General Awareness: National Events-March-2015
                                          
    
    
  
    
  
      
  
  
    
(General Awareness For Bank's Exams)
National Events
March - 2015
PwC man Involved in Spying: CBI
	- The Central Bureau of Investigation, which has arrested five suspects in 
	the corporate espionage racket, said that the investigation had revealed the 
	alleged role of a representative of PricewaterhouseCoopers India in 
	obtaining information from the Department of Economic Affairs.
-  The agency produced accused Paresh Chimanlal Buddhadev, a partner 
	in Chitale & Associates, before a Mumbai court that granted his transit 
	remand for being brought to Delhi. Another accused, Ram Niwas, Assistant in 
	the Finance Ministry, was also sent to five days’ CBI custody.
-  The agency earlier arrested Mumbai-based accused Chartered 
	Accountant Khemchand Gandhi, who had allegedly been procuring the documents, 
	Ashok Kumar Singh, Under Secretary in the Department of Disinvestment; and 
	Lala Ram Sharma, Section Officer in the Department of Economic Affairs. The 
	three are in CBI custody.
SC gives one last chance to Sahara
	-  The Supreme Court granted the Sahara group a last opportunity to 
	raise bail money to its chief Subrata Roy and two directors in jail since 
	March 2014.
-  A Special Bench of Justices T.S. Thakur, Anil R. Dave and A.K. 
	Sikri, at one point, said the court had lost its patience with Sahara’s 
	repeated assurances that they would sell their assets soon to pay security 
	for securing bail.
-  The Bench stopped short of going ahead and appointing ‘court 
	receivers’ to take over from Sahara and initiate sale deals in a 
	“transparent” manner.
-  But Sahara’s counsel and senior advocate Kapil Sibal prevailed 
	over the court and requested to give his client “one last chance” to sell 
	their assets and collect Rs. 6000 crore more required for bail security.
-  Earlier the court had asked 65-year-old Roy to pay a total Rs 
	10,000 crore to get bail.
-  During the hearing, the Sahara group blamed Mirach Capital for the 
	failure of the second proposed deal for selling of offshore properties.
 Haryana set to Ban Cow Slaughter
-  Haryana is all set to bring legislation for banning cow slaughter 
	and making it a punishable offence. The move is not only likely to have an 
	adverse impact on the cuisine and business of premier hotels in the State 
	but also the livelihood of a large number of people dependent on butchery, 
	especially in the minority-dominated district  of Mewat.
-  Haryana Health Minister Anil Vij said that the State Government is 
	framing a stringent law to clamp a complete ban on cow slaughter which would 
	help in the protection and promotion of cows. 
-  Following Maharashtra’s ban on beef, Haryana now looks all set to 
	follow suit. Haryana Agriculture and Animal Husbandry Minister Om Prakash 
	Dhankar had also confirmed that stringent punishment would be handed out for 
	cow slaughter and sale and storage of beef in the State.
You sat on Rape videos, SC tells Home Ministry
	-  The Supreme Court pulled up the Home Ministry for sitting on crucial video 
material about a gang rape highlighted in the “Shame the Rapist” campaign 
launched by activist  Sunitha Krishnan.
-  The Social Justice Bench of Justice Madan B. Lokur and Justice U.U. Lalit 
found the Ministry made no move to hand over the video evidence to the CBI for 
over 20 days.
-  It received the videos on February 10 from Ms. Krishnan, but chose to pass 
them on to the CBI only on March 5. Despite repeated queries from the Bench to 
explain its conduct, the Ministry had nothing to offer.
-  “So between February 10 and March 5, you just sat on these videos. You people 
did not do anything ... only yesterday you filed the FIRs,” Justice Lokur told 
Additional Solicitor-General Maninder Singh, who appeared for the Ministry.
-  The court directed Mr. Singh to name the officer who received the video 
evidence from Ms. Krishnan, and demanded a full explanation on “What you were 
doing all that time till March 5.”
-  The court, during the previous hearing on February 27, took suo motu 
cognisance of a letter by Prajwala, a non-governmental organisation of Ms. 
Krishnan, highlighting the existence of the videos and the immediate necessity 
to nab the culprits. The Bench had ordered the CBI investigation.
-  In the videos, five men are seen smiling into the camera after taking turns at 
sexually assaulting their victim.
- Mr. Singh said the videos showed a total of 12 clips, of which three were 
repeats. He said eight FIRs had been filed and a preliminary inquiry had started 
on one.
-  The court ordered the Ministry to share the photos with the Directors-General 
of Police in Odisha, West Bengal and U.P. where these men may hail from.
MHA tells States, UTs not to use national flag made of plastic
	-  The Union Home Ministry had directed all State Government and 
	Union Territories not to use National Flag made of plastic for any function 
	as these are not biodegradable and thus their appropriate disposal is not 
	possible. 
-  The letter, which has been sent to all State governments and Union 
	Territories, noted that National Flag made of plastic are being used in 
	place of paper flags on important functions. Since plastic flags are not 
	biodegradable like the paper flags, these do not get decomposed for a long 
	time and are harmful to the atmosphere. Further, ensuring the appropriate 
	disposal of national flags made of plastic with the dignity of the flag
 is a problem.
-  Therefore, the MHA said State governments and others should ensure 
	that on important national, cultural and sports events, only flags made by 
	the paper are used in public. 
-  It cautioned that offence pertaining to showing disrespect to the 
	National Flag can invite up to three years jail term, fine or both. 
 Process on to implement One Rank One Pension scheme
-  The modalities for implementing ’One Rank One Pension’ (OROP) 
	scheme for armed forces are under consideration and the financial 
	implication could be calculated once the details are finalised and approved 
	by the government, Lok Sabha  was informed.
-  Minister of State for Defence Rao Inderjit Singh said in a written 
	reply that the principle of OROP for the armed forces has been accepted by
	
 the government.
-  He was asked whether the implementation of the scheme has been 
	delayed.
-  Responding to another part of the question on removing disparities 
	in pension of various ex-servicemen, he said possible amendments to the 
	pension policies are being examined with a view to reduce litigation.
-  Explaining the reasons behind the delay, the Minister had said, 
	“The methodology of calculating the One Rank, One Pension is an issue 
	pending between the Services and the Defence Ministry.”
-  The scheme, which seeks to ensure that a uniform pension is paid 
	to defence personnel who retire at the same rank with the same length of 
	service, irrespective of their date of retirement, has been a long-standing 
	demand of the over two million ex-servicemen in the country. It is important 
	to note that, earlier Army Chief Dalbir Singh Suhag said that the scheme 
	will be implemented by the April and this year.
Law panel bats for stronger EC
	-  Law Commission has pitched for a stronger Election Commission by 
	giving equal constitutional protection to all members of the poll body and 
	appointing the CEC and the two ECs by a high-powered collegium.
-  In its report on electoral reforms submitted to the Law Ministry, 
	the law panel has also recommended creation of a permanent, independent 
	Secretariat for the EC.
-  The law panel said Article 324(5) of the Constitution should be 
	amended to equate the removal procedures of the two Election Commissioners 
	with that of the Chief Election Commissioner.
-  The President appoints Chief Election Commissioner and Election 
	Commissioners after the Law Ministry initiates the file for their 
	appointment. 
-  The Chief Election Commissioner can be removed from office only 
	through impeachment by Parliament. The government can remove the ECs based 
	on the recommendation of the CEC.
-  The Law Commission said the appointment of all the Election 
	Commissioners, including the CEC, should be made by the President in 
	consultation with a three-member collegium or selection committee, 
	consisting of the Prime Minister, the Leader of the Opposition of the Lok 
	Sabha (or the leader of the largest opposition party in the Lok Sabha) and 
	the Chief Justice of India.
-  It said elevation of an Election Commissioner should be on the 
	basis of seniority, unless the three member collegium or a committee, for 
	reasons to be recorded in writing, finds such Commissioner unfit.
-  The precedent is to appoint the senior-most EC as the CEC. 
Govt. rethinking strategy on Land Bill
	-  In a major shift in stance, the government will not bring the 
	controversial Land Acquisition (Amendment) Bill in the first half of the 
	Budget Session of Parliament ending on March 20. 
-  It may either allow the ordinance to lapse or repromulgate it 
	after Parliament is prorogued.
