Friday 30 November 2012

60th Meeting of Central Advisory Board of Education (CABE)



Ø CABE is the highest advisory body to advise the Central and State Govt. in the fields of education.
Ø Our minister said- the purpose of education should be to build an inclusive, fair, and just society. In a country as diverse and as large as India, the task of developing national policies while at the same time respecting and incorporating regional aspirations and an inclusive agenda of growth is indeed a real challenge.
Ø Education should lead to character building of our youth and also inspire them to work towards the task of nation building in addition to their work for employment/ self- employment.
Ø Minister also emphasized the importance of Teacher’s education as also the need to prohibit unfair practices in schools.
Ø Need for close cooperation in implementation of the RTE act.
Ø Higher education- consolidation of the initiatives undertaken during XI plan period- strengthening of the state institutions, faculty development, strengthening research and Innovation in Basic Sciences and Social Sciences, Skill Building and Vocational Education should be the critical focus areas.
Ø ensure that the provisions of the Constitution relating to establishment of educational institutions by Minorities should be respected in letter and spirit so as to ensure the educational development of minorities.
Ø CABE discussed the recommendations of the Justice Verma Commission and endorsed the recommendations of the Commission. CABE also approved the suggested Action Plan for implementation of the recommendations of the Commission.
Ø CABE noted the progress under the roll out of the RTE Act, 2009 which shows substantive efforts by the States and UTs to implement its various provisions.  CABE took note of the support extended by the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan in augmentation of school infrastructure in order to meet the gaps in the opening of neighbourhood schools, recruitment of teachers and in improving quality of schooling. 
Ø CABE reiterated the need for the initiative to curb prevalent unfair practices in the school education sector including charging of capitation fees, misleading and non-transparent processes adopted by schools for admission of students in higher classes, appointment of ineligible and unqualified teachers and unanimously endorsed the proposed legislation.

Genetically Modified Crops


Genetically Modified Crops:

Ø Parliament Standing Committee report- “for the time being all research and development activities on transgenic crops should be carried out only in containment, the ongoing field trials in all States should be discontinued forthwith.
Ø Support to GM- Conventional Agriculture Technologies may not be adequate to meet India’s Food Security Challenges. And conventional techniques are not science based.
Ø There is no GM crop anywhere in the world which increase crop productivity (Even US department of Agriculture acknowledges that the productivity of GM Soya and GM corn in the US is less than the conventional varieties.  Moreover, the prevailing drought in the U.S. has conclusively shown that it is only non-GM crops that have withstood the vagaries of weather.
Ø In India, on June 1, a record 82.3 million tonnes surplus of wheat and rice was stored. This surplus existed at a time when an estimated 320 million people went to bed hungry. Mr. Pawar is making all efforts to export a large chunk of food stocks or make open market releases, but no serious effort is being made to feed the hungry. In fact, since 2001-03, India has been holding on an average anything between 50 to 60 million tonnes of foodgrains and yet its ranking in the Global Hunger Index shows no improvement.

FOOD INSECURITY

Ø Food insecurity, therefore, is not the result of any production shortfall. To ensure that farmers do not produce more, and thereby add to existing storage problems, the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP) has frozen the wheat price at last year’s level. Paying more to farmers would entail more production. This does not make any economic sense. After all, the farmer too is impacted by rising inflation. Why penalise farmers for the government’s inability to handle and store surplus foodgrain?
Ø The fact remains that food production is being deliberately kept low, and only enough to meet basic food security needs. Provide market price to wheat and rice growers, and I am sure production will go up manifold.
Ø SAC-PM is a committee made up of distinguished scientists. Although the Genetic Engineering Approval Committee (GEAC) had given the green signal for commercial cultivation of Bt Brinjal, the SAC-PM should take note of the 19-page submission by the then Minister for Environment and Forests, Jairam Ramesh; the analysis is the best “science-based” justification for stopping GM food crops.

