Indian Holocaust My Father`s Life and Time -Two Hundred SIX
Palash Biswas
http://indianholocaustmyfatherslifeandtime.blogspot.com/
The deep-sea crab that eats trees
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'नैनीताल समाचार' 1 जनवरी 2009 में विनोद अरविन्द ने 'गुमशुदा हुए चिपको आंदोलन के असली मुद्दे' में इस बात को रेखांकित करने का प्रयास किया है कि चिपको आंदोलन को पुनः परिभाषित करने का समय आ गया है। वैश्विक और राष्ट्रीय संदर्भ में वनों के संरक्षण और संवर्द्धन का अपना महत्व है। ग्लोबल वार्मिंग और [ आगे पढ़ें.....]
The Koda Scam | ||||||
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As 300 mn people move to urban centres in 40 yrs, challenge is to redesign transport & land-use pattern to optimise energy use. |
The release of discussion papers on GST reflects only the broad consensus amongst the states and has not yet been ratified by the central government.
Roubini warned that the Fed Reserve and other govt central banks are fuelling a massive new asset "bubble" that will someday lead to calamitous consequences.
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/Opinion/opinionshome/897228639.cmsGreen debate ahead of CopenhagenReading Post - 2 hours ago Greater Reading Environmental Network (GREN) has organised a public debate today on the UN International Climate talks in Copenhagen with local MP Martin ... Increasing Pessimism on Copenhagen, US Climate Bill Triple Pundit Averting climate catastrophe UI The Daily Iowan US most important country for climate deal: UN ChiefTimes of India - 3 hours ago "All eyes of the world are looking to the United States and to this august body, the US Senate," he said, adding that the Copenhagen Climate Conference ... IEA urges low-carbon energy investmentsEurActiv - 3 hours ago The 2009 edition came out just ahead of the UN climate conference in Copenhagen in December, where the global community is to negotiate a successor to the ... IEA says global oil demand returns to growth in Q4 Moneycontrol.com IEA warns of huge cost for energy 'revolution' Daily Times IEA puts $500bn a year cost on Copenhagen failure Carbon Finance (subscription) Climate change talks deadlocked: SaranBusiness Standard - Nov 10, 2009 Efforts to achieve a global agreement to address climate change at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen in December are at a deadlock, ... Congress Has Two Choices On Addressing Climate Change Says Markey Talk Radio News Service Rudd Says Collaboration Key to Tackle Climate ChangeBloomberg - - 7 hours ago The United Nations will host delegates from 192 nations in Copenhagen in December to seek a new emission-reduction treaty for industrialized and developing ... Meles Unites 52 Nations to Exert Clout at UN SummitBloomberg - - 22 minutes ago 12 (Bloomberg) -- Africa's point man at the Copenhagen climate-change summit next month is prime minister of drought- stricken Ethiopia, a former Marxist ... Ethiopia PM says world not serious on climate change Reuters South Africa Denmark invites 191 leaders to UN climate summitReuters UK - - 23 minutes ago COPENHAGEN, Nov 12 (Reuters) - Denmark has formally invited the leaders of United Nations member countries to the UN conference in Copenhagen in December ... Denmark invites 191 leaders to UN climate talks The Associated Press Poor nations vow low-carbon pathBBC News - - Nov 11, 2009 The V11 declaration is in part an appeal for richer nations to promise more at the UN climate summit in Copenhagen next month, which is supposed to agree a ... Vulnerable nations for climate change United Press International World leaders 'must act on climate change' Morning Star Online Copenhagen chief backs Aussie ETSBrisbane Times - - 18 hours ago The boss of the Copenhagen climate summit says it would make a "huge difference" to global negotiations if Australia passed its emissions trading scheme ... Copenhagen chief backs Aussie ETS Sky News Australia London Lib Dems - Sign up to join The Wave - Copenhagen 2009 - Cooling the Planet DeHavilland (press release) (subscription) |
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POPULATION PRESSURE AND DEFORESTATION IN INDIA S.C. Gulati Suresh ...
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POPULATION PRESSURE AND DEFORESTATION IN INDIA. INTRODUCTION. The growing global concern for conservation of the world's natural resources has resulted in ...
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DEFORESTATION IN INDIA. OVERVIEW AND PROPOSED CASE STUDIES. Pankaj SEKHSARIA. Kalpavriksh - Environment Action Group, India. I. INTRODUCTION ...
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Perspective view of the Himalayas and Mount Everest as seen from space looking south-east from over the Tibetan Plateau. (annotated version) ...
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TODAY - 12 November, 2009
I have no regrets: Sachin
I might have made mistakes - like had I known I would get out while playing a certain shot - but I have no regrets, says Tendulkar. More
- Aus to invest $50 mn for Indo-Australia research fund
- Stapled visas by China not valid for travel: MEA
- FBI team may come to India to probe Headley case
- Yechury has close links with Maoists: Mamata
- 'Zardari receiving millions in sub deal a 'conspiracy''
- ED focus on Mumbai-based firm to track Koda's money
- Cyber crime: Chennai Police interrogating Dutchman
- Anil Kapoor, Irrfan Khan to be honoured at Cairo film fest
- MJ to be brought back from the dead using 3D
updated 8:35 PM IST
I have seen the Green Himalayas and the Terai belt. i have seen the Merciless DEFORESTATION. Now we are seized by the Naked Himalayas and the Melting glaciers are bound to flow within us!
