General Awareness: National Events- April-2015
CURRENT AFFAIRS –APRIL 2015
NATIONAL
RSBY to be implemented by Health Ministry
- Starting April 1, the Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY) of the
Labour and Employment Ministry will now be implemented by the Ministry of
Health and Family Welfare.
- The RSBY, the health insurance scheme for BPL (below poverty line)
families provides for IT-enabled and smart-card-based cashless health
insurance, including maternity benefit cover up to Rs. 30,000 per annum on a
family floater basis.
- Ministry of Labour said in a statement that the scheme had benefited
3,85,15,411 families up to March 31, 2014 and as many as 10,311 hospitals
are rendering services to the insured persons which include 6,093 private
hospitals and 4,218 Government hospitals.
- In India, of the estimated workforce of 47 crore, only eight crore are
organised workers and thirty nine crore are workers in the unorganised
sector.
- RSBY provides for IT-enabled and smart-card-based cashless health
insurance.
Maharashtra govt to build 56 lakh toilets
- Maharashtra Government has decided to construct 56 lakh toilets in the
state by 2019 under the cleanliness campaign of
central government.
- When the project is completed, all families in the state will have a
toilet in their home, Water Supply Minister Babanrao Lonikar told reporters
at Vidhan Bhawan.
- The central and state governments’ provision for building personal
toilets has been increased to Rs 12,000 from Rs 4,000 earlier, the BJP
leader from Marathwada said.
- He said “cleanliness ambassadors” would be appointed at village-level to
ensure rural sanitation and half of them will be women.
- The Minister said sanitation parks will be set up at tehsil level, which
will enable gram panchayats to check various models of toilets and select
any of them for building in their village.
Janata Parivar merger: Name and symbol of new party on Sunday
- The name and symbol of a new party that will be formed through the
merger of six Janata Parivar entities will be announced at a meeting of its
leaders slated at Samajwadi Party supremo Mulayam Singh’s residence.
- The SP leader will be the new party’s chairman and its name will
contain the word Samajwadi — either Samajwadi Janata Dal or Samajwadi Janata
Party.
Party’s symbol
- Its symbol will either be the SP emblem, the cycle, or the wheel that
the erstwhile Janata Dal had frozen in 1999 when it split into the Sharad
Yadav-led Janata Dal (United) and the H.D. Deve Gowda-led Janata Dal
(Secular). Both parties were allotted separate symbols.
- The SP held a meeting of all its units in Lucknow and passed a
resolution agreeing to the merger. A similar resolution will be passed in
Patna by the Rashtriya Janata Dal under the leadership of Lalu Prasad, while
the JD(U) is likely to go through the same procedure on April 8.
- The Indian National Lok Dal, the JD(S) and the Samajwadi Janata Party
will also pass internal resolutions agreeing to dissolving their separate
identities and forming one party: these resolutions are required by the
Election Commission before it registers the new party.
- Mr. Mulayam Singh is likely to be the leader of the new parliamentary
party in the Lok Sabha, while Mr. Yadav could be named its leader in the
Rajya Sabha. The new formation will have 15 MPs in the Lower House and 30 in
the Upper House.
- Mr. Kumar, Mr. Yadav and Mr. Tyagi (JD-U) and Mr. Prasad and Prem Chand
Gupta (RJD) had also met at the residence of the SP chief, who had been
authorised by all these parties to work out the modalities of the merger.
- The first impact of the new party will be felt when it launches a
united agitation against the Land Acquisition Bill, and then when Parliament
meets on April 20 for the second half of the Budget Session. Its first
challenge, of course, will be the Bihar Assembly elections later this year.
BJP's next mission: End manual scavenging
- The Bharatiya Janata Party, in a bid to increase its reach and hold,
proposes to take up four nation-wide non-political programmes, including an
end to manual scavenging.
- An announcement in this regard was made at the inaugural session of the
party’s two-day national executive that began in Bengaluru.
- Briefing the media later, Union Minister of State for Information and
Broadcasting Prakash Javadekar said party workers would be roped in as
volunteers for these programmes.
- The party would work out a programme to involve its workers in
relocating 23 lakh persons who currently do manual scavenging work, he said.
- Party workers would also be involved in creating awareness about the
Central scheme for the girl child - Beti bachao, beti padhao - to prevent
female foeticide.
- The other two non-political programmes are the Clean India campaign or
Swachch Bharat and the cleaning of the Ganga, he said.
Army to take Swachh to Everest
- The Army is taking the Swachh Bharat campaign to the Everest with a
mountaineering team planning to clean up and bring down tonnes of garbage
dumped there by mountaineers over the decades.
- The campaign is part of the golden jubilee of the scaling of the world’s
highest peak by an Indian team for the first time.
- Fifty years ago, an Indian team led by Captain (the then Lieutenant
Commander) M.S. Kohli scaled the Mount Everest (Sagarmatha) for the first
time. Major A.S. Cheema was the first Indian to scale the peak, Army
officers said.
- “The Army team will contribute towards restoring the ecological balance
of the route by bringing down some of the non-biodegradable waste left
behind by generations of climbers,” an Army officer said . The Army
mountaineers aim toconvey the message of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s
vision of a clean environment, the officer added.
- The team aims to bring down at least 4,000 kg of non-biodegradable waste
from the high-altitude camps
- The 30-member team is being led by Major R.S. Jamwal, an experienced
mountaineer. Army Chief General Dalbir Singh flagged off the team. They will
depart for Kathmandu on April 4 and begin scaling the peak mid-May. The team
has been undergoing special endurance and mountaineering training for the
mission.
Prasar Bharati honours Mrinal Sen
- The Prasar Bharati handed over a copy of the documentary Celebrating
Mrinal Sen to the nonagenarian auteur at his south Kolkata residence as part
of paying tribute to the “living legends of our country.”
- Jawhar Sircar, Chief Executive Officer of Prasar Bharati, handed over
the DVD, a release by the Press Information Bureau said.
- The archival documentary is primarily based on conversations between Mr.
Sen and film critic Sameek Bandyopadhyay, interspersed with excerpts from
his memorable films and comments from actors and crew members of his film.
India hails Iran nuclear agreement
- India hailed the agreement reached between Iran and the P5+1 group —
U.S., U.K., France, Russia, China and Germany — on Tehran’s nuclear
programme, calling it a “significant step” towards a comprehensive
settlement.
- A statement issued by the Ministry of External Affairs, after the
agreement was announced in the Swiss town of Lausanne said: “The
announcement underlines the success of diplomacy and dialogue, which India
has always supported.”
- After several delays and an extended deadline, the Foreign Ministers of
all the countries involved in what are called the E3+3 (Europe 3+3 or P5+1
of the Security Council and Germany) group and Iranian Foreign Minister
Javad Zarif announced that they had a “framework agreement” to take forward
their twin objectives of reducing Iran’s nuclear capabilities for civilian
use only, while lifting financial sanctions imposed by the U.N., the
European Union and the United States.
- According to the draft agreement released by U.S. officials, Iran will
reduce the number of installed centrifuges by two-thirds, bring uranium
stocks down from 10,000 kg to 300 kg LEU (low-enriched uranium) and turn its
nuclear facility in Fordow into an R&D facility for 15 years. All the excess
stockpile and nuclear parts will be kept at an IAEA-monitored location,
while the U.N., the U.S. and the EU will withdraw all sanctions that have
crippled the Iranian economy for years.
- Indian officials were cautious about the completion of the final
agreement, but say once the deal is finalised, India could stand to benefit
greatly. “If there is a significant withdrawal of sanctions, that would
benefit our economic engagement greatly as even the most normal transactions
had become very tedious for Indian businesses. From insurance to raising
capital, every deal faced international hurdles,” a senior official told.
India and Iran have an annual bilateral trade of about $14 billion, with an
extremely high balance of trade problem, as India has been unable to pay
Iran about $8.8 billion for oil due to sanctions, according to Commerce
Ministry figures.
- The government has also had to bow to U.S. and international pressure on
cutting its oil imports from Iran, and in March 2015 halted oil imports
altogether for the first time in more than a decade in order to keep its
international commitments.
- Some are also warning that the Lausanne agreement could face a strain if
the U.S. and the Iranian governments come under pressure from their hardline
domestic constituencies in the months ahead. “Both sides are trying to play
this as a great win for domestic reasons, and say that they have taken the
other side for a ride,” explained former Indian Ambassador to Iran K.C.
Singh. “With both President Rouhani and President Obama in weakened
political positions at home, neither can afford to be seen as a loser from
the agreement,” he told.