FINDINGS:

Ø Even when the Bt Brinjal debate was hot, I had pointed out the inability of the scientific community to conduct long-term feeding trials on rats. Internationally, the practice is to have 90-day feeding trials, which corresponds to 24 years of human lifespan — and that’s what the GEAC followed. I had always wondered why the industry as well as the scientific community was not conducting feeding trials for two years, which means the entire human lifespan. Professor Gilles-Eric Séralini, professor of molecular biology at the Caen University in France, finally did it. He recently published the findings of the two-year study on the long-term toxicity of GM maize NK 603, engineered to resist Roundup herbicide — and as expected the industry was up in arms.
Ø In these first-ever long-term feeding trials on rats, published in the scientific journal Food and Chemical Toxicology, Prof. Séralini and his team observed that “females developed fatal mammary tumours and pituitary disorders. Males suffered liver damage, developed kidney and skin tumours and experienced problems with their digestive system.” The team also found that even lower doses of GM corn and Roundup weedicides resulted in serious health impacts. Moreover, 50 per cent male and 70 per cent female rats died prematurely. The tumours were 2.5 times bigger than what would normally appear in the control population.
Ø As expected, the study was branded “bogus,” “inadequate” and of course “unscientific.” 

Agreement between In India and Canada:


Agreement of Social Security:

It provides for avoidance of double social security contributions by detached workers (Employed persons who are subject to the legislation of a country and who are sent by their employers to work in the territory of another country) from the host country legislation, portability of contributions at the time of relocation and totalization of the periods of contributions for determining eligibility to a benefit.

MOU on cooperation in Information Communication Technology and Electronics:

Ø Provide the necessary framework for cooperation in the ICTE sector for establishing a strong and effective B2B partnerships and cooperation, raising awareness among private and public sector stakeholders on ICTE opportunities in Canada and India.
MOU between DRDO and York University, Canada:
Ø In area of Joint Research and development in defence Science & Technology. 

Thursday 29 November 2012

Agamas and Padmanabhaswamy Temple, Financial Task Force, Look East and Look West Policy


Agamas and Padmanabhaswamy Temple:

Ø SC, expressed concern at shortcoming in maintenance of temple and directed to strengthen Kallaras (Vault) for preserving and protecting the precious ornaments, jewels, artefacts.
Ø The rituals at the temple are carried out as per the Agamas Sastras.
Ø Agamas – A collection of Sanskrit, Tamil, Granthal scripture chiefly constituting the methods of temple construction and creation of idols, worship means of deities, philosophical doctrines, meditative practices, attainment of six fold desires and four kind of Yoga.
Ø Vedic form requires no idols and shrines whereas the agamic religions are based on idols with pooja as means of worship.
Ø Each Agama consists of four parts:
·       Kriya Pada: Consists of rules for construction of temples
·       Charya Pada: rules for daily worship
·       Yoga Pada: Concentrate on Yoga
·        
Ø Essential requirements for a place of Pilgrimage- Sthala, Tirtha and Murthy

Mr. President on the State- Chhattisgarh

Ø Green cover of 45%
Ø Tribal Population 32%
Ø Famous Kalchuri dynasty ruled for almost 800 years (Oldest Panchayati Raj system)

Financial Action Task Force

Ø Indian has become a full-fledged member of Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an inter-governmental body, responsible for setting global standards on anti-money laundering (AML) and combating the financing of terrorism (CFT). Earlier, India had become Observer at FATF in the year 2006.

 Look East Policy and North East Region:

Ø DoNER has stressed to make northeast the centre of country’s LEP
Ø North east is the gateway to the Asian Century.
Ø LEP launched in 1992
Ø NER depends on central funding for for development activities
Ø Both BIMSTEC and SAARC have made no. of program and projects to promote trade and investment in the region
Ø Cultural aspect of Indian society must be fully utilized in bringing the factors of cultural uniformity within the region with India,

Look West Policy:

Ø Why central Asia Matters- Energy, Minimizing Pakistan Influence and est. itself as a significant player in the interplay of outside powers that is taking shape.
Ø cultural aspect of Indian society must be fully utilised in bringing the factors of cultural uniformity within the region with India, It can be recalled that for 2,000 years Indian culture
Ø Why Central Asia Matters: -India has had its eye on Central Asia for a long time. Its primary interests there are in energy, minimizing Pakistan’s influence, and establishing itself as a significant player in the interplay of outside powers that is taking shape. 

