners will each receive a certificate, a medallion bearing the likeness of the late President, and a cash prize.

Wednesday 25 July 2012

Egypt's new Prime Minister Hashim Qandil

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Egypt's new Prime Minister Hashim Qandil

Egypt’s President Mohamed Morsi has appointed Hashim Qandil, the current irrigation minister, as the new prime minister of the North African nation. Last year, Qandil was appointed as irrigation and water resources minister after the fall of the former Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak in early 2011.

After completing his undergraduate level in faculty of Engineering of Cairo University in 1984, Qandil continued his academic education in the US and obtained his Master's degree and Doctorate from North Carolina University in irrigation and drainage engineering.

He also worked as the head of the Nile sector in the African Development Bank.

Sworn in on June 30, Morsi is locked in a power struggle with the powerful Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF).

The parliament, dominated by Muslim Brotherhood lawmakers, was dissolved in line with a ruling by the Supreme Constitutional Court, based on a decision by the military, prior to the presidential elections.

Morsi was elected president on June 24 in a runoff against Ahmed Shafiq, who served as ousted dictator Mubarak's last prime minister.

Thursday 19 July 2012

Committee to Scale Up PPP Mode in Inland Waterways Sector

A Committee has been constituted to scale up private investment in Inland Waterways Sector under the Secretary, Planning Commission. The Secretary, Ministry of Shipping, DG of Inland Waterways Authority of India (IWAI) and a representative of Department of Economic Affairs will be the members. This Committee would undertake a systematic effort to identify new areas for private investment, both in infrastructure and in transportation. It will also identify multiple business models which could then be bid out through concessions. This will be supplemented by designing Model Concession Agreements (MCA) and other standardised documents for facilitating a rapid scaling up of investment.

The committee will assess the investment potential of the sector and come up with approaches and proposals for scaling up private investment in Inland Waterways. It will also suggest mechanisms to have standardised MCAs prepared quickly for possible areas of investment.

 

National Waterways - 1, 2 and 3 (NW - 1,2,3). These are the

Varanasi- Haldia stretch of the Ganga (NW-1),

Brahmaputra in Assam (NW-2)

Inland stretch in Kerala (NW-3).

IWAI has since moved forward on large scale private investments to transport coal and fertilizer on NW-1, foodgrains and coal on NW-2 and a lot of cargo on NW-3.

The development and regulation of the waterways which are declared as National Waterways are under the purview of Central Government, while the other waterways remain under the purview of the respective State Governments. The Government has been taking various steps to develop Inland Water Transport (IWT) which, inter-alia, includes ensuring targeted depth and width in the navigational channels, aids for day and night navigation, fixed/floating terminals at specified locations for berthing and loading/unloading of vessels and intermodal connectivity at select locations. Besides these, Central Government also provides 100 per cent Grants-in-aid to the States in the North-Eastern Region for development of IWT.

As per the Report prepared by RITES Ltd. in the year 2009 titled “Total Transport System study on Traffic Flows & Modal Costs”, the share of Inland Water Transport (IWT) in the total domestic transport during 2007-08 was 0.24 % compared to 50.12 % for the road and 36.06 per cent for the rail sector in terms of tonne km.

Geonkhali-Charbatia stretch of East Coast Canal (217 km),

Charbatia- Dhamra stretch of Matai River (39 km),

Talcher- Dhamra stretch of Brahmani- Kharsua- Dhamra River system (265 km) along with Mangalgadi- Paradeep stretch of Mahanadi delta Rivers ( 67 km) having a total length of 588 km.

In the States of West Bengal and Odisha have been declared as National Waterway (NW-5) w.e.f. 25th November, 2008. Out of total length of 588 km., about 497 km. of NW-5 is in the State of Odisha. The efforts to develop more commercially viable stretches of NW-5 under Public Private Partnership (PPP) mode with Viability Gap Funding (VGF) under India Infrastructure Project Development Fund (IIPDF) and PPP Pilot Project Initiative under the Asian Development Bank (ADB) Technical Assistance are in process.