- If the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action agreement is finalised as
hoped, opinion is divided over how much India will benefit. While economists
are predicting India-Iran trade could double, given old business ties
between the two countries, officials concede that once sanctions are lifted
on Iran, India would also have to compete with the U.S. and European
suppliers for the “prosperous middle-class market” that Iran represents.
In the short run, the big advantage for India could be a further reduction
in the price of oil that India used to source at a much higher quantity
pre-2012, when Iran was India’s second biggest supplier.
Gujarat leads in Swachh Bharat implementation
- Gujarat stands tops the list of States in the implementation of the
Swachh Bharat Mission, while Odisha has excelled in the construction of
community toilets, according to an assessment by the Union Urban Development
Ministry for 2014-15.
- Gujarat accounted for 60 per cent of the 2,70,069 household toilets
constructed during the last financial year under the mission. Madhya Pradesh
constructed 99,151 household toilets, followed by Karnataka with 4,697.
- Odisha was ahead in the construction of community toilet seats,
accounting for 740 of the 1,222 seats built during 2014-15. The Andaman and
Nicobar Islands reported 200 and Karnataka 100.
- Gujarat also took the lead in solid waste management, the third
component of the mission, reporting 100 per cent collection and transport of
municipal solid waste in 120 of the 195 towns in the State. Odisha did well,
with 100 per cent solid waste management of 107 towns and Karnataka with 40
towns.
- Swachh Bharat, launched on October 2 last, is aimed at ensuring
cleanliness in all 4,041 statutory cities and towns of the country by
October 2, 2019, the 150th birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi.
- The five-year mission will be implemented at a cost of Rs. 62,009 crore,
with a plan to build 1.04 crore household toilets, 2.51 lakh community
toilet seats and 2.55 lakh public toilet seats, besides helping 37 crore
urban people in solid waste management.
- “During 2014-15, Rs. 900 crore has been sanctioned by the Ministry of
Urban Development and Rs. 700 crore has been released to the States and the
Union Territories based on proposals received under the mission. The
implementation of the mission is expected to pick up momentum from the
current financial year,” said an official.
“By 2050, India will have the largest number of Muslims”
- Although the world population of Hindus will grow rapidly between now
and 2050 based on a relatively high expansion rate and the youth profile of
the community, the global surge in the number of Muslims will outpace the
growth of the population of every other religion.
- This was a key result of an in-depth study on ‘The Future of World
Religions: Population Growth Projections, 2010-2050,” conducted by the Pew
Research Center, which sought to explain ‘Why Muslims Are Rising Fastest,’
in terms of the community’s higher fertility (3.1 children per woman) and
the fact that 34 per cent of them are below the age of 15.
- The report argued that India would retain a Hindu majority, but would
also have the largest Muslim population of any country in the world,
surpassing Indonesia.
Commonwealth Speakers’ meet in Vizag from April 8
- Presiding officers of parliaments of 10 countries and 20 States in
India along with Chairpersons of Legislative Councils and Assembly
Secretaries are participating in the three-day Commonwealth Parliamentary
Association (CPA) conference to be held from April 8.
- The CPA holds in conferences in different Commonwealth countries every
year and the theme of Visakhapatnam conference, being organised by the AP
chapter of CPA, is ‘Parliament and Media Law’, Speaker Kodela Sivaprasada
Rao said at a press conference.
- "Discussions would be held on different aspects relating to the theme
during the conference and the resolutions made by the delegates would be
forwarded to the CPA,” Dr Sivaprasada Rao said. About 200 delegates are
attending. All would reach here by April 7.
- All MPs, MLCs and MLAs of Andhra Pradesh have been invited to
participate in the conference.
- Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu will inaugurate the conference on
April 8 at Hotel Novatel. Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan and Union
Minister for Parliamentary Affairs M. Venkaiah Naidu would also attend. The
second day's deliberations would be at APTDC resort at Rushikonda the
delegates would move to Araku Valley for the final day's meeting.
- Cultural programmes reflecting the culture and traditions of A.P. are
being organised every evening. Some folk troupes from other States are also
participating, Minister for Panchayati Raj Ch. Ayyanna Patrudu said.
- The Commonwealth conference would bring Visakhapatnam once again into
international focus and help in its bid to attract foreign investment, Mr.
Patrudu said and thanked Mr. Naidu and the Speaker for selecting
Visakhapatnam as the venue of the conference.
- Earlier, Dr. Sivaprasada Rao held a meeting with Collector N. Yuvaraj,
Commissioner of Police Amit Garg, VUDA VC T. Baburao Naidu, other officials
and MP of Anakapalle M. Srinivasa Rao and MLAs and finalised the
arrangements for the conference.
- The Speaker while announcing the topics of the conference said any one
could send their opinions on the topics, to Prof. D.V.R. Murthy of
Department of Journalism and Mass Communication of Andhra University through emaildwa100@gmail.com.
- The topics are the CPA and Parliament and media; the role of media as
the fourth estate; Parliament and media: legal framework; Parliament and
media; working groups; how has the social media impacted the institutions of
Parliament and Parliamentarians; access to Parliamentary information;
overview of access and rights to information; medial as accountability tool:
collaborative governance across the national budget cycle.
P.V. Abdul Wahab is IUML RS nominee
- The Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) on Saturday chose P.V. Abdul Wahab,
chairman of Peevees Group, as its candidate for the Rajya Sabha (RS) seat.
- If elected, it will be Mr. Wahab’s second term in the Upper House after
a gap of five years.
- Apart from Mr. Wahab, IUML State general secretary K.P.A. Majeed’s name
was also tipped for the post. A section in the party favoured Mr. Majeed
while another strongly opposed him.
ED seeks chopper deal details from Defence Ministry
- The Enforcement Directorate, which has recorded the statement of Air
Marshal (Retd.) Gautam Nayyar in connection with the Rs. 3,700-crore
AgustaWestland VVIP helicopter deal, has sought information from the Defence
Ministry on the post-retirement cooling-off period for Air Force officers.
- The ED last month summoned the retired Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief
(Maintenance Command) and recorded his statement on the alleged links with
Christian Michel, an accused.
- The agency said he received Rs. 1 crore from Michel’s Dubai-based firm
Global Services after retirement. The agency has obtained documents
suggesting that Michel had financed the foreign trips of the retired officer
and his wife between 2010 and 2013.
- In a statement to the media, Mr. Nayyar denied his role in any defence
deal, even the VVIP helicopter contract.
Kejriwal launches helpline to tackle graft
- Taking on the Narendra Modi government, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind
Kejriwal urged the people of Delhi to register complaints against corrupt
officials in three agencies reporting to the Union government — the
Municipal Corporation of Delhi, the Delhi Development Authority and the
Delhi Police — which have been removed from the jurisdiction of the Delhi
government’s anti-corruption branch (ACB).
- Mr. Kejriwal was addressing a gathering after launching his government’s
anti-corruption helpline.
- Soon after coming to power, the Modi government issued a notification on
July 23, amending a 1993 notification, which fixed the jurisdiction of the
ACB only “to the officers and employees of the Government of the National
Capital of Delhi.”
- The three agencies face allegations of corruption.
- In a reference to the BJP, Mr. Kejriwal said the “party that spends Rs.
10,000 crore in its election campaign cannot punish the corrupt.”
Trial in criminal cases will be completed in 5 years: CJI
- Chief Justice of India H.L. Dattu said that the joint conference of
Chief Ministers and Chief Justices had decided to complete criminal trials
in five years.
- “We have taken a decision to try our best that five year should be the
maximum time to finish a case [at the district level]. My priority is that
it should not go beyond two years. But please keep in mind the
judge-population ratio and lack of infrastructure also,” he said during an
interaction with the media.
- There are 2.64 crore undecided cases in the subordinate courts and 42
lakh pending in the High Courts. Earlier in the inaugural session of the
conference, the CJI said the current judge0population ratio of 1:61,865 was
“unacceptable.”
- On the delay in deciding the December 16 Delhi gang rape case, the CJI
said the appeal filed by the four condemned men came to the apex court only
last year. “There are already 23 death reference cases pending in the SC. It
[Delhi case] would certainly be decided on priority, if the matter is
mentioned before the court,” he said.
- Chief Justice Dattu said the highest judiciary worked 24x7 during 190
working days, and spent court holidays writing judgments.
- “It is not an easy-go life. Having 20 years experience as judge, I can
say, we work 24x7,” he said.
- Law Minister D.V. Sadananda Gowda said that almost 96 per cent of the
subordinate courts had been computerised.
Online protest against Rajnath Singh
- Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh’s comments that there is “no
non-lethal weapons strategy” for the Border Security Force (BSF) to man the
India-Bangladesh border has attracted an online protest.