Tuesday 27 November 2012

E-toilet, International Bioenergy Summit- 2012


E-toilet:

Ø After payment, the door of the unit unlocks and the light and exhaust fan are switched on automatically. After the user enters it, the closet is doused with 100 ml of water
Ø  If the usage is for less than three minutes, the system flushes with 1.5 litres of water, if more than 4 ltr of water
Ø It also uses a bio-membrane reactor for its sewage treatment plant which uses nanotechnology to recycle used water.

Bio-energy Summit:

Ø In an endeavor to create a roadmap for the next five years for innovative technologies and policies for biofuels development in India, the Department of Biotechnology, Govt. of India along with The Energy and Resources Institute(TERI) launched a two day International Summit on ‘Bioenergy: Algae Biofuel & Synthetic Biology 2012’
Ø two day summit, experts and policymakers are aiming to identify the primary tasks that must be undertaken to accelerate the sustainable deployment of biofuels in India.
Ø The summit is witnessing the participation from renowned scientists from over 7 countries, including India, USA, France, Belgium, Malaysia, and South Africa along with 10 eminent international speakers.
Ø Releases “The Bioenergy Road-Map –Vision 2020” of the Department of Biotechnology

International Bioenergy Summit-2012

Mission of the summit:

Ø The summit will consist of plenary talks, invited talks, and panel discussions to deliberate on key issues for next generation fuels.
Ø It will provide a unique opportunity for communication and collaboration between academia, industry, and policy-makers.

Organizers

Ø The International Bioenergy Summit-2012 is being sponsored by the Department of Biotechnology, Government of India, and organized by TERI. The event, scheduled to be held on November 5 and 6, 2012 at the India Habitat Centre, New Delhi, India, plans to bring together key players who are pioneering in the development of next generation biofuels to address the key issues in creating cost-competitive, industrial scale production technologies.


Durgabhai Deshmukh Award. ASEAN, National Investment Board


Durgabhai Deshmukh Award:

Ø for women’s development was constituted in 1997
Ø by Central Social Welfare Board, an autonomous organization of the Ministry of Women and Child Development, Government of India,
Ø to honour the memory of its founder chairperson Dr. Durgabai Deshmukh.
Ø Dr. Deshmukh was an active participant in the independence movement.
Ø She founded the Andhra Mahila Sabha and as Chairperson of the Central Social Welfare Board, she imparted to the organisation her distinct flair for activism in the sphere of women’s welfare and development.
Ø She contributed greatly to developing the Board as a body which links the government and non-government sectors to ameliorate the status of women and children in the country.
Ø  The award is presented to an organisation which has made outstanding or innovative contribution to women’s welfare and empowerment and has at least 5 years of working experience in the field. The award carries an amount of Rs. 5 lakhs, a citation and a shawl

Kaushik Basu for flexible labour laws to spur growth:

Ø Accelerating urban development and increasing labour flexibility are key to creating jobs in more productive activities
Ø India's labour market is over-regulated. India's rigid labour laws are hurting India's growth ... Flexible labour laws will help organised and unorganised sectors,
Ø When workers move from low-to-high-productivity jobs, output increases and the economy becomes more efficient. Stringent regulations that obstruct such labour reallocation do not sit on the efficiency plateau and affect economic efficiency.
Ø India can take advantage of this demographic dividend by creating an environment more conducive to job creation. Jobs can serve as a cornerstone for development, contributing to growth, prosperity and social cohesion

ASEAN-India Workshop on Cooperation in Renewable Energy:

Ø The workshop which is being attended by experts and policy planners from ASEAN countries and India,
Ø aims at sharing of experience among participating countries on the development and deployment of renewable energy,
Ø and to identify the institutions for establishing long term cooperation between India and ASEAN countries.
Ø  This workshop has been organized as a precursor to the meeting of the Ministers of Renewable Energy of ASEAN countries and India scheduled on 7th November 2012.

