Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
CONTENTS
1. THE uNFOLDING The Road Ahead For CSAT..................................................... 2. NATIONAL BuLLETIN Soumitra Sens Impeachment and Tainted Judiciary .............. National News.......................................................................... 4 8 9
3. INTERNATIONAL BuLLETIN Arab Uprising and Libyan Crises............................................. 12 International News................................................................... 16 4. BILATERAL BuLLETIN PMs Visit to Bangladesh : ...................................................... 19 Bilateral News.......................................................................... 25 5. ECONOMY@ IP US Debt Crisis: An analysis of the impact............................... 27 Economy News........................................................................ 29 6. SCIENCE SPECTRuM Nanotechnology: Alternatives to Fossil Fuels......................... 32 1 Chandrayaan-2 ....................................................................... 34 Science News........................................................................... 35 7. PERSPECTIVES Indian Unrest............................................................................ 38 8. INSPIRATIONS Kingdom Of Dreams................................................................ 41 9. THINKERS ARENA Crony Capitalism and Post-Liberalisation India ................... 43 10. MOSAIC Indian Cinema.......................................................................... 48 11. KNOW IT ALL...................................................................... 52
12. QuESTIONS@ IP Current affairs questions........................................................... 59 CSAT Model Paper................................................................... 65 13. CL INTERVIEW.................................................................... 76
INDIA PREPARES
EDITORS NOTE
Blessed is the man who, having nothing to say, abstains from giving wordy evidence of the fact.
- George Eliot
Unfortunately, such people are in short supply. We hope that we do not indulge in vacuous verbose in the exercise of introducing this publication an exercise , which like introducing ourselves, is fraught with the danger of overstating your case. In these fast changing times of the present era, where Central and State Commissions are adjusting the exam patterns according to the modern needs, we present to you INDIA PREPARES. Civil Services examination is going through a transition period. Its not just the syllabus that has been changed but also the skills and abilities tested in the exam that have undergone a change. It is no longer a recognition based test but one, which requires a basic clarity of concepts and understanding on the part of students. This publication is a humble effort to bring diverse and informed perspectives on some of the seminal issues which emerge from the immediate context of public discourse, flux of events and developments, and wanderings in the unending realms of ideas. In doing so, care has been taken to facilitate the understanding of the context and content of the news/discourse for beginners also - through explanations wherever required. Facts and the information have been taken from highly authentic sources. Instead of using a single lens, every news/issue is presented from multiple perspectives to widen the horizons of students understanding. These are meant not just for mains writing but will also help at the interview stage. The magazine is divided into different sections to make it more readers friendly. Apart from the regular sections on current news, many new sections have been added to make the magazine updated as per the current developments and 2 requirements of Civil Services examination. Efforts have been made to remove all grammatical mistakes and errors and to use good vocabulary. With the introduction of CSAT in civil services exam, it is important that students generate good vocabulary, correct usage and understanding of proper words. It will be our constant endeavor to cover each and every area pertaining to the preparation. Attempts have been made to break free from all stereotypes and traditional styles of writing and to give a fresh whiff of perspective to the examination and its preparation. The publication is in its infancy, and may have some teething problems. But that is no excuse for the mistakes and shortcomings that might have crept in. Though constant efforts will be made to improve the publication in all aspects, your feedback will be appreciated and can act as timely reminders. Following are the sections (with a brief layout) which will feature in INDIA PREPARES. THE UNFOLDING: The Unfolding or the cover story deals with a seminal issue of the month. The story will be presented from multiple perspectives and dimensions. The topic need not be limited to the current news and happenings but can pertain to other major activities and developments happening in the field of Civil Services examination. For example cover story for the first issue is The Road Ahead For CSAT. Stress would be given to not just factual information but also to an over-all analysis of the topic. Idea is to give readers something which is exclusive. THE NATIONAL BULLETIN: This section involves all current happenings in India including polity. THE INTERNATIONAL BULLETIN: This section will cover the developments from around the world with an Indian perspective. Its structure will be same as that of The National Bulletin. Special care will be taken while filtering the data as it is often found that large amount of data is there but very less is actually important from civil services point of view. THE BILATERAL/MULTILATERAL BULLETIN: This section will include Indias bilateral and multi-lateral relations with other countries. Special focus will be there on south Asia and its structure will be like the previous two sections only.
INDIA PREPARES
PERSPECTIVES: Perspectives is a section that aims at enhancing the analytical understanding of the readers. A seminal issue of the month would be debated from multiple perspectives. MOSAIC: This unique section being introduced by India Prepares will endeavor to help aspirants on two fronts. This section will take one topic from diverse fields like art, culture, sports or any popular hobby and will give detailed analysis of the same. This section would be of particular relevance at the interview stage where one is asked various kinds of questions about the hobbies mentioned. Also, one information box prepared by the experts will be added so as to tell students, which are the major areas where they should work, what all information they need to collect and what are the most asked questions from that field. ECONOMY @ IP: Economics has always been a matter of concern with most of the civil services aspirants. Often it is considered as a tough nut to crack. This is largely because of false stereotypes and mindset that aspirants create in their mind. Our objective will be to deconstruct these myths by presenting this section in such a manner that it not just clarifies the concept but provide basic, relevant data as well. This section will include economy based news at national, international and bilateral levels. SCIENCE SPECTRUM: In last few years, it is this section which has gained maximum importance by taking a big portion of question paper. But it is this section which has often been a nightmare for majority of the students. Our aim will be to make things simple and interesting for them. Comprehensive coverage will be given to this part. 2-3 articles and other short news capsules will be included covering almost every development in the field of science and technology. THINKERS ARENA: Thinkers arena is a section especially for those candidates whose exposure to social sciences is very less and whose concepts are often clouded with doubts. Every month well take a topic which is seminal and intrinsic to national developments. Basics will be discussed to break the misconceptions and clarify the doubts. This section will be prepared by subject specialists and references will be given for further reading. INSPIRATIONS @ IP: Preparing for civil services is a long process. One has to delay every rectification and it requires a consistent flow of energy. Any form of motivation is important in such situation. Inspiration section provides you 3 with this only. It contains short stories to lighten the mood and essays written by students themselves who share their experiences while going through these examinations. This section will also include interviews of successful candidates and stories of those whose life in itself is an inspiration for others. KNOW-IT ALL: This section will cover general knowledge and current events from various fields like sports, awards, appointments, books released etc. Newness in this section is not in what we are offering but how the material is selected. There is always abundance of data in the areas mentioned above and to differentiate between what to retain and what to leave is a big problem. It is this problem that we endeavor to deal with. Data for this section is selected in an objective manner and according to the trend of civil services examination. QUESTIONS @ IP: Every month one model paper on CSAT will be given. It is seen that the CSAT paper of preliminary stage is abstract and general in nature and no special preparation can be done for it. The only way to score good marks in CSAT is through rigorous and continuous practice, which can be done through model papers. These tests are prepared with special care. Questions designed and passages taken are also from current developments, thus making it more useful for the aspirants. In addition 50 questions will be given every month on current affairs which will help in revision and consolidation of facts and data. HEPLMAIL SERVICE: We are starting with a nationwide e-mail service which will provide individual consideration to every students problems. These problems can be of any nature like subjects, coaching institutes, lodging, books, strategy, study material, so on and so forth. Aspirants just have to mail their queries to the given e-mail id and personalized attention would be given to it by the experts. SONAL VATS Editor
INDIA PREPARES
The Unfolding
THE UNFOLDING...
INDIA PREPARES
The Unfolding
About the difculty level of the questions, he added that despite the seemingly rudimentary level of the questions, very few have been able to achieve a healthy score in the paper. A closer examination of the questions would reveal that there were many questions that lured a student into attempting them, only to realise that the answer was not as obvious as expected. But having already invested a couple of minutes into the exercise, it then became very hard to pass up the temptation to mark an answer. And for the vast majority, all this earned was negative marks. He further suggested that, the CSAT is likely to experience a gradual escalation in the types of questions and their level of difculty. The UPSC has explicitly stated their right to include any form of questions that they deem t. Although this will not happen in an abrupt manner and although the changes will be incremental, the CSAT certainly will experience novel questions and modes of testing in each subsequent year. About the general perception of the exam being simple, Mr. V.P. Gupta cautions students against any kind of complacency. To him, it was only seemingly easy. He gives a detailed, section wise analysis to elaborate on this. Regarding questions on Comprehension If you analyze this years questions in Comprehension, you will realize that the answer choices were seemingly similar; however, there was only one right answer to each question. Comprehension questions based on given text test how good a candidate is at fact-nding, sifting through information, interpreting text, concluding from given information and discerning between stated and implied meaning of the given information. Understanding of vocabulary, rhetorical tools, hunting for the required information while keeping the holistic picture in mind, etc are essential comprehension skills at play in this area. This topic has a lot of scope for testing of the moral and ethical dimension of decision making. Regarding questions on English
The English questions are not easy rather they are seemingly easy. If you compare English with say an area like Maths, then the differences are stark. Candidates from our Indian schooling systems have to do a lot of Maths in their syllabi. Parents, teachers and students work hard on Maths, but except for the initial focus on English during primary schooling, at later stages from standard 5 to 12 students are just handed a mandatory English reader (book), which has a few stories followed by some questions. Students can recall that during the high school and later stages they could study English for a few days before exam and could secure the desired score in English subject. So if you analyze, English is an area where our foundation is weak and candidates will have to put in an extra effort to match the standards of testing. Regarding questions on Quantitative ability CSAT, by virtue of being an Aptitude Test for Civil Services, will test students for their ability to play with numbers but not higher level Maths. A candidate who has passed 10th standard knows more Maths than is needed by the CSAT. Understanding and practicing various types of questions that can come in the exam is required initially, while later a candidate can focus on nding out what type of questions they most frequently make mistakes on and correcting themselves is required for the nal honing of quantitative skills. Ravi R. Chokkalingam at Rising IAS, argues differently. He says-It was a competition with relatively more proportion of easy questions rather than an easy exam. This competition is never going to be easy, as no. of people clearing PT to those having applied is still less than 3 per 100 applications and in a situation where a larger portion of questions are relatively easy, what matters is attempting the most relevant ones and the nal differentiator is the no. of questions done out of the ones that were not easy, as everyone is expected to solve more or less same no. of easy questions. So a strategy is needed for this competition rather than just thinking of
it as an exam like the college exam where everyone can have very good results if the paper is easy. As far as the paper goes the difculty level was only as expected, because, Firstly, the syllabus is basically of class 10th level. Secondly, this exam is intended for aspirants of different socioeconomic and educational back ground for a government service, rather than an elitist exam looking for only convent educated, English speaking and careerwise professionally trained urban class as in case of CAT, GMAT,GRE etc. Thirdly, this was rst time UPSC was introducing this exam, so it was very conventional in setting the paper as is reected by difculty level of questions and content sourcing for the comprehension questions which were mostly nationally recognized books and sources like Complete works of Mahatma Gandhi, The Discovery of India by Jawahar Lal Nehru, Economic Survey, articles from The Hindu newspaper and standard reference books on Indian Society etc. Lastly, this is not a test for a straightforward business management job dealing only with production, nances and sales marketing where much more quantitative and english language aptitude is required but for a diverse bouquet of careers ranging in administration, law and order, diplomacy, and various other civil services set in the socio economic and political environments. So based on all this, expectation for next years prelims are on the same lines as this years with the analytical - aptitude difculty level gradually increasing by 15 -20 %. When UPSC announced aptitude testing at the preliminary stage of the Civil Services examination, many students from the humanities background complained that this step would put them at disadvantage in comparison to students from engineering and commerce stream. We asked these faculty members if the perception has changed after the exam and almost everyone refuted the highly misplaced fears and perception of the students at the rst place itself.