In Princep Ghat Local down train, we Commuters were engaged in intense debate on Indian Economy as the debate prolonged just because of train timing rescheduled and the train stops on TALA for almost fifteen minutes. Today the regular Card players were also absent and the Participants doubled with interested listeners and even the hawkers joining. One Card Player, who is a Caste Hindu RMS employee detached with disinvestment developments and RMS closure, suddenly introduced the debate applauding DR Manmohan Singh and UPA Government for buying IMF Gold. He opined India is Glittering and the Economy is RESILIENT. I could not help to oppose the comment saying,` my dear friend you see the Glittering Gold which we people may not buy and is used mostly to divert Black Money indigenous, but you do not see the Ethnic Cleansing, mass Exodus and persecution, death Processions, SELL OFF Psus, Job loss, poverty and starvation, Man made calamities. The India Incs government sold our resources, land, home and livelihood and chose us to kill with surgical precision and you happen to be indulged in the ADVERTISED Magical Gold Buying Economy just because you have the Purchasing capacity and enjoy the freedom and sovereignty for an individual for the time being despite having been seized within Bleeding landscape and human scape.
And the debate was launched.
December's Copenhagen climate conference will produce a "real" but probably not binding agreement, a US climate change negotiator said Thursday.
A leading climate scientist recently accused India's environment ministry of "arrogance" over a government report claiming there was no evidence that climate change has caused "abnormal" shrinkage of glaciers in the Himalayas. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change had warned that Himalayan glaciers were receding at an alarming rate. India on Monday challenged the internationally accepted view that the Himalayan glaciers were receding due to global warming. The glaciers, although shrinking in volume and constantly showing a retreating front, have not in any way exhibited ...For the first time, the Indian government has challenged western research that says global warming has hastened the melting of Himalayan glaciers.
Seven fishermen were killed and 17 fishing boats with some 100 men were still missing in the Arabian Sea as Cyclone Phyan left a trail of destruction in Maharashtra's Konkan region, officials said on Thursday.
Russia must reduce the role of the state in the economy and modernise its industrial base to survive, Dmitry Medvedev, the country's president, has said, apparently challlenging the policies of his predecessor, Vladimir Putin.Governement of India and the Ruling Manusmriti Apartheid hegemony has accomplished the task transferring Governance, Policy Making, Legislation and even law and order to Corporate hands. Political parties are CORPORATE now and Money Power abolished the role of State and state Power has been transformed ROBOTICALLY INHUMAN, ARMED with Nuclear, biological chemical armament, JUST A Tool of Mass Destruction destroying not only indigenous aboriginal production system, livelihood and Life but also destroying Nature, Climate and environment!
Hence, we criticise the Brahaminical Civil Society, Media,Intelligentsia and NGOs which jointly Kill the Constitution and Democracy to promote Free Market democracy. Only due this particular reason, we insist that every Social activist must be an Environment ACTIVIST first. The War, Civil War and Insurgency, Terror and Unprecedented Violence, Disintegration and Destabilise mean to clear the decks of Monopolistic aggresion against the Indigenous Aboriginal people to Capture all Natural Resources to benefit the MINORITY Market dominating class.
Dhaka, Manila, Jakarta and Kolkata are topping a new list of major Asian cities vulnerable to the effects of climate change. Kolkata is the fourth most vulnerable Asian city but number three among those least prepared to adapt.On the other hand, Most glaciers in the Indian Himalayas are retreating, but there is "no conclusive scientific evidence" to link this to global warming, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said here Monday.Meanwhile, Hindu leaders in Britain have teamed up with Prince Philip and the UN to launch a long-term action plan that will engage with the community worldwide in the fight against climate change, an Oxford University centre said.
Kolkata facing brutal future in warmer world!As Annual food inflation rises to 13.7%..Our friends in central Government Employment, trade Unions, political parties, academia, PSUs are not CONCERNED at all. We may not dare to expect any commitment from this BASTARDISED Ruling Class as the Masses are deprived of the basic Information despite RTI.The masses know nothing about Resource management, Human Management , Balance of payment, fiscal and Monetary Policies and the Inflated economy with hyped recession as well as RESILIENCE Inflated!
Someone amongst our friends blamed the Population explosion! Family welfare is more than successful in India and the Post Modern Metro , Urban , suburban an even the Rural family set Up is no more Joint family within which we grew. It is nucleus family without any liability armed with Premium Cosumer Goods. But the development Projects have always meant Destruction, displacement and Exodus resultant in Ethnic Cleansing! Where from the Slum dogs, half of the population in URBAN and Semi Urban periphery so previlleged come from? How the LPG Mafia has taken over the Governance? How do we face REALTY BOOM? Why do the FIIS take over the SENSEX Economy? Why do we get Foreign capital Inflow at the cost of the majority Masses? Why the only job available is only marketing?
Chian has more population than India but it runs with 16 percent growth rate? Most of the Masses consists of Peasants and unskilled labour. Provided they get job in their locality in their own language,the population transforms into human Resource, manpower.But Indian human Resource is not considered at all. Free Market democracy resolves the matter with genocide Culture leading to resistance, terrorism, insurgency and unprecedented Violence.
India's annual food inflation, based on wholesale prices, moved up to 13.68% for the week ended Oct 31 from 13.39% for the week before, as per official data released Thursday.
The 52-week average prices of onions were higher by as much as 33.4% and potatoes became costlier by 27.9%, according to the limited data on wholesale price index released by the commerce ministry.
The statistics also showed average prices of vegetables were up 18.6%, pulses 16.83%, rice 15.95%, wheat 5.19%, fruits 7.05% and milk 7.99%.
This was the second week during which data on wholesale price index was issued as per the new guidelines approved by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs, restricting the disclosure of index numbers to primary articles and fuels.
The full data will be available only on a monthly basis as opposed to the weekly release earlier, with Nov 14 set as the date on which the complete wholesale price index numbers will be released for the first time under these guidelines.