- A Kolkata-based human right organisation, MASUM, engaged in monitoring
violence on the eastern border, launched the protest, based on an April 1
report.
- The chief of MASUM, Kirity Roy addressed the petition to President
Pranab Mukherjee charging that Mr. Singh had negated the agreement of March
2011 between the BSF and the Bangladesh Border Guards (BGB) agreeing not to
use lethal weapons along the 4,000-km. Indo-Bangladesh border.
- “There is nothing like a non-lethal strategy. What is paramount is that
our border needs to be protected. I cannot allow [a situation in which] the
jawans are attacked and they cannot fire in self-defence,” Mr. Singh had
said during a visit to a floating border outpost at the North 24 Parganas
district.
- “While everyone has the right to self-defence, the BSF usually fires
shots and then lodges an FIR against the dead. This border was earlier
referred to as the ‘trigger happy zone’ and the agreement between the two
countries was reached after prolonged interventions by human rights
organisations of both India and Bangladesh. Even children are not spared at
the border. Mr. Singh’s comments were unconstitutional,” Mr. Roy said.
Operation Raahat: over 600 evacuated
- In the largest evacuation as part of Operation Raahat so far, three Air
India flights airlifted 488 people from Sana’a to Djibouti while naval
patrol vessel INS Sumitra rescued 203 people, including 19 foreign nationals
from eight countries, from Ash Shihr via Al Muqalla port.
- India secured a four-hour window for evacuation from Sana’a.
- Meanwhile two Air Force C-17s with 452 passengers landed in Mumbai while
an Air India AI-777 with 352 passengers landed in Kochi.
- In addition, the civilian liners Kavaratti and Corals , with a total
capacity of 1100 passengers, have reached Djibouti and will join in the
evacuation, officials said.
- Op Raahat is now a global endeavour with nationals from several
countries evacuated by India; INS Mumbai evacuated 179 people from 17
countries from Aden.
- “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam - The world is a family…” tweeted Syed Akbaruddin,
External Affairs Ministry spokesperson.
- External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj meanwhile said the evacuation
from Aden, which is witnessing heavy fighting between the warring sides, is
now over. “The evacuation from Aden is complete - thanks to Indian Navy,”
she tweeted.
- The Minister also turned down criticism that India had delayed its
response, reminding citizens and netizens alike that India had issued three
advisories — the first one as early as January — asking Indians to leave.
- In another tweet, Ms. Swaraj said: “My colleague General V. K. Singh who
is shuttling between Sana’a and Djibouti is sparing no effort in
accomplishing this difficult task.”
- As situation worsens and the anxiety of stranded citizens and their
awaiting families mounts, Twitter continues to be the primary link between
those stranded and the government to disseminate information.
Accord signed for Ambedkar memorial
- Clearing all hurdles in the construction of a memorial for Dr. Babasaheb
Ambedkar at the Indu mill land in Central Mumbai, a tripartite agreement was
signed in New Delhi between the Union government, the National Textile
Corporation (NTC) and the Maharashtra government.
- Prime Minister Narendra Modi will attend the stone-laying ceremony.
- The project was put on hold as the Central government had not presented
the Bill in Parliament to hand over the mill land from the NTC to the State
government.
- According to officials, the agreement was signed after Maharashtra’s
Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis held discussions with the legal fraternity
and it was clarified that the land could be transferred with approval from
the Central government, without bringing the Bill.
- The agreement was signed as per section 11 of ‘The Textile Undertakings
Nationalisation Act 1995’ with prior permission of the Centre, in the
presence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Mr. Fadnavis.
- The State government will buy the land from the NTC. A three-member
committee will decide on the price and other technical details.
Muslim girl felicitated for winning Gita contest
- Political parties are now scrambling to felicitate 12-year-old Mariyam
Siddiqui, a Class 6 student who won the Bhagvad Gita contest organised by
ISKCON International Society last month for 4,500 students.
- Maharashtra Finance Minister Sudhir Mungantiwar felicitated Mariyam and
her parents at a specially organised function at Vidhan Bhavan.
- “A Muslim student winning a competition on a great scripture like the
Gita is a praiseworthy achievement,” said Mr. Mungantiwar, who assured the
girl’s family of all support in her educational career.
- Mariyam, student of Cosmopolitan High School, received the first prize
in an inter-school competition for explaining the teachings of the holy
book. ISKCON International Society had organised the “Shrimad Bhagvad Gita
Champion League” in which 195 schools including 105 private and 90 municipal
schools participated.
- Mariyam topped the written examination consisting of 100 questions,
scoring 100 out of 100 marks. Mumbai Congress chief Sanjay Nirupam said his
party would felicitate Mariyam at the party headquarters on April 8.
CPCB officials stress need for uniform air quality data
- The new National Air Quality Index launched by Prime Minister Narendra
Modi, gives current as well as 24-hour average data on particulate matter –
PM2.5 or very fine particles smaller than 2.5 micrometres in diameter, and
PM 10 which are less than 10 micrometers in diameter – as well as other
pollutants including nitrogen dioxide, ozone and carbon monoxide.
- PM 2.5 levels are commonly used as the best indicator of severe air
pollution, while PM 10 particles are also a cause of public health concern,
but less lethal.
- India now grades air quality along a colour-coded chart based on
pollutant levels.
- Officials from the Central Pollution Control Board warned that the
quality of new monitoring stations was mixed across the country, and said
Delhi was likely to have the most rigorous data. “There is still a lot of
standardisation work we need to do to get all cities and all monitoring
stations comparable. The new index should be seen as indicative,” the
official said, asking not to be named.
- While comparable data for these 17 locations is available only for the
last few weeks, particulate matter is heavily influenced by weather
patterns. Anumita Roychowdhury, head of the Centre for Science and
Environment’s air pollution and clean transportation programmes, compiled
data for Delhi from October 2014 onwards.
- The data shows that while there were “moderate” days in October,
February and March, the second halves of November and December, and the
first half of January were consistently “very poor”.
- In 2014, the World Health Organisation compiled average annual PM 2.5
numbers for over 1600 cities across the world, including 124 from India.
Delhi had the worst air quality in the world by that estimate, but 12 other
Indian cities were among the world’s worst 20 – Patna, Gwalior, Raipur,
Ahmedabad, Lucknow, Firozabad, Kanpur, Amritsar, Ludhiana, Allahabad, Agra
and Khanna.
- The Centre for Science and Environment, which has for long advocated the
adoption of the AQI, welcomed the government's move “For the first time, the
government has taken the initiative to inform people about daily air quality
with simple descriptions that people can understand. This can help build
public awareness as well as public support for hard decisions needed to get
cleaner air,”said CSE's executive director Anumita Roychowdhury.
- However, in stark contrast with other countries that have air quality
warning systems, India does not yet have a mechanism or measures in place to
bring down peak pollution levels. Beijing for instance, puts in motion a
slew of operations when the warning signal for severe pollution is issued.
- On such days kindergartens, primary and middle schools close, there is a
cap on the number of cars allowed on the roads and polluting factories
either cut down emissions or shut down completely. Similarly, when the air
quality index rose in Paris recently, the city made public transport free
and removed almost 50 per cent of the vehicles off the road.
- 12 Indian cities were among the WHO list of the world’s worst 20 for air
quality.
Maharashtra to set up memorial to R.K. Laxman
- The Maharashtra government will set up a memorial to cartoonist R.K.
Laxman in the Sir J.J. School of Arts.
- State Culture Minister Vinod Tawde announced in the Assembly that the
memorial would have eight halls exclusively exhibiting cartoons of the past
eight decades.
- “We will also place cartoons by cartoonists across the country and
abroad along with those of Laxman’s,” he said.
- He said the bungalow of Rudyard Kipling within the compounds of the
School would be converted into a museum of rare paintings.
- Explaining the government’s initiative to promote Marathi cinema, which
of late has been winning many national awards, including this year’s best
film award, Mr. Tawde said all multiplexes in the city would have to play at
least one show of a Marathi film at prime time.
- “Apart from playing the National Anthem at the start of the movie, a
short film of a minute or two on the life of Dadasaheb Phalke, the father of
Indian cinema, will be played in each theatre,” he said.
- He said the Culture Department was in consultation with the Law
Department to change “Bombay” to “Mumbai” in various laws.
- “There are 199 Acts from the time of the British rule and all of them
have the name ‘Bombay’ as it was known earlier,” he said. The process of
changing it to Mumbai had already begun.
- “All multiplexes in Mumbai required to play at least one show of a
Marathi film at prime time”.
Union Cabinet clears Real Estate Bill
- The Union Cabinet approved the Real Estate (Regulation and Development
Bill) which will address a long-standing demand to bring in a regulator for
the real estate sector.