-  This was indicated by Union Parliamentary Affairs Minister M. 
	Venkaiah Naidu to party leaders during the meeting of the Rajya Sabha 
	Business Advisory Committee.
-  On the face of it, the government maintains that it needs to 
	confer with the Opposition to build a consensus, but with tremendous 
	pressure from the RSS and its affiliates and farmers’ organisations, the BJP 
	is reframing its strategy on  the Bill.
-  Significantly, Prime Minister’s “Man ki Baat” radio talk on March 
	22 is on farmers’ issues.
-  He has invited comments from farmers, saying he would like to 
	“hear them.”
-  According to sources, the government is keen that the Coal Mines 
	(Special Provisions) Bill and the Mines and Minerals (Development and 
	Regulation) Amendment Bill be approved by the Upper House after they are 
	returned by the respective Select Committees on March 18. 
-  Since coal auctions are under way, the government is keen that 
	legislation is in place and the Opposition parties are on board on this.
-  But because of differences on the Land Bill, the government is 
	having a rethink on its strategy. 
Ban on airing India’s Daughter to Continue 
	-  Remarking that media trials tend to influence judgements, the 
	Delhi High Court said that although it had no objection to screening the BBC 
	documentary “India’s Daughter,” the matter could only be decided post a 
	verdict regarding the fate of the convicts, from the 
 Supreme Court.
-  The Division Bench further said a decision on lifting the ban 
	could only be taken by an appropriate Chief Justice’s Bench. 
-  It also refused to pass any interim orders on the appeal asking 
	for the ban to be lifted. “Had it been originally placed before us, we would 
	have asked you to place material before us on why the ban should be lifted.
	
-  But it has come here from the roster bench of the Chief Justice, 
	so we will not pass any interim orders. Let the roster bench decide it,” the 
	court said. 
-  The judges spoke at length over the subject of media trials 
	influencing court decisions. “Media trials do tend to influence judges. 
	Subconsciously, a pressure is created and it does have an effect on the 
	sentencing of the accused. Whether he [the accused] has shown remorse or not 
	would be considered at the time of his sentencing. Why not wait till the 
	Supreme Court decision?”
Make paid news a poll offence: Law panel
	-  The Law Commission has recommended that newspaper advertisements 
	on the eve of elections be banned. In a report released on Thursday, the 
	commission wanted Independent candidates to be barred from contesting 
	elections, and paid news made an electoral offence leading to 
	disqualification. 
-  Headed by Justice A.P. Shah, the commission submitted its 255th 
	report, on the issue of electoral reforms, to the Union Law Ministry. 
-  Noting that the ban on broadcast of election matter 48 hours prior 
	to an election was restricted to the electronic media now, the commission 
	recommended such prohibition for the print media also.
-  The report recommends regulating opinion polls and making 
	disclosures about the methodology mandatory.
-  The commission, while stopping short of recommending state funding 
	of elections or limits to political parties’ expenditure on elections, 
	recommended several changes to election funding legislation. 
-  Noting that “the current system tolerates, or at least does not 
	prevent, lobbying and capture, where a sort of quid pro quo transpires 
	between big donors and political parties/candidates”, the report recommends 
	making it mandatory for all parties to declare donations of even less than 
	the current Rs. 20,000 limit, if the total of such contributions adds up to 
	Rs. 20 crore, or makes up 20 per cent of the party’s income, whichever is 
	lower.
-  Welcoming many of the recommendations, Jagdeep Chhokar, co-founder 
	of the Association for Democratic Reforms, whose work the report refers 
	extensively to, said, however, that the organisation would continue to press 
	for limits on political parties’ expenditure.
-  Independent candidates are often “dummy” candidates, the 
	commission said. It criticised compulsory voting, recently introduced during 
	local elections in Gujarat, and did not support the right to recall or a 
	move to proportional representation. 
-  The report recommended measures to strengthen the Election 
	Commission and for a collegium or selection committee, which includes the 
	Leader of Opposition, to appoint commissioners. 
Citizen ID systems tend to exclude marginalised: WB
	-  Despite heavy investment on large-scale citizen identification 
	systems, akin to the UID-Aadhaar project, these often run the risk of 
	increased exclusion of the most vulnerable and marginalised groups, a new 
	World Bank study cautions.
-  While the study, titled “Identification systems don’t always serve 
	the bottom 40%”, does not specifically discuss Aadhaar, it analyses similar 
	systems in several Asian and African countries and finds “less than robust” 
	evidence to justify their multi-million dollar budgets.
-  It cautions of a real risk in “over-selling” development benefits 
	of identification systems, especially those related to service delivery, 
	which is primarily what the Indian government intends to use Aadhaar for.
- “Attracted by the promise of new technology, countries and development 
	partners ... have invested heavily in identification systems ... [however] 
	rigorous evidence on the link between registration/ documentation and 
	development outcomes is limited and mixed,” the study says.
-  Authors Megan Brewer, Nicholas Menzies and Jared Schott argue that 
	strengthening large-scale identification systems could result in several 
	“perverse consequences” that undermine development gains.” 
-  Since registration among marginalised groups, like rural poor, 
	could be significantly lower than national averages, using such data for 
	development planning could result in further exclusion of these groups, the 
	researchers say.
NGO seeks CBI, ED probe into Aditya Birla group
	-  Common Cause, the NGO whose PIL plea led to the cancellation of 
	coal block allocations, moved the Supreme Court accusing Aditya Birla group 
	of hawala transactions, money laundering and bribery and sought a CBI and 
	Enforcement Directorate probe.
-  The application filed by advocate Prashant Bhushan for the NGO 
	cited how coal extracted from a captive block allocated to the Sasan ultra 
	mega power project was allowed to be diverted, resulting in a huge 
	post-bidding concession worth Rs. 29,000 crore to Reliance Power Limited (a 
	Reliance ADAG company).
-  It alleged that huge amounts of cash were routed through hawala by 
	the Birla Group.
-  The application also pointed to alleged recovery of unaccounted 
	Rs. 25 crore during the raids on the company office.
SC upholds life term in Manjunath murder case
	-  A decade after he was gunned down for fighting the oil 
	adulteration racket in Uttar Pradesh, IIM-Lucknow alumnus and Indian Oil 
	Corporation manager Manjunath Shanmugham won justice, with the Supreme Court 
	confirming the life imprisonment of six persons accused for his death.
-  In a judgment, a Bench of Justices S.J. Mukhopadhaya and N.V. 
	Ramana quoted the prosecution about how the brutal death of the young 
	Karnataka-born manager had shaken the nation’s conscience.
-  The judgment reproduces the prosecution’s submissions about the 
	lonely battle waged by Mr. Manjunath, who was shot dead at Gola area of 
	Lakhimpur Kheri district on November 19, 2005 after he threatened to cancel 
	a petrol pump’s licence for selling spurious fuel.
-  Though the trial court had sentenced him to death, Mr. Mittal’s 
	punishment was commuted to life imprisonment by the Allahabad High Court.
 ‘RTI Act applies to A-G’s office’
-  Stating that even under common parlance the office of the Attorney 
	General of India has always been understood to mean a “constitutional 
	authority,” the Delhi High Court refused to accept that this office was 
	outside the ambit of the Right to Information Act and further directed it to 
	reconsider the RTI application that it had rejected on these grounds. 
-  The issue came into question when a petition challenging an order 
	by the Central Information Commission was up for hearing before the single 
	Bench of 
Justice Vibhu Bakhru.
	-  The CIC had held that the office of the AGI was not a public authority under 
Section 2(h) of the RTI Act. 
-  The petition was also challenging a letter by the AGI refusing all information 
to the petitioner under the RTI act.
-  “An office that is established under the Constitution would clearly fall 
within the definition of Section 2(h) of the RTI Act…,” said Justice Vibhu Bakhu 
while rejecting AGI’s arguments.
Land Bill Clears Lok Sabha hurdle
	- The controversial Land Acquisition (Amendment) Bill was approved by the 
	Lok Sabha , but not before the Modi government reached out to unhappy NDA 
	allies and unattached parties such as the BJD and the AIADMK to seek their 
	support for this 
 crucial legislation.