The Reserve Bank of India and the government have warned India's annual inflation rate based on wholesale price index for all commodities will rise to 6-6.5% by March, while the Prime Minister's Economic Advisory Council has pegged the rate at 6%.
Jonathan Pershing made the comments in Barcelona, Spain, where UN climate negotiators are trying to pave the way for a deal to replace the 1997 Kyoto Protocol in Copenhagen Dec 7-18.
UN top climate change official Yvo de Boer said Wednesday he expected the United States to table concrete proposals in Copenhagen, but Pershing did not give details on eventual commitments.
The US Senate is in the process of considering a law proposal on emission cuts.
Hopes of a strong deal in Copenhagen have been waning in Barcelona, with African countries accusing advanced industrialised nations of not wanting to make clear commitments.
Pershing disagreed with African delegates who described the Barcelona talks as a waste of time and money.
The administration of US President Barack Obama was committed to fighting global warming, but it was also necessary to implicate other countries such as India and China, Pershing said.
According to Mega-Stress For Mega-Cities, a new report by World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), many of these cities are highly exposed to threats such as storms and flooding while lacking the capacity to protect themselves at a time when their severity and frequency are rising due to global warming.
"Climate change is already shattering cities across developing Asia and will be even more brutal in the future," said Kim Carstensen, leader of the WWF Global Climate Initiative.
"These cities are vulnerable and need urgent help to adapt, in order to protect the lives of millions of citizens, a massive amount of assets, and their large contributions to the national GDP."
The WWF report covers 11 large cities across Asia, all located in coastal areas or river deltas. Following Dhaka (9 out of 10 possible vulnerability points), other cities at high risk are Manila and Jakarta (8 each), Kolkata and Phnom Penh (7 each), Ho Chi Minh City and Shanghai (6 each), Bangkok (5), and Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong and Singapore (4 each).
Releasing a discussion paper that puts together recent studies on glaciers by Indian scientists, Ramesh said: "The scientists may debate the causes, but the health of the glaciers is very poor and the level of debris has reached alarming proportions."
The paper says that while most of the 9,500-odd glaciers in the Indian Himalayas are retreating, some, like the Siachen Glacier, are advancing, while some, like the Gangotri glacier, have reduced their rate of retreat. Most of the glaciers in trouble are the small ones.
Ramesh said there was serious lack of data on the Himalayan glaciers -- only about 10 of them have been studied at all, and long-term temperature data is available only in Srinagar. The environment ministry is now sanctioning Rs.14-15 crore in the first phase of three studies -- Rs.3 crore for 15 new weather stations, Rs.7-8 crore to monitor the glaciers from satellites and Rs.4 crore for a study on the effects of soot on glacier melt.
Former Geological Survey of India official V.K. Raina, who put the discussion paper together, said that while glaciers were retreating, "we cannot say if it is abnormal, because we don't know what is normal". He hoped that with the new studies being started, the level of knowledge would improve in the next five-ten years.
While glaciers contribute only about ten percent of the water flow in south Asian rivers -- with the rest coming from rainfall -- they are vital in ensuring perennial water flow in these rivers. With 1.3 billion people dependent on them, the Himalayas have been called the water tower of Asia and sometimes the third pole.
The Bhumi Project was launched Friday after a three-way meeting between Hindu leaders, Prince Philip - the husband of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II - and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon as part of this week's environmental summit at Windsor Castle, attended by over 200 faith leaders from nine major world religions.
The meeting was called by the UN Development Programme and the Alliance of Religions and Conservation (ARC), a secular body founded by Prince Philip to help world religions develop their own environmental programmes.
Over the next nine years, the Bhumi Project will implement a series of initiatives to help Hindus engage in environmental action to better care for the planet, Oxford University's Centre for Hindu Studies said.
"Hindu tradition and history is replete with stories and references to 'bhumi', to mother earth, and we want to help Hindus re-learn these sacred teachings and find new relevance for them in the modern world," said Centre director Shaunaka Rishi Das, who helped formulate the project.
"Because there are 900 million Hindus worldwide, the environmental choices we make will have a significant impact on our climate," said Neal Raithatha of the UK National Hindu Students Forum, a delegate at the Windsor Castle summit.
"We must work in India in particular to ensure increasing urbanisation and affluence does not put undue strain on the country's natural beauty and cultural heritage sites. We must make sure environmental destruction is not the price we pay for India's economic growth," he added.
Specific proposals include educating members of Hindu communities on best environmental practice; developing a Hindu labelling scheme for a range of products and services; helping all Hindu places of worship employ the highest standards of environmental practice; and partnering with conservation projects in India, such as those involved in cleaning the river Ganges.
The project will start by working with British Hindus before being taken to America and eventually introduced to India.
Obama, Manmohan with Osama, Dawood among world's most powerful
US President Barack Obama and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh find themselves in the unusual company of the world's most wanted
terrorist Osama bin Laden and fugitive Dawood Ibrahim in a list of the World's Most Powerful people compiled by Forbes.
Obama was named most powerful, while Chinese President Hu Jintao and Russian PM Vladimir Putin complete the top three.
The list features three resident Indians - Singh and industrialists Mukesh Ambani and Ratan Tata, and two non-residents -- fugitive Dawood, and Lakshmi Mittal who lives in London and heads the world's largest steel company.
Singh has been ranked 36th, while the country's top corporate house Reliance Industries' chief Mukesh Ambani finds himself ranked 44th ahead of Tata Group chief Ratan Tata (59).
Ranked very next to Singh is al-Qaida founder Osama bin Laden at 37th place, while Indian underworld don Dawood Ibrahim is at 50th position.