- The Cabinet, however, deferred its decision on the proposed juvenile
justice amendment bill that will allow minors between the age of 16-18 years
accused of heinous crimes like murder or rape to be treated as adults.
- The Real Estate (Regulation & Development) Bill seeks to protect the
interests of consumers and establish regulatory bodies at the Centre and
States for ethical and transparent business practices in the real estate
sector.
- The Bill provides for mandatory registration of all projects and real
estate agents who intend to sell any plot, apartment or building with the
Real Estate Regulatory Authority. It makes mandatory the disclosure of all
information for registered projects like details of promoters, layout plan,
land status, schedule of execution and status of various approvals. The Bill
also seeks to enforce the contract between the developer and buyer and a
fast track mechanism to settle disputes.
- The government said the Bill is expected ensure greater accountability
towards consumers, and to significantly reduce frauds and delays. It said
the proposed legislation is expected to promote regulated and orderly growth
of the real estate sector through efficiency, professionalism and
standardization
- “These measures are expected to boost domestic and foreign investment in
the sector and help achieve the objective of the Government of India to
provide ‘Housing for All by 2022’, through enhanced private participation,”
a government release said.
- The Real Estate Regulation Bill was first introduced by the UPA
government in the Rajya Sabha in August 2013 and was then referred to a
Parliamentary Standing Committee, which had submitted its report in February
2014.
- The NDA government had made some important changes to the original
legislation. The earlier Bill had mandated that a developer put 70 per cent
of the buyer's investment into an escrow account that would be used only for
the construction of that project.
- Last year, the Housing Ministry brought this down to 50 per cent,
reportedly after much lobbying from the real estate companies. The other
major change was to bring the commercial segment of the real estate sector
within the ambit of the Bill, which was earlier limited to regulating only
the residential segment.
- The Bill also now includes a condition that prohibits a developer from
changing the plan in a project unless 2/3rd of the allottees have agreed for
such a change.
India ranks lower than even Nepal
- Out of 133 countries rated on indicators of well-being such as health,
water and sanitation, personal safety, access to opportunity, tolerance,
inclusion, personal freedom and choice India has secured the 101th place.
- This is lower than India’s rank, of 93, for GDP per capita income. Even
Nepal and Bangladesh rank higher than India on the Social Progress Index
(SPI) ratings to be released globally.Norway has bagged the first rank; the
U.S. is at the 16th place.
- On the parameter ‘Tolerance and inclusion’ India ranks 128th and is at
the 120th place on ‘health and wellness’ that, says economist and executive
director of the SPI, Michael Green, is the toughest parameter for a country
to excel at. As a country becomes richer while tackling sanitation and water
becomes easier, tougher challenges emerge such as air pollution and obesity.
The U.S. despite its high levels of spending on health and wellness ranks
68th.
- Even harder to tackle are freedom and tolerance, he says. “The most
striking findings for India are the worst performance on the tolerance and
inclusion front…It’s a complex problem in a diverse country…another thing I
will be watching for as India grows economically is when obesity as a crisis
will start hitting.”
- The SPI was launched in 2013 and is based on 52 indicators of countries’
social and environmental performance. It includes no economic indicators and
measures outcomes. The UN’s Human Development Index and Bhutan’s Gross
National Happiness Index are also alternate measures for well being but they
use GDP or other economic measures.
- Focusing exclusively on GDP implies measuring progress in purely
monetary terms and failing to consider the wider picture of the real things
that matter to real people. “GDP isn’t bad but it’s not the whole story…
alongside economic growth social progress is more important for
policymaking.”
Nasim Zaidi set to become new CEC
- Election Commissioner Nasim Zaidi will become the next Chief Election
Commissioner later this month.
- The Law Ministry has initiated the file for the appointment as
incumbent, H.S. Brahma retires on April 19. Mr. Zaidi will have a tenure up
to July 2017, when he attains the age of 65.
Voluntary retirement no excuse to skip alimony, says apex court
- Deciding the case of a man who took voluntary retirement and stopped
paying maintenance to his divorced wife, the Supreme Court held that he has
to continue paying her as long as he is “healthy, able-bodied and is in a
position to support himself.”
- In a judgment, a Bench of Justices Dipak Misra and Prafulla C. Pant said
reasons given by estranged husbands to skip payment are bald excuses. “These
have no acceptability in law,” Justice Misra, who authored the verdict,
said.
- The right to get maintenance is “absolute” for a woman, and she cannot
be reduced to the state of a “beggar” after being compelled to leave her
matrimonial home. “If the husband is able-bodied and is in a position to
support himself, he is under the legal obligation to support his wife, for
the wife’s right to receive maintenance under Section 125 Cr.PC, unless
disqualified, is an absolute right,” the court held in its April 6 judgment.
The court held that the obligation of the man to pay maintenance is
“heightened” when the couple’s children are with the wife. Again, the amount
of maintenance should not be that which would only mean their “mere
survival.”
- As per law, she should lead a life similar to the one she would have in
her husband’s house. “And that is where the status and strata of the husband
comes into play and that is where the legal obligation of the husband
becomes a prominent one,” Justice Misra wrote.
- The court was deciding the case of an ex-Armyman who took VRS so that he
did not have to pay her the monthly maintenance of Rs. 4,000.
PM announces enhanced input subsidy
- Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced enhanced input subsidy relief for
farmers in distress.
- Farmers will now be eligible for input subsidy if 33 per cent of their
crop has been damaged, as opposed to 50 per cent or more, which was the norm
till now, the Prime Minister said at the launch of the Pradhan Mantri Micro
Units Development and Refinance Agency Ltd (MUDRA) Yojana .
- Further, the input subsidy given to distressed farmers will be enhanced
by 50 per cent of the existing amount.
- The Prime Minister expressed concern over the problems faced by farmers
due to the abnormal weather in the past year.
- “Helping farmers in this time of distress is our responsibility, and
therefore, the government has sent teams of Central Ministers to affected
areas to assess the extent of the damage,” Mr. Modi said, according to an
official release.
- He also gave the assurance that the Centre, State governments, banks and
insurance companies would do their utmost to provide relief to the farmers.
- Mr. Modi said banks had been asked to restructure loans of farmers hit
by unseasonal rain and insurance companies had been advised to pro-actively
settle claims.
MUDRA bank launched
- He also launched the MUDRA bank with a corpus of Rs. 20,000 crore and
credit guarantee of Rs. 3,000 crore.
- The bank will be responsible for refinancing micro-finance institutions
in the business of lending to small entities.
- While big industrial houses provide jobs to only 1.25 crore people,
small entrepreneurs have given employment to nearly 12 crore people, Mr.
Modi said.
- The postal network would be used for increasing access to the formal
financial system.Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said the MUDRA Bank was
a step in the right direction for “funding the unfunded.” He had proposed
the MUDRA Bank in his budget speech in February.
- MUDRA will be set up through a statutory enactment. It will be
responsible for developing and refinancing all micro-finance institutions (MFIs)
which are in the business of lending to micro and small business entities
engaged in manufacturing, trading and service activities.
- It will also partner with State and regional-level coordinators to
provide finance to last-mile financiers of small and micro business
enterprises. Its proposed role includes laying down policy guidelines for
micro enterprise financing business, registration, accreditation and rating
of MFI entities.
- The agency will also lay down responsible financing practices to ward
off over-indebtedness and ensure proper client protection principles and
methods of recovery, according to an official release.
- These measures are targeted towards mainstreaming young, educated or
skilled workers and entrepreneurs, including women entrepreneurs, the
release said.
- “A vast part of the non-corporate sector operates as unregistered
enterprises and formal or institutional architecture has not been able to
reach out to meet its financial requirements. Providing access to
institutional finance to such micro, small business units, enterprises will
not only help in improving the quality of life of these entrepreneurs, but
also turn them into strong instruments of GDP growth and employment
generation,” the release said.
India will be able to create 109.7 mn jobs by 2022: study
- India will be able to create only 109.7 million jobs by 2022, latest
estimates and studies on sector-wise human resource and skill requirements,
commissioned by the newly-created Skills Ministry, show.
- An earlier official estimate said that by 2022, India will have to
impart skills training to 500 million people. Union Minister for Skill
Development and Entrepreneurship Rajiv Pratap Rudy will release the new
estimates.
- The estimate of 109.7 million jobs is for India’s qualitative skill gap
in key job roles, explained a government source. “It is a demand-side
projection from the industry’s point of view... it is different from the
estimate of the labour-supply side for the need for jobs that was earlier
projected at 500 million,” the source said.
- The studies for calculating India’s Skill Gap were undertaken in the
wake of the launch of the Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana that the Union
Cabinet headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi approved last month.