-  The Congress, the Trinamool Congress, the Samajwadi Party, the RJD 
	and the BJD walked out of the House while NDA ally Shiv Sena abstained as 
	the Bill was passed by voice vote. 
-  In the official amendments it moved, the government accommodated 
	some concerns of the Opposition and allies, such as dropping “social 
	infrastructure” from the five categories of land use exempted from the 
	consent clause.
-  However, other key points of contention — the Social Impact 
	Assessment and the restoration of the consent clause — remained unresolved 
	as the Bill moves to the Rajya Sabha, where the government is outnumbered — 
	and the Opposition plans to force the Bill to a Select Committee.
-  Barring the Swabhiman Paksha and the Shiv Sena that held its 
	counsel during the meeting, all the other allies agreed to back the 
	government if it addressed their concerns.
SC unhappy with fund use for Taj zone green project
	-  Noting its unhappiness with the Uttar Pradesh government, the 
	Supreme Court came to the brink of ordering a CBI probe into the alleged 
	irregularities in its utilisation of funds meant for compensatory 
	afforestation at the Taj Trapezium Zone (TTZ) in Agra.
-  Justice Thakur considered directing a CBI probe into the 
	“irregularities,” but said the court would give the government one last 
	opportunity to fulfil its commitment to plant saplings to replace trees 
	felled across the land spread over several hundred hectares.
-  It said the only explanation for “discrepancy and failure” from 
	the officials was non-release of funds. 
-  Calling their attitude “cavalier,” the court asked why these 
	officials could not have approached the court had their intentions been in 
	earnest. 
-  A Bench gave the State four weeks to comply with its orders. The 
	State’s Additional Advocate-General Gaurav Bhatia promised that the court 
	orders would be complied with and a better affidavit, removing all 
	discrepancies on the number of trees uprooted and the number of trees 
	planted.
Mumbai to come under CCTV surveillance, says Governor
	-  The installation of CCTV-based surveillance systems for Mumbai is expected to 
be completed within 90 weeks and the project is already being implemented in 
Pune, Maharashtra Governor C. Vidyasagar Rao told the joint session of the 
Maharashtra Assembly on the opening day of the budget session.
-  “It is proposed that GPRS-based system will be installed in Meru and other 
Private Taxis and the front seats reserved in share taxis in Mumbai for women,” 
he said to underline the measures for improving the safety and comfort of women 
commuters in Mumbai.
-  Emphasising several measures taken by the Devendra Fadnavis government to 
decongest Mumbai and improve its infrastructure, Mr. Rao said the government has 
expedited the work of Navi Mumbai International Airport Project, the second 
international airport for the city, and has received consent letters from 
Project Affected People (PAP) for land acquisition. 
-  On the plan to decongest Mumbai by developing new smart cities, Mr. Rao said 
the government has proposed a new city on an area of 600 sq km around the Navi 
Mumbai international airport, and the city would be christened NAINA.
World War I Commemorations begin
	-  Over 74,000 Indian soldiers laid down their lives fighting the 
	war.
-  The Centenary Commemoration of the First World War (1914-1918), in 
	memory of the 1.5 million Indian soldiers who fought in the war, began with 
	President Pranab Mukherjee laying a wreath at Amar Jawan Jyoti in India 
	Gate.
-  The commemoration, from March 10-14, is also in memory of the over 
	74,000 soldiers who laid down their lives fighting the war, whose names are 
	etched in stone on the walls of India Gate. They fought in several theatres 
	across Asia, Africa and Europe.
-  The centenary commemo-rations will continue till 2018.
-  March 10 coincides with the Battle of Neuve Chapelle marking the 
	British offensive in the Artois region of France, in which the Garhwal 
	Brigade and the Meerut Division of the Indian Corps participated. 
-  Between 1914 and 1918, around 90,000 Indian soldiers fought on the 
	French soil, more than 8,500 of whom perished.
-  General Jean-Pierre Bosser, Chief of Staff of the French Army, is 
	currently on an official visit in India to pay tribute to the sacrifice of 
	Indian soldiers who laid down their lives for France’s freedom during World 
	War I.
-  The highlight is an exhibition at Manekshaw Centre in which the 
	moments and conditions of World War I have been recreated.
-  The ‘Corner of Remembrance’ in the exhibition will have old 
	letters and an old home with belongings of soldiers while the ‘Sacrifice 
	Hall’ includes replicas of Indian memorials and paintings of Victoria Cross 
	winners in India and abroad.
-  The Army has also created a replica of a World War I bunker 
	showcasing the living conditions of the soldiers then.
Delhi, Kerala, Tamil Nadu top in girls’ education
	-  Delhi, Kerala and Tamil Nadu are India’s best-ranked States in 
	terms of gender-related education indicators, new data from the Ministry of 
	Human Resource Development and UNICEF, shows.
-  Using district-level indicators of girls’ education, health and 
	social disadvantages, the government aims to identify the most backward 
	pockets of the country, requiring the most attention.
-  While the atlas uses data earlier collected by other government 
	agencies, it also creates a new composite index using 21 indicators to do 
	with girls’ education, along four axes — access, infrastructure, teachers 
	and outcomes. Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Delhi and Punjab are in the top 25% of the 
	index’s range for elementary education, and the two Southern states and 
	Delhi make the top quarter of the index for secondary education as well. 
	Central and northern States, including Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Bihar, 
	are among the worst performers.
-  The atlas also creates a Vulnerability Index of factors which 
	impinge on girls’ education, including the likelihood of joining the 
	workforce early and 
 early marriage.
-  The two southern States, along with Delhi and Himachal Pradesh, 
	are the best performers here, with Gujarat, Rajasthan and the central and 
	northern States among the worst.
Nagaland submits report on lynching
	-  The Nagaland government has submitted an interim report to the 
	Union Ministry of Home Affairs on the lynching of a person from Assam in 
	Dimapur on March 5.
-  The report, it is understood, says the police and prison security 
	staff were overwhelmed by the huge crowd. 
-  Police could not open fire initially since there were a number of 
	women and children among the protesters.
-  A 7000-strong mob had stormed the jail on March 5 and pulled out 
	Syed Sarif Khan, who was accused of raping a Naga student. He was stripped 
	and dragged all the way and when police caught up with the mob, the accused 
	was already dead.
Ruskin Bond lends a hand to Swachh Bharat campaign
	-  Celebrated author Ruskin Bond has joined the Swachh Bharat campaign, wielding 
a broom specially made by the students of the Moran Blind School 
 in Assam.
-  Actor Victor Banerjee — who runs the school at Moranhat in upper Assam’s 
Dibrugarh district — handed over the broom to the famous storyteller at the 
latter’s residence  in Mussoorie.
‘India’s Daughter’ documentary: HC refuses urgent hearing on PIL to lift ban
	-  The Delhi High Court refused to give urgent hearing to a PIL 
	seeking lifting of the ban on telecast of a controversial documentary 
	featuring an interview of one of the four convicts in the December 16 
	gangrape case. 
-  A bench of justices B.D. Ahmed and Vibhu Bakhru said there is no 
	so urgency in the matter and it will be heard on March 11. 
-  The court’s response came after two law students — Arun Menon and 
	Kritika Padode —— in their public interest litigation (PIL) sought urgent 
	hearing, saying the ban on the documentary is a clear violation of their 
	fundamental rights under Article 19 of the 
 Indian Constitution.
-  The duo approached the High Court after a trial court on March 4 
	had banned until further orders the broadcast of the interview of December 
	16, 2012 gangrape convict Mukesh Singh, which was allegedly conducted in 
	July 2013 inside Tihar jail in New Delhi. 
-  Earlier, a trial court had restrained the media from broadcasting 
	or publishing the interview of Mukesh Singh after the Delhi police moved 
	court for a restraining order against his interview. 
-  The Information and Broadcasting Ministry has also issued an 
	advisory to all television channels to not broadcast the documentary on the 
	victim. 
-  The government has also sought an explanation from Tihar jail 
	authorities over how the convict was interviewed while being in judicial 
	custody. 
-  A similar petition was filed last week, by a law student, who has 
	sought lifting of the ban on the ground that it is “nothing but a honest 
	look at the mind and mindset of one of the convicted rapists of the young 
	woman”. 
-  The plea also said that a direction be issued to the Supreme Court 
	registry to constitute a three judge special bench to hear the appeals of 
	the four death row convicts, which is pending since August  25, 2014.