INDIA PREPARES
The Unfolding
According to Mr. Brijendra Singh, CSAT has tried to create a level playing eld for all aspirants, regardless of their background. However irrespective of the stream, there are two categories of students who need to exercise caution- those who come from a non-english speaking background and those who do not have access to adequate study material. Success in an aptitude test depends upon diligent practice and regular testing. And this comes from having the right quality and an adequate quantity of exercises to train oneself through. Unfortunately, most of the literature available in the markets seeks to test a students knowledge rather than aptitude. This misplaced locus of efforts can be potentially fatal. For those who have not been exposed to aptitude tests, it would be advisable to procure the right study material, practice diligently and if possible, have someone to not just cross-check their answers with but also to learn effective tips to save time and improve accuracy from. Ravi R. Chokkalingam also agrees
Maths/Engineering background or put aspirants from humanities background at a disadvantage. Now, post the preliminary exam 2011, we have seen aspirants from Humanities stream clear and composed while handling Aptitude questions in class. CSAT PAPER-2011
Area Comprehension English Comprehension Basic Numeracy & Data Interpretation Verbal Reasoning General Mental Ability Decision Making Total No. of questions 27 9 19 4 13 8 80
interpretation. Thus, what is critical in Maths is speed and what is critical in English is accuracy. For English, students should start by incorporating a new dimension in their daily reading of the newspaper-read the editorial carefully, take note of the new words that you are unfamiliar with and summarize the editorial in your own words. This will go a long way in overcoming the impediments of a restricted vocabulary as also the mental-block we face while reading a piece from a new subject area. For Mathematics, start again with the basics-memorize multiplication tables and the roots/cubes/fractions/percentages etc. to gain speed in calculations. Next, revise the basic formulae and commit them to memory. Learn not just their derivation and their application but also the shortcuts that help avoid needlessly lengthy calculations. And then, practice! For Ravi R Chokkalingam, strategy is important. Prepare a strategy for the competition. Know your strong & weak areas, prepare the content only as per the limits of the syllabus, but emphasis should be on knowing ways to solve questions fast as only answers are needed and not the whole solution. Know which questions to attempt and which to leave. CSAT might have been introduced this year, but the General Studies paper which is called CSAT Paper I in the new exam scheme has been witnessing changes for last few years. It no longer tests the memorizing or recognition skills of the students, rather emphasizes an analytical approach. Also it is important to note that UPSC, along with the introduction of the Aptitude Paper at the Preliminary Examination, also made the following inclusions to the General studies paper:-General issues on Environmental ecology, Bio-diversity and Climate Change, and the Sustainable Development. According to Mr. V.P. Gupta, a closer look at last few years question papers will make us realize that the questions are becoming more practical in nature and being increasingly based on knowledge of current affairs and general
To score well in the CSAT paper, he further adds that in light of the Paper II 2011, it has become even more important to have a wide range of knowledge on various subjects and themes. In order to gain that, read voraciously and analytically through newspapers and magazines. In order to be good at Comprehension, a candidate must have the ability to understand the basic information given to solve a question / problem on the basis of some rules. Overall, since Paper II is not theoretical in nature, practice regularly, to clear your concepts, handle different type of questions with equal ease and improve your speed (reading as well as question solving speed). Mr. Brijendra Singh also emphasizes that practice is the key to success in paper II. Practice. And then practice some more. The domain of the syllabus does not exceed the requirements of a matriculate exam. But since all the questions are application-based and also since there is a constant paucity of time, the foremost need is to learn how to get to the correct solution in the shortest time possible. Maths is based on pure logic while English, being a language, is based upon
INDIA PREPARES
The Unfolding
awareness (which can only be acquired from voracious reading of newspapers and magazines). Such questions may require application of more than one concept/fact. Aspirants should develop an application based approach to do well in General Studies paper. Mr. Ravi R. Chokkalingam also concurs that G.S. is becoming more analysis based and with practical application orientation. Current affairs with much ner analysis is becoming more and more relevant from exam perspective as was visible in this years Prelims paper 1 also. G.S. preparation and objective analysis will prepare one, even for comprehension as passages there are taken from sources of relevance to GS. Practical application based approach is decreasing the importance of history, and Statistics, as was visible in last Mains paper. Such an approach is becoming more and more relevant even in mains optional papers. Mr. Brijendra Singh, Vajiram & Ravi
adds an interesting point while keeping the relevance of G.S. intact. He saysGeneral Studies continues to command the lions share of a students attention, effort and time. Its direct correlation with the Mains ensures that its relevance can never be undermined. However, regardless of a students calibre and the sincerity of his efforts, the sheer vastness of the GS syllabus makes it practically impossible to attempt more than 50% of the questions with condence. Add to that the penalty accrued by a wrong answer and the net score in the paper falls to a very modest level. In sharp contrast is the CSAT. The syllabus is well-dened, limited in scope and the level of difculty is moderate. Attempting even two-thirds of the questions with full accuracy is not a big task. What this then translates to is that even if the GS paper goes off at an average level, one can more than make up for it through the CSAT. This holds especially true for those sitting for their rst
attempt, where a crucial hurdle in the GS is being able to identify the right sources to study from. Using the CSAT as a muchneeded relief, one can catapult oneself from the ocean of aspirants sitting for the Prelims to the more exclusive group that get to write the Mains. The commensurate benets in terms of condence, a sense of purpose and having come one step closer to achieving your dream can hardly be overemphasized. The journey has just begun for CSAT. And we know its a long road ahead. We hope that this small endeavor by the team of India Prepares will prove highly helpful to the aspirants to prepare successfully for civil services examination. I would also like to thank all the students who participated in our workshop and whose opinions and concerns provided valuable inputs to this article. We wish all the students and aspirants Good Luck and success in life.
iphelpmail@gmail.com
INDIA PREPARES
National Bulletin
NATIONAL BULLETIN...
1) A motion addressed to the President signed by atleast 100 members of the Lok Sabha or 50 members of the Rajya Sabha is delivered to the Speaker or the Chairman. 2) The motion is to be investigated by a Committee of three (two SC judges and a distinguished jurist). 3) If the Committee nds the Judge guilty of misbehaviuor or that he suffers from incapacity the motion together with the report of the committee is taken up for consideration in the House where the motion is pending. 4) If the motion is passed in each Huse by majority of the total membership of that House and by a majority of not less than two-thirds of that House present and voting the address is presented to the President. 5) The Judge will be removed after the President gives his order for removal on the said address. Soumitra Sen of the Calcutta High court is the second judge after Justice V. Ramaswamy in 1993, to have
INDIA PREPARES
National Bulletin
NATIONAL NEWS
Triumph for Anna as Parliament backs key demands
In a historic gesture, the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha unanimously resolved to endorse three key ideas that social activist Anna Hazare had insisted be included in the draft Lokpal Bill, now being considered by Parliament. The sense of the House resolution adopted on 27th August night represented a stunning triumph for the fasting anti-corruption crusader who, just 12 days ago, had been arrested and jailed by a government fearful of the protest he was about to embark upon. The Parliamentary motions adopted by the traditional thumping of desks rather than a formal vote were preceded by an extraordinary debate on the issues related to corruption. The identically worded resolutions, which were read out by Union Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee at the end of the debate, said: The House discussed various issues relating to the setting up of a strong and effective Lokpal. This House agrees in principle on the following issues: (a) Citizens Charter, (b) Lower bureaucracy also to be under Lokpal through appropriate mechanism, (c) Establishment of a Lokayukta in the States; And further resolves to transmit the proceedings to the Departmentrelated Standing Committee for its perusal while formulating its recommendations for a Lokpal Bill. According to media reports on 27th of august 2011, the Lok Sabha Speaker has claried that thumping of desks conveys voice vote as well; If the House was unanimous in passing the resolution, there is no need for a vote. Nobody abstained, nobody disagreed. Thus, the Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee made a statement in the Lok Sabha which did not require any voting since it was agreed upon by all the parliamentarians by thumping of desks and hence this statement was adopted as a sense of the house resolution. Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha Arun Jaitley has said that though the sense of the House resolution passed by Parliament on the three demands of Team Anna is not binding on the Standing Committee, it is unlikely to reject it. He said, It is a commitment before the whole country. The chances of the House going back on it normally do not arise. Maintaining that it was only an in-principle acceptance of the three points raised by Team Anna, Mr. Jaitley said there was no proposer, no seconder, and no voting as was normally the case when a resolution was passed. conduct investigations, inspect, search and seize documents and objects from the sources of such radiation. The NSRA Bill 2011 gives the authority sweeping powers to carry out inspection or inquiry as may be necessary, and enter any building or place where the inquiry may lead to. It will enable establishment of a Council of Nuclear Safety (CNS), under the Prime Ministers chairmanship, to oversee and review the policies relating to radiation/nuclear safety. The decision to form a powerful NSRA with a chairperson (Supreme Court Judge or the Chief Justice of a High Court), two full-time members (eminent nuclear/atomic scientists) and four part-timers was taken by the union cabinet. The authority will replace the existing Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) and is in line with the governments commitment to create an independent regulator in the wake of the Fukushima nuclear disaster.
INDIA PREPARES
National Bulletin
Even Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes communities too have been affected in the latest draft which stipulates that 2.5 acres of land be given to members of these communities for each acre acquired from them. The provision is diluted in that earlier for each acre ve acres had been stipulated as compensation. The promised R&R for those surviving on the acquired land will now be applicable only to those who had been eking out a livelihood for at least three years on the said piece of land. Earlier all those sustaining themselves on the acquired piece of land were made eligible for compensation. In the eventuality of the acquired land not being put to use for the dened purpose within 10 years of acquisition, the same would now be transferred to the State land bank. The earlier proviso was to return the land to the farmer if the slated project failed to come up within ve years of acquisition. While the purpose for acquisition cant be changed, the Bill, however, now allows transfer of land with the approval of the State government and if the transfer is effected without the development of land then the farmers will have to be paid 20 per cent of the appreciated value. The Bill species timelines for the payment of compensation. The price of land has to be paid within three months of the award, the other monetary compensations within six months and the infrastructure entitlements under the R&R package within 18 months. Penalties will be levied on violation. The rural development ministry draft has relaxed its earlier proposal for total ban on acquisition of multi-crop land. Now, a maximum of 5% multi-crop land can be acquired in a district on the condition that equal area of degraded land would be developed. If net sown area is less than 50% of total land in a district, then only 10% of such land is open for acquisition for different projects.
the National Accreditation Regulatory Authority for Higher Educational Institutions Bill, 2010. To maintain academic quality, the Bill seeks to make it mandatory for every higher educational institution to be accredited by an independent accreditation agency. The Bill is now before Parliament. Prof. Ranganath said that at present, 162 universities and 5,000 colleges in the country had been accredited by the NAAC, an autonomous institution of the University Grants Commission.
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INDIA PREPARES
National Bulletin
(113th) Amendment Bill, which have already been approved by the Rajya Sabha.
while dealing with paid news, even when no consideration of cash and kind was involved in giving the candidates publicity. The new guideline would deal with advertisements taken out by candidates on television and cable channels owned by political parties or their functionaries and ofce-bearers.
National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project: Rs 1500 crore Approved for Cyclone Tracking in Coastal States
The Center has Okayed Rs 1,500 crore for a national cyclone risk mitigation project for coastal states for building up a network of apt forecasting apart from cyclone tracking and warning systems. The rst phase of the project will be implemented in the next ve years and will be piloted from Andhra Pradesh and Odisha to start with. Important milestones in the project will involve upgraded cyclone forecasting system and capacity building in multi-hazard risk management.
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Maharashtra Government to introduce tree credits, village forests to improve green cover
The Maharashtra government will soon introduce the concepts of tree credit and village forests to improve green cover in the state. Both initiatives will be implemented by the social forestry department (SFD). Elaborating on both concepts, Nitin Raut, minister for EGS and water conservation, said that Maharashtra would be the rst state to introduce them. These concepts aim to improve the green cover of the state.
INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
INTERNATIONAL BULLETIN...