National Investment Board:

Ø NIB would be a cabinet committee, headed by the prime minister,
Ø which would intervene on behalf of investors if the time for clearing a project, to be mutually agreed between the NIB and the relevant ministry, were exceeded
Ø NIB was vested with sweeping powers to not only fast-track clearances that had been rejected earlier but also alter rules and regulations to ease norms for other large projects


Monday 26 November 2012

INS Vikarmaditya, Budapest Cyber Security Dialogue, India- US relation, Nikshay, MCI- Code of ethics


INS Vikarmaditya:

·       Trial failure- propulsion problem of jet, broiler problem
·       INS Vikramaditya is nothing but old shit of USSR packed in new design …( Converted from former hybrid missile cum aviation cruiser admiral Gorshkov.

Budapest Cyber Security Dialogue:

Ø Three area of focus-
ü Revitalizing Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-IN)
ü Creation of professional body that certify the security of network  
ü cyber defense of important network that are prone to risk
Ø Need Internation cooperation as most of the attack come across nation border
Ø International sources- United nation’s convention of transnation organized crime and European council on cyber crimes
Ø Other than this India is in many bilateral agreements with countries like US, UK, Korea
Ø Why this is important to India:
v 800 million mobile subscriber
v Targeted half a billion internet users
v 100 billion dollar BPO industry

India- US relation:

Ø Bilateral talk between SM Krishna and Hillary:
Ø Increased Visa fee (H1B and L1) – bad for Indian IT companies
Ø A large quantity of shale gas discovered in US- India interested in importing in liquefied form as LPG to meet its energy requirement but there is problem in US- needs legislative approval to export gas to India, Environmental impact- mainly on water table due to hydraulic fracture
Ø Canada also have shale gas reserves- India can diversify its suppliers
Ø Discussion also on Wisconson Gurudwara shooting , TAPI pipeline,

Nikshay:

Ø ICT application of GoI to monitor the realtime data on TB patients
Ø Est. of all health facilities need to register with Nikshay to report TB cases

MCI- Code of ethics:

Ø MCI- Profession conduct, etiquette and ethics regulation act 2002 which prohibit doctors to accept undue benefits from Pharmaceutical companies and other health industry.

Friday 23 November 2012

HR, UN Green Climate Fund, Shilpotsav, National Sports Development Bill, China Syndrome, Jaitapur Nuclear Reactor Project, Rangnath Commission, National Innovation Council


Challenging Task of Human Resource Ministry:

Ø The Right to Education Act must be supported to achieve good outcomes
Ø significant resources mobilised for school,
Ø vocational and higher education
Ø to realising the so-called demographic dividend available to India by 2020 that is, a population with an average age of 29 compared with 37 and 38 for China and the United States respectively
Ø For young students to participate in the growth story, they need a reformed system.
Ø At present, millions of gullible students are paying huge amounts to colleges with weak academic credentials; the distance education system is in a mess, and vocational education needs massive investments.

S Korea to be HQ of UN Green Climate Fund

Ø A new U.N. fund meant to manage billions of dollars to help developing nations combat climate change will be based in South Korea.

“SHILPOTSAV-2012”

Ø at Dilli Haat, is an annual event of the Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment
Ø This is the sixth year of Shilpotsav. The Shilpotsav was started during the year 2007-08 by the Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment by way of collaborating with all the Apex Corporations and National Institutes under the Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment, with an objective to provide a platform to the beneficiaries assisted under the developmental schemes of various Finance & Development Corporations and National Institutes to showcase their art & craft
Ø The event also provides opportunity for publicity of Ministry’s schemes with live examples of success and triumph over the poverty and unemployment among the target group with assistance from the Ministry’s schemes.