	
-  Initially the apex court in July had stayed the execution of the 
	four convicts in the gang-rape and murder case.
-  The other petition, prepared by Vibhor Anand, had also said that 
	“it is legally wrong to oppose the screening of the film after giving it 
	legal approval and after the documentary-makers fulfilled all legal 
	commitments.” 
-  It claimed that the parents of the gangrape victim have also not 
	objected to the telecast of the documentary. 
-  It also said that as per social media the public at large wanted 
	to see the documentary as within 24 hours of its being put up on YouTube, it 
	was viewed by more 2.86 lakh people. 
-  The victim, a physiotherapy student was raped and assaulted with 
	an iron rod after she was tricked into boarding an unregistered private bus 
	to go home after watching a movie with a male friend on December 16, 2012.
	
World’s first Solar-powered Aircraft 
	-  The Swiss solar-powered aircraft’s flight got delayed by a day due 
	to bad weather conditions in the UAE.
-  Solar Impulse, claimed to be the world’s only solar-powered 
	aircraft, will make a stop over in Ahmedabad as a part of its maiden global 
	journey. 
- After making a landing here, the solar-powered aircraft’s founders and 
	pilots Bertrand Piccard and Androrschberg are likely to stay in the city for 
	two days before leaving for Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh, the  release 
	said. 
-  The Swiss solar-powered aircraft’s flight got delayed by a day due 
	to bad weather conditions in the UAE. The aircraft was scheduled to land in 
	Ahmedabad.
-  Piccard and Borschberg, during their stay in the city, will reach 
	out to the government, NGOs, universities and schools to spread the message 
	of 
 clean technologies.
-  The aircraft is also likely to hover above river Ganga in Varanasi 
	to spread the message of cleanliness and clean energy, an official 
	associated with 
 the project said.
-  Solar Impulse is claimed to be the first aircraft to fly day and 
	night without a drop of fuel, propelled solely by the sun’s energy, as per 
	the 
 project’s website.
-  The single-seater aircraft made of carbon fibre has a 72 metre 
	wingspan, larger than that of Boeing-747 and weighs just 2,300 kg, 
	equivalent to the weight of a car. 
-  The 17,248 solar cells built into the wing supply electric motors 
	with renewable energy. The solar cells recharge four lithium polymer 
	batteries totalling 633 kg each, which allow the aircraft to fly at night 
	and therefore have virtually unlimited autonomy, it said. 
-  This round-the-world flight will take-off from Abu Dhabi and make 
	a halt at Muscat (Oman), Ahmedabad and Varanasi in India, Mandalay in 
	Myanmar and Chongqing and Nanjing  in China.
-  After crossing the Pacific Ocean via Hawaii, the aircraft will fly 
	across the US stopping at Phoenix, the Midwest and New York City, said the 
	website. 
-  The test flight of the aircraft was conducted in the US in 2013.
	
As tensions rise, Assam on alert to Protect Nagas
	-  The Assam government has put its administration on high alert following the 
lynching of a rape accused, Syed Sarif Khan, from the State by a mob after 
dragging him out of the Dimapur jail in Nagaland .
-  The government has asked the Deputy Commissioners, the Superintendents of 
Police and the Divisional Commissioners to provide security to people from 
Nagaland living in the State and to ensure the safety of travellers between the 
two States.
-  Parliamentary Affairs Minister Rockybul Hussain listed the steps in a 
statement in the Assembly after the Opposition raised the issue.
-  The government informed the Assembly that Nagaland promised to arrest the 
guilty and instituted a judicial investigation, besides suspending three 
officials.
-  Mr. Hussain said Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi had written to his Nagaland 
counterpart, T.R. Zeliang, requesting that those behind the lynching be arrested 
and the lives and property of Assamese be secured. 
-  Thehief Minister had written to Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh to take up 
the matter with the Nagaland government.
-  He said Sarif Khan, 28, from Bhanga village in Karimganj district had been 
living in Dimapur for over two years after marrying a Naga woman.
-  Mr. Gogoi told presspersons that it was important to fix responsibility for 
security lapses. The Union government owed an explanation because the Central 
Reserve Police Force was deployed for jail security.
-  The movement of lorries to Nagaland remained suspended. Members of the 
All-Assam Goods Carrier Truck Drivers and Handyman Union staged a protest in the 
city. 
Mufti orders  Release of political prisoners 
	-  Senior separatist leader Masarat Alam was released from prison 
	just days after Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed 
	directed the police to release political prisoners against whom no criminal 
	charges had  been registered.
-  Earlier in the day, police sources had confirmed that he had been 
	moved from the Baramulla prison to a police station 
 in Srinagar.
-  Head of the Muslim League in the State, Mr Alam was among the main 
	organisers of pro-Azadi protests in the Valley in 2010. He was arrested 
	along with several other leaders after those protests and remained one of 
	the few senior leaders still behind bars.
-  Arrested under the Public Safety Act (PSA) — a preventive 
	detention law in J&K which gives a Deputy Commissioner the authority to take 
	anyone in his district into preventive custody for up to two years without 
	trial if he feels the person poses a threat to the security of the State — 
	Mr. Alam has been in various prisons for more than four years now.
-  Police sources said since 2010, more than six consecutive PSA 
	charges had been slapped on him.
-  Reacting strongly to the release of Masarat Alam, the BJP said the 
	decision was anti-national, unacceptable and detrimental to the coalition.
Nirbhaya film: Bar council issues notice to defence lawyers
	-  Even as the Bar Council of India initiated suo motu proceedings 
	for professional misconduct against two defence lawyers in the Nirbhaya 
	gang-rape case for their alleged derogatory remarks against women in the BBC 
	documentary ‘India’s Daughter’, senior members of the legal community said 
	lawyers, above all, should be sensitive to the equality and dignity of 
	women.
-  They said the proceedings gives the BCI, the highest regulatory 
	body for legal practice, an opportunity to amend rules to check lawyers from 
	making unsubstantiated, off-the-cuff remarks, especially when they represent 
	sensitive cases involving crimes against women.
-  The two lawyers – Manohar Lal Sharma and A.P. Singh – represent 
	the four persons on death row for the brutal gang-rape and murder of a 
	23-year-old medical student in Delhi in December 2012.
New Kailash Mansarovar Yatra route by June
	-  The new route for Kailash Mansarovar Yatra through Nathu La in 
	Sikkim will be operationalised during this yatra season beginning in June, 
	Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swaraj informed the Parliament.
-  “The route through Nathu La will augment the capacity and reduce 
	the hardship enabling many pilgrims, particularly aged ones, to undertake 
	the yatra,” the government said.
-  The understanding for the new route was reached between India and 
	China during the visit of Chinese President Xi Jinping to India last year.
-  The new route was necessitated as the current route through 
	Lipulekh pass in Uttarakhand is cumbersome and also the number of pilgrims 
	increasing.
-  In the last three years about 1700 pilgrims had visited Mansarovar. 
	With the addition of the second route, 1000 pilgrims are expected to 
	undertake the yatra this  year alone.
-  As per the understanding, five batches of 50 pilgrims each are 
	expected to travel through Nathu La this year.
-  A dedicated website has been set up and the application procedure 
	has been simplified.
-  Prime Minister Narendra Modi is scheduled to visit China in May 
	but External Affairs Ministry officials have denied reports that he would 
	travel to Kailash Mansarovar.
Activists continue bid to post India’s Daughter on the Web
	-  Free speech activists continued efforts to make available India’s 
	Daughter on the Internet ,demand grew more vocal for a revocation of the ban 
	on the controversial documentary on the December 16, 2012 gang rape in 
	Delhi.
-  Though the hour-long documentary, aired on BBC Four on Wednesday 
	evening, could not be accessed on YouTube for much of the day, at least one 
	URL (Uniform Resource Locator) provided it for watching in the evening.
-  On clicking the YouTube link to the video, the video-sharing site 
	threw up a black screen for the most part of the day with a message, “This 
	content is not available on this country domain due to a court order.”
-  Asked if the government had issued any new communication to pull 
	down more URLs, a Google India source said: “There was no update.” The film 
	was, however, accessible on other video-sharing websites as people found 
	ways of circumventing the ban to share the film.