Dawood, head of the infamous 'D-Company', is wanted by India in connection with the 1993 serial blasts in Mumbai and has been listed by the US as 'Specially Designated Global Terrorist' for funding al-Qaeda.
Osama Bin Laden, the mastermind of 9/11 terror strike on US, too has been eluding US-led multi-national armed forces.
Dalai Lama is ranked 39th and Pope Benedict-XVI 11th. The magazine took into consideration the influence of the person, whether they control relatively large financial resources compared with their peers and are they powerful in multiple spheres.
13 Indian firms in Forbes Asia's Fabulous 50
As many as 13 Indian companies, including Reliance Industries (RIL), Infosys Technologies and Tata Steel, have made it to the list
of Forbes' 50 best listed companies in the Asia-Pacific region.
"Our list is a mix of giant, established companies this year which includes Australian miner BHP Billiton, Hong Kong conglomerate Noble Group and Indian oil and gas heavyweight RIL and smaller outfits such as Agile Property Holdings, Anhui Conch Cement and Digital China Holdings," Forbes Asia said in a statement.
The Forbes list has four Indian entities – RIL, Bharti Airtel, Infosys Technologies and Tata Consultancy Services – among the top 10 firms in terms of market value, while RIL and Tata Steel feature in the top 10 league in terms of sales.
The Indian league has four newcomers this year – Adani Enterprises, Axis Bank, Jindal Steel & Power and Tata Consultancy Services – and among the Indian firms returning to the list include Bharat Heavy Electricals, Larsen & Toubro and RIL.
China has again outdone the rest of the Asia Pacific with the most number of firms (16) represented in the league, followed by India with 13 entities.
"The mainland firms together with five from Taiwan and three from Hong Kong account for almost half of the entries, giving Greater China the biggest regional representation on the list," Forbes said.
Taiwan moved up the ranking this year and is in the third place with five companies on the list, all of which are from the technology sector. Japan and Australia share the fourth place with four companies each on the list.
The list included companies that have revenue and market capitalisation of at least $3 billion and a five year record of operating profitability and return on equity.
The other criteria for being in the list include long term profitability, sales and earnings growth, stock price appreciation, projects earnings, quality of management and entrepreneurial skills.
47 Indian companies among Forbes 'Global 2000 List'
As many as 47 Indian companies, led by corporate behemoth Reliance Industries and the country's biggest lender, State Bank of India,
have made it to the list of world's biggest 2,000 companies by US magazine Forbes.
However, five Indian companies -- scam-hit IT firm Satyam Computer, realty firm Unitech, Suzlon Energy and two Anil Ambani group firms Reliance Power and Reliance Capital -- have been dropped out of the Forbes 'Global 2000 List' this year.
Four Indian companies, Hero Honda Motors, Sun Pharma, Indian Bank and Jindal Steel and Power Ltd are the new entrants to the list.
Mukesh Ambani-promoted RIL, State Bank of India, and Oil and Natural Gas Corporation are among the top 200 companies ranked 121st, 150th and 152nd, respectively, on the list.
All the three top Indian firms have improved their ranks considerably from their last year's positions, wherein RIL had been 193rd, SBI at 219th spot, while ONGC was ranked 198th.
Overall, the list is topped by industrial conglomerate General Electric, followed by Dutch oil and gas major Royal Dutch Shell, Japan's Toyota Motor, ExxonMobil and UK's BP in that order.
The rankings have been compiled on the basis of a composite score of sales, profit, assets and market capitalisation.
However, British banking giant HSBC Holdings has dropped to the sixth place this year from its numero uno position in the last year's list.
The other top Indian firms on the list include Indian Oil (207th), NTPC (317th), ICICI Bank (329th), Tata Steel (463rd) and Bharti Airtel (508th).
The Indian presence is almost evenly divided among the private and state-run companies. While none of the Indian companies has managed to find a place among the top 100 firms this year as well, the elite club includes a firm run by person of Indian origin.
Lakshmi Mittal-headed steel behemoth ArcelorMittal is at 41st position. However, Vikram Pandit-run banking giant Citigroup has dropped to 472nd rank this year.
Further, Indra Nooyi-run beverage major PepsiCo has been ranked 115th, India-origin Francisco D'Souza-headed Cognizant Technology Solutions at 1389th place. Motorola, headed by Sanjay Jha, is at 658th place.
According to Forbes, the Global 2,000 companies have combined revenue of 32 trillion dollars, 1.6 trillion dollars in profit, 125 trillion dollars in assets and 20 trillion dollars in market capitalization.
Sonia, Chanda Kochhar among Forbes' top 20 powerful women
Congress President Sonia Gandhi and ICICI Bank CEO and Managing Director Chanda Kochhar ranked in the top 20 of the World's 100 Most
Powerful Women list compiled by Forbes.
Kochhar debuted at number 20 behind Gandhi who was ranked 13 in the list led by German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Indian-origin chief executive of Pepsico Indra Nooyi figured at number three after Sheila Bair, Chairperson of Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
Yahoo's Carol Bartz was ahead of Gandhi at number 12 in the list.
Besides, Anglo American Chief Cynthia Carroll, Temasek CEO Ho Ching, Kraft Foods Chief Irene Rosenfeld, DuPont head Ellen Kullman, WellPoint CEO Angela Braly, Areva Chief Anne Lauvergeon and Sunoco head Lynn Elsenhans are among the top 10 powerful women.
Interestingly, speaker of the US House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi (35) was ranked ahead of Hillary Clinton (36), the US Secretary of State, Michelle Obama (40), the first lady of the US, and Queen Elizabeth II (42).
Other dignitaries in list are Melinda Gates (34), the Co-chairman Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Oprah Winfrey (41), Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed (78) and Chile President Michelle Bachelet (22) among others.