National Policy on Petrochemicals

In pursuance of National Policy on Petrochemicals, the Department of Chemicals and Petrochemicals has taken up implementation of the following 3 schemes.

i) Schemes of National Awards for Technology Innovations in Petrochemicals and downstream Plastic Processing Industry –

The aim is to incentivize meritorious innovations and inventions in the field of Petrochemicals and downstream Plastic Processing Industry. The National Awards for the year 2010-11 were distributed on 28th November, 2011 and the National Award for the year 2011-12 were distributed on 26th April, 2012.

ii) Setting up of Centres of Excellence –

It aims at improving the existing petrochemical technology and research in the country. In the year 2010-11, CIPET, Chennai and National Chemical Laboratory, Pune have been identified for setting up of Centres of Excellence. These two Centres of Excellence have already started research activities in their respective fields.

iii) Setting up of Plastic Parks –

The scheme has been formulated in the year 2010-11 with the aim of setting up need based plastic parks with requisite state of the art infrastructure and enabling common facilities to assist the sector to move up the value chain and contribute to the economy effectively. The Scheme Steering Committee in its first meeting held on 24.02.2012 granted “in principle” approval for setting up of four plastic parks in the states of Tamil Nadu, Madhya Pradesh, Assam and Odisha.

India's Defence Shipyards Building 61 Warships, Vessels

India's four Defence public sector shipyards are building a total of 61 warships and vessels for the maritime forces of the country.

The four shipyards are ..

Mumbai-based Mazagaon Docks Limited (MDL),

Kolkata-based Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers (GRSE),

Goa-based Goa Shipyard Limited (GSL)

Visakhapatnam-based Hindustan Shipyard Limited (HSL), which is the latest entrant in governmental warship building in the country.

MDL has 14 warships on order including the six Project-75 Scorpene submarines. It is also constructing a Project-17 Frigate of the Shivalik class, three Project-15A Kolkata class and follow-on four Project-15B Destroyers, all for the Indian Navy.

GRSE is constructing four Anti-Submarine Warfare Corvettes under Project-28, apart from six Inshore Patrol Vessel of the Rajshree class and eight Landing Craft Utility, forming the 18 ships on order.

GSL, on the other hand, is building 11 vessels, four of which are Offshore Patrol Vessels for the Indian Navy, six 105-metre Offshore Patrol Vessels and a 90-metre Offshore Patrol Vessel.

The HSL, which joined Defence shipbuilding as a government shipyard just about two years ago, has 12 Inshore Patrol Vessels of two different classes, apart from three 50-ton Bollard Pull Tug and 25-ton Bollard Pull Tug.

But the performance of the four shipyards, in terms of deliveries, is a really interesting bag. MDL has, in the last 10 years, delivered just two frigates under Project-17.

GRSE, on the other hand, has been the best performer, delivering 24 vessels in the last 10 years -- five Fast Attack Craft, two Project-16A Frigates, an Hovercraft, two Inshore Patrol Vessels, three Landing Ship Tanks, a Project-25A Corvette, and 10 Waterjet Fast Attack Craft.

GSL has delivered 12 ships of which two were Extra Fast Attack Craft, a Sail Training Ship, two Advanced Offshore Patrol Vessels, five Fast Patrol Vessels, and two 90-metre Offshore Patrol Vessels.

HSL has in the last two years delivered an Inshore Patrol Vessel, that too in January 2012.

Since warship building is a very complex activity that has a long gestation period, latest technologies and systems that evolve during the construction period have to be incorporated after making necessary changes in existing design.

Wednesday 18 July 2012

Hubble telescope spots a 5th Plutonian satellite

image

As humankind's first robotic visitor to Pluto approaches its destination, astronomers working to understand what it will find there have uncovered a tiny moon orbiting the dwarf planet.

The moon is the fifth known natural satellite of Pluto and has been informally labeled P5. It was discovered Saturday, July 7, in images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope as part of a campaign to identify possible hazards to the New Horizons spacecraft, now en route to Pluto for a 2015 flyby. Dust rings encircling Pluto, or small moons shedding unseen debris, could endanger the $700-million mission. So far, the search has not identified any dangerous dust bands around Pluto, but it has turned up two newfound moons—a small object called P4 last year, and now P5.