-  As more people managed to access the film, the clamour for 
	revoking the ban grew, resulting in more endorsements for an online petition 
	to the Union Home Minister to reverse the decision and “celebrate 
	International Women’s Day (March 8) by shining a light on the problems our 
	country faces, instead of shying away  from them.”
-  The decision to ban the film, which the government said was part 
	of an international conspiracy to defame India, drew world media attention 
	with most leading media houses reporting on it or carrying editorials.
Ex-editor of RSS organ replaces NBT Chairman
	-  The Government appointed Baldev Bhai Sharma, former editor of 
	Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh’s weekly magazine, Panchajanya, as the next 
	Chairman of the National Book Trust (NBT) cutting short the term of 
	incumbent A. Sethumadhavan – better known by his pen name ‘Sethu’ — by six 
	months.
-  Officially, the Ministry of Human Resource Development (HRD) was 
	filling a vacancy that fell open last week. 
-  According to Mr. Sethumadhavan, he had put in his papers last week 
	after he was called to the Ministry by the joint secretary overseeing NBT 
	affairs and given a clear indication that the Government wanted to appoint 
	someone else.
-  Conceding that it was the Government’s prerogative to replace him, 
	Mr. Sethumadhavan said he had hoped to complete his three-year term as there 
	had been no interference from the Ministry since the change of guard at  
	the Centre.
-  He had been appointed NBT Chairman on September 12, 2012, for 
	three years, and had a little over six months to go.
Centre to amend RBI Act to set up monetary policy panel 
	-  An agreement between the Centre and the Reserve Bank of India last month 
formalised a policy that the central bank had been following since January 2014, 
of prioritizing controlling price rise.
-  The Centre would amend the RBI Act for the setting up of the proposed monetary 
policy committee, a key element of the new framework.
-  Replying to a query, Mr. Mehrishi said the budget announcement about proposed 
‘strategic disinvestment’ in public sector units would enable the Centre to 
induct private strategic partners.
Nanditha Krishna, M.D. Srinivas in ICHR
	-  The Union MHRD has reconstituted the Indian Council for Historical 
	Research, inducting 18 new members.
-  Included in the restructured Council is C.I. Issac, former Head of 
	the Department of History at CMS College, Kottayam, Kerala and author of The 
	Evolution of Christian Church in India, which questions the origins of 
	Christianity in India from  St Thomas.
-  Jadavpur University Professor Purabi Roy who has worked 
	extensively on Subash Chandra Bose also joins the Council.
-  The new nominees to the Council include Dilip K. Chakrabarti, 
	Professor Emeritus of South Asian Archaeology, Cambridge University, 
-  Nanditha Krishna, Director of C.P. Ramaswami Aiyar Foundation, 
	Chennai, 
-  Michel Danino, Guest Professor at the Indian Institute of 
	Technology, Gandhinagar, and author of books on 
 ancient India,
-  M. D. Srinivas, chairman of Chennai-based Centre for  Policy 
	Studies, 
-  Cambodia-based Sachchi-dananda Sahai who authored the five-volume 
	Lao Ramayana and helped restore Angkor  Vat, and 
-  Rahman Ali, Head of the Department of the School of Studies in 
	Ancient Indian History, Culture and Archaeology at Vikram University, Ujjain. 
	PDP gets  10 Cabinet berths, BJP six
-  Among the 24 legislators sworn in as Ministers in Jammu and 
	Kashmir, 16 will join the Mufti Mohammad Sayeed Cabinet. While 10 of the PDP 
	are in the Cabinet, the BJP has six, including People’s Conference chairman 
	and party ally  Sajjad Lone.
-  The Cabinet Ministers from the PDP are Haseeb Drabu, Haq Khan, 
	Imran Raza Ansari, Abdul Rehman Bhat (Veeri), Javed Mustafa Mir, Basharat 
	Bukhari, Choudhary Zulfikar Ali, Ghulam Nabi Lone, Altaf Bukhari and Naeem 
	Akhter.
-  The PDP has three Ministers of State — Abdul Majeed Padder, Ashraf 
	Mir and Asiya Naqash.
-  The six Cabinet ministers from the BJP are Mr. Lone, Nirmal Singh, 
	who will be Deputy Chief Minister, Lal Singh, Bali Bhagat, Sukhnandan Kumar 
	and Chander Prakash.
-  The party has five Ministers of State — Shirin Dorji, Sunil Kumar 
	Sharma, Abdul Gani Kohli, Priya Sethi and Independent candidate Pawan Kumar 
	Gupta.
-  Mr. Sayeed described as a breakthrough the joining of Mr. Lone, 
	who formerly held a separatist position, in the government, but refrained 
	from suggesting that it would become an example for other separatist 
	leaders. 
Pakistani singer Adnan Sami applies for Indian citizenship
	-  Pakistani singer-musician Adnan Sami has applied for Indian 
	citizenship for a second time despite an earlier plea of his having been 
	rejected by the Centre. 
-  The 43-year-old singer - whose earlier request was rejected some 
	two years back - has made his application to the Foreigners’ Division of the 
	Home Ministry. 
-  Last month, Home Ministry had asked Law Ministry as to whether 
	Sami can be granted Indian citizenship. But Law Ministry refused to 
	entertain the request, saying that the power of granting Indian citizenship 
	lies with the Home Ministry under the Citizenship Act. 
-  The Law Ministry, however, said that it can help Home Ministry 
	with the interpretation of any provision of the Citizenship Act to enable it 
	to decide the case. 
-  Under the Indian Citizenship Act, a foreigner is entitled to 
	receive citizenship provided that he or she has rendered distinguished 
	service to the cause of science, philosophy, art, literature, world peace or 
	human progress. 
Nai Manzil to bridge lack of skills in minorities
	-  The ‘Nai Manzil’ scheme announced in the budget is something that 
	the Minority Affairs Ministry has been talking about ever since the Modi 
	Government assumed office last year.
-  In reply to a question in the Rajya Sabha on July 16, 2014, the 
	Ministry had listed ‘Nai Manzil’ as one of the steps “being taken’’ by the 
	Government for the welfare of minorities.
-  It was billed as a “bridge course to bridge the academic and skill 
	development gaps of the deeni Madrasa passouts with their mainstream 
	counterparts’’.
-  Seven-and-a-half months later, Mr. Jaitley flagged ‘Nai Manzil’ as 
	a scheme that “will be launched this year’’ to enable minority youth who do 
	not have a formal school-leaving certificate to obtain one and find better 
	employment.
-  The other minority community-related programme that he flagged in 
	the Budget speech on Saturday pertained to show-casing the civilisation and 
	culture of Parsis. The Government will support an exhibition ‘The 
	Everlasting Flame’, he said.
-  The allocation for the Ministry “is being protected’’ with an 
	estimate of Rs. 3,738 crore. Last year’s budget had allocated Rs. 3,734 
	crore to the Ministry which was cut down to Rs. 3,165 crore in the  
	revised estimates. 
-  A bulk of this is for the Multi Sectoral Development Programme for 
	Minorities and the other main claimants to the allocation are the pre-matric 
	and post-matric scholarships for minorities.
Vistara to have fleet size of 20 aircraft by 2018
	-  Vistara, a joint venture between Tata Sons and Singapore Airlines, 
	said its fleet size will be increased to 20 by 2018, from five at present.
-  Phee Teik Yeoh, Chief Executive Officer, Vistara (Tata SIA) 
	Airlines Ltd also said that the aviation industry in India is facing 
	challenges such as high fuel cost and a high tax regime.
-  The airlines launched its first flight from Hyderabad to New 
	Delhi. Having started with its operations on January 9, with 68 frequencies 
	weekly, Vistara now operates 164 flights in a week.
-  Replying to a query on challenges that the Indian Aviation 
	Industry is facing, Mr. Yeoh said government should work on addressing the 
	issues such as high aviation turbine fuel coast which is 40-60 per cent more 
	expensive than other countries.
-  He also said that government must remove the 5/20 rule — five 
	years of flying experience, and a fleet size of 20 — for allowing domestic 
	airlines to fly globally.
-  Justifying the launch of flights from Hyderabad, he said it is due 
	to the low sales tax on ATF which formed one of the key consideration to 
	expand the network from the capital of Telangana.