Forbes' Powerful Women list is based largely in terms of influence rather than celebrity status or popularity.
In assembling the list, Forbes looked for women who run countries, big companies or influential nonprofits.
"Their rankings are a combination of two scores: visibility -- by press mentions -- and the size of the organisation or country these women lead," the US-based magazine said.
India 75th in world's best nations for business: Forbes
India has slipped 11 positions to be ranked 75th in a list of world's best countries for business, compiled by US publication Forbes,
as the country lost ground in areas like trade freedom, technology, corporate tax rate and corruption.
The list has been topped for the second year in a row by Denmark, while India has moved down from its 64th position in Forbes' annual list, which ranks 127 nations on the basis of business climate in a country for entrepreneurs, investors and workers.
The US has moved up two positions to be ranked second on the list. Besides, Canada and Singapore have moved up four spots each to number three and four respectively. Other countries in the top 10 this year include New Zealand, UK, Sweden, Australia, Hong Kong and Norway.
Three countries -- New Zealand, Australia and Norway -- are new to the top-ten this year, while three others -- Finland, Ireland and Switzerland -- have fallen out of this league.
"Sliding the most this year was Ireland (No. 14, down 12), which even saw plans for a Guinness mega-brewery shelved by parent Diageo as exports slowed," Forbes said, adding Uruguay, Armenia, Paraguay and Latvia also moved down considerably.
China has moved ahead of India to 63rd position in this year's list, up from its 79th spot last year, primarily due to improvements in areas like innovation and investor protection. The Communist nation has been ranked at top position across the world in terms of investor protection, although it is ranked among the lowest at 122nd in terms of personal freedom.
About India, the report said the country declined on the rankings on four metrics -- trade freedom, technology, corporate tax rate and corruption.
In terms of trade freedom, India was ranked among the lowest at 125th position, while it was down to 118th on corporate tax rate front. In technology and corruption, the country slipped to 64th and 71st positions respectively.
Besides, India is ranked at the 107th spot in terms of monetary freedom, 90th on red tape basis and 54th on personal freedom front. The rankings are, however, better at 30th each on the basis of investor protection and innovation and 44th on intellectual property rights.
In terms of GDP growth, India ranks 14th among these 127 countries with a growth rate of 7.3 per cent, while China is fourth with 9.8 per cent growth. Azerbaijan has topped this tally with a 15.6 per cent growth rate.
"This is not a tally of economies with the highest gross domestic product growth, or lowest unemployment. The goal is to quantify for entrepreneurs and investors the often- qualified information about dynamic economies and what they would consider desirable conditions for business," Forbes said.
The report said the ranking took into consideration the right to participate in free and fair elections, freedom of expression and organisation and investor protection safety among other factors.
"Amid the financial turmoil this year, we added stock market performance to reflect the extent of disrepair in countries' banking systems, as well as investor confidence in a recovery. Intellectual property rights, the promotion of free trade and low inflation, combined with low taxes on income and investment, give a snapshot of the conditions for business in each," it added.
About India, the report added the government has reduced controls on foreign trade and investment and higher limits on foreign direct investment were permitted in a few key sectors, such as telecommunications.
Pachauri rubbishes government stand on melting glaciers
RANDEEP RAMESH
A leading climate scientist recently accused India's environment ministry of "arrogance" over a government report claiming there was no evidence that climate change has caused "abnormal" shrinkage of glaciers in the Himalayas.
Jairam Ramesh, the country's environment minister, released the controversial report in Delhi, saying it would "challenge the conventional wisdom."
Two years ago, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned that Himalayan glaciers were receding faster than those in any other part of the world and could disappear altogether by 2035, if not sooner.
On November 9 Ramesh denied any such risk existed, and said he was prepared to take on "the doomsday scenarios of Al Gore and the IPCC."
He said: "There is no conclusive scientific evidence to link global warming with what is happening," adding that although some glaciers were receding they were doing so at a rate that was not historically alarming.
"My concern is that this comes from western scientists ... it is high time India makes an investment in understanding what is happening in the Himalayan ecosystem," he said.
Report dismissed
Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the IPCC, dismissed the report as not peer reviewed and having few scientific citations.
He said: "I don't know why the minister is supporting this unsubstantiated research. It is an extremely arrogant statement." In one remarkable finding, the report claims the Gangotri glacier, the main source of the river Ganges, receded fastest in 1977 and is today "practically at a standstill." Some scientists have warned the river beds of the Gangetic Basin - which feed hundreds of millions in northern India — could run dry if the glaciers melt.
http://www.hindu.com/seta/2009/11/12/stories/2009111250021300.htm
यह तो लगभग सब ही जानते हैं कि हमारे देश में अधिंकांश नेताओं और गुंडों के बढ़े मधुर सम्बन्ध रहे हैं। कुछ लोगों का तो यहाँ तक कहना है कि बिना ग़ुंडा हुए या बिना गुंडों से संबंध रखे नेता बनना खासा मुश्किल है। हाल ही में पूरे उत्तराखंड में चर्चित रहा कालाढूंगी कांड इन [ आगे पढ़ें.....]
कालाढूंगी कांड ने उत्तराखडं पर एक बहुत बड़ा उपकार तो कर ही दिया है। इसने पार्टीगत राजनीति का चेहरा पूरी तरह उघाड़ कर रख दिया है। अपने आँख-कान खुले रखने वाले जागरूक लोग तो पहले भी यह जानते ही थे कि आखिर क्यों ऐसे लोग लाखों-करोड़ों रुपये खर्च कर ग्राम-प्रधान से लेकर सांसद तक [ आगे पढ़ें.....]