- They involve mapping of top job roles in 24 sectors including
unorganised parts and also of current supply infrastructure (both private
and public)- capacity, quality and challenges. Government schemes for skill
development for the sector were also factored into the assessment.
- The Modi government’s skills initiative is central to the success of the
Prime Minister’s other pet schemes such as Make in India and Digital India.
- The studies have made recommendations for government, training partners,
industry and the National Skills Development Council.
U.S. FAA upgrades India’s aviation safety rating
- In a major boost to the Indian civil aviation sector, more specifically
for Air India and Jet Airways, the U.S. Federal Aviation Association (FAA)
has upgraded the safety rating of Indian airlines as well as of the civil
aviation regulator by granting a Category 1 rating to India under its
International Aviation Safety Assessment (IASA) programme.
- This announcement was made by the U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony
Foxx during his meeting with Civil Aviation Minister Ashok Gajapathi Raju in
New Delhi.
- Secretary Foxx also announced that India now complies with international
safety standards set by the International Civil Aviation Organisation
(ICAO).
- “U.S. and Indian aviation officials have an important, cooperative
working relationship,” said Secretary Foxx.
- “The U.S government commends the government of India for taking
corrective action to address the safety oversight issues identified during
the IASA process,” he said.
- A Category 1 rating means that the country’s civil aviation authority
complies with ICAO standards and permits India’s airlines to add flights to
the United States using their own aircraft and carry the code of the U.S.
carriers on their operations.
Raju gets 7 years for Rs. 7,000-cr. fraud
- Former chairman of Satyam Computer Services Ltd. B. Ramalinga Raju and
nine others, two of them family members, were sentenced to seven years
rigorous imprisonment in the country’s largest-ever corporate fraud.
- The special court imposed a fine of Rs. 5.5 crore each on Raju and his
brother Rama Raju, ex-managing director, and about Rs. 50 lakh each on their
sibling Suryanarayana Raju and seven others.
- A confessional statement by Raju on fudging of accounts by his company
on January 7, 2009, following the aborted acquisition of Maytas Properties
and Infra, shook the corporate world as his meteoric rise had made him a
household name among stock market investors.
- Raju, seated in the accused box, looked calm as Judge B.V.L.N.
Chakravarthi delivered the verdict. Initially, the judge who pronounced them
guilty, did not disclose the quantum of punishment as he wanted to hear the
accused and their counsel.
- He delivered the sentence after the lunch break. Only the lawyers and
accused were allowed inside the court hall while media personnel waited in
the corridor outside.
- The court found the accused guilty under 14 counts for various offences
and sentenced them to imprisonment for different periods besides imposing
fines.
- The sentences will run concurrently and the maximum punishment each
accused will get is seven years.
- Raju has already spent nearly 29 months in jail.
Direct flights to Colombo, Macau, Bangkok on cards
- The decision of IndiGo airlines to make Visakhapatnam International
Airport a hub for its operations will put it in the fast track mode of
development, according to Minister for HRD Ganta Srinivasa Rao.
- He was at the airport in connection with the flagging of the Air India
flight to Port Blair by Union Minister of Civil Aviation P. Ashok Gajapathi
Raju.
- Around 30 flights, including three to international destinations, were
operating from Visakhapatnam to various destinations every day. Chief
Minister N.Chandrababu Naidu was committed to making Visakhapatnam
destination for IT and Tourism and industry hub. Air traffic growth augured
well for all this, Mr. Srinivasa Rao said in an informal chat with media
persons.
- He said efforts were being made to introduce direct flights to Colombo,
Macau and Bangkok.
- He expressed the view that the day would not be far off when 100 flights
took off everyday from the Visakhapatnam Airport.
- IndiGo, which had planned to operate from Visakhapatnam to
Tiruvananthapuram via Chennai, with effect from March 29 had postponed the
same reportedly due to technical problems.
- “They had given us the schedule but postponed the launch,” Airport
Director C. Pattabhi said. The flight is now expected to begin operations on
April 15.
Govt. freezes Greenpeace accounts
- The Union Home Ministry suspended the registration of Greenpeace India
under the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) for six months and
froze its seven accounts, prohibiting donations from abroad.
- This follows allegations about the organisation’s involvement in
encouraging “anti-development” campaigns across the country.
- The action is being viewed as part of the government’s policy to clamp
down on advocacy groups which, it says, have been indulging in acts
prejudicial to national economic security.
- Greenpeace India has been served with a show-cause notice asking why its
registration should not be cancelled.
- Citing various grounds for suspension of its FCRA registration, the
Ministry of Home Affairs alleged that the organisation did not inform the
authorities about transfer of foreign contributions received in the
designated account to the FCRA utilisation account and then to five other
accounts.
UNESCO report lauds India’s progress
- India has made remarkable strides towards ensuring education for all, a
new global monitoring report shows. While access is now close to universal,
the quality of education remains a major challenge, it says.
- In April 2000, the governments of 164 countries adopted the Dakar
Framework to deliver “Education for All” commitments by 2015. The United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) published
the “Education for All” Global Monitoring Report to evaluate the progress of
countries on these goals.
- India is likely to reach the first goal of 80 per cent enrolment in
pre-primary education by 2015, has already reached the second goal of
universal primary enrolment, and will fall just short of universal youth
literacy by 2015, the report said.
- The one measurable goal India will not reach is reducing its adult
illiteracy rate by half (it has reduced it by 26 per cent). The country’s
major success has been in reaching gender parity for primary and lower
secondary enrolment, the only country in South and West Asia to do so. It
has also made progress towards improving the quality of education, but major
gaps remain.
- The report says nearly half of all countries have achieved universal
pre-primary, primary and lower secondary enrolment.
- Only 25 per cent of the countries have reduced by half their levels of
adult illiteracy, and women continue to make up two-thirds of the
illiterate. Two-thirds of the countries have achieved gender parity at the
primary level, but fewer than half at the secondary level.
- “Overall, not even the target of universal primary education was
reached, let alone the more ambitious ‘Education for All’ goals, and the
most disadvantaged continue to be the last to benefit. But there have been
achievements that should not be underestimated. By 2015, the world has
advanced beyond where it would have been if the trends of the 1990s had
persisted,” the report says. “A lesson re-emerging over the past 15 years is
that while technical solutions are important, gaining political influence
and traction is of even greater significance,” it notes.
- However, major challenges remain. The efficiency of public spending in
India comes in for criticism, as does the expansion of contract teaching
jobs in public schools.
- Most crucially, the Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) said that
while India’s education system succeeded in enrolling many more children,
there were wide disparities in students’ achievement of basic skills across
the States, a finding validated in the official National Achievement Survey
of Grade 3 students,” the report says.
Rafale purchase a setback to ‘Make in India’ pitch
- After the surprise announcement by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on
buying 36 Rafale fighters in a direct purchase from France, the original
Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) deal now hangs fire.
- This deal, under which the Rafale acquisition is being negotiated, had a
substantial ‘Make in India’ component, is now heading towards a ‘Made in
France’ endeavour
- .Speaking on the decision, Union Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar said:
“India has finally broken the ice over the deal which has been pending for
the last 17 years.” He added that the Rafale fighters in fly-away condition
would be inducted into the Air Force in two years.
- Experts feel the decision was driven by operational necessities. Defence
analyst Nitin Gokhale said: “It’s a decision born out of absolute
operational necessity for the IAF and therefore, in a way, unavoidable.
Under the circumstances it is the best beginning possible. Going by PM’s
statement, under ‘Make in India’ Rafale could play a major role.”
- While this does address the immediate concerns of the Air Force, the
surprising part of the announcement is the timing since the deal was on the
verge of collapse. Just last month, Mr. Parrikar had reiterated that France
had to adhere to tender norms. He had also said that if the deal was to fall
through, India would buy additional Sukhois.
- Officials, however, indicated that there was potentially a larger ‘Make
in India’ component to the direct purchase by inviting Dassault to partner
with an Indian private entity and build more Rafales in India.
- Some see this decision as an acknowledgement that Hindustan Aeronautics
Limited (HAL) is not capable of producing an advanced aircraft and
irrespective of what is said, the fact remains that no private player in
India has the capability to execute such a sophisticated project.
Modi makes strong pitch for U.N. seat for India
- Prime Minister Narendra Modi made a strong pitch for a permanent seat
for India in the UN Security Council, saying it should get it as a “right”
for its immense contribution to global peace.
- “Those days are gone when India had to beg. Now we want our right. No
other country has such moral authority,” he said while addressing the Indian
community.