P5 is incredibly faint—half as bright as P4, and roughly one one-hundred-thousandth as bright as Pluto—and orbits relatively close to the dwarf planet. The newfound moon's faintness implies that it has a diameter of just 10 to 25 kilometers. "They're very close, and this is a very small object.

P4 and P5 join Charon, a large moon of Pluto whose discovery was announced exactly 34 years prior to the day Showalter spotted P5 in new Hubble imagery as well as the small moons Nix and Hydra, discovered by astronomers using Hubble in 2005. All of those satellites could be remnants of one giant collision early in solar system history.





Pan-India roll out of e-Courts by 2014

The Government was committed to pan-India roll out of e-Courts by 2014 to deliver quick justice and reduce the backlog of pending cases.

Under the e-Courts Mission Mode Project (MMP), it is proposed to implement ICT in Indian Judiciary in 3 phases over a period of 5 years.

This is imperative and we can’t achieve the goal set for reducing the backlog of pending cases without help of e-Courts.

e-Courts would bring about transparency in the judicial system and help in faster disposal of cases. The e-Court system is more reliable, faster and efficient.

“A data storage and retrieval repository, easily accessible to legal fraternity and common man should be created.

It is the need of the hour to ensure that justice to the common man is not delayed or denied. We need this technology to increase our efficiency."

e-Courts will be of great help to the judiciary and the common man as court and case management would become easier, delays would be reduced and it would become difficult to mislead litigants.

The MMP aims to develop, deliver, install, and implement automated decision-making and decision-support systems in 700 courts across Delhi, Bombay, Kolkata and Chennai; 900 courts across 29 State/ Union Territory capitals; and 13,000 district and subordinate courts across the nation.

TRAI plans standardisation of mobile data

Draft policy for regulating wireless data services by mobile operators has been released for inviting comments, objections and suggestions

Browsing Internet is set to become a soothing experience. Users of mobile data or wireless broadband services may soon be having real-time high speed web-browsing, video streaming and live chats. The phase of prolonged latency (zero date download/upload for longer period) would be over.

Moved by growing number of complaints regarding poor delivery of data through wireless technology (3-G and wireless broadband access) by mobile operators, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) has set in the process for finalising the standard benchmark for data service to regulate mobile data service.

Though the quality of voice and messaging services of all mobile operators are being audited regularly, data service, which of late received phenomenal growth in subscribers’ base after the launch of 3-G services, remained unregulated so far.

As a result, mobile operators hardly paid any significant attention towards ensuring quality service as assured to the customers.

Once the regulation is notified, service providers would not have any excuse for degraded speed of data upload/download as promised by them.

As per the draft regulation, quality of service would be assessed on different parametres such as service activation, successful data transmission download attempts, minimum download speed, average throughput for packet data, latency and service disconnection due to link failures.

The proposed regulation would enable TRAI to set up or appoint technical team to monitor the speed and quality of data being offered to subscribers in different areas and slap fines on operators for their slackness.

RBI moots new index to measure inflation

It has proposed a Producer Price Index in place of the Wholesale Price Index to bring price movement of services under the structure.

Reserve Bank Governor D Subbarao has proposed a producer price index (PPI) saying that the present structure of measuring inflation does not capture the price movement of services and is a hybrid of rate quotes.

Producer Price Index (PPI) will be better able to measure the average change over time in the sale prices of domestic goods and services.

Sellers and purchaser prices differ due to government subsidies, sales and excise taxes, and distribution costs.

The RBI Governor further said that core inflation gives a better picture of price trend as it is less volatile Wholesale Price Index (WPI) -based inflation.

Core inflation is usually estimated by excluding food and energy prices from the basket of goods and services that represents a household's spending.

Government steps up effort to boost inland waterways

It has formed a panel to identify new areas for attracting private investments in the sector

To promote private investment into inland waterways, the Central government has constituted a committee which will identify new areas for attracting funds and private investment in the sector.