पर्यटन उत्तराखंड की पहचान है। चारों धामों में धार्मिक पर्यटन कई सालों से चल रहा है। नैनीताल, मसूरी, रानीखेत, अल्मोड़ा, देहरादून सहित अनेक ऐसे पर्यटन स्थल हैं, जो स्वतः ही लोगों को आकर्षित करते हैं। हाल के वर्षों में साहसिक पर्यटन और इको टूरिज्म की अवधारणा ने पर्यटन की संभावनाओं में नए आयाम जोड़े [ आगे पढ़ें.....]
कहा जाता है कि भारत विश्व का सबसे बड़ा प्रजातंत्र है। अक्टूबर 13 को चमोली ज़िले के देवसारी में गांव वालों के प्रस्तावित पिंडर नदी पर बांध तथा जल-विद्युत परियोजना का विरोध करने पर 11 के खिलाफ मुकदमे दायर कर दिए गए तथा अन्य 60, जिनके नाम नहीं दिए गए, के विरुद्ध भी कार्रवाही [ आगे पढ़ें.....]
'नैनीताल समाचार' का 15-30 सितम्बर एवं उससे पूर्व का अंक मिला। आप व नैनीताल समाचार की टीम को कड़ी मेहनत करने के साथ प्रखर पत्रकारिता के कार्य के लिए पुनः साधुवाद कि आपने इस भौतिकवादी दौड़ में समाचार पत्र का वह मूल्य जिन्दा रखा है, जो सभी समाचार पत्रों को रखना चाहिए था। नैनीताल समाचार [ आगे पढ़ें.....]
गढ़वाली लोक संस्कृति का लोहा मनवाने वाले चन्द्र सिंह राही आज भी आज भी अपने काम में जुटे हैं। प्रस्तुत हैं देहरादून में गढ़वाल सभा में इस संस्कृतिकर्मी से लक्ष्मण सिंह नेगी की छवीं बथ के अंश -
प्रश्न:- अपने निजी जीवन के बारे में कुछ बतायें।
उत्तर:- मेरा जन्म 1947 को गिवाली [ आगे पढ़ें.....]
उसने अपनी जिन्दगी में सिर्फ तीन पहाड़ देखे
सामने का पहाड़ जिसमें पसरी है जिन्दगी
बायें तरफ का पहाड़, जो ढँका है चीड़ों से
और वह पहाड़ जिसमें आबाद है उसका गाँव
उसने सिर्फ दो ही पट्टियाँ देखीं,
मायके और ससुराल की.
गाँव के नीचे बहती नदी से उसे खासा लगाव है
क्योंकि वह बहकर आ रही है उसके मायके से
आज भी [ आगे पढ़ें.....]
स्थानीय व्यक्ति का अपने क्षेत्र में अधिकारी बन कर आना क्या वहाँ के लोगों के लिए हितकर होता है या नुकसानदेह ? इस पर अलग-अलग धारणाएँ हो सकती हैं। यहाँ पर मैं इसी तरह की एक नियुक्ति के बारे में कुछ लिखना चाहता हूँ। इस जोशीमठ सीमांत क्षेत्र में भारत-चीन के 1962 युद्ध के [ आगे पढ़ें.....]
प्रस्तुति : राजेन्द्र गहतोड़ी
'पहाड़' के रजत जयन्ती समारोह कार्यक्रमों के क्रम में 26 व 27 अक्टूबर को चम्पावत में पहाड़ की माटी के अनेक रत्न जुटे। 26 अक्टूबर की शाम जवाहर नवोदय विद्यालय में वरिष्ठ पत्रकार गोविन्द पंत 'राजू' ने अंटार्कटिका के स्लाइड दिखाये। वे पृथ्वी के इस हिस्से में जाने वाले देश के [ आगे पढ़ें.....]
प्रस्तुति : सतीश जोशी
'नैनीताल समाचार' की इस वर्ष की निबंध प्रतियोगिता में कनिष्ठ वर्ग (कक्षा 4, 5 व 6) के लिये विषय था, 'कैसा हो स्कूल हमारा'। यह विषय 11 वर्ष पूर्व 1998 में भी दिया गया था और तब गिर्दा ने विषय से प्रभावित होकर इसी शीर्षक से अपनी सुप्रसिद्ध कविता लिखी थी, [ आगे पढ़ें.....]