E-commerce transactions on ‘aggregator’ platforms turn costly 
	-  E-commerce transactions through websites and mobile apps based on ‘aggregator 
model’, including for cab services and online shopping, may turn expensive as 
those providing such services under their own brand are being brought under the 
service tax net. 
-  The Finance Bill has proposed changes in the Service Tax rules with respect to 
certain e—commerce transactions involving aggregator model, which may impact 
online aggregator taxi services like Uber and Ola Cabs. 
-  There are also many online retail websites that follow ‘aggregator’ model. 
Under this model, an entity does not produce or warehouses any product itself, 
but collects or aggregates information on goods or services on one single 
platform from several sources. 
-  The aggregator draws customers to its platform and allows them an easy 
comparison of prices and specifications of product or service offered by several 
sellers. 
-  As per the Finance Bill 2015, presented by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in 
Parliament, “In respect of any service provided under aggregator model, the 
aggregator, or any of his representative office located in India, is being made 
liable to pay Service Tax if the service is so provided using the brand name of 
the aggregator in 
any manner. 
-  “If an aggregator does not have any presence, including that by way of a 
representative, in such a case any agent appointed by the aggregator shall pay 
the tax on behalf of the aggregator.” 
-  In this regard, appropriate amendments have been made to the Service Tax 
Rules, 1994, it said, while adding that the change has come into effect 
immediately, that is with  effect from today. 
-  As a result, such services will turn expensive once the aggregators decide to 
pass on the service tax levy to the consumers. 
-  According to leading law firm Khaitan & Company, “In respect of certain 
e—commerce service transactions, the person liable to pay Service tax has now 
been clearly specified.” 
-  For services offered under aggregator model, the aggregator, or its 
representative office in India would be now made “liable to pay Service tax if 
the service is provided by using the brand name of the aggregator in any 
manner.” 
-  If an aggregator does not have any presence, then its agent will have to pay 
the tax, the law  firm clarified. 
States will have  More spending Freedom: CEA
	-  Chief Economic Adviser Arvind Subramanian said that calculations 
	showed that the total transfers from the Centre to the States as a 
	percentage of the divisible pool of its net tax revenue would remain nearly 
	the same even after the acceptance of the 14th Finance Commission’s 
	recommendations.
-  However, transfers from the Central government would no longer be 
	scheme-and-grant-based, and it would rather be devolution-based, leading to 
	more spending freedom for the States — and that would be a “watershed change 
	in the story of Indian federalism.”
-  In a presentation to reporters after Union Finance Minister Arun 
	Jaitley tabled the Economic Survey 2014-15 in Parliament, Dr. Subramanian 
	said that in the last three years, the Centre transferred, on an average, 64 
	per cent of the divisible pool of its net taxes to the States under various 
	heads. 
-  This included the States’ share of 32 per cent of the pool on 
	account of the 13th Finance Commission’s award and the Centre’s assistance 
	to the States by way of plan transfers.
-  The Centre would have had to transfer to the States funds 
	amounting to 65 per cent of the pool had the recommendations of the 14th 
	Finance Commission (which is for a 42 per cent States’ share against the 
	13th Finance Commission’s 32 per cent) applied in the current year, he said.
-  The 14th Finance Commission’s recommendations do not apply in the 
	current year; they will be applicable for the five-year period starting 
	April 1.
-  With the share for the States in the pool rising, the Centre’s 
	plan transfers to the States by way of assistance would diminish, the 
	Economic Survey indicated. “Balancing the enhanced fiscal autonomy of the 
	States with preserving fiscal space of the Centre entails a reduction in the 
	Central assistance to the States,” it said.
-  The Survey said the biggest gainers from the 14th Finance 
	Commission’s award in absolute terms under the general category States are 
	Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal and Madhya Pradesh. Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal 
	Pradesh and Assam are the most benefited in the special category.
-  The 14th Finance Commission’s recommendations would add 
	substantial spending capacity to the States’ budgets, the Survey said.
SC moved for CBI probe into Essar leaks
	-  The Centre for Public Interest Litigation, NGO which successfully 
	fought the 2G Spectrum scam case, moved the Supreme Court for a CBI 
	investigation into the nexus between multi-billion dollar Essar Group and 
	top bureaucrats, journalists and politicians, including Transport Minister 
	Nitin Gadkari and a host of UPA leaders.
-  The petition is based on internal emails and documents leaked from 
	Essar by a whistleblower.
-  The petition, supported by a host of annexures, mostly emails, 
	alleged that Essar not only sponsored high-end gifts but also luxury travel 
	of politicians and their family members. 
-  A series of emails details that Mr. Gadkari and his family used 
	Essar vice-chairman Ravi Ruia’s 280-feet super luxury personal yacht 
	‘Sunrays’ for cruise in 2013 when he was BJP president.
Liberalise FDI in retail for farm sector: Survey
	-  The Economic Survey said that by adopting what it called the JAM Number 
Trinity — Jan Dhan Yojana accounts seeded with Aadhaar numbers and operated 
through mobile numbers — would allow the States to deliver the subsidies to the 
poor in a targeted and less distorted manner.
-  Pointing to the lop-sidedness of policies, it said India’s public expenditure 
on agriculture was a fourth of the subsidy bill on food and fertilizer.
-  In its recommendations for farm sector reforms, it said liberalisation of 
foreign direct investment (FDI) in retail could help fill the massive investment 
and infrastructure deficit which resulted in supply-chain inefficiencies. The 
Narendra Modi government’s stand has been to disallow FDI in multi-brand retail.
-  The Survey also found that India’s manufacturing was skill-intensive, which 
was not in line with the country’s comparative advantage in unskilled labour and 
recommended rebalancing of policies: 
-  “While ‘Make in India’ occupies prominence as an important goal, the future 
trajectory of Indian Development depends on both it and ‘Skilling India’.”
 SCO: Russia to push for India’s full membership
-  Russia will push for India’s full membership in the Shanghai Cooperation 
Organisation (SCO) during the upcoming meeting it is hosting in July, said 
Sergey E. Naryshkin, Chairman of the Russian State Duma. India is currently an 
observer in the multilateral grouping.
-  The SCO, founded in 2001, comprises Russia, China and several Central Asian 
republics and is seen as a counter to the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation 
(NATO).
-  Russia is also pushing for deeper engagement among the BRICS 
(Brazil-Russia-India-China-South Africa) group as well as the Russia-India-China
	
 (RIC) troika.
-  Mr. Naryshkin said it was logical “to turn BRICS into a full scale strategic 
forum” for discussing issues of mutual interest.
-  Russia is scheduled to take over chairmanship of the BRICS grouping and the 
next summit will be held in Russia in July.
Govt. digs in heels on land ordinance
	-  A day after Surface Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari sought to 
	make out a case for the government’s land ordinance at a press briefing, 
	Finance Minister Arun Jaitley made a spirited defence of the land reforms 
	that have been denounced as “anti-farmer” and “pro-corporate” by a united 
	Opposition and civil society groups.
-  Mr. Jaitley’s speech in the Rajya Sabha is being read as the 
	government’s definitive stand, the position that Prime Minister Narendra 
	Modi has decided to take on this controversial issue.
-  Mr. Modi is absolutely clear that he will not allow major changes 
	to what he sees as one of his key reforms.
-  In discussions with Cabinet colleagues on how to tackle the 
	dissent, Mr. Modi indicated that an all-party meeting would serve little 
	purpose since the Opposition had shown no signs of softening.
-  Worse, BJP allies Shiromani Akali Dal, Shiv Sena and Lok Janshakti 
	Party also expressed their reservations. Now it is learnt that another NDA 
	partner, the Rashtriya Lok Samata Party, is poised to do the same.
-  Against this backdrop of a hardened stand, Mr. Jaitley made a 
	frontal attack on the Congress, under whose watch the Land Acquisition Act — 
	that this government is seeking to amend — was enacted in 2013.
President clears Amitava Roy’s elevation as SC judge
	-  Flagging it as proof that there is no friction between the 
	government and the highest judiciary in appointment of judges, the 
	government has acted quickly to get the President’s approval for the 
	elevation of Chief Justice of Orissa High Court Amitava Roy as a Supreme 
	Court judge.
-  The notification on his appointment would be issued as soon as the 
	papers reached the Law Ministry from the President’s office.