- “This is an opportunity to recognise a peace-loving nation like India,”
he said, asking the U.N. to reconsider its stand on the issue when it
celebrates the 70th anniversary. Mr. Modi said India had the maximum
presence in U.N. peacekeeping forces. Both during the World War I, when 14
lakh Indians went to the battle front, and the World War II, the
participation of Indians was immense, he stressed.
- The world should understand this and change its outlook towards India,
he said. India, he noted, had never been an aggressor against any country
and firmly believed that the world must be rid of the spectre of war.
“Sometimes, history is forgotten. Those who forget history will lose their
right to write one,” he said.
- The Prime Minister, who spoke in Hindi to an estimated over 2,000-strong
gathering, was repeatedly cheered with chants of “Modi, Modi.”
Indian-Americans among biggest philanthropists
- Three Indian-Americans are among 50 biggest philanthropists of 2015,
including top business honchos such as Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates,
Apple CEO Tim Cook and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
- The list compiled by American lifestyle Town and Country Magazine
figures New York-based Adarsh Alphons, Reshma Saujani and Shaila Ittycheria,
all under 40 years of age.
- “These are the men and women whose serious dollars, bold ideas, and
old-fashioned hard work have made them the year’s most noteworthy and
inspiring givers,” says the magazine on its T&C 50: The Biggest
Philanthropists of 2015 list.
- Ms. Saujani (39) is the founder of Girls Who Code, a three- year-old
non-profit that teaches computer skills to girls from low-income communities
to close technology’s gender-gap. “This is more than just a programme. It’s
a movement,” said Ms. Saujani.
- Mr. Alphons (30) founded ‘ProjectArt’ to unleash the creative power in
each child and change the way the world views arts education, because for
him, art saves lives.
- His ‘Grand Plan’ is to help troubled New York City students via
ProjectArt, which provides free art classes at public libraries in all five
boroughs.
- It does this by public awareness and programmes. Using its unique
library-partnerships model, it helps youth express their artistic visions,
set goals and display their art in celebrated art galleries in New York, all
at no cost to the students.
- Ms. Ittycheria (31) co-founded ‘Enstitute’ that bypasses college by
placing its students in paid tech apprenticeships.
Government notifies NJAC, puts an end to collegium
- Acting on its words in the Supreme Court that “the judges’ job is to
judge cases and not to appoint their brother judges,” the Union government
notified the National Judicial Appointments Commission law and effectively
brought to an end the two-decades-old collegium system of appointing judges.
- The notification brings into immediate effect the National Judicial
Appointments Commission Act, 2014, and the 99th Constitution Amendment Act.
- Now, the political class and civil society have an equal voice, along
with the judiciary, in the appointment and transfer of judges in the highest
judiciary.
- The notification comes hardly 48 hours before a five-judge Bench of the
Supreme Court was to hear a batch of petitions challenging the
constitutionality of the NJAC law on April 15.
- But the notification was made possible by the Supreme Court itself on
April 7.
- While referring the petitions to a larger Bench, the court had refused
to pass a stay order on the law coming into force.
IMF predicts India will hit 7.5 % growth, overtake China
- The International Monetary Fund forecast India’s growth to strengthen
from 7.2 per cent in 2014 to 7.5 per cent in both 2015 and 2016, overtaking
China’s growth — for the first time since 1999 — that it projected will slow
down to 6.8 per cent.
- The World Bank too projected India’s growth to accelerate to 7.5 per
cent in 2015, but added that on the back of significant acceleration of
investment, growth could even reach 8 per cent in 2017-18. The country is
attempting to shift from consumption to investment-led growth, at a time
when China is undergoing the opposite transition, the Bank said in its
bi-annual South Asia Economic Focus report.
- Both the World Bank and the IMF’s projections for the current year are
less optimistic than that of the Reserve Bank. The Central Bank-projected
growth in 2015-16 (7.8 per cent) will be barely 30 bps faster than in
2014-15 (7.5 per cent) last week in its first bi-monthly monetary policy
statement of 2015-16. At 8.1 per cent to 8.5 per cent, the Modi government’s
growth projection for this year is the most optimistic.
- Speaking to reporters after the release of the Outlook, IMF Chief
Economist Olivier Blanchard said there was an increasing divergence in the
growth paths of the world’s major economies this year, as a pick-up in the
euro zone and India is expected to be offset by diminished prospects in
other key emerging markets. Responding to a question, he said, he agreed
with the general consensus that the U.S. Federal Reserve would raise
interest rates later this year.
- The Oulook projects global growth to reach 3.5 percent and 3.8 per cent
in 2015 and 2016 from the ‘modest’ 3.4 per cent in 2014 — in line with the
projections in the IMF’s January 2015 World Economic Outlook Update. It
projected growth to be stronger in 2015 relative to 2014 in advanced
economies, but weaker in emerging markets. Nevertheless, emerging markets
and developing economies still account for more than 70 percent of global
growth in 2015.
Gandhi statue defaced in South Africa
- A statue of Mahatma Gandhi here has been defaced by a group of people
who threw buckets of white paint on it.
- The incident occurred on Sunday when the group came in a car at about
noon and threw buckets of white paint on the statue and surrounding plaques
detailing Gandhi’s history in South Africa, security guard Ntandzo Khwepe
said. They had placards that read: ‘Racist Gandhi must fall’. The statue in
the centre of the city is believed to be the only one in the world showing
the Mahatma as a young lawyer in his court robes.
- The statue is on a public transport hub square which was renamed Gandhi
Square because the offices in which he practiced law during his stay in the
city are on the periphery of the square. “They said we should not stop them
because Gandhi was a racist man,” Khwepe said, adding that the group was
wearing African National Congress (ANC) regalia.
New visa scheme renamed “e-Tourist Visa”
- The “Tourist Visa on Arrival-Electronic Travel Authorization (TvoA-ETA)”
scheme, which was launched last year to facilitate short duration visits by
travellers from as many as 44 countries, has now been renamed “e-Tourist
Visa” to clarify that it is not an on-arrival scheme.
- The government has issued 1.10 lakh visas under the new scheme that was
launched on November 27 last year. According to the MHA, it will be extended
to more countries and airports in a phased manner.
- “The name of the scheme [TVoA-ETA] is creating confusion among tourists,
who are under the impression that the visa is being granted on arrival.
However, in the present system, the pre-authorisation of visa has to be
taken before travel,” said an MHA official.
- After some Indian embassies raised the issue with the Home Ministry
seeking change of name, a committee comprising officials of the Bureau of
Immigration, Home and External Ministries was formed to suggest a new name.
- “Keeping in view the application process and the purpose of the scheme,
the committee suggested 'e-Tourist Visa' as the appropriate name,” said the
official.
Net neutrality wins as Flipkart does U-turn
- Switching sides to support Net neutrality, e-commerce major Flipkart
decided not to join Airtel Zero, which offers subscribers free browsing of
websites of companies that join the platform for a fee.
- The proposed tie-up was in the eye of a storm as it raised questions on
the need to maintain equal Internet access to all.
- Net neutrality provides for equal treatment of all traffic; any priority
given to an application or company for payments made amounts to a violation
of the concept.
- “We will be walking away from the discussions with Airtel for Airtel
Zero,” Flipkart said. “We had not signed up for a deal.
- We were in the midst of discussions, and ... have pulled out of that.
We, at Flipkart, have always strongly believed in the concept of Net
neutrality. For, we exist because of the Internet.”
- Airtel Zero was launched last week, but outraged users termed it a
violation of Net neutrality.
- Many consumers boycotted the popular e-tailer and even down-rated its
mobile app to “1 star”.
- Airtel said, “The statement by Flipkart regarding their decision not to
offer toll-free data service to customers is consistent with our stand that
Airtel Zero is not a tariff proposition. It is merely an open platform for
content providers to provide toll-free data services.”
‘Reformer-in-chief’: Obama’s name for Modi
- PM Narendra Modi is featured in the Time magazine’s list of 100 most
influential people for this year with an article by U.S. President Barack
Obama, who titled it “India’s reformer-in-chief.”
- “As a boy, Modi helped his father sell tea to support their family.
Today, he is the leader of the world’s largest democracy, and his life story
— from poverty to PM — reflects the dynamism and potential of India’s rise,”
Mr. Obama wrote.
- Recalling how they reflected on the teachings of Martin Luther King and
Mahatma Gandhi last year, Mr. Obama said Mr. Modi recognised that more than
1 billion Indians living and succeeding together can be an inspiring model
for the world.
- “Like India, he transcends the ancient and the modern — a devotee of
yoga who connects on Twitter and imagines a “digital India,” Mr. Obama
added.