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INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
the reports of widespread looting and mayhem that ensued, one sees another Iraq or an Afghanistan in the making. After the rebels and their NATO military advisers marched into Tripoli on August 21, the capital has been without essential supplies, including drinking water and electricity. Places of worship, including the oldest Greek Orthodox Church in North Africa, have been ransacked. Hundreds of bodies have been left rotting on the streets and in hospitals. Hospitals have been bereft of essential equipment and medicines. The rebel forces have gone on a looting spree while NATO helicopters and planes continued attacking progovernment holdouts in the capital until late August. The African Union and many leading countries in the world have not recognized the rump government that NATO seeks to put in place in Tripoli. Only 40 countries had recognized the NTC, which consists of former close associates of Qaddas, Western intelligence assets and Islamists, as of early September. The A.U. issued a statement in the last week of August calling for the setting up of an inclusive transitional government that would include representatives from the previous government. The A.U. had repeatedly called for peaceful negotiations to end the ghting ever since the NATOinstigated war started. The Venezuelan president Hugo
Chavez termed the war as imperial madness after the fall of Tripoli and once again accused the U.S. and European countries of fomenting internal conict to seize control of the countrys oil riches. Since the imposition of no-y zone over Libya, there were little doubts, if any, about Wests intentions. The aerial attacks and covert ground activities were focused entirely on regime change with France and U.K. having their sights on lucrative oil contracts and multi billion dollar defence deal. Muammar Qadda may have gone but there arent any tangible signs of leadership as yet. During Muammar Gaddas 42-year rule, Libya had made great strides socially and economically thanks to its vast oil income. Women in Libya are free to work and to dress as they like, subject to family constraints. Life expectancy is in the seventies. And per capita income - while not as high as could be expected given Libyas oil wealth and relatively small population of 6.5m - is estimated at $12,000 (9,000), according to the World Bank. Illiteracy has been almost wiped out, as has homelessness - a chronic problem in the pre-Gadda era, where corrugated iron shacks dotted many urban centres around the country. Guns, not civilian politics, are currently determining Libyas future, and could yet precipitate a squabble for the countrys tantalizingly rich resources. SYRIA
The task of proving that the Arab world without its dictators is a better place may yet be a tortuous struggle. Yemen and Jordan, where the rate of unemployment is the highest, also witnessed big anti-government demonstrations but to no big overhauls. It is interesting to note that the revolt in the Arab world was not merely against a resident dictator but a worldwide economic tyranny designed by the US Treasury and imposed by the US Agency for International Development, the IMF and World Bank, which had ensured that rich countries like Egypt are reduced to vast sweatshops, with half the population earning less than $2 a day. The ght was as much for bread as it was for freedom from dictatorship. If issues like poverty, unemployment, high prices and recession are slipped under the cover, the entire revolution would mean little. The revolution sparked by Bouazizis death is far from over. Regimes might have been toppled but democracy is yet to see the light of the day. Poverty, unemployment, corruption, high prices are the factors that will dene and direct these insurrectionary currents in the long and stable terms. And to free themselves from the clutches of Western Corporate plunder would be a more arduous task for these nations than the political turnovers. The series of protests and demonstrations across the Middle East and North Africa has become known as the Arab Spring,and sometimes as the Arab Spring and Winter,Arab Awakeningor Arab Uprisingseven though not all participants in protests identify as Arab.
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TUNISIA MOROCOO JORDAN ALGERIA LIBYA EGYPT SAUDI ARABIA OMAN IRAQ
BAHRAIN
YEMEN
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International Bulletin
AND DATE OF STARTING STARTING The demonstrations were precipitated by high 18-12-2010 Revolution on 14 unemployment, food ination, corruption, January 2011 lack of freedom of speech and other forms of Protests subdued political freedom, and poor living conditions. since March 2011
Ousting of President Ben Ali and Revolution Prime Minister Ghannouchi Dissolution of the RCD, the former ruling party of Tunisia and liquidation of its assets Release of political prisoners Elections to a Constituent Assembly on 23 October 2011.
LIBYA
Muammar Gadda was the de-facto ruler of Libya 17-02-2011 Ongoing since he led a military coup that overthrew King Idris I in 1969. He abolished the Libyan Constitution of 1951, and adopted laws based on his own ideology. A leaked diplomatic cable describes Libyan economy as a kleptocracy in which the government either the al-Qadha family itself or its close political allies has a direct stake in anything worth buying, selling or owning. Gadda amassed a vast personal fortune during his 42-year rule. An estimated 20.74% of Libyan citizens were unemployed, and about one-third lived below the national poverty line. Hosni Mubarak became head of Egypts semi- 25-01-2011 Revolution on 11 presidential republic government following February 2011 the 1981 assassination of President Anwar Protests ongoing El Sadat, and continued to serve until 2011. Mubaraks 30-year reign made him the longest serving President in Egypts history, with his National Democratic Party (NDP) government maintaining one-party rule under a continuous state of emergency. Basic resons for the protests were-Police brutality; Corruption in government elections and ofcials; Restrictions on free speech and press; Demographic, economic and poor living challenges Demonstrators initially protested against 03-02-2011 Ongoing governmental proposals to modify the constitution of Yemen, unemployment and economic conditions, and corruption, but their demands soon included a call for the resignation of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who had been facing internal opposition from his closest advisors since 2009.
Overthrow of Gadda; Gaddas whereabouts are currently unknown. Opposition forces seize control of numerous Libyan cities, including the capital, Tripoli. Formation of the National Transitional Council UN-mandated NATO, Jordanian, Qatari, Swedish, and Emirati military intervention
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EGYPT
Ousting of President Mubarak and Prime MinistersNazif and Shak; Assumption of power by the Armed Forces; Suspension of the Constitution, dissolution of the Parliament; Disbanding of State Investigations Service; Security
Revolution
Dissolution of the NDP, the former ruling party of Egypt and transfer of its assets to the state[ Prosecution of Mubarak, his family and his former ministers. Resignation of MPs from the ruling Sustained civil party disorder and On 4th June, President Ali Abdullah governmental Saleh and 35 members of his family, changes as well as the prime minister and the Speaker of the Yemeni parliament, leave Yemen for Saudi Arabia. As of 31 August, Saleh has not returned to Yemen. Vice President Abd al-Rahman Mansur al-Haditakes over as Acting President on 4 June 2011.
YEMEN
SYRIA
Protesters have been calling for political 15-03-2011 Ongoing reforms and the reinstatement of civil rights, as well as an end to the state of emergency which has been in place since 1963.Brutality by Syrian security forces
Sustained civil disorder and End of Emergency Law; governmental Military action in Hama, Daraa and other changes areas;
INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
OMAN
Demanding salary increases and a lower cost of living and an end to corruption and better distribution of oil revenue.
17-01-2011
Ended may 11
Economic concessions by Sultan Qaboos; Dismissal of ministers; Granting of lawmaking powers to Omans elected legislature Economic concessions by King Abdullah; Male-only municipal elections to be held 22 September 2011
SAUDI ARABIA
In Saudi Arabia hundreds of people protested against the poor infrastructure in Jeddah following ooding. At the same time, an online campaign began calling for major political and economic changes. On 5 February, forty women demonstrated for the release of prisoners held without trial. Against economic government policies of the
21-01-2011
Protests
JORDAN
14 January 2011
Ongoing
King Abdullah II dismisses Prime Protests and go v e r n me nt a l Minister Rifai and his cabinet; changes
by and King Protests governmental
MOROCCO
Demand for political reforms and King Mohammed to relinquish some of his power.
20-02-2011
Limited after 1 Political concessions July 2011 Mohammed VI; Referendum reforms; on
constitu-tional changes
Respect to civil rights and an end to corruption BAHRAIN The 2011 protests in Bahrain were initially aimed at achieving greater political freedom and respect for human rights, and later on intended to end the monarchy. 14-01-2011 Ongoing Economic concessions by King Hamad; Release of political prisoners; GCC intervention at the request of the Government of Bahrain Sustained civil disorder and go v e r n me nt a l changes
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IRAQ
Hundreds of protesters gathered in several major urban areas (notably Baghdad and Karbala) on 12 February, demanding a more effective approach to national security, to the investigation of federal corruption cases, as well as increased government involvement in making public services fair and accessible. Protests began in Algiers over the lack of housing, quickly escalating to violent confrontations with the police.
10-02-2011
Ongoing
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki announces that he will not run for a 3rd term in 2014; Resignation of provincial governors and local authorities
Major protests.
ALGERIA
28-12-2010
Major protests
INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
Bhattarai is new Nepal Prime Minister
Prime Minister Jhalanath Khanal resigned on August 14, 2011, in accordance with the ve-point agreement signed among the top political parties in May. After this, Nepals legislature-parliament elected, a 57-year-old scholar who has done his doctorate in Jawaharlal Nehru University, Baburam Bhattarai, Vice-Chairman of the Unied Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist), as new Prime Minister. The Maoists were supported by the United Democratic Madhesi Front (UDMF), an alliance of ve Madhesi parties. In the House of 594 MPs, 575 members participated in the election and around 340 voted for Dr. Bhattarai, helping him secure a simple majority. The other candidate, Nepali Congress Parliamentary Party leader Ram Chandra Poudel, got 235 votes. Lumbin is a Buddhist pilgrimage site in the Rupandehi district of Nepal. It is the place where Queen Mayadevi gave birth to Siddhartha Gautama, who as the Buddha Gautama founded the Buddhist tradition. The Buddha lived between roughly 563 and 483 BCE. Lumbini is one of four magnets for pilgrimage that sprang up in places pivotal to the life of the Buddha, the others being at Kushinagar, Bodh Gaya, and Sarnath. A Non-governmental organization called Asia Pacic Exchange and Cooperation Foundation (APECF) backed by the Chinese government and a UN group called United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) tried to sign a deal to develop Lumbini into a special development zone with funds worth $3 billion. The venture was a China-UN joint project.
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International Bulletin
pinpoint the sources of the Brahmaputra and Indus rivers using satellite images, and have found that the length and drainage areas of both rivers exceeded earlier estimates. Researcher form the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), an ofcial think-tank in Beijing, used remote-sensing satellite images and data from several expeditions to the Tibetan plateau to map the sources of the Brahmaputra, Indus, Salween and Irrawaddy rivers. They located the source of the Brahmaputra, or Yarlung Tsangpo as it is known in Tibet, on the Angsi glacier on the northern side of the Himalayas, in the Tibetan country of Burang. The source of the river was earlier thought to be on the Chemayungdung glacier, further south. Indus rivers headstream was mapped near Mount Kailash in Tibet, 30 km away from where its source was earlier thought to be. The team used remotesensing images provided by the U.S. Landsat satellite and the French SPOT satellite to map the Qinghai-Tibet plateau.
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INDIA PREPARES
International Bulletin
France went into damage-limitation mode following a blast at a nuclear re-processing plant, which killed one person and injured four. France is one of the worlds leading exporters of nuclear technology and authorities were quick to minimize the seriousness of the explosion.
bound aid ship, Mavi Marmara. In that assault, one Turkish origin American and eight Turkish activists were killed. Turkey also opposes a deal between Cyprus and Israel to drill offshore for natural gas with the participation of some American companies. Turkey wants the project to be put on hold till the Cyprus issue, which has deep historical roots, is resolved.
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INDIA PREPARES
Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
BILATERAL/MULTILATERAL BULLETIN...