PC nudges Buddha govt - Mamata's quit-call to Left has found resonance, CPM lived with Maoists for long: Home minister | ||
MANINI CHATTERJEE | ||
New Delhi, Nov. 11: Union home minister P. Chidambaram today obliquely backed his cabinet colleague Mamata Banerjee's assertion that the Left Front government had lost the right to rule Bengal and should go and said it was for the CPM to respond to that call. In an exclusive interview to The Telegraph at his North Block office here this evening, Chidambaram said: "She (Mamata) is articulating her party's point of view, and it is a point of view which appears to have found resonance across Bengal." It was a call of the Opposition party "and it is for the ruling party to respond to that call", he added. Asked in what way the Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee government should respond to the call to step down from office in the wake of the bypoll rout, Chidambaram said: "There are several responses possible in a democratic polity but I am not going to list them down." On whether he thought the Left Front government had lost its nerve after repeated electoral defeats over the past few months, Chidambaram did not mince words. "Elections are not a matter of testing nerves. Elections are a test of a party's support. It is pretty clear from the latest byelection results that the party which has the largest measure of support in Bengal today is the Trinamul Congress." The home minister's disdain for the CPM went beyond its electoral misfortune as he echoed Mamata's charge of a CPM-Maoist nexus. Speaking at length on the Maoist threat facing large parts of India, he maintained that the CPM was to blame for the spread of Naxalite influence to Bengal. "I have said this before and the CPM objected but I will say it again — the CPM and the CPI (Maoist) did not confront each other all these years. They thought they were on the same side of the line and that the enemy was the Congress or other mainstream parties which they said represented the landlords, the capitalists and the bourgeoisie." He went on to add: "I am not in a position to say when they found themselves on the opposite sides of the dividing line. Today, they are confronting each other. In a way, they (the CPM) are paying the price for 20 years of living together." On the CPM's claim that it had been battling the Naxalites ever since Charu Mazumdar broke away from the party in 1967, Chidambaram emphatically disagreed. "That is not correct. Take Lalgarh which falls under the Jhargram Lok Sabha constituency which the CPM won with a big margin. Why is it that the CPM MP can no longer go there today? Why is it that people who voted for the CPM in the month of May have turned against them today? The inference is pretty obvious. It means that they (the CPM) won with the support of the CPI (Maoists)." That apart, Chidambaram also blamed lack of governance for the spread of the Maoist threat. Asked whether he thought the Maoists had increased their influence because the mainstream Left had failed to deliver on their radical promises, he said: "That is true but it is a misguided reason. To my mind, the real reason in all affected states is poor governance. The state has failed to deliver basic goods and services to people in the area (where Maoists have influence.) Take Jharkhand, for instance. It was formed as a separate state 10 years ago and three of the four chief ministers since then came from the BJP stable. No Congressman has been chief minister or minister in Jharkhand. Those who ruled Jharkhand must bear responsibility (for its status as the most Naxalite-affected state)." Asked whether he blamed Naveen Patnaik and Bhattacharjee on the same count, Chidambaram replied: "I am not pointing fingers at individuals. I am saying that governments which do not have an inspiring record of governance are most affected." But then what of his reported stance that the "menace" must be controlled first and only then will development follow? Describing it as "only a question of sequencing," Chidambaram said: "My review shows that money poured into Naxalite-affected districts delivers nothing. The bulk of the money goes to the CPI (Maoist) — they impose levies on contractors or they simply extort. Therefore, we must re-establish civil administration first in that district and then allocate money. Second, if the district remains under their influence, whatever infrastructure has been built — schools, roads, primary health centres, telephone towers — have been destroyed. So our first job is to re-establish civil administration which means the Naxalites must stop violence or they must retreat." Regarding the argument of civil society activists that the Centre had suddenly decided to crack down on Left-wing extremists because of the huge mining interests in tribal areas under Naxalite influence, Chidambaram said: "The first part of the answer is the Centre is not cracking down; the second is that counter-insurgency operations have been taken by state governments for the last 10-15 years and is not new; and the third is if MoUs have been signed and mining licences granted, it has been done by the state governments. So you can't suddenly paint the Centre as a monster." Then, adopting a different tack, the home minister said: "I am willing to request the Prime Minister that all MoUs be reviewed. Will it put an end to Maoist violence? Will they give up armed liberation struggle? Those who make these charges against the government (that it is backing the mining lobby et al) must answer this issue. The choice is stark — do you support the democratic, republican form of government or do you support armed liberation struggle and seizure of power?" On the Maoists' assertion that the Indian state was not truly democratic, Chidambaram said: "Then make it more democratic, join the democratic process, send better MPs and MLAs, give a more compassionate government, implement all your Left policies." He added with a bit of sarcasm: "After all, hasn't the CPM claimed to be doing all that for the last 30 years?" Asserting that every citizen of India must make a choice between standing by the democratic Constitution or seeking to overthrow it, Chidambaram said: "If the overwhelming majority of the people reject this form of government, of course there will be a revolution. But even in the last parliamentary election in Jharkhand, over 57 per cent voted and in the recent Maharashtra Assembly elections, 65.27 per cent in Gadchiroli voted despite the Maoist call to boycott the election and threat to punish those who voted." Reverting to the carrot-and-stick policy aimed less at disarming the Maoists than confusing their sympathisers, the home minister said: "Nevertheless, we do not regard the CPI(Maoist) cadres as enemies. They are citizens of this country. We have to contain violence but we have to talk to them on matters that agitate them." The Maoists had not responded to the offer of talks and Kishanji only yesterday had iterated that abjuring violence was not on their agenda since they believed in armed struggle. But the offer, Chidambaram said, was still open. "I am not asking them to lay down arms. I am too realistic to know that they won't. All I am saying is halt violence." In the meantime, the state governments would continue with their counter-insurgency operations but when and where they would act was a decision "to be taken by the state concerned". The Centre was only there to help with paramilitary forces, sharing of intelligence and giving "technical" assistance. Asked if he was satisfied with the progress made by state governments since he took over the home ministry, Chidambaram said: "It is only when the menace is controlled and large areas come under civil administration, we can say we are satisfied. But that is some distance away." |
Meet five Indian Americans in Barack Obama's team
As the Indian diaspora grows, the Indian community is beginning to play an increasingly important role in their adopted communities. This is nowhere more evident than in America,where with the advent of President Barack Obama's election, Indian Americans have become increasingly important figures in guiding and forming the policies of the state. Here , we look at a few members of President Obama's White House team, that will be instrumental in helping him achieve and implement his vision for the United States of America
Dr. Rajiv Shah:
Born to Indian immigrant parents in Ann Arbor, Michigan, the 36 year old Shah serves as the Under Secretary for Research, Education and Economics (REE) and Chief Scientist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. With a staff of over 10,000 under him (including 2,200 federal scientists), and a budget in excess of $2.6 billion, Dr. Shah is tasked with leading the agency's participation in President Barack Obama's global food security initiative.