Raising of Pakistan flags intolerable: Mufti
- A day after Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh asked the Jammu and
Kashmir government to take strictest possible action against those involved
in raising pro-Pakistan slogans at a rally in Srinagar, Chief Minister Mufti
Mohammad Sayeed spoke the same language terming the act intolerable.
- Mr. Sayeed told NDTV that such an act was unacceptable and the law would
take its course. He told the media that it was fine till the separatists
kept to rallies, but the raising of Pakistani flags would not be tolerated
and action would be taken against those who hoisted the Pakistani flag at
the rally of Hurriyat leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani in Srinagar.
- The J&K police have registered a case under the Unlawful Activities
Prevention Act against Mr. Geelani, Masarat Alam and Peer Saiffulah.
However, no arrests have been made so far.
- While Mr. Sayeed had struck an understanding with the BJP over providing
a democratic space to all political views in Kashmir, the waving of
Pakistani flags evidently crosses the threshold of the arrangement,
provoking the BJP to cry foul and forcing the Chief Minister to act.
- Stating that the government would not tolerate any anti-national
activity, Mr. Singh on Thursday said at Saharanpur in Uttar Pradesh that he
had spoken to Mr. Sayeed and sought strict action against those involved.
- Amid pro-Azadi and pro-Pakistan slogans, thousands of people in Srinagar
welcomed Mr. Geelani with Tehreek-e-Hurriyat and Pakistani flags. The
Hurriyat leader had returned to Kashmir after spending four months in Delhi.
- The Chief Minister decided to deny permission for a rally by separatists
on Friday from Srinagar to Tral where a youth was killed by the Army in a
“gun battle.”
Yechury is new CPI(M) chief
- Rajya Sabha member Sitaram Yechury was elected the fifth general
secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) after it became evident
that his supporters in the newly elected Central Committee (CC) would press
for a vote if Polit Bureau (PB) member S. Ramachandran Pillai’s name was
proposed by outgoing general secretary Prakash Karat.
- Eager to ensure a smooth transition by averting a vote, Mr. Pillai’s
candidature was withdrawn paving the way for the unanimous election of the
91-member CC, after which Mr. Karat proposed Mr. Yechury for general
secretary which was unanimously accepted. The new CC also elected a
16-member PB. Both bodies have a few new faces.
- Three party veterans — two former Chief Ministers, V.S. Achuthanandan
from Kerala and Budhhadeb Bhattacharya from West Bengal, and Nirupam Sen —
have been dropped from the CC, but made special invitees. Mr. Bhattacharya
and Mr. Sen, who did not attend the congress, have also been dropped from
the PB, as was K. Vardha Rajan — all on account of advancing age. The four
new faces in the 16-member PB are Hannan Mollah, Mohd. Salim, Subhashini Ali
and G. Ramakrishnan.
- Addressing the concluding session soon after, Mr. Yechury papered over
differences by reiterating his commitment to “collective leadership” and
said his effort would be to correct the weaknesses that may have come up or
are inherent “in all of us.”
- Before the issue was clinched, the divide at the top was evident in the
morning as Mr. Karat and Mr. Yechury left their hotel for the makeshift red
township — Samar Mukherjee Nagar. Asked whether there could be a vote for
the post of general secretary, Mr. Karat said: “This does not happen in our
party.”
- Mr. Yechury’s response was: “It is for the new CC to decide.”
- Mr. Yechury’s statement was seen as an indication that neither he nor
his supporters would blink. Within hours, the party’s Malayalam television
channel Kairali broke the news that Mr. Pillai had withdrawn from the race
just before the CC election.
Nasim Zaidi takes over as new CEC
- Nasim Zaidi, assumed charge as the 20th Chief Election Commissioner
succeeding H.S. Bramha who retired after completing his term.
- After assuming charge Mr. Zaidi said: “I feel privileged and honoured
that I have been given this responsibility to lead one of the finest
institutions that the Indian Constitution has provided. I am conscious of
the onerous task in hand.”
- “Election Commission of India will formulate a strategic plan for
efficient election management based on principles of independence,
transparency, professionalism, inclusiveness and measurable outputs,” he
told the media.
- Mr. Zaidi further stated that he would like the Election Commission to
become a more vibrant and transparent organisation, which is open to
receiving new ideas and best practices.
- “Commission would like to formulate its guiding principles based on good
governance,” he said.
Indira, Rajiv names dropped from two Hindi awards
- The BJP-led NDA government has dropped the names of former Prime
Ministers Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi from two awards for propagating
Hindi.
- The two awards have been discontinued by the Union Home Ministry, which
instead launched two new schemes for doing outstanding work for promoting
the progressive use of official language.
- According to a Home Ministry order, the ‘Indira Gandhi Rajbhasha
Puraskar’ and ‘Rajiv Gandhi Rashtriya Gyan-Vigyan Maulik Pustak Lekhan
Puraskar’, launched more than two decades ago, have given way for ‘Rajbhasha
Kirti Puraskar’ and ‘Rajbhasha Gaurav Puraskar’.
Ford Foundation on Centre’s watch list
- The Ford Foundation, a U.S.-based funding agency which has been accused
by the Gujarat government of interfering in the country’s internal affairs
and fanning communal disharmony, was put on the Union Ministry of Home
Affairs (MHA) watch list.
- Citing “concerns for national interest and security,” the MHA informed
the Reserve Bank of India that Ford Foundation had been included on the list
of foreign funding agencies which required prior approval from the Ministry
for each transaction.
- It invoked Section 46 of the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act.
Rajnath and AAP face off; FIR blames party workers
- Home Minister Rajnath Singh has backed the Delhi Police which is under
fire for allegedly not doing enough to stop the farmer Gajendra Singh from
committing suicide during an Aam Aadmi Party rally.
- The FIR said the police received no cooperation from AAP volunteers or
leaders. “This is totally an incident where AAP workers and leaders
instigated the man to commit suicide and they also did not pay heed to
requests made by police,” the FIR says.
- Inspector S.S. Yadav says in the FIR that party workers obstructed the
police from rescuing Singh.
- The Minister said in the Lok Sabha on Thursday that while the policemen
on duty called up the control room and tried to get help from the fire
brigade to stop the suicide, AAP volunteers egged the farmer on. Instead of
talking him out of the suicide, as was generally done, the crowd kept
clapping and raised slogans, he said.
- “The crowd was clapping. The police requested them to stop raising
slogans,” he said.
- The AAP accused the Home Minister of lying in Parliament. The party
declared an assistance of Rs. 10 lakh for the family of the deceased, and
promised to support his children’s education.
eVisa to Chinese nationals likely
- India may extend e-visa on arrival facility to Chinese nationals when
Prime Minister Narendra Modi visits China from May 14 to 16, a move that has
been held up for several years due to opposition from security agencies.
- The Home Secretary is expected to chair a series of meetings focussing
on Chinese concerns next week, when the decision could be taken.
- Ahead of Mr. Modi’s visit, Chinese companies have raised serious issues
over investing in India, also calling for an end to the government’s policy
of “security clearances for countries of concern” that applies to China.
- Sources have confirmed that the Ministry of External Affairs made a
representation to the Home Ministry’s policy, which “discriminates” against
Chinese investors, saying that visas were being given in a manner that
“lacked objectivity and predictability.”
- The issues are being taken more seriously after Chinese truck
manufacturer Beiqi Foton Motor, which had announced the biggest FDI of $400
million for a plant near Pune in 2011, began to downsize its plans this
February as it could not meet deadlines for setting up production because of
bureaucratic hurdles.
SC seeks govt. response on renaming India as ‘Bharata’
- The Supreme Court sought a response from the government on a petition
seeking a declaration that the Republic be called ‘Bharata’ instead of
‘India.’
- A Bench led by Chief Justice of India H.L. Dattu issued notice to the
Centre and all the States on a public interest petition filed by social
activist, Niranjan Bhatwal from Maharashtra, that the public should have an
“unambigous understanding” that the country’s name is ‘Bharata.’
- It sought a clarification on the phrase — “India, that is, Bharat shall
be a Union of States” — used in Article 1 of the Indian Constitution. The
petitioner represented by Ajay G. Majithia and Rahul Pandey said there the
word ‘India’ is not a literal translation of the word ‘Bharata.’ Besides the
country, both historically and in the Scriptures, is known as ‘Bharata.’
RSS think tank pitches for Institute for Classical Studies
- After the aggressive appropriation of B.R. Ambedkar as a nationalist
Hindu icon, taking a leaf out of the Chinese government rule book, the
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) has now proposed that Union Human Resource
Development Minister Smriti Irani establish an Indian Institute of Classical
Studies to promote Indian languages abroad, on the lines of China’s
Confucius Institute.