PMs Visit to Bangladesh : Teesta didnt happen, but a lot else did.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singhs visit to Bangladesh (6-7 September 2011), the rst bilateral visit by an Indian Prime Minister in 12 years to the neighbouring country, carried a heavy load of expectations. The previous bilateral visit by an Indian Prime Minister to Dhaka was in 1999 when Atal Behari Vajpayee went over to inaugurate the Dhaka-Kolkata bus service. But not since the visit of Indira Gandhi has there been a sojourn to Dhaka by an Indian Prime Minister with such an impressive menu on the consolidation and expansion of bilateral relations as Dr Singhs in September 2011. It is, therefore, all the more unfortunate that the last-minute hitch in an agreement on sharing the Teestas waters (and the withdrawal of the West Bengal chief minister from the Prime Ministers team) should have inevitably engaged the primary attention of the media. Understandable in terms of news worthiness, it detracted attention from the 10 agreements and Memorandum of Understandings (details in box) which were signed during the visit along with the 65-clause joint statement that details the steps taken by the countries in the fullment of their commitments and the appreciation of each for the steps taken by the other. Bangladesh, several agreement of importance to India, viz, Agreements on Mutual Legal Assistance on Criminal Matters, Transfer of Sentenced Persons, On Combating International Terrorism, Organised Crime and Illicit Drug Trafcking, have been ratied and are now in force. The two Prime Ministers noted with satisfaction that the following decisions owing from the Joint Communiqu of January 2010 had been implemented: a) Dredging of the river Ichhamati along the common reach between Angrail and Kalanchi bridges has been completed; b) The river bank protection works along Mahananda, Karatoa, Nagar, Kulik, Atrai, Dharla, Punarbhaba, Feni, Khowai, Surma etc. are being carried out in phases. The Prime Minister of India reiterated the assurance that India would not take steps on the Tipaimukh project1 that would adversely impact Bangladesh. The ofcial talks between Bangladesh and India were held on 6 September 2011 in an extremely warm, cordial and friendly atmosphere. During the ofcial talks, the Prime Minister of India was assisted by External Affairs Minister, Shri S M Krishna, Chief Minister of Assam, Shri Tarun Gogoi, Chief Minister of Meghalaya, Dr. Mukul Sangma, Chief Minister of Mizoram, Shri Lal Thanhawla, Chief Minister of Tripura, Shri Manik Sarkar, National Security Advisor, Shri Shivshankar Menon, Foreign Secretary, Shri Ranjan Mathai, High Commissioner of India to Bangladesh, Shri Rajeet Mitter, Secretary Ministry of Water Resources, Shri Dhruv Vijai Singh and other senior ofcials. The two Prime Ministers welcomed that there has been progress on the principles and modalities of interim agreements on sharing of waters of Teesta and Feni Rivers on fair and equitable basis. They directed the concerned ofcials to work towards concluding the agreements at the earliest. The Prime Minister of India, on behalf of the Government and people of India, conveyed appreciation to the Government of Bangladesh for conferring the Bangladesh Swadhinata Sammanona (Bangladesh Freedom Honour), the highest Award of Bangladesh for foreign nationals, on former Prime
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1. The Tipaimukh Hydroelectric Project is being constructed near the conuence of Barak and Tuivai rivers, in Manipur, India and within 100km of Bangladesh border. The 164 meter high dam will have a rm generation capacity of 401.25MW of electricity. While Hydroelectric projects are typically considered greener than other power generation options in short term, it has signicant long-term impact to the environment like changes in the ecosystem, destroying nearby settlements and changing habitat conditions of people, sh and wildlife. Especially in the densely populated countries like India and Bangladesh, where rivers are lifelines, projects like Tipaimukh will create adverse effect to a huge number of population and their habitats. No wonder right from the start this project faced protests from potentially affected people in India, and from the downstream neighbour Bangladesh.
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Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
Minister of India, Smt. Indira Gandhi, for her extraordinary contribution to the historic Liberation War of Bangladesh. The Prime Ministers noted that the Joint Rivers Commission (JRC), Secretary and technical level meetings were discussing various aspects relating to sharing of waters of the Manu, Muhuri, Khowai, Gumti, Dharla and Dudhkumar rivers. The two Prime Ministers underscored the need to conclude an Extradition Treaty between the two countries. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina expressed deep appreciation of the Government of Bangladesh for facilitating 24-hour unfettered access to Bangladesh nationals through the Tin Bigha Corridor1. The Prime Ministers agreed to promote trade, investment and economic cooperation in a sustainable manner and facilitate trade by road, rail, inland waterways, shipping and air. Both sides underscored the need to increase trade volumes and address trade imbalance. Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh announced the decision of the Government of India to remove all forty six textile lines which are of interest to Bangladesh from Indias Negative List for LDCs under the provisions of SAFTA, thereby reducing the applicable duty rate to zero with immediate effect. Bangladesh has long complained that trade with India was grossly unequal with India selling about $ 3 billion in goods to Bangladesh against the latters export of about $ 400 million business in jute, ammonia and garments. Bangladeshs industry chambers claim they face high Indian non-tariff barriers, including compulsory testing of all exports, delays and poor infrastructure at border crossings, limited transport routes and hassles in obtaining
Indian business visas, which increase business costs for them. Earlier attempts to accede to Dhakas request had been stalled by the Indian textile mills, most of them located in the Tirupur-CoimbatoreSalem-Erode in Tamil Nadu and Ludhiana in Punjab. The two Prime Ministers welcomed the opening of BanglabandhaFulbari Land Port for bilateral trade between Bangladesh and India. They also expressed satisfaction at the Indian initiative to develop seven Integrated Check Posts (ICPs), and noted that this would facilitate trade between the two countries. Banglabandha is a major inland port in northern Bangladesh established to provide a trade link with India, Nepal and Bhutan. The three nations are separated by 52 km of Indian Territory, known as the Siliguri Corridor. The Indian Prime Minister appreciated the announcement of the Bangladesh PM regarding the establishment of a Special Economic Zone for Indian investments. The Prime Ministers noted with satisfaction the operationalisation of Ashuganj and Silghat as additional Ports of Call under the bilateral Inland Water Transit and Trade Protocol. Also they expressed satisfaction at the programmes orgainsed for the joint celebrations to commemorate the 150th birth anniversary of Rabindranath Tagore. They directed ofcials of both sides to remain engaged in the joint effort and take it to a successful conclusion in May 2012. It was agreed that the 90th Anniversary of the publication of Bidrohi by Poet Nazrul Islam would be jointly celebrated. Bangladesh PM conveyed her intention to set up a Bangladesh Bhaban in Shantiniketan as a resource centre
for use of the visiting academicians and researchers from Bangladesh. The Prime Ministers expressed satisfaction at the utilisation of the US$ 1 billion Line of Credit extended by India and noted that it would signicantly enhance infrastructure and capacities in Bangladesh. The credit would nance a number of projects identied by Bangladesh, including for supply of BG locomotives, tank wagons, passenger coaches and infrastructure projects such as Khulna-Mongla rail line and rail bridges over Titas and Bhairab rivers for strengthening Bangladesh Railways, purchase of buses for Dhaka city public transportation and dredgers for capital and maintenance dredging of Bangladesh rivers.
No transit agreement
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It was even before the visit of Indian PM, that Bangladesh ruled out inking any transit agreement with India, even as it said a major treaty on rail and waterways will be signed to increase connectivity. According to Mr Gowher Rizvi (Prime Minister Sheikh Hasinas foreign affairs adviser), no transit agreement was needed to be signed since Bangladesh and India already had bilateral trade agreement of 1974 that envisaged transit facilities through rail, road and water ways. Asked about the tentative time to allow India to use the transit facility he said at this moment our roads are not all ready. First, transit through waterways will be operationalise, then railway and later on road. What Bangladesh now needs is to construct infrastructure, roads, rail tracks, bridges and expansion of ports facilities and xed the transit fees. We are now working on modalities of the transit, he said. Regarding the transit fees he said a committee of experts has submitted its
1. The Tin Bigha Corridor is a strip of land formerly belonging to India on the West BengalBangladesh border which has been leased indenitely to Bangladesh so that it can access its DahagramAngarpota enclaves. The corridor was previously open for 12 daylight hours only, causing major distress including death of the inhabitants of the enclave, given the fact that the enclave has no hospitals or law enforcement facilities.
INDIA PREPARES
Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
report to the government but declined to elaborate on it immediately. Transit through Bangladesh, remained to be a contentious issue as BNP and its rightwing allies were opposed to the facility for security and economic concerns, an argument rejected by mainstream nancial and security analysts. Off late, BNP, however, apparently softened its stance saying they were not opposed to the connectivity if it did not compromise the countrys interest but all transit related deals have to be made public and discussed in parliament. Begum Khaleda Zia, the Bangladeshi opposition leader, is against giving India a corridor to the states and the right to use the ports because she feels it would give India an upper hand over Bangladesh. India, in July 2011, pressed Bangladesh for transit rights to its landlocked north-eastern states. There is nothing to be feared by giving these transits. Transit is only for peaceful purposes, Indias External Affairs Minister, SM Krishna said at the Bangladesh Institute of International and Strategic Studies during his 3 day visit to Bangladesh in July 2011. He assured that if Bangladesh gave connectivity to India through its territory it could gain market access to the northeastern Indian states. Bangladesh also suspects that India would use the transit rights to ferry weapons to northeastern states to combat insurgency.
l
Banerjee refused to accompany PM Manmohan Singh to Bangladesh. River Teesta, which begins its journey in Sikkim, ows through north Bengal before entering Bangladesh. The other river on the India-Bangladesh discussion table is the Feni. The Feni, which ows 135 km south of Tripura capital Agartala, has been in dispute since 1934. In a total catchment area of 1,147 square km of the river, 535 sq km falls in India and the rest in Bangladesh. India and Bangladesh have 2,979 km of land border and 1,116 km of riverine boundaries. The Indian states of West Bengal, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Assam and Tripura share the 4,095-km border with Bangladesh.
taken a tough stance against them, satisfying one of Indias major longstanding demands. India, for its part, has also given strong instructions to its Border Security Force against shooting unarmed Bangladeshi civilians along the border areas even if they were found crossing the borders illegally. By restoring trans-border connectivity via the northeast, India and Bangladesh will be laying the groundwork for larger regional economic integration involving Nepal, Bhutan and Myanmar. The Awami League government of Bangladesh appeared genuinely keen to forge a relationship of trust and cooperation with India. The joint statement issued after Prime Minister Sheikh Hasinas visit to India in January 2010 was remarkable in the range of issues and subjects covered. Both countries have worked assiduously to provide substance to the expectations aroused and India appeared to have been roused from its non-productive pre-occupation with Pakistan and willing to engage meaningfully with its eastern neighbour. The positives from Singhs Dhaka visit are substantial. Much baggage from the past has been frontally tackled and disposed of. The vexed and unseemly question of access across Tin Bigha has been nally been put to rest. The issues of adverse possession, enclaves and boundary demarcation have been resolved, making possible the ratication of the Indira-Mujib land boundary agreement of 1974 and providing, at last, relief to the thousands who have been virtually stateless for decades. Regrettably, the many positive gains from the visit were overshadowed by the last-minute deletion of the sharing of the Teesta waters from the agenda. This, in turn, led to lack of progress on transit. Foreign policy is not fashioned in the abstract and its primary function has to be the protection and promotion of national interests. In this case, preserving West Bengals interests in the ows of the Teesta has to be taken into account by
Final analysis
If what is said is converted into action, Prime Minister Manmohan Singhs visit to Dhaka, can be a new beginning for the eastern sub-region of South Asia including Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal and India (BBNI). Indeed, the Dhaka visit could well become this years most important foreign policy initiative by Dr Singh. While relations and connectivities between the people of the two countries, as also trade, have ourished over the years, that between governments have often verged on being frosty. Indias chief concern has been the use of Bangladeshi territory by North-eastern insurgents, often believed, with the collaboration of state agencies. On this issue, the Awami League government has sought to both provide assurances and take action to allay Indian concerns. The issue of jihadi terrorism has also been a concern for India, though of this, Bangladesh itself has been a victim, even if the coalition compulsions of past governments of Dhaka made it look the other way. Insurgents operating in Indians north-east have tended to nd a safe haven in Bangladesh for some decades now but the Hasina government has
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Water Disputes
Bangladesh, a country, surrounded on three sides by India, is a gigantic delta formed by the alluvial deposits of the three rivers: the Ganges, the Brahmaputra and the Meghna. There are more than 300 rivers in Bangladesh of which 57 are trans-boundary Rivers. Out of the 57 trans-boundary rivers, 54 are common with India and remaining 3 with Myanmar. It was over the nal draft of the Teesta water sharing agreement that the West Bengals chief minister Mamata
INDIA PREPARES
Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
the central government in any steps, it might wish to take. There is, however, another consideration that is, equally to be kept in mind. Teesta is an international river and India cannot take the view that it has an absolute right over its ows to the exclusion of the interests of others. This would be morally repugnant and legally non-sustainable, even if there may not be any binding treaties on the sharing of river waters. As the combined requirements of India and Bangladesh are clearly in excess of the current dry season ows, a formula has to be evolved which seeks to share the shortage until such time as the ows can be augmented, if that were
possible. As the Indian state with the longest border with Bangladesh, besides many other connectivities, West Bengal has a direct stake in fostering close relations between India and Bangladesh. It cannot, of course, be expected to ignore the interests of its own farmers. But one may hope that in the discussions to follow in the coming days, the shortfalls and requirements on the other side of the border would be duly considered. Prime Minister Singhs visit has sought to lay the foundation of a new edice of relationship between India and Bangladesh by rebinding the historic links. It has envisaged partnership in a broad sweep of interests. The agreements
and declarations hold out the possibility of good neighbourly relations on a scale as yet unmatched in South Asia. It would be critically important to ensure that these ideas are matched by sustained engagement and delivery. References 1. Beginning with Dhaka, August 31, 2011, Indian Express: C. Raja Mohan 2. Ministry of external affairs website 3. Big gains in Dhaka, over to Bengal for Teesta, September 10, 2011 Telegraph: Deb Mukharji, 4. Press Trust of India Website 5. A visit that failed to achieve its promise, Harsh V Pant.