Prior to his appointment as Under Secretary, Dr. Shah worked for the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in a variety of roles, including Director of Agricultural Development, which over saw the foundation's multi-billion dollar portfolio for grant and program related investments which looked to transform small scale farming around the world and over come hunger and poverty. He also managed the Foundation's $1.5 billion commitment to the Vaccine Fund, an effort that Bill and Melinda Gates called 'their best investment'.
During his tenure as Under Secretary at the Department of Agriculture, Dr. Shah has launched the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) to help fund research programs that advance the knowledge for agriculture, the environment, human health and well-being, and poor communities.
He has previously worked for Al Gore's 2000 Presidential campaign as a health care policy advisor and served as an advisor to the City of Philadelphia's Public Health Commissioner. Early in his career, he worked on a health and development project in rural Southern India.
He has recently been nominated by President Obama to be the chief of the U.S. Agency for International Development, (USAID), which would make him the highest ranking Indian American in the U.S. Administration, pending approval by Congress.
Drought rap on ocean war - Cause traced not to Aila but to tussle that killed clouds | ||
G.S. MUDUR | ||
New Delhi, Nov. 11: More than Aila, a heated tussle between two regions of a great ocean caused the drought of 2009. A tug of war between a warm Bay of Bengal but an unusually warmer Indian Ocean killed clouds prematurely in the Bay for about three weeks in June this year, leading to the drought, scientists have said. The three-week hiatus in June led to such a massive early rainfall deficit that the rest of the monsoon season could not compensate, researchers said in the first investigation into the causes of the overall 23 per cent lower than normal rainfall. India's monsoon rainfall is sustained by cloud formation over a warm Bay. Normally, the sea surface temperatures in the Bay are slightly higher than sea surface temperatures in the equatorial Indian Ocean region. But an analysis of the temperatures this year shows that the equatorial Indian Ocean region was warmer by about 1 degree Celsius than the Bay through early June. "The equatorial Indian Ocean region had an edge — it kept killing any cloud systems which were forming over the Bay," said Sulochana Gadgil, professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences at the Indian Institute of Science. "Cloud formation was favoured over the equatorial Indian Ocean at the expense of the Bay region," she told The Telegraph. "I would call it unusual — it's the first time we've observed a warming phenomenon prolonged for up to three weeks in June." The findings by Gadgil and her colleague P.A. Francis appear in the journal Current Science today. The scientists say it is unclear why the equatorial Indian Ocean was warmer this year. "There appears nothing else that could explain the poor rainfall in June," said K. Krishna Kumar, a senior scientist at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Pune, who was not associated with the study. The 2009 drought marked by a 23 per cent monsoon deficit has been one of the worst droughts in recent decades, comparable to 24 per cent deficit in 1974 and 22 per cent deficit in 2002. Some meteorologists had speculated that cyclone Aila in May may have led to a cooling of the Bay. Gadgil said while Aila would have led to a cooling, historical behaviour shows that the Bay has the ability to recover quickly from such cooling. "The (cyclone's) effect would not have lasted three weeks," she said. The effect was a 48 per cent monsoon deficit during June. Although rainfall during the remaining three months of the monsoon season could have made up, a slight warming of sea surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean during August and September could have contributed to deficits during the last two months of the season. The only other year when the Bay lost to the equatorial Indian Ocean was in 1995, but the effect lasted only a few days, leading to a 24 per cent below normal June rainfall. |
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WORLD NEWS | BUSINESS NEWS | |||
SPORT NEWS | ||||
South Asia |
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The US ambassador in Kabul warns against sending thousands more troops to Afghanistan, in a dramatic intervention. |
Sri Lanka's armed forces chief, Gen Sarath Fonseka, resigns amid reports he may run for president. | Gunmen kill a Pakistani working at the Iranian consulate in the city of Peshawar, officials say. |
The players and rifts inside Obama's Afghan team | The Sri Lankan general who could run for president | Why free food centres in Pakistan are booming |
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MORE FROM SOUTH ASIA BUSINESS | FEATURES PICTURE STORIES
A GUIDE TO SOUTH ASIA
Compiled by BBC Monitoring |
Guest writer Mark Tully on India's Maoist rebellion | Can Taliban fighters be persuaded to switch sides? | Have Sri Lanka's leaders fallen out over who won war? |
Science & Environment IN ASSOCIATION WITH |
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The last year has seen a big increase in illegal ivory trade with organised crime involved, says the world's monitoring agency. |
Astronomers tell the journal Nature that Sun-like stars with orbiting planets tend to be depleted in the element lithium. | The key to preserving old, treasured books is contained in the compounds that produce their smell, say scientists. |
Ex-astronaut gets probation for attack on love rival | How the Marine Bill could affect one area in Dorset | Why humanity needs a 'space race' for this planet |
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Environmental opinion and debate | Reporting life on Earth |
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SCIENCE | ENVIRONMENT |
LauncherOne: Virgin Galactic's other project | Vulnerable species found in the UK's coastal waters | Russia resumes work to complete the space station |
South Asia |
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The US ambassador in Kabul warns against sending thousands more troops to Afghanistan, in a dramatic intervention. |
Sri Lanka's armed forces chief, Gen Sarath Fonseka, resigns amid reports he may run for president. | Gunmen kill a Pakistani working at the Iranian consulate in the city of Peshawar, officials say. |
The players and rifts inside Obama's Afghan team | The Sri Lankan general who could run for president | Why free food centres in Pakistan are booming |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
MORE FROM SOUTH ASIA BUSINESS | FEATURES PICTURE STORIES
A GUIDE TO SOUTH ASIA
Compiled by BBC Monitoring |
Guest writer Mark Tully on India's Maoist rebellion | Can Taliban fighters be persuaded to switch sides? | Have Sri Lanka's leaders fallen out over who won war? |
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