-  Union Law Minister V. Sadananda Gowda said the judicial 
	appointments through the collegium system would continue for the time being.
-  The apex court had two more vacancies and there were several 
	vacancies to fill in the various High Courts.
-  With the appointment of 62-year-old Justice Roy, the strength of 
	judges in the Supreme Court climbs to 29. The sanctioned strength is 31.
 Bureaucrats reshuffled
-  The Narendra Modi-led Appointments Committee of the Cabinet 
	approved a series of Secretary-level transfers.
-  Secretary, Department of Health and Family Welfare, Bhanu Pratap 
	Sharma, has been given additional charge of Department of Health Research 
	for three months, whereas Siraj Hussain has been shifted as Secretary, 
	Department of Agriculture and Cooperation from the Ministry of Food 
	Processing Industries.
-  Special Secretary, Department of Agriculture and Cooperation, 
	Ranglal Jamuda, has been appointed Secretary, Ministry of Food Processing 
	Industries, in place of Mr. Hussain.
-  S.M. Vijayanand, Special Secretary in the Department of Rural 
	Development, has been made Secretary, Ministry of Panchayati Raj, whereas 
	Jugal Kishore Mohapatra, Secretary, Department of Fertilisers, has been 
	appointed Secretary, Department of Rural Development.
Irom Sharmila gets Sthree Shakti award
	-  Activist Irom Sharmila, who has been on an indefinite fast since 
	November 4, 2000, demanding the repeal of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) 
	Act, has been conferred with the Sthree Shakti award.
-  The award is in recognition of her extraordinary courage and 
	determination, M.L. George, managing trustee of Smaraks Sthree Trust, Kochi, 
	told reporters.
 Section 66A a necessary deterrent, says government
-  The government argued before the Supreme Court that Section 66A of 
	the Information Technology Act should be interpreted on a case by case 
	basis.
-  In arguments which continued through the day before a Bench led by 
	Justice J. Chelameswar, the government was addressing the court’s view that 
	the penal provision was too vague. Section 66A prescribes a three-year jail 
	term to a person found guilty of causing “annoyance or inconvenience” 
	through social media.
-  The court had asked the government to explain what constituted 
	“grossly offensive.” The government maintained that the provision was a 
	necessary deterrent and could not be cast away on the apprehension that it 
	would be misused to affect the freedom of speech and expression.
-  The court is hearing a bunch of petitions challenging the validity 
	of certain provisions in the 2000 Act. One of the petitions filed is by 
	Shreya Singhal, a law student, which deals with the arrest of two girls, 
	Shaheen Dhada and Rinu Shrinivasan, in Thane, Maharashtra, in connection 
	with a comment against the shutdown in Mumbai following Shiv Sena leader Bal 
	Thackeray’s death.
Panel against trying juveniles as adults
	-  A Parliamentary Standing Committee has taken on board civil 
	society’s apprehensions of treating 16-to-18-year-olds as adults in cases of 
	heinous crimes, and called for a review of this provision in The Juvenile 
	Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Bill, 2014, introduced in the Lok 
	Sabha in August.
-  This amendment to the JJ Act is among the slew of changes that the 
	UPA Government had initiated in various laws of the country following the 
	huge public outcry over the Delhi gang rape.
-  A juvenile was among the accused and the brutality of his actions 
	prepared the ground for proposing differential treatment to juveniles in the 
	16-18 age group in case of heinous crimes.
-  In its report in the Lok Sabha, the Parliamentary Standing 
	Committee on Human Resource Development recommended that all relevant 
	clauses dealing with Children’s Courts, and differential treatment of 
	children between 16 and 18 years need to be reviewed as subjecting them to 
	an adult judicial system goes against Articles 14 and 15(3) of the 
	Constitution.
Under pressure, government agrees to consult all parties
	-  A united Opposition, backed by sustained protests outside, 
	compelled the Modi government to agree to consult leaders of all parties to 
	find a way out of the Land Acquisition Bill imbroglio.
-  However, the government, despite pressure from both the Opposition 
	and RSS affiliates, sources said, is reluctant to give in and make all the 
	changes suggested, as then, the final product will resemble the original 
	Land Acquisition Act.
-  At BJP parliamentary party meeting, Prime Minister Narendra Modi 
	urged MPs to explain the Bill’s provisions to their constituents to counter 
	the Opposition’s criticism.
-  The government-Opposition stand-off in Parliament on five other 
	ordinances continued, with each side registering a minor victory of its own. 
	Simultaneously, the NDA’s parliamentary managers tried to create public 
	opinion to use the infrequently deployed provision of a joint session.
Swachh Bharat, food subsidy need huge funds
	-  If an allocation of Rs. 40,000 crore is made in the Union Budget 
	for 2015-16 for the Swachh Bharat Abhiyaan as required, there will be enough 
	money to build toilets for India’s 12.3 crore households without them, but 
	if this will achieve zero open defecation is a different story.]
-  Not everyone with a toilet is convinced of the need to use one, 
	yet the share of public outreach in the recast scheme’s Budget fell to under 
	10 per cent, Payal Hathi of the Research Institute for Compassionate 
	Economics, which studies sanitation, found, and over half of this remains 
	unspent, Accountability Initiative has shown.
-  The food subsidy, including the Public Distribution System, the 
	mid-day meal scheme and other nutrition programmes cost the government Rs. 
	1.25 lakh crore in its last Budget, and would need to rise to Rs 1.5 lakh 
	crore with an additional Rs. 12,000 crore in maternity benefits for the 
	government to meet its obligations under the National Food Security Act.
Harvard researcher offers free online legal research tool for students
	-  An online legal research initiative started by an Indian student 
	research fellow with the Harvard Law School Centre offers a level playing 
	field for his counterparts spread across 140 law schools and colleges in the 
	country.
-  The Standard India Legal Citation (SILC), an online India-centric 
	legal citation manual which can be accessed free of cost, provides legal 
	research material ranging from parliamentary debates, circulars of 
	government bodies like RBI and SEBI to academic papers on Indian family laws 
	to help law students with their academic work.
-  Citations help readers easily find reference to cases  and 
	facts. India, Russia sort out differences on fighter jet project
 • India and Russia have generally agreed upon the amount and division of 
	work during the research and development (R&D) stage of the fifth generation 
	fighter aircraft (FGFA) project.
-  A contract for the R&D phase is being prepared and expected to be 
	signed this year, said Yuli Slyusar, president and chairman of Russia’s 
	United Aircraft Corporation (UAC) at Aero India 2015 in Bengaluru.
-  The work share of Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) has been a 
	contentious issue as the project will have equal investment between India 
	and Russia and is likely to cost over $30 billion for about 400 aircraft. 
	India plans to induct 144 of them.
-  But HAL’s share in the work has been limited to a meagre 13 per 
	cent so far which will not build any critical technological gains.
-  Both sides have been holding discussions to sort this out before 
	the final agreement.
-  FGFA is crucial for Indian Air Force’s evolving structure as was 
	recently acknowledged by the air chief recently.
-  The final announcement could come later this year with President 
	Pranab Mukherjee visiting Moscow in June, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi 
	expected to visit Russia twice
Modi suit fetches Rs. 4.31-cr in auction
	-  Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s monogrammed suit fetched Rs. 4.31 crore as 
bidders scrambled to own the two-piece ensemble in the final moments of the 
three-day auction that ended at 5 p.m.
-  Lalji Patel, a diamond trader, and his son, Hitesh Patel, are the new owners 
of the suit that Mr. Modi wore during a meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama 
on January 25.
-  With a reportedly Rs. 10-lakh price and the name Narendra Damodardas Modi 
embroidered down the length of the fabric to look like golden pinstripes, the 
navy-blue bandhgala suit had raised a controversy.
-  Bids flew thick and fast in the last hour of the auction, which had no base 
price. District Collector, Surat, Rajendra Kumar said bids, one of Rs. 5 crore, 
received after the deadline had been disqualified.
-  Mr. Lalji Patel, who owns the Dharmananda Diamond Company, told presspersons 
that he wanted to do something for the country, and the auction gave him an 
opportunity.
China protests  PM's Arunachal Visit China expressed its “diametrical opposition” to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s 
visit to Arunachal Pradesh.