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Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
It might seem that this is a small price to pay for India to x its wonky border. Sorting out the border between India and Bangladesh, particularly making the West Bengal-Bangladesh border contiguous, brings practical benets to both nations and irons out irritants which had persisted in bilateral dealings since 1974. As Dr Singh emphasised in his Dhaka University speech, the destinies of the nations of South Asia are interlinked and the future should bring common prosperity and fullment. But for that, the sovereign reality of our borders must be turned into frontiers of hope and opportunity, and effective border management remains the biggest bilateral challenge. So, a dened and peaceful boundary, as the enclaves agreement seeks to demarcate, is the stepping stone to the essential stability for cross-border cooperation. Enclave: In political geography, an enclave is a territory whose geographical boundaries lie entirely within the boundaries of another territory.For example, Dohala Khagrabari, is an Indian enclave in Bangladeshs Nilphamari district and Dohogram Angorpotha, a Bangladeshi enclave in Lalmonirhat zila of West Bengal. There are 111 Indian enclaves inside Bangladesh and 51 Bangladeshi ones inside India with a combined population of 51,000. 3) Addendum to the MOU between India and Bangladesh to Facilitate Overland Transit Trafc between Bangladesh and Nepal; On August 15, 1978, India and Bangladesh entered into a MOU to facilitate overland transit trafc between Bangladesh and Nepal. Both countries under the addendum (Something added or to be added, especially a supplement to a book) to this MOU have agreed to add new rail routes for facilitating overland transit trafc between Bangladesh and Nepal. Accordingly: Trafc in Transit to/from Nepal and Bangladesh shall move through Indian territory by rail using Singhabad Railway station in India and Rohanpur Railway station in Bangladesh with their existing facilities. The existing rail route through Radhikapur Railway station in India and Birol Railway station in Bangladesh which has been suspended shall be brought into operation by converting Bangladesh portion into broad gauge. In this case, both the routes (proposed and the existing) shall be used for Nepal Transit Trafc by rail for additional operating convenience. 4) MOU on Renewable Energy Cooperation; Cooperation under this Memorandum of Understanding may take the following modalities: Exchange and training of scientic and technical personnel; Exchange of scientic and technological available information and data; Development of joint research or technical projects on subjects of mutual interest; Exchange visit of Government ofcials and technical experts for sharing of experiences on renewable energy practices, policies, framework, incentive and technologies with nancing mechanism; In order to coordinate the above-mentioned activities and decide upon project proposals related to design and development of various new and renewable energy technologies such as, but not restricted to, Solar Energy, Wind Energy and Bio-Energy, the Parties intend to establish a Joint Working Group. 5) MOU on Conservation of the Sunderban; Both the Governments are parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity 1992 and are contracting parties to the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands 1971 and the Sundarban of India and Bangladesh represent a single ecosystem divided between the two countries. The wildlife sanctuaries of the Sundarban located in both countries is recognized as UNESCOs World Heritage Site and in Bangladesh as Ramsar site as well. The MOU basically pertains to the monitoring, conservation and protection of the rich biodiversity of the region and also to encourage mangrove regeneration, habitat restoration and rehabilitation programs, which would eventually increase the potential for carbon sequestration. A Working Group will be set up to dene activities, responsibilities, time, and resources involved, according to the activities established as per this Memorandum. 6) Protocol on Conservation of the Royal Bengal Tigers of the Sunderban; Sunderban, is an excellent tiger habitat and the largest sanctuary for the Royal Bengal Tiger in the world. It is necessary to intensify the efforts for the safety of the species. Therefore, India and Bangladesh have agreed to following points: Both countries will undertake bilateral scientic and research projects to promote their understanding and knowledge of the Sunderbans Royal Bengal Tiger including habitat and will develop information systems, share research data and conduct joint research;
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INDIA PREPARES
Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
Will undertake patrolling of the Sunderban waterways on their respective sides to prevent poaching or smuggling of derivatives from wildlife; A special committee will be constituted in each country to examine human casualties that take place in the Sunderban by tiger attacks with a view to sharing experiences from either side, and to act in consultation with the other side, if necessary. 7) MOU on Cooperation in the eld of Fisheries; Ministry of Agriculture of India and the Ministry of Fisheries and Livestock of Bangladesh, have agreed to promote development of co-operation in sheries, aquaculture and allied activities between the two countries through joint activities, programmes, exchange of scientic materials, information and personnel. A Joint Working Group (JWG) shall be formed to provide guidance, review the progress of activities and to facilitate cooperation under this Memorandum. The Joint Working Group Meeting shall be arranged every year alternately in India and Bangladesh. 8) MOU on Cooperation on Mutual Broadcast of Television Programmes; Both countries have agreed on the following points: Doordarshan, India and Bangladesh Television (BTV) of National Broadcasting Authority (NBA), will enter into detailed agreement to make available for mutual broadcast of general programmes. Doordarshan and BTV of National Broadcasting Authority (NBA) may broadcast live, any specic event such as visit of High Dignitaries or any cultural event of bilateral importance through an arrangement of sharing of signals. They may also exchange programmes on Education either free of cost or on nancial terms agreed between the Parties. 9) MOU between Jawaharlal Nehru University and Dhaka University; Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, (hereinafter called JNU) and University of Dhaka (hereinafter called DU) established, under this MOU a formal understanding to cooperate in following areas:
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Exchange of faculty members; Exchange of students; Joint research activities; Exchange of academic materials and other information; Special short-term academic programmes; Joint cultural Programmes. 10) MOU on Academic Cooperation between National Institute of Fashion Technology (NIFT), India and Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) Institute of Fashion Technology (BIFT) The objective of this agreement is to encourage international cooperation, and strengthening two institutes in the following areas: NIFT will provide a semester study for BIFT students while BIFT will facilitate NIFT students to carry out Internship and Graduation Project/ Research Project in Apparel Industry in Bangladesh; Faculty training program for BIFT; Exposure to workshops, exhibitions and conducting special lectures; Joint industrial projects and joint research activities.
INDIA PREPARES
Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
Bilateral/Multilateral News
India- South Korea Cooperation: India to Reopen shortly take the necessary initiative in opening up trade with India. India has ofcially ruled out moving to the WTO against CEPA
Days after having inked a civil nuclear agreement with South Korea, India will reopen the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) to make it more contemporary and further strengthen trade ties with the East Asian tiger. The rst round of talks on upgrading the CEPA will begin soon, with an Indian team due to visit Seoul. Since 2009, when the India-South Korea CEPA was sealed, both countries have shed their cautiousness and offered better terms to other nations. India has offered lower tariffs to other countries with which it has made similar agreements, while South Korea too has been more liberal in offering access to other countries. Trade with South Korea stood at $7.1 billion in 2006. The CEPA propelled it to $17.5 billion in 2010 an increase of 46 per cent over the previous year, with growth rates of exports being the same for both countries. The expectation from bilateral trade this year is $21 billion very much on course to touch the target of $30 billion set for 2014. Pakistan for not granting MFN status as Indian diplomats have informed the European trade ofcials that India wanted Islamabad to do so without any external pressure
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INDIA PREPARES
Bilateral/Multilateral Bulletin
sparked by the death of an Afro-Caribbean youth in a police shoot-out in the north London suburb of Tottenham, quickly spread to other areas London and then to several cities.
offered to share its missile defence technology with India to build its capability to shoot down incoming enemy missiles, realizing the commonality of threats faced by the 28-nation grouping and South Asias pre-eminent power. India, thus, becomes the only nation, apart from Russia, outside of the NATO that the US-led military alliance is willing to work in the critical missile defence technology sector. The NATO missile defence project, launched in May 2001, aims to work with member-countries to meet the groups responsibility of defending itself from missile attacks. India too is in the process of developing its own ballistic missile defence system based on its Prithvi ballistic missile platform considering the missile threats it faces from rivals in the region. Indias BMD programme, launched in the middle of the previous decade, is a two-tiered shield system consisting of two interceptor missiles -- the Prithvi Air Defence (PAD) missile for high altitude interception, and the Advanced Air Defence (AAD) missile for lower altitude interception. It tested the PAD for the rst time in November 2006 and the AAD in December 2007. With these tests, India became the fourth country to have successfully tested the anti-missile system after the US, Russia and Israel. However, the Indian BMD, mainly focusing to counter missiles with less than 5,000-km range, is far from being perfected and further tests of the BMD system are being planned.
Foreign Secretary Mathai undertakes rst ofcial visit - meets King of Bhutan 26
Foreign Secretary Shri Ranjan Mathai, was in Bhutan (1719 August 2011), on his rst ofcial visit abroad after assuming charge on August 1, 2011 with a two year term. Prior to this assignment, he served as the Indian Ambassador to France. Ranjan Mathai is a 1974 batch Indian Foreign Service Ofcer. He succeeds Nirupama Rao, who is now Indias Ambassador to the United States of America. He has served in Indian Embassies in Vienna, Colombo, Washington, Tehran and Brussels.
INDIA PREPARES
Economy@IP
ECONOMY@IP...
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Economy@IP
global economy, with the health of the US economy a critical factor. Japan, still recovering from the consequences of the nuclear fallout in March, can illafford to have a trade imbalance to add to its woes. Secondly, the worlds reserve currency has lost credibility, with South Koreas actions suggesting an erosion of condence in the greenback, and a need for stability in the market to prevent further landslides. The scenario of a nancial domino effect worldwide is threatening to become reality. A crashing US economy would not only hurt other individual economies but also have implications for overall global stability. The question is whether there will be alternatives to stem the tide of possible nancial disarray. Effect on dollar World trade is now a game in which the US produces dollars and the rest of the world produces things that dollars can buy. All the central banks need to accumulate dollars to sustain their undervalued currency and comparative advantage in trade. So what happens if the federal government goes bankrupt and the dollars become worthless? This is really a wakeup call to all. The
world needs to decouple its well being from the US decit. We cant delay the inevitable forever, or else next time it will be more than just a close call. We need to be prepared for a world without the dollar as the dominant reserve currency and global vehicle currency, and without the US consumption economy as the vital export growth engine. We need the Euro to step up and take more responsibilities over from the dollar; we need China to unleash a consumer economy to help solve the grievous global imbalance. Otherwise the world economy will continue functioning by inertia until the dollar and the US consumer economy wont support the weight placed on them no more. The world has prospered on the debtfueled credit binge in the US for decades. All good things come to an end. In fact, the dollar hegemony has become increasingly scally and monetarily unsustainable to the US itself. The dollar hegemony will come to an end by either a forceful market correction or a knowingly gradual reconstruction of global reserve currency system. The best
candidate in this reconstruction is Euro. It is of course possible that Europe will survive its current sovereign debt crisis, but it is difcult to imagine that the currency of a continent so battered will be strong enough to replace the dollar at the worlds reserve currency any time in the near- or medium-term though stranger things have happened. For the foreseeable future, RMB has no way joined in the race to be a world reserve currency in a foreseeable future and at best it can act as a regional invoicing currency among trading partners, because China has some insurmountable aws when it comes to the candidacy of a world reserve currency: a political structure sharing no aspiration with the democratic economies, powerful state control on the economic issues, overmanipulated exchange rate, impotent law system to protect property rights, and fragile diplomatic relationships with many trading partners. In the absence of a meaningful alternative, the global currency system will in all likelihood continue to hobble along using the wounded dollar until the nal day of reckoning.