National Sports Development Bill, 2011

Ø rejection of the proposed National Sports Development Bill, 2011 by the cabinet
Ø It is an irony that ever since India participated in the Olympics, it has won 20 medals in all (9 gold, 4 silver and 7 bronze).
Ø China, with whom we eagerly compare ourselves in every field, won 100 medals just in the 2008 Summer Olympics. Sports Development Bill 2011:
Ø Seeing the low level of sports regulation in India, the need and importance of the National Sports development bill becomes manifold. Further the humongous blob of corruption created by the 2010 Commonwealth games has made it compulsory to regulate the sporting bodies in India by the government.
Ø includes retirement age of 70 and a limited number of terms for officials heading them
Ø made to constitute a National Sports Development Council which is to be headed by an Eminent Athlete
Ø The bill seeks to make the National Olympic Committee responsible for the conduct of the National Games every 2 years. Further, NOC has been obligated to hold fair and transparent election every 4 years.
Ø The bill also deals with the issue of foreign nationals representing India at national and international level. The bill states that only Indian passport holders and NRI’s can represent India, thus it restricts PIOs and OCIs from representing India.
Ø The bill also tries to effectively control the cases of doping in sports.
Ø It seeks establishment of National Anti-Doping Agency (NADA) and National Anti-Doping Laboratory.
Ø Senior politicians and cabinet members who are involved in the administration of this sport include Sharad Pawar, Praful Patel, Arun Jaitley, Jyotiraditya Scindia, Vilasrao Deshmukh and Farooq Abdullah (That’s why bill got rejected)

Odisha has become the first state in the country to launch  National Rural Livelihoods Mission

Ø (NRLM) in its bid to bring down rural  poverty by promoting diversified and gainful self-employment to the rural poor
Ø NRLM will replace the Swarnajayanti Gram Swrojgar Yojana (SGSY) aimed at  poverty reduction. The main weaknesses of the SGSY were uneven spread in the  formation of Self-Help Groups (SHGs), high attrition rate in the SHGs, lack of  adequate access to banking facilities,
Ø In the first phase, NRLM has been launched in 38 backward poverty stricken blocks of 10 districts where the World Bank-funded Targeted Rural Initiatives for Poverty Termination and Infrastructure (TRIPTI) is being implemented. wastage of funds can be stopped  and maximum dividend of the project is made available.

The China syndrome:

The 1979 coined term 'the  China syndrome' seems to be true with the Japanese experience at Fukushima and  at the same time the disaster sent a clear cut message to every nuclear-embedded nation to take adequate measure to protect their nuclear  installations from the deadly repercussion of nuclear mishap. The term China  syndrome refers to the loss of coolantaccident and describes a nuclear reactor  operations accident characterized by the severe meltdown of the core components  of the reactor. This was the third major disaster after one in the US (Three  Mile Island) and the second in the erstwhile Soviet Union (Chernobyl).

About Jaitapur project: 

Jaitapur is a small port situated in  Rajapur Tehsil of Ratnagiri district, Maharashtra State, India. Jaitapur lies  on the Arabian Sea coast. If commissioned, the 9,900 MW Jaitapur  Nuclear Power Station will be the largest in the world, overtaking the current  largest 8,200 MW Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant in Japan.

Why nuclear-energy is important for India?