"This committee would undertake a systematic effort to identify new areas for private investment, both in infrastructure and in transportation. It will also identify multiple business models which could then be bid out through concessions.

The PMO has been actively pushing for greater private investment in inland waterways.

The PMO has identified and fast-tracked implementation of key projects in the national waterways (NW). These are the

Varanasi-Haldia stretch of the Ganga (NW-1),

Brahmaputra in Assam (NW-2),

Inland stretch in Kerala (NW-3).

Based on the push by the PMO, the Inland Waterways Authority of India (IWAI) has moved forward on large-scale private investments to transport coal and fertilizer on NW-1, food grain and coal on NW-2, and a cargo on NW-3.

"This (process) will be supplemented by designing model concession agreements and other standardised documents for facilitating a rapid scaling up of investment.

The committee will have Secretary (Planning), Secretary (Shipping), Director General IWAI and a representative of DEA (Department of Economic Affairs) as members.

HIV-prevention drug Truvada approved

US health regulators have for the first time approved a drug to prevent HIV infection.

imageTruvada, made by California-based Gilead Sciences, is already backed by the FDA to be taken with existing antiretroviral drugs for people who have HIV.

Studies from 2010 showed that Truvada reduced the risk of HIV in healthy gay men - and among HIV-negative heterosexual partners of HIV-positive people - by between 44% and 73%.

"We know that for HIV-positive people if they consistently take antiretroviral drugs and their viral load is suppressed for them it's almost impossible to transmit the virus."

Truvada is approved in the UK for the treatment of HIV, but not prevention.

In 2011 another study found that Truvada reduced infection by 75 per cent in heterosexual couples in which one partner was infected, according to reports.

Tuesday 17 July 2012

Indian Oil Limited’s ‘Rupaantar’ creates transformation

The project is coined to eliminate poverty through income generating activities by social mobilization and capacity building among the rural people. During a short span of time of only nine years the project “Rupaantar” is now being considered as a milestone of rural development initiatives across the country

In Assam, the project “Rupaantar” (Transformation) has been able to create a social and economic transformation in the operational areas of Oil India Ltd. Particularly in Dibrugarh and Tinsukia district. The project is being jointly implemented by the Oil India Ltd and the State institute of Rural Development, Assam.

The project is coined to eliminate poverty through income generating activities by social mobilization and capacity building among the rural people. During a short span of time of only nine years the project “Rupaantar” is now being considered as a milestone of rural development initiatives across the country.

AIR correspondent reports, In order to address the problem of growing unemployment and poverty the Oil India Ltd. has undertaken a long term project named “Rupaantar” which means Transformation. The idea of the project was to help the unemployed youth and women to find out alternate source of employment and income.

To achieve this goal the Oil India Ltd. Has signed a memorandum of understanding with the State Institute of Rural Development (SIRD), Assam in the year 2003. Under this project Self Help Groups (SHGs) are developed and SIRD is providing these groups necessary training and technical support where the OIL is supporting them in the form of revolving fund and margin money

USAID-FICCI launches Millennium Alliance

MA - a platform to bring together Indian creativity, expertise and resources to source and intensify innovations being developed and tested in the country.

The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) is contributing $7.7 million to the Millennium Alliance (MA), which is being matched by FICCI.

Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) unveiled the program website and announced the first call for applications inviting Indian innovators to apply for grant funding to develop and scale their innovations.

The Millennium Alliance will provide social innovators with essential resources such as seed funding, business incubation services, networking opportunities, and technical assistance, and will facilitate their access to equity, debt, and other capital.

Cho-Lhamu declared highest lake in India

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The Cho-Lhamu lake over 18,000 feet above sea level in North Sikkim

The Cho-Lhamu lake, located over 18,000 feet above sea level in North Sikkim, has been declared the highest lake in the country after a survey conducted by the Central Government.