-  Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said that China had lodged 
“strong representation with India,” that it was “not conducive to properly 
resolving and controlling disputes between the two sides, nor in conformity with 
the general situation of growth of bilateral relations,” Xinhua quoted her as 
saying.
-  In a statement posted in English on the Chinese Foreign Ministry website, Ms. 
Hua urged “the Indian side to take China’s solemn concerns seriously, meet the 
Chinese side halfway and commit itself to fairly and properly resolving the 
bilateral boundary question through negotiation.”
-  The Xinhua report said that Mr. Modi visited a “disputed zone in the eastern 
part of China-India borders” to participate in activities marking the founding 
of the so-called “Arunachal Pradesh,” a State that Indian authorities “illegally 
and unilaterally declared in 1987.”
Centre defends pictures of politicians in ads
	-  Noting that there was nothing “mala fide” in publishing photographs of the 
Prime Minister, political leaders and “higher authorities” in government 
advertisements, the Centre said it was the prerogative of a democratically 
elected government to decide its expenses and the Supreme Court could not 
interfere.
- Attorney-General Mukul Rohatgi told a Bench headed by Justice Ranjan Gogoi 
that an ulterior motive of “trying to gain political mileage” could not be read 
into every government advertisement published with the photographs of political 
leaders. He submitted that any restriction on government advertisements even 
before their publication would amount to “pre-censorship.”
-  The court was debating if it should make into law a recommendation by a 
Supreme Court-appointed high-power committee, led by eminent academic N.R. 
Madhava Menon, that names and pictures of political parties and their 
office-bearers should not be mentioned in government advertisements.
-  The committee, in a report to the court in October 2014, said that such 
advertisements were instances of self-aggrandisement and misuse of public money. 
It has framed a series of guidelines to regulate expenditure and contents of 
government advertisements in order to “keep politics out of ads.”
-  Prashant Bhushan, counsel of petitioner Common Cause, said such advertisements 
were harmful instances of patronage of media houses by the government.
-  Mr. Rohatgi said such guidelines were unnecessary as a constitutional 
framework was in place to regulate expenses. “All expenses of the government are 
provided through the Appropriation Bills passed by Parliament. Every penny spent 
is audited. There is a constitutional requirement for audit. The Comptroller and 
Auditor General will check. These guidelines have limited value,” Mr. Rohatgi 
said.
Amartya Sen to 
Leave Nalanda Post
	-  Nobel laureate Amartya Sen withdrew his candidature for a second term as 
Chancellor of Nalanda University in Bihar, since the Narendra Modi government 
had not given its approval to his nomination.
-  More than a month had passed since the Board made the unanimous choice that he 
should serve as Chancellor of the university for a second term.
-  In a letter to members of the Governing Board, he said there was a unanimous 
resolution in January that he should have another term, but the President as 
Visitor was not able to give his assent to it.
-  Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen said academic governance in the country remained 
“deeply vulnerable to the opinions of the ruling government,” where it chose to 
make political use of special provisions in a university’s statute.
Defence at the 
heart of “Make in India”
	-  Stressing on the need for domestic manufacture of defence equipment to equip 
the country for the future, Prime Minister Narendra Modi called upon foreign 
defence manufacturers to become strategic partners as he inaugurated “Aero India 
2015” in Bengaluru.
-  India has an annual defence budget of about $40 billion of which 60 percent is 
spent on capital expenditure for purchase of equipment. But having failed to 
build a domestic defence manufacturing base the country has the distinction of 
being the world’s largest defence importer.
-  Addressing the private sector’s concerns for a level playing field in defence 
manufacturing, the Prime Minister has assured significant policy changes to 
facilitate the same.
Legendary filmmaker Ramanaidu is no more
	-  Legendary film producer Daggubati Ramanaidu, who entered the record books for 
producing maximum number of films in the world died, leaving a void in the 
Indian film industry.
-  Rama Naidu established the well-known film house Suresh Productions after his 
elder son Suresh and produced about 150 films in most of the Indian languages 
with Telugu topping the list. Considered as an icon, he introduced several new 
faces and directors through his film company.
-  Recipient of Dada Saheb Phalke Award for life time achievement in 2009 and 
also Padma Bhushan in 2012 in recognition of his contribution to Indian cinema, 
Ramanaidu also holds the record for producing films in many languages in India 
including Bhojpuri and Punjabi.
-  Born in an agricultural family in Karamchedu in Guntur district of Andhra 
Pradesh, Mr. Ramanaidu also represented the Bapatla constituency in Parliament 
during 1999 - 2004 getting elected on the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) ticket.
-  Some of his well-known films include “Prem Nagar, Mundadugu, Soggadu, Jeevana 
Tarangalu, Devatha, Sangharshana, Prathidwani, Aha Na Pellanta, Prema, Indrudu 
Chandrudu” and the latest being “Gopala Gopala” starring Venkatesh and Pawan 
Kalyan. Some of his runaway hits in Hindi include “Tohfa, Insaf Ki Awaz” and 
“Prem Qaidi” in which he introduced Karishma Kapoor. The entire film industry 
landed at his residence to pay their last respects.
BJP, PDP propose phased withdrawal of AFSPA
	-  The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) will 
have a lot of explaining to do to their respective constituencies if they tie 
up. The task is harder for the BJP and difficult to pull off, unless Prime 
Minister Narendra Modi throws his weight fully behind it.
-  During the talks the point came up that while the Army has in practice already 
diluted the impunity of troops under the AFSPA, its continuing application in 
the entire State is bringing a bad name to New Delhi. Both parties are working 
towards a scheme to roll back the law in a phased manner.
-  While the BJP has been open to engaging the separatists and Pakistan and to 
address the concerns regarding the AFSPA, the most difficult of all issues is 
formulating a position acceptable to both parties on the State’s special status. 
The proposal on the table is for the CMP to keep all contentious issues in 
suspension for discussion in a future mechanism, a “roundtable.”
-  Two other questions on the BJP agenda that are sensitive in the Valley are 
delimitation of constituencies in the State, and the status of those who crossed 
over to Jammu from what became Pakistan in 1947. These issues also will have to 
be suspended, for the CMP to take shape.
Malnourishment high among children of migrants: study
	- The level of malnourishment is high among children whose parents migrate in 
search of livelihood. Inherent malnourishment in mothers, lack of food and 
nutrition security, feeding and dietary practices and illnesses are some of the 
reasons identified for high levels of malnourishment.
-  A study ‘Understanding hunger and malnutrition among high migrant communities’ 
conducted in south Rajasthan by Aajeevika Bureau and EdelGive Foundation has 
revealed that more than half the children were underweight in those communities 
where migration was high. Stunting or retarded growth was reported in 53 per 
cent of the children with 28 per cent of them severely so; 33 per cent are 
wasted (debilitated growth) with over 9 per cent of them severely so and 
one-fourth severely underweight. South Rajasthan — broadly Udaipur division — is 
a semi-arid region with a largely tribal population which owns small land 
holdings. Small land holdings are unable to help them sustain a livelihood which 
results in high levels of migration.
-  Each panchayat, where the study was done, had 550-600 migrants. The study was 
done in four panchayats in one block — two had high levels of migrations and the 
other two low migration.
-  The sample of 884 households, which had less than three children, was picked 
up from 13 villages.
-  A total of 695 children under the age of three were weighed and measured as 
were 607 mothers. The median BMI (body mass index) of mothers was 18.1 with 58 
per cent having a BMI of less than 18.5. An analysis has suggested 
inter-generational transfer of under-nutrition. When the mother is 
under-nourished, children are 1.8 times more likely to have severe malnutrition.
-  Also, less availability of food items, small land holdings resulting in low 
produce and caring practices caused malnutrition. Roti was the only food item 
eaten by children daily and more than 60 per cent had access to it. Only 58 per 
cent were breastfed, and less than one per cent had daliya (porridge) which is 
supposed to be highly nutritious.
-  The study further shows that children of migrating families were less likely 
to be enrolled at the anganwadi centres where the government provides 
supplementary food to pre-school children. Importantly, the anganwadi centres 
were less functional in areas with high migrating population.
-  When a mother goes for work, the primary caretakers are grandparents in 57 per 
cent of the cases, father in just 4 per cent and elder brother in 5 per cent.