- The proposal comes from the India Policy Foundation, a think tank funded
entirely by the RSS, with senior Sangh functionaries Dattatreya Hosabale and
Manmohan Vaidya on its board.
- While Mr. Hosabale, sah sarkaryavah or joint secretary of the RSS and
tipped to take over its reins in the near future, Mr. Vaidya is the All
India Prachar Pramukh of the RSS.
- The foundation, it is learnt, wields considerable clout and has stalled
key legislation in the past.
- Looking to the Confucius Institute for inspiration, in a letter dated
April 23, the honorary director of the institute, Rakesh Sinha, writes:
“Given that Indian literature and languages are already recognised as one of
the most scientific languages in the world, the Government of India must
consider conceptualising an institution/centre which could be established in
reputed universities in foreign countries — on the lines of the Confucius
Institute.”
- The India Policy Foundation, a think tank funded entirely by the RSS,
has written to Human Resources Minister Smriti Irani calling for the setting
up of Indian Institute of Classical Studies to promote Indian languages
abroad.
- Director of the Institute Rakesh Sinha’s letter to Ms Irani says, “The
global integration is demanding a coordinated effort of economic, education
and cultural initiatives in the present context of geo-political
developments. An institutionalised initiative by the MHRD, under your
leadership (Ms Irani) will mark an international presence of Indian
language, literature and civilisational culture helping India in its
philosophical dignity and global endeavours.”
- Mr Sinha adds, “For example, the Confucius Institute has established
more than 450 institutions in universities close to 100 countries in past 10
years to promote Chinese language and culture, support local Chinese
teaching internationally and facilitate cultural exchanges.”
- In its endeavour, the RSS seems to be diluting its aggressive Hindi
stance by making a pitch for other classical Indian languages, namely
Kannada, Malayalam, Tamil, Telugu, Bangla, Marathi, Assamese, Odiya and
several others. “Indian cultural and intellectual heritage that have given
India pre-eminence in the world need our rejuvenated efforts to make them
available to general readers. It will help people in India and abroad to
find the glorious tradition in our cultural history is one of the pillars of
cultural nationalism,” the letter states.
- Incidentally, the Confucius Institute is governed by a council whose
members are drawn from the leadership of the Communist Party of China.
Maharashtra announces awards for film legends
- Senior cinematographer in the Hindi and Marathi film industries
Suryakant Lavande and veteran actor Shashikala will be conferred the V.
Shantaram and Raj Kapoor Life Time Achievement Awards respectively by the
Maharashtra government.
- State’s Minister for Culture Vinod Tawde on Monday made the
announcement. Actors Sonali Kulkarni and Vidya Balan will be presented the
V. Shantaram and Raj Kapoor special contribution to the film industry awards
respectively.
- The awards are given every year by the Maharashtra government on the
birth anniversary of Dadasaheb Phalke, founder of the Indian Film Industry.
- “The life time achievement awards are given for their extra ordinary
contribution to the film industry. We are happy to felicitate two legends of
the industry,” said Mr. Tawde. The award ceremony will take place in Pune on
April 30.
Centre recasts Nehru memorial society
- With Prime Minister Narendra Modi as the head, the Nehru Memorial Museum
Library Society (NMMLS), considered a Congress legacy, has been
reconstituted to include 34 members, and eight new members to the Executive
Council.
- An order dated April 27 announced Home Minister Rajnath Singh; Finance
Minister Arun Jaitley; Human Resources Development Minister Smriti Irani;
Culture Minister Mahesh Sharma; Dr. Karan Singh; Narayana Murthy, founder,
Infosys; Centre for Policy Research president Pratap Bhanu Mehta; NITI Aayog
member Bibek Debroy; former ISRO chief Dr. Kasturirangan; academic Nayanjot
Lahiri; Prasar Bharati Chairperson Surya Prakash; former Foreign Secretary
M.K. Rasgotra; columnist Swapan Dasgupta, and a member of the Jawaharlal
Nehru Memorial Fund, as some of the new members to the society.
- The 34 members of the society will have a tenure of five years.
- The Executive Council comprises president of ICCR Lokesh Chandra as
chairman, former editor and BJP member M.J. Akbar as vice-chairman, Pratap
Bhanu Mehta, Nitin Desai, Surya Prakash, the financial adviser of the
Ministry of Culture, an ex-officio member, and Dr. Mahesh Rangarajan as
director.
- Chandra was in news for calling Modi god incarnate.Regarded as a
Congress fiefdom, one of the last decisions of the Congress-led UPA, with
barely 48 hours left for the announcement of election results in 2014, was
to extend the services of director Mahesh Rangarajan, originally for three
years to 10 years.
- Previous NMML directors have served till the age of 60, and by extending
Rangarajan’s tenure for 10 years, the Congress had ensured that he would
continue till his retirement.
- Congress president Sonia Gandhi had stepped down as president of NMML
last year.
‘Unbelievable support from India’
- Nepal said India has led the relief and rescue operations being carried
out in the quake-hit nation and was the first to rush aid to the people.
- Nepal’s Ambassador to India Deepak Kumar Upadhyay said there has been
“unbelievable support and assistance” from India and the assurance of help
from the Indian government has been like a “blank cheque.”
- The Ambassador said though countries like the United States, China and
Israel have been quick with relief material and help, the Nepalese people
have received “overwhelming love and support” from India immediately after
the quake hit.
- The embassy in Delhi, which is coordinating relief work, has also asked
the External Affairs Ministry to facilitate the movement of registered NGOs,
who have been recommended by the embassy and registered in India, to help in
rescue and rebuilding work.
- “We are getting a lot of requests from NGOs who want to go and help in
Nepal, but we cannot have a rush of people there, so we have asked the MEA
to help us verify the registered NGOs who can then be asked to pitch in with
relief work,” the Ambassador said.
- Appreciating India’s efforts, he said help started pouring in soon after
Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke to his counterpart.
‘NREGA, the only insurance for India’
- The World Bank said that the spike in ‘unmet demand’ for MGNREGA jobs is
an indicator of increasing rural distress. Since the scheme is the only and
therefore the best bet India has for mitigating the impact on the poor of
the recent unseasonal rains, the government should take steps aimed at
arresting delays in wage payments and the rising unmet demand for jobs.
- “If you are a State hit by the unseasonal rains, now is the time to tell
those responsible for implementing the MGNREGA to give their best…it is the
only insurance India has…,” said World Bank Country Director in India Onno
Ruhl. He was speaking at the release of the Bank’s latest India Development
Update which analyses the performance of the scheme in States such as Bihar.
- The update projects that provided there is a pick-up to 11 per cent in
the rate of investment in the economy, growth in the current year would be
7.5 per cent, 7.9 per cent in 2016-17 and 8 per cent in 2017-18.
- “The government has made progress in several policy areas, and long-term
prospects for growth remain bright for India,” said Mr. Ruhl. Continuous
strong momentum in reforms aimed at strengthening the business environment
and enhancing the quality of public spending will further unleash the
productivity that Indian firms need for creating jobs and becoming globally
competitive, he said.
- He stressed the need for reducing the pipeline of stuck projects,
especially in the Public Private Partnership space for lifting the
investments rate. Balance sheets of both companies and banks, he said, are
stressed due to the stuck projects.
- The analysis of MGNREGA in the update shows that the programme’s impact
on rural poverty in Bihar is only 1 percentage point as against its
potential of reducing poverty by at least 14 percentage points. Among the
main reasons why the potential is not being realised, the study says, is
that the supply side is too slow to respond to the demand for work from the
poor, workers not receiving the full scheme wage and delays in wage
payments.
- “Discrepancies in the stipulated wage rages and the actual wages
received by workers are contributing to the gap between potential and
realised impacts…payment delays have emerged as a major bottleneck and are a
strong disincentive to participating in the programme,” said a statement.
“If MGNREGA were to be implemented effectively, its design would ensure that
there is no unmet demand for work,” said the study’s author and lead
economist at the Bank Rinku Murgai.
Modi may attend Afghan Parliament inauguration
- Prime Minister Narendra Modi is likely to attend the inauguration of the
new Parliament building in Kabul after he was extended an invitation by
visiting Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani.
- According to a source, the Indian side was recently informed that as
elections are drawing near, the outgoing Parliamentarians have expressed a
wish to mark the end of their term from the new Parliament building.
- “The Central Public Works Department (CPWD), which is carrying out the
work on India’s behalf, has assured Afghan officials that all work will be
wound up by September 30, and the Parliament building will be functional by
October for their last session. The only work left is carpeting and sound
system, the rest has been completed,” the source told .
- The Rs.710-crore project, initiated in 2009 and initially scheduled for
a December 2012 completion, is part of India’s $2-billion aid.