With 436 nuclear plants operating  worldwide, nuclear energy provides almost 14 per cent of global electricity,  with France relying on it for 75 per cent of its electricity needs.
Japan currently meets 30 per cent of its energy requirements from nuclear plants and  this is expected to increase to at least 40 per cent by 2017.
In the US, currently 104 operating nuclear plants produce around 20 per cent of the total  US energy profile
China currently has the most ambitious nuclear programme, with 13 nuclear power reactors in operation, 27 others under construction, an  additional 50 reactors in the planning stage, and more than 140 others at the proposal level
India is in a seismic zone  and as the power plants have to be sited near the coast because of huge quantities of water needed for cooling.
The practice of storing spent fuel rods at or near the reactor buildings adds to risks, and safer and more secure storage sites must be found  for this material. The storage of spent fuel in unsecured sites results in a  serious security risk, as terrorists can target these facilities.
There is no scientific, technical and economic justification for the project which is going to adversely affect the livelihood of thousands of people, and cause unimaginable damage to biodiversity and environment in the area.
Aftermath of Fukushima, Germany has decided to shut down all its  nuclear reactors by 2022. Germany has 17 nuclear reactors, eight of which are  currently off the electricity grid. To make up for the loss of nuclear energy,  the German government will begin to switch to renewable energy and increase investments in energy research. Further, While Thailand has halted the project  for five nuclear plants; Malaysia has decided to review its earlier plan to  build its first nuclear station in 2021. The Swiss government has decided to  phase out nuclear power by 2034, which would require the closure of its five  nuclear reactors that currently provide 40 per cent of the country's power. Spain  and Portugal, however, have called for the gradual phase-out of nuclear energy.
All reactors built in India will have to meet safety standards  certified by the regulatory authority, including on imported equipment and  technologies. The outfall of the Jaitapur project was not directly opening out  into the sea, but an undersea tunnel would run 1.5 to 2.5 km under the  coastline with a diffuser to distribute water. Therefore, the ecology is not  going to be affected. Further, Jaitapur was in seismic zone III, while the Fukushima  facility was in seismic zone IV. Moreover, the proposed nuclear power project  in Jaitapur is about 72 feet above the sea level. In case of a tsunami striking  the Maharashtra coast, the waves will not reach to the level where the project  has been planned.

Removal of a Judge:

A member of the higher judiciary, which means the Judges and Chief Justices of the Supreme Court of India and the state High Courts, can be removed from service only through the process of impeachment under Article 124 (4) of the Constitution on grounds of proven misbehaviour or incapacity. In India, there is no other process by which a Judge can be removed from office before his term comes to an end.
As many as 75 members of the Rajya Sabha, from BJP, Left Front, Samajwadi Party, JD(U), BJD, Shiv Sena, AGP and AIADMK, notwithstanding their political differences, submitted a joint notice of motion for the removal of Dinakaran. Justice Dinakaran is charged with possessing wealth disproportionate to his known sources of income, The notice also charges him with “misuse of official position to unlawfully secure property and to facilitate other illegal acts for personal gain”. The Rajya Sabha Secretariat confirmed the receipt of the notice under Article 217 read with 124 (4) of the Constitution.
In India, there is no other process by which a Judge can be removed from office before his term comes to an end. However, the process is very cumbersome. As per the Judges Inquiry Act, 1968, a complaint against a Judge has to be made through a resolution either by 100 members of the Lok Sabha or 50 Rajya Sabha members.

Rangnath Commission: 10 per cent Muslim quota:

Government-appointed National Commission for Religious and Linguistic Minorities commission under the Rangnath  Mishra has recommended 10 per cent reservation for Muslims and 5 per  cent for other minorities in government jobs and favoured Scheduled  Caste status for Dalits in all religions.
To delink SC  status from religion and abrogation of the 1950 Scheduled Caste Order,  which “still excludes Muslims, Christians, Jains and Parsis from the SC  net. The order originally restricted the SC status to Hindus only but it  was later opened to Buddhists and Sikhs.

National Innovation Council:

The National Innovation Council was set up by the Prime Minister of India to lay a roadmap for transforming the country into an innovation nation, with a focus on inclusive growth in keeping with the Government’s commitment of turning the next decade into a ‘Decade of Innovation’. The National Innovation Council is focused on encouraging and facilitating the creation of an Indian Model of Innovation by looking at five key parameters: Platform, Inclusion, Eco-system, Drivers and Discourse. The core idea is to innovate to produce affordable and qualitative solutions that address the needs of people at the Bottom of the Pyramid, eliminate disparity and focus on an inclusive growth model.
National Innovation Council`s initiatives are also aimed at fostering an innovation ecosystem across domains and sectors to strengthen entrepreneurship and growth, to facilitate the birth of new ideas and enhance collaboration.