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Economy@IP
Economy News
Wipro Rural BPO: Rural Center Opened in Tamil Nadu
Wipro BPO, the business process outsourcing arm of Wipro Technologies, has opened its rst rural center at Manjakkudi village in Tiruvarur district of Tamil Nadu. It has a population of about 2,500. This location had been selected due to the relatively high level of investment in education in the region. The center has a capacity of 120 seats, and will open with a 50-seat pilot project for an international client in the retail sector. for licensing of new banks in the private sector. The norms stipulate a minimum capital requirement of Rs.500 crore and limited the new banks non-resident shareholding at 49 per cent. New banks will be set up only through a wholly owned non-operative holding company (NOHC) to be registered with the Reserve Bank as a non-banking nance company (NBFC), which will hold the bank as well as all other nancial companies in the promoter group, the RBIs draft guidelines said. The NOHC would hold a minimum 40 per cent of the paid-up capital of the bank for ve years from the date of licensing of the bank. Shareholding by NOHC in excess of 40 per cent would be brought down to 20 per cent within ten years and to 15 per cent within 12 years from the date of licensing of the bank. Entities/groups in the private sector, owned and controlled by residents, with diversied ownership, sound credentials and integrity and having successful track record of at least ten years will be eligible to promote banks. However, entities or groups having signicant (10 per cent or more) income or assets or both from real estate construction and/or broking activities individually or taken together in the last three years will not be eligible. At least 50 per cent of the directors of the NOHC should be independent directors. The corporate structure should be such that it does not impede effective supervision of the bank and the NOHC on a consolidated basis by the RBI. The RBI further stipulated: The bank shall get its shares listed on the stock exchanges within two years of licensing; it shall open at least 25 per cent of its branches in un-banked rural centres (population up to 9,999 as per 2001 census); and existing NBFCs, if considered eligible, may be permitted to either promote a new bank or convert themselves into banks.
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RBI prescribes Rs.500 crore minimum capital for new private banks
The Reserve Bank of India has released the draft guidelines
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Economy@IP
Industrial Finance Corporation of India Ltd. (IFCI) in violation of all norms. The petition was led by the Centre for Public Interest Litigation. Holding that the induction of Mr. Rai as whole-time member in the IFCI Board was completely mala de, the petitioner sought a direction to remove him from the post.
competitive country globally, with the United States falling to the 5th position. The report states that over the past ve years several countries in the Asian Pacic regions, including China, Indonesia, Vietnam and Sri Lanka, have made important strides in the GCI rankings. Singapore is the 2nd most competitive country. Indias performance is however disappointing and it has fallen 5 notches since last year from 51 to 56 out of 142 economies. China is ranked 26th, improving its score and rank since 2005. Indias supply of transport, ICT, and energy infrastructure remains largely insufcient and ill adapted to the needs of business (89th). The report paints a similar picture in Indias health and basic education (which is 101st) pillar. The apparent inability of the government to provide a more conducive environment for business has been growing. This discontent is fuelled by corruption (India is listed as 99th) and its burdensome regulations. India has dropped from rank 37 to rank 69 in the Institution pillar. It lost 11 places since the previous year. Indias macroeconomic environment is rated low down at 105, for its continued large and repeated public decit and high debt-to-GDP ratio. However, the reports state that the positive strengths of India are in its more advanced and complex drivers of competitiveness. It can rely on a well-developed and sophisticated nancial market (21st) that can channel nancial resources to good use, and it boasts of reasonably sophisticated (43rd) and innovative (38th) businesses.
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Arguing that a shift from scal stimulus towards scal tightening is self-defeating, especially in the most developed economies that were severely hit by the nancial crisis, the report points out that in such a situation, a restrictive scal policy may reduce GDP growth and scal revenues, and is therefore counterproductive in terms of scal consolidation. The report says that after a rapid post-crisis recovery, the world economy is slowing down from about 4 per cent GDP growth in 2010 to around 3 per cent in 2011. According to the report, developing countries, having recovered pre-crisis growth trends, could now be affected by recession in developed economies as the initial impulses from the inventory cycle and scal stimulus programmes in the developed countries gradually disappear and fundamental weakness of the recovery comes to the fore. Private demand alone is not sufciently strong to maintain the momentum of recovery, as unemployment remains high and wages are stagnating. Moreover, household indebtedness continues to be high and banks are reluctant to provide new nancing. Developing economies like India which have sustained their strong growth path mainly based on domestic demand face the risk of nancial instability and speculative capital ows generated in developed economies and are not likely to be spared by a new recession in the North.
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Economy@IP
it is imperative to create a more conducive investment climate in South- Asia. The Forum is driven by focused discussions and active sharing of experiences and best practices among South Asias diverse public and private stakeholders, for charting out the future course of SAARC and recommend if required, necessary improvements in the existing mechanisms.
Ltd. (HAL) would begin the process of disinvesting with the government deciding to ofoad 10 per cent of its holding in the next ve years.
IDRBT and ISACA signed MoU for benet of Indian banking and Financial Sector
The Institute for Development and Research in Banking Technology (IDRBT), the premier Institute of Banking Technology in India, established by Reserve Bank of India, and ISACA (formerly the Information Systems Audit and Control Association), the international body that promotes and cultivates expertise in the area of Information Systems Control, Audit, Security and Governance, signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), to carry out joint activities that will benet the Indian Banking and Financial Sector.
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Science Spectrum
SCIENCE SPECTRUM...
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Science Spectrum
feedstock to ethanol using both the methods described here. Researchers at Michigan State University are trying a neat trick. They are genetically engineering corn to include the needed enzyme. The plan is to make the enzyme inactive until triggered by high temperatures. When the cellulous part of the corn, such as the stalk, is processed, the high processing temperatures would activate the enzyme and convert the cellulous to starch. This would avoid the added cost of producing the enzyme separately. Researchers at the University of Rochester are studying how bacteria choose a particular enzyme, or enzymes, to break down at particular type of plant or other bio mass. They hope to generate enzymes that can convert cellulous to ethanol in one step, rather than the two steps used by the existing processes. There is obvious cost savings of using yard waste to fuel our cars, and ethanol
has a head start as an alternative fuel in that over 5 million cars in the US have already been equipped by the vehicle manufacturer to run either on regular gasoline or an 85% ethanol/15% gas mixture. These so-called Flex Fuel vehicles represent a portion of cars manufactured over the last several years. Manufacturers have done this in exchange for being allowed to produce other vehicles with low gas mileage. If cellulous-based ethanol production is shown to be economical, there are already cars on the road that could use the fuel. The advantage of cars that can be lled up with either gasoline or ethanol has been demonstrated in Brazil which uses much of its sugar cane crop to produce ethanol. Drivers with Flex Fuel cars are able to chose their fuel depending upon which is less expensive at the time, and most cars sold in Brazil are capable of using either fuel. Using nanotechnology/genetic
engineering to produce ethanol from cellulous has the potential to make a serious dent in our consumption of crude oil. However we do need to keep an eye on some safety issues. For example precautions must be taken to insure that a built-in enzyme is only activated in the processing plant, not while the crop is in the eld, and that corn with the special enzyme is not mixed with crops grown for human consumption. We can hope that corporations and universities will make public the steps they take to insure that the methods they use to simplify the conversion of cellulous to ethanol do not endanger food crops or forests. Conclusion All of the signs are pointing towards nanotechnology and alternative energy viability increases in the future. Increased efciency, durability, and manufacturing options are all becoming reality, cutting costs for the average person, and making the dependence on fossil fuels look more likely to end.
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Science Spectrum
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Science Spectrum
Science News
T-50 stealth ghter makes public debut
The Sukhoi fth-generation stealth ghter made its public debut at a Moscow air show in august 2011. The new ghter is being jointly developed by India and Russia under the 2007 FGFA agreement signed by Defence Minister AK Antony during his Moscow visit. Under the agreement, India will get up to 200 T-50 ghters, while the Russians are planning to order 150. The T-50 jets are being developed at an estimated cost of USD 10 billion of which India would invest USD 600 million. But even taking into cost of escalation, Russian media said the new stealth ghters would be far economical than the US made F-22 Raptor and the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. The T-50 resembles Russias best-selling Su-30 ghter jet but will have all its weapons hidden inside its body and wings to avoid radar detection and will y at supersonic cruising speeds. The aircraft also boasts of ultra manoeuvrability and high-technology avionics. It is Indias biggest-ever defence project and its largest defence deal with Russia. India and Russia are jointly designing two versions of the plane a single-seater for the Russian Air Force and a two-seat version for the IAF. The Indian Air Force will acquire 50 single-seater ghters of the Russian version before the two seat FGFA is developed. India will contribute about 30 per cent of the total design in the project, including composite components with the stealth function and some avionics, electronic warfare systems and cockpit displays. A fth-generation jet ghter is a ghter aircraft classication used in the United States, encompassing the most advanced generation of ghter aircraft. Fifth-generation aircraft are the most advanced as of 2011, designed to incorporate numerous technological advancements over the class similarly dubbed fourth generation, including all-aspect stealth even when armed, Low Probability of Intercept Radar (LPIR), high-performance air frames, advanced avionics features, and highly integrated computer systems capable of networking with other elements within the theatre of war in order to achieve an advantage in situational awareness. The only currently combat-ready fthgeneration ghter, the Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor, entered service with the U.S. Air Force in 2005. INS Satapura is a stealth warship equipped with advanced stealth features to dodge enemys radar and packed with potent repower. It is designed to have low signatures so that they remain undetected to enemy electronic sensors of other navies. Its shape is designed to evade detection by radar; it is engineered to give off minimal infra-red (IR) emissions and every piece of equipment on board is designed to work silently so that the ship cannot be heard by enemys sonar and acoustic sensors. It is equipped with state-of-the-art defence against nuclear, biological and chemical attack. Satapura is also equipped with a mix of imported and indigenous weapon systems and sensors, including Barak surface-to-air missiles and Russian made Klub cruise missiles, shtil air defence system etc.
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Science Spectrum
Kashalkar. Over 62 students and faculty members of the institute worked hard to built Jugnu weighing 3 kg, he said. On being asked about the delay in the project, he said it took some time for the faculty members and students as it was an indigenously built satellite.
of Genetically Modied (GM) crops. The novel technology was rst developed in rice plants and it can be readily applied for all other crops also so that it would have enormous impact in improving the bio-safety value. The universitys research group has, through its research initiatives, now developed Selectable Marker Elimination technology and it was successful in coming out with marker-free GM rice with sheath blight disease resistance.
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Science Spectrum
Paul Wilford, a senior research director at New Jerseys Bell Labs, has developed a telepresence project called NetHead that will one day help the disabled to participate in meetings, join community groups, attend school functions, and even work in an ofce -- all from a remote computer. Robert Oschler, a freelance computer programmer, is developing a robot for the disabled. The project, called Robodance 5, uses the Emotiv EPOC EEG headset to read facial movements, jaw clenches, and track eye movements. I trained the Emotiv system to react to my head and facial movements, said Oschler. Other robotic systems are already helping those with disabilities. In the UK, a robot avatar named KASPAR (Kinesics and Synchronization in Personal Assistant Robotics), developed at the University of Hertfordshire, interacts with kids who have autism.