The Wetland Atlas, prepared by the Ministry of Environment and Forest, states that Cho-Lhamu is the highest lake in the country and the sixth highest lake in the world, Bhim Dhungel, Tourism Minister, Sikkim said recently.

The Teesta river, said to be the lifeline of Sikkim, has its origin in Cho-Lhamu lake, located near the Donkiala Pass and only about five kilometres from the Indo-China border.

National Wetland Atlas

National Wetland Atlas

imageThis publication by Space Applications Centre (SAC), Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is an outcome of the project on National Wetland Inventory and Assessment (NWIA) and deals with the updated database and status of wetlands, compiled in an atlas format. Increasing concern about how our wetlands are being influenced had led to formulation of the project entitled to create an updated database of the wetlands of India.

What is Wetlands?

Wetlands defined as areas of land that are either temporarily or permanently covered by water exhibit enormous diversity according to their genesis, geographical location, water regime and chemistry. They are one of the most productive ecosystems and play crucial role in hydrological cycle. Utility-wise, wetlands directly and indirectly support millions of people in providing services such as storm and flood control, clean water supply, food, fiber and raw materials, scenic beauty, educational and recreational benefits. Thus, their identification and protection becomes very important.





IAS Preparation online

Categories of Wetlands

The wetlands have been categorised under nineteen classes and mapped using satellite remote sensing data from Indian Remote Sensing Satellite: IRS P6- LISS III sensor. The results are organised at 1: 50,000 scales at district, state and topographic map sheet (Survey of India reference) level using Geographic Information System (GIS). This publication is a part of this national work and deals with the wetland status of a particular State/Union Territory of India, through text, statistical tables, satellite images, maps and ground photographs.

This is the first time that high resolution digital remote sensing data has been used to map and decipher the status of the wetlands at national scale. The methodology highlights how the four spectral bands of LISS III data (green, red, near infra red and short wave infra red) have been used to derive various indices and decipher information regarding water spread, turbidity and aquatic vegetation. Since, the aim was to generate a GIS compatible database, details of the standards of database are also highlighted in the methodology.

The results and finding are organized in three sections; viz: Maps and Statistics, Major wetland types, and Important Wetlands of the area. The Maps and Statistics are shown for state and district level. It gives details of what type of wetlands exists in the area, how many numbers in each type, their area estimates in hectare. Since, the hydrology of wetlands are influenced by monsoon performance, extent of waterspread and their turbidity (qualitative) in wet and dry season (post-monsoon and pre-monsoon period) are also given.

Some important findings

Excluding rivers, wetlands cover some 10 million hectares, or a little over three percent of the country’s geographical area.

Of this 10 million hectares, reservoirs account for about 2.5 million hectares, inter-tidal mud flats for 2.4 million hectares, tanks for 1.3 million hectares, lakes/ponds for 0.70 million hectares, mangroves for some 0.47 million hectares and corals for about 0.14 million hectares.

Objective of the Project?

The main objective of the project were wetland mapping and inventory at 1:50,000 scale resolution by analysis of digital satellite data of post and pre-monsoon seasons, creation of digital database in GIS environment and preparation of state-wise wetland atlases.

State wise distribution of wetlands

Lakshadweep has 96.12 per cent of geographic area under wetlands

Andaman and Nicobar Islands (18.52 per cent),

Damand and Diu (18.46 per cent)

Gujarat (17.56 per cent) have highest extent of wetlands.

Puducherry (12.88 per cent)

West Bengal (12.48 per cent),

Assam (9.74 per cent) are wetland-rich States.

States like Mizoram, Haryana, Delhi Sikkim, Nagaland and Meghalaya the extents of wetland is less than 1.5 per cent.

The inventory said, India has long coast line and large area under coastal wetlands like inter-tidal, mudflat, lagoon and creek.

The inventory has also mapped high altitude lakes lying above 3,000 meter elevation. The Indian Himalayas cover almost 18 per cent of India’s land surface and is spread over six states, which have 4703 lakes above 3,000 meter elevation.

This includes 1996 small lakes. The total area of these lakes is 1.26 lakh hectares.

Cho-Lhamu lake