Current Affairs For Bank, IBPS Exams - 17 August, 2015
Current Affairs for BANK, IBPS Exams
17 August 2015
:: International ::
Pakistan spy master tied to militants, dies
-
Hamid Gul, who led Pakistan’s powerful Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency as it funneled U.S. and Saudi cash and weapons to Afghan jihadis fighting against the Soviets and later publicly supported Islamic militants, died late Saturday of a brain hemorrhage. He was 78.
-
Gul’s tenure at the ISI and his outspoken backing of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and other extremists highlighted the murky loyalties at play years later when the Sept. 11 attacks and their aftermath tested the U.S.-Pakistani alliance.
-
Gul came to be seen as an increasingly out-of-touch braggart later in life, as he appeared on countless Pakistani television programs warning of conspiracies and demanding his country militarily confront India.
:: Business ::
RIL dethrone by IOC
-
Within two quarters of losing its 23-year-old reign as the country’s most profitable company to TCS in the December quarter, Reliance Industries was again humbled in the June quarter, this time by IndianOil.
-
The state-run firm booked Rs.118 crore more profit than the Mukesh Ambani-run firm net income of Rs.6,318 crore.
-
Better refining margins arising from lower oil prices and almost full payback of subsidies by the government helped the nation’s biggest oil company Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) to report a massive more than twofold jump in the June quarter net profit at Rs.6,436 crore.
-
IOC’s refining margins soared to a seven-year high during the reporting quarter. For Reliance, losing the numero uno slot comes within two quarter as in the December 2014 earnings season as well it had lost out to TCS as it booked more profit than RIL with a net income of Rs.5,328 crore.
-
The loss in the December 2014 quarter was the end of RIL’s 23-year run as the most profitable firm with a net profit in the country, overtaking the long-standing champion Reliance which saw its profit dip to Rs.5,256 crore as falling crude prices hurt its core business.
:: India & world ::
India, Bangladesh both facing fake currency problem
-
The Indian team informed the Bangladeshi side that fake notes were being used by some “state agencies” to fund terror activities in India and that forensic examination of the seized notes indicated that they were being printed using raw materials and sophisticated currency printing machines available only for sovereign states.
-
Indian agencies have strong reasons to believe that the high-quality fake notes being pushed into the country were being printed in Pakistan.
-
The Bangladeshi agencies also gave a presentation on the adverse impact of fake notes on the country’s economy. In Bangladesh, such notes are being used to fund human and drug trafficking, besides anti-state activities.
Digital record
-
The Bangladeshi delegation accepted a proposal from the Indian side to help establish state-of-the-art facilities for examination of fake currency notes and maintain a digital record of seizures and analysis. The Indian team proposed to create a database on smugglers for use by both countries.
:: Miscellaneous ::
National consumer court issues notice to Nestle
-
The national consumer court on Monday issued notice to Nestle India over the central government's Rs 640-crore unfair trade practice class action suit related to tainted samples of the popular Maggi two-minute noodles.
-
A bench of the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission comprising Justice VK Jain and BC Gupta directed Nestle India to respond to the notice by September 30 and allowed the government to send samples of Maggi noodles to an accredited laboratory for tests on lead content and MSG.
-
The Centre had last Tuesday filed a first-of-its-kind “class action” complaint against Nestle India, seeking Rs 640 crore in damages for alleged unfair trade practices by selling “hazardous” Maggi noodles to millions of consumers, especially children.
-
The complaint – filed through the secretary of the consumer affairs department in the national consumer court – accused Nestle India, a subsidiary of Nestle SA, Switzerland, of promoting noodles containing excessive lead as healthy with the sole aim of enhancing profits.
:: Sports ::
Super Saina leads India's rise in badminton
-
For a country which produces world-class athletes miserly, something revolutionary is happening in the world of badminton with world No.2 Saina Nehwal leading the Indian charge.
-
There is a steep jump in the number of Indians competing at the highest level of the sport in the last few years, with currently three men and two women in the top 15 of the respective world rankings.
-
India had players like Prakash Padukone and Pullela Gopichand, current national chief coach, in the past but they were exceptions at best.
-
Padukone won India's first World Championships medal, a bronze, way back in 1983 after winning the prestigious All England Championships in 1980, whereas Gopichand won the All England title in 2001.
-
Padukone even rose to the pinnacle of the sport when he was ranked No. 1 in the world badminton rankings in 1980.
Anirban Lahiri scaled a new high
-
Golfer Anirban Lahiri scaled a new high for India by becoming the first from the country to finish inside the top-five of a Major, signing off a brilliant tied fifth in the prestigious PGA Championships.
-
Lahiri played a superb final round of 68, after first three rounds of 70-67-70, for a total of 13-under 275. In fact, at one stage, he rose to as high as tied third during the day.
-
The 28-year-old, who hit the global golf headlines with stunning wins in the Malaysian Open and Hero Indian Open in a span of three weeks, will return to top-50 in the new rankings and is also a