Information Services (INCOIS) in Hyderabad. The Department of Space and INCOIS established the ground station to receive and process data from Ocean Colour Monitor (OCM) on-board the Indian Remote Sensing Satellite Oceansat-2 in real time. The Oceansat-2 ground station, tted with a 7.5 m diameter antenna, could cover an area of 5,000 km diameter circle, covering the Bay of Bengal on the east and the Arabian Sea on the west, a note issued by INCOIS on the occasion said. INCOIS said, the 7.5 meter diameter antenna system at the new ground station could also be used to receive data from satellites launched by ISRO in the future study of oceans. The chlorophyll data received from OCM at the ground station would be integrated with Sea Surface Temperature from NOAA satellites for providing the Potential Fishing Zone (PFZ) advisory services. The PFZ advisories generated by INCOIS using Oceansat-2 data advise shermen on the optimal locations for shing. INCOIS said an estimated 65,000 users regularly access the PFZ service, thereby beneting by 60-70 per cent reduction in search time for sh shoals and 2-3 times increase in net prot. The recent study, carried out by National Council of Applied Economic Research, on the socioeconomic benets of PFZ advisory services and ocean state forecasts, has estimated the net annual benets to be in the range of Rs 34,000 to Rs 50,000 crore due to scientic identication of PFZs based on satellite information, INCOIS said.
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Oceansat-2 Hyderabad
ground
station
inaugurated
in
A state-of-the-art Oceansat-2 ground station was inaugurated in September 2011 at the Indian National Centre for Ocean
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Perspectives
PERSPECTIVES...
Indian Unrest
Monsoon 2011 saw an unprecedented downpour of humanity at Ramlila maidan and various other places in India to protest against the rampant corruption. Anna Hazare, a 74 yr old social activist from Ralegan Siddhi undertook a fast unto death to press the government to pass a strong and effective Lokpal Bill in the Parliament. While the fast and the movement got mass support from the people and the media, many criticized it for being coercive and deploying my way or the highway formula. Grammar of Anarchy and Enabling Democracy look at this recent mass movement from these two perspectives.
GRAMMAR OF ANARCHY
Now that the resolution conveying the sense of the house on the Lokpal Bill has been passed and the veteran Gandhian, the Saviour of our times has broken his 12 days old fast, its time we ask some tough questions. We all know what happened and why it happened. However what requires serious consideration and attention is the way it all happened. Was this the only option left with the civil society to register its protest? Does end justify the means? How this movement is different from those that went before like JP movement or Narmada Bachao Andolan? What future repercussions can/ will it entail? The all pervading corruption has undoubtedly crippled all our social and political institutions. There is a widespread feeling of lack of social justice and accountability. However if your house is infested with rats, you dont put the house on re to get rid of them. Our government might have failed to deliver on its promises and responsibilities but does that give right to a bunch of self appointed people claiming to represent the civil society to undermine Constitution or its basic structure. If Government acted authoritarian by arresting Anna in the early hours of 16th Aug, Team Anna acted no different in the subsequent days. Ramchandra Guha aptly called Anna behaving as a village patriarch. The claim of Team Anna that they represent the Indian public was nothing but dictatorial. Anna is India and India is Anna reminds us of the authoritarian era of Indira Gandhi. It was indeed disheartening to see a man of Annas experience, understanding and capability setting such a dangerous precedent in front of a billion plus people. One of it was well showcased by Baba Ramdev- a sure shot formula to garner headlines. Tomorrow if I believe, strongly believe that something is right and needs to be done, I surely know the way to get it done. Team Anna unwittingly conveyed a message that only coercive and unconstitutional methods work. There have been movements before but they all were based on constitutional methods like rallies, demonstrations, advocacy etc but Anna Hazare knew only one way- his own. It is my way or the high way. Experience with constitutional means shows that civil society activists, through their constant struggles, have persuaded the two successive United Progressive Alliance governments to acknowledge several basic rights and convert these into laws. The right to employment through the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), the right to information, rights under the Forest Act, the right to education, and now the right to food, are some of the revolutionary measures that civil society has been able to accomplish through constitutional methods. Annas anti-corruption movement at many times seemed more like an anti-government protest. The fast was for something but their adamant and stubborn position conveyed something otherwise. It was a sea of humanity at Ramlila maidan. People braved both heavy rains and hot Sun to express their solidarity with the 74 yr old Gandhian. However those who had an in depth understanding of the issue about which they were protesting were very few. Such a big stage could well have been used as a forum to educate and enlighten the people about the nuances of the various versions of the bill. Sadly nothing like this happened. For many it was another picnic spot to have fun, enjoyment with an added opportunity to be on national TV. The Lokpal bill is too important a legislation to be passed under coercion or threats. Blaming all politicians and government ofcials for all the corruption in the society is turning a Nelson eye to the real problem. Fixing the blame outside themselves and a constant harping against political class can hardly lead to any solution. Be the change you want to see there. There is a need for self introspection on everyones part. Bribe is more often than not offered than demanded. Legislations alone cannot bring any social change. If that could be the case then words like dowry deaths, communal riots, discrimination would have long been part of our history books and not everyday existence. Corruption breeds from inside us. We need to change our mind sets rst and only then can a Lokpal help us in uprooting corruption completely. Coming to the main object of contention Lokpal or the Jan Lokpal bill. If governments version is defective, toothless and a mere sham then Annas proposed draft is overboard, impractical and gigantic to an extent of being preposterous. Its like a Leviathan. In words of Social activist Aruna Roy, a monolithic, humongous institution with so much power is impractical, complicated, and a threat to democracy. She further added that Jan Lokpal was impossible to implement and that it derails the checks and balances
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between the Judiciary, executive and other organs of the democratic structure. The Jan Lokpal is a threat to democracy as a powerful, non-elected agency can lead to abuse of power and abuse of authority. Power corrupts. The massive organisational setup suggested in the Jan Lokpal would lead to corruption and inefciency, she said. You may be able to nd 11 Lokpal members of integrity, but it is difcult to create a clean set-up of thousands of staffers and hold them accountable. More importantly, a single
Lokpal body cannot ght corruption alone. We need many other reforms like electoral, judicial, police reforms and administrative reforms to make this process comprehensive. The criticism against media for playing the Hazare campaign over the board isnt unjustied too. Media cannot wash of their hands by saying that they merely presented what was happening. If that is the case, what about Irom Sharmilas marathon fast to get AFSPA repealed, the farmers agitation in Noida
or Bhopal tragedy victims agitation etc. They did not get half the number of lenses or perhaps a tenth of the total time that our reporters devoted at Ramlila maidan. The fourth estate has to share some measure of blame of having failed to fulll its responsibility. The media should have highlighted the issue in a sustained campaign years ago, pressurizing the political classes into action. They paid scant attention to the culture of corruption that grew and slowly engulfed everyone.
Vs
ENABLING DEMOCRACY
Had it not been for Team Anna, with special mention to Arvind Kejriwal, we would have continued living our routined, resigned lives to corruption. Thanks to their efforts, people have nally been jolted out of their slumber to not only exercise their political right but also to shoulder the responsibility of a true citizen. Anna Hazare, with the massive support from his middle class army and intellectuals nally succeeded in bringing the government to pass a resolution for a strong and an effective Lokpal. Legislations cannot be enacted on the streets. True! But are they being enacted where they should? Try recalling the last meaningful debate or discussion during a parliament proceedings. Bills languish in committee for years until parliament is dissolved, and the process starts from the beginning in the next parliament. Four decades have passed since the Lokpal bill was rst tabled in the Parliament. Attendance is often so low as to be a mockery of the intent of our constitution. It was against this backdrop that a Retd. Army man with a bunch of people from civil society stood up to make deafs hear. Though the means and ways adopted to protest by Team Anna can always be debated but a warrior seldom looks beyond his enemy. In this case a duo- rampant corruption in all spheres of human existence and an indifferent, tainted political class. What does one do in the face of a ruling class with a spate of scandals and scams behind its name, one which takes months to arrest the likes of Kalmadi and Raja but puts the 74 year old anti graft crusader in jail on dubious charges of threatening peace and order of the state. The way the government handled/mishandled the entire episode displayed a clear want of political imagination and statesmanship. There wasnt a single leader of stature that could put forward governments arguments ( even legitimate ones) with conviction. Lokpal/Jan Lokpal bill is no magic wand that will end corruption overnight. Honestly speaking, I dont even buy the 65% claim made by Anna himself. Instead, its a beginning. A renewed promise to redeem the pledges, we have so often taken. The movement needs to be seen as aiming for social, political and moral regeneration of our state and society. Words like justice, peoples rights, representative and participative democracy have lost much of their meaning and content. A common man nds himself both handicapped and helpless amidst the politico-beauracraticcriminal nexus. It is to this nameless common man, Anna has given a face and a voice. Ironically, we saw many politicians bragging about supremacy of Parliament and the Constitution to counter Anna Hazares demands of passing the bill. Had these men, the so called elected representatives of people worked to uphold the ideals and principles of our Constitution or genuinely represented the concerns of their people in the parliament, they would not have found themselves amidst this political turmoil. Some people are calling this movement as Indias own version of Arab Uprising. While the people in the Arab world rose in unison to replace autocracy with democracy, back home the unrest and the uprising was to enable and emancipate that democracy, to restore peoples faith back in it. That the protest did not witness any violence or bloodshed speaks volume about the character and the nature of this movement. The young and old, rich and poor, without apparent political afliations, took to the streets in a rare voice of solidarity. Many critics of Team Anna questioned the timings of his movement. True, the massive protest came on the back of various high prole exposes and indeed there are many more issues that need equal attention, if not more. But how does all this diminish the importance of this movement. Corruption, hitherto seen as an inseparable part of our daily
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existence, has crippled all forms of human lives and institution. This 74 yr old social activist inspired millions to stand up and be counted in the ght against
corruption. These mass protests of nonviolent nature point to the dynamic evolution of Parliamentary democracy. What does one do in the face of a ruling
class which is ready to backtrack at the rst available opportunity. It is time we break the status-quo and rediscover our lost principles and ideals.
LOKPAL-FACT FILE
The Jan Lokpal Bill, also referred to as the citizens ombudsman bill, is a proposed independent anti-corruption law in India. Anti-corruption social activists proposed it as a more effective improvement to the original Lokpal bill, which is currently being proposed by the Government of India. The Jan Lokpal Bill aims to effectively deter corruption, redress grievances of citizens, and protect whistle-blowers. If made into law, the bill would create an independent ombudsman body called the Lokpal (Sanskrit: protector of the people). It would be empowered to register and investigate complaints of corruption against politicians and bureaucrats without prior government approval. The word Lokpal was coined in 1963 by L.M.Singhvi, a Member of Parliament during a debate in Parliament about grievance redressal mechanisms. His son Dr. Abhishek Singhvi is now the head of the Parliamentary Standing Committee reviewing the bill. The Lokpal bill was rst introduced by Shanti Bhushan in 1968 and passed the 4th Lok Sabha in 1969. But before it could be passed by Rajya Sabha, Lok Sabha was dissolved and the bill lapsed. The subsequent versions were re-introduced in 1971, 1977, 1985, 1989, 1996, 1998, 2001, 2005 and in 2008, but none of them got passed. While the central government is still debating the institution of this body, many states have already set up the institution of Lokayukta. Lokayukta institution has come into existence in different years, in different States in India. Orissa was the rst state to present a bill on establishment of Lokayukta in 1970; however, Maharashtra was the rst state to establish the institution in 1972. Thereafter, this institution was established in different States in different years namely: Maharashtra (1972), Bihar (1974), Uttar Pradesh (1977), Madhya Pradesh (1981), Andhra Pradesh (1983), Himachal Pradesh (1983), Karnataka (1984), Assam (1986), Gujarat (1988), Delhi (1995), Punjab (1996), Kerala (1998), Chhattisgarh (2002), Uttaranchal (2002) and West Bengal (2003) and Haryana (2004). The structure of the Lokayukta is not uniform across all the states. The institution of Ombudsman was rst created in Sweden in 1809. Ombud is a Swedish term and refers to a person who acts as the representative or spokesperson of another person. The Swedish ombudsman is a constitutional authority which keeps a watch over all public ofcials which includes all civil, judicial and military ofcials. Wide powers are given to him and its functions are comprehensive making it a potent weapon for ghting corruption. From Sweden, the institution of Ombudsman spread to other Scandinavian countries- Finland ( 1919), Denmark (1955) and Norway (1962). New Zealand was the rst commonwealth country in the world to have adopted the institution of ombudsman in the form of parliamentary commissioner for investigation in 1962. The United Kingdom adopted the ombudsman like institution called parliamentary commissioner for administration in 1967. However in the United Kingdom, the Ombudsman usually investigates complaints referred to him or her by a Member of Parliament, where there has been evidence of maladministration having occurred which has resulted in an unremedied injustice. The scope of jurisdiction and authority of the British parliamentary commissioner is much more restricted when compared to the Swedish ombudsman. Since then, more than 40 countries of the world have adopted the ombudsman like institutions with different nomenclature and functions. In Pakistan, the establishment of Ombudsman is a part of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan by virtue of Article 270-A. It started functioning on 8 August 1983.The Ombudsman in Pakistan is called Wafaqi Mohtasib, (English: Federal Ombudsman) with its headquarters in Islamabad. The Government of Sri Lanka has designated several ombudsmen for the redress of grievances and complaints from individuals in the banking, insurance and other sectors being serviced by both private and public bodies and corporations.
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Inspirations@IP
INSPIRATIONS@IP...
Kingdom of Dreams
I have become my own version of an optimist. If I cant make it through one door, I ll make it through another door- or I ll make a door. Something terric will come no matter how dark the present. - Rabindranath Tagore
I wanted to be a politician when I was twelve. The year next, inspired by my school counseling teacher, the dream was to become a counselor. Then a doctor, then a journalist, an academician, a civil servant and today-well I am still in the process of guring out, what next?. Some of these were pure wishes, I worked on few others, didnt succeed and moved on. And of course some are still in harness. We spend a major part of our life working, so it becomes important to make sure that what we do is fullling and worthwhile and that we gure out right option(s) for ourselves. If something is worth striving for, striving is its own reward. We shouldnt worry about the outcome. Ultimately, all sense of victory and loss are personal. The poet Longfellow puts it best: Not in the clamour of the crowded street, / Not in the shouts and plaudits of the throng, / But in ourselves, are triumph and defeat. We often misconceive our means to be the goals and get entrapped. There are several alternative ways to reach there. One just needs to breakfree from such illusory trappings. Most of us go to our graves with our music still inside of us because we never let the strings go loose. Hell bent upon having a sure thing career with xed pay-cheques, remunerations, pen-surance schemes, we often let our callings go unheard, stopping way short of constructing a future with our own vision. One of my university professor always used to say, Find something you love to do and then live a life that shows it. Its never too late. Everything you ever dreamt of, all the things you thought of doing one day- from climbing a mountain or taking a detour to ofce or
playing a harmonium to working in paddy elds, acting on a stage or writing for a journal- try it. Sometimes it takes a push like a lay-off or a big setback to move in the right direction. Say a Yes and Start. Our aspirations, dreams are not isolated events. They are very much located within the social, political, economic and spatial parameters. Global meltdown and recession has given a new whiff of perspective to public sector. More and more people are trying their hands at the safe harbours of government jobs. Similarly, a recent employment trends survey by Ma Foi Randstad revealed that the organized sector in India will create nearly 1.6 M jobs in sectors like healthcare, hospitality, real estate, media and entertainment, education etc. Its not difcult to nd ones space of glory if one is perceptive to the changing currents in both personal and socioeconomic realm. There is nothing settling about nding a job and neither it ever should be. After doing my masters in literature, I realized that I dont want to pursue academics. Not clearing my civils entrance was disheartening but I learnt something important. As human beings, we are capable of facing and
bearing anything. No dream is bigger than my life and every dream is worth living a life for. Our dreams are not just about the goal-posts. They are as much about the lush meadows and the dark, tranquil valleys that we traverse through, as about the horizons sought. Also, they enable you to lay the road to your destination, to plan all the moves, digressions and detours. Unfortunately, all people do not have such engagements. Children from lower rungs of the society, the underprivileged, undernourished never get to enter this Kingdom of Dreams. For them little exists beyond today or concerns of daily survival. This decit is a cumulative effect of biological, economical, nutritional, cultural and education related reasons. Education provides that fertile
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ground that lets a sapling grow into a big tree. Ask a child who has never seen a school, whom you see everyday at the road crossings, begging for a penny or the one who cleans your car every morning, what does he want to become when he grows old? Chances are bleak that you will get an answer. These children dont know that each one of them is a reservoir of talents, that their imagination holds the key to a bright future, a small lane out of the vicious circle. Education provides a child with that key to unlock the gates
of his/her imagination, to realize his/her potential, to think beyond today and to realize the innate self. Is education in our schools doing the needful or not is perhaps food for thought for some other day. It doesnt matter what you have been through, where you come from, who your parents are- nor your social or economic status. None of that matters. What matters is how you choose to dream, how you choose to express that
dream through your work, through what you have to give to the world.. Till the time the boat of our dreams is rowing, there is always a hope to nd an anchorage. It took the master batsman Sachin Tendulkar 22 long years to hold the coveted World Cup. Going might be tough at times, things may not just work, they may fail. Dont stop. Dont be scared. Fear is thief of dreams. It hinders us in our journey towards success by drilling us into inaction and pulling us back. DREAM ON DREAMER , ITS ALRIGHT, FEEL ALIVE.
Mood to retire
An elderly carpenter was ready to retire. He told his employer-contractor of his plans to leave the house building business and live a more leisurely life with his family. He would miss the pay check, but he needed to retire. They could get by. The contractor was sorry to see his good worker go and asked if he could build just one more house as a personal favour. The carpenter said yes, but in time it was easy to see that his heart was not in the work. He resorted to shoddy workmanship and used inferior materials. It was an unfortunate way to end a dedicated career. When the carpenter nished his work, the employer handed the front door keys to the carpenter. This is your house, he said, my gift to you. The carpenter was shocked! If he had only known he was building his own house, he would have done it all so differently. So it is with us. We build our lives, a day at a time, often putting less than our best in the building. Then with a shock we realise we have to live in a house we have built. You are the carpenter. Life is a do it yourself project, someone has said. Your attitudes and the choices you make today, build the house, you live in tomorrow.
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Thinkers Arena
THINKERS ARENA...
Crony Capitalism and Post-Liberalisation India : Understanding the Symptoms of an Infected Political Economy
Crony capitalism is a danger that we must guard against
Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh (At an interactive session with a group of newspaper editors, September 6, 2010.) It is ironical that the Prime Minister and other advocates of the liberal economic regime are advising precaution against a disease which, some believe, is intrinsic to the capitalist anatomy of economic liberalisation in India. The recent revelations about a slew of corruption scams and seedy patronage patternsranging from 2G spectrum allocation scam to the dubious S- band spectrum deal and from Commonwealth Games scam to the Adarsh Housing Society scam, and various irregularities in awarding mining leases and land allotments have set the alarm bells ringing for the government. If the analogy of the Frankestein sounds too clichd, one would be allowed to borrow the eloquent metaphor of a spectre that Marx and Engels used in the Manifesto of the Communist Party. Thus, in a different context, we may say : a spectre is haunting India - the spectre of crony capitalism. Crony capitalism has been the term most frequently used to explain the structural issues that have emerged from the recent scams. But what is crony capital? How have the different streams of economic and political thought interpreted crony capitalism and the nature of state- capital relations? How crony capitalism has got entrenched and reinforced systemic corruption in post-liberalisation India and what are the perspectives offered by some commentators on this issue? Here an attempt has been made to briey address some important aspects
of these questions. Thus, it entails the following: (1) Dening crony capitalism (2) (a) A synoptic view of how the liberal thought has responded to the state-capital relations and crony capitalism, (b) A brief commentary on the liberal view (3) (a) Outlines of how the Marxist thought has responded to the state- capital relations and crony capitalism, (b) Some later developments in the Marxist thought on the state-capital relations (c) The response of the Marxist institutional politics in India to crony capitalism (4) (a) Disillusionment : Corruption and Cronyism in Post Liberalisation India (b) Some Perspectives on the nature of state capital relations and the crony capitalism in Post Liberalisation India
for favouring the crony capitalists with concessions, licences, contracts, special tax breaks, monopoly rights, subsidies, government grants, sweetheart deals in disposing off public properties, illegal avenues of money laundering, etc. In addition to these, the presence of crony capitalism in the nancial market of an economy has also been identied, as Alan Greenspan (in his testi-mony before the U.S. House of Representatives on January 30, 1998)1 observed that purchasing the stocks and granting loans on the basis of association, and not the economic value of the stocks, illustrates the working of crony capitalism in the nancial market. The discretionary channels of state patronage and the competition among the capita-lists to win favours from the government have made crony capitalism a breeding ground for corruption.
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(2) (a) A synoptic view of how the liberal thought has responded to the state-capital relations and crony capitalism
Any study of the liberal approach to crony capitalism has to begin with the classical school which advocated the laissez faire policy - favouring a free market economy and non-intervention by the state in the sphere of economic activities. Following Adam Smith, the classical economists were consistent in their assumption that the invisible hand of the market could help the economy in achieving all kinds of efciency, be it allocative or distributive. Any interference in the working of
Classical school (liberal): It refers to the early liberal economists and thinkers who advocated the laissez faire policy - favouring a free market economy and non-intervention by the state in the sphere of economic activities. Neo- Classical school (liberal): It refers to a contemporary school of liberal economists who support the view of the classical school on the importance of free market economy.
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free market would lead to sub-optimal outcome or the less desirable one. Carrying this argument to the issue of crony capitalism, the classical economists were of the view that crony capitalism would lead to sub-optimal outcome because the market forces would be guided by the collusive interests of the government and the the favour seeking business houses, rather than by the free interplay of the market forces. This would ultimately hinder the growth of the economy. The neo-classical economists have arrived at similar conclusions regarding crony capitalism. The Keynesian school emerged as an important strand in the broadening of the liberal approach. Responding to the great depression of the 1930s , the Keynesian school supported the government intervention for overcoming the market imperfection and smooth running of the economy. However, it would be supercial to assume any resemblance between this argument of the Keynesian school and crony capitalism. Though both seek government intervention , the difference lies in the objectives they intend to achieve. While the Keynesian school advocates government intervention for developmental purposes and for correcting market imperfection, the crony capitalism uses government intervention for collusive rent seeking. However, the recent developments in liberal economics have seen the emergence of institutional economics which is premised on the belief that those institutions of an economy evolve over the period of time which results in reduction of the transaction cost and increases the efciency of the economic system2. It has sought to analyse crony capitalism in a different perspective. It begins its inquiry with a general statement that that crony capitalism is often seen as an impediment to economic growth because it implies decisions based on non-market principles, increases transaction costs, impedes efciency, involves rent-seeking, distorts
economic incentives, and makes exchange between economic actors more difcult.3 Interestingly, it has examined the different responses to the role of crony capitalism in different economies. It considers the economic setting where: (a) legal, political and economic institutions are weak, as in most developing countries, information about market conditions and possibilities is both scarce and difcult to obtain, and investments and property rights may be insecure.(b) long-term commitments of any type are more difcult because political and economic conditions and actors can change rapidly. (c) capital markets do not function as effectively in developing countries, and political and economic decision making is subject to greater uncertainty than in developed and democratic systems (d) for businessmen and politicians, the transaction costs of making and keeping agreements and securing property rights can be prohibitively high. Under these conditions, the institutional economics argues that cronyism can: (a) reduce transaction costs, because actors have deep and enduring contact with and knowledge of each other and are able to make nuanced judgments about each others credibility and integrity (b) can make monitoring easier, because all parties know each other and actors with longterm, close, and overlapping personal ties can sanction each other and spread information more easily. The empirically tested case study of South Korea is cited to illustrate a situation of cronyism-facilitated growth. Despite extensive crony capitalism in South Korea, corruption was constrained by mutual hostages between the business class and a coherent state. Both these actors beneted from the close relationship with the other, but neither gained the upper hand. Business and government elites needed each other and relied upon each other, and stability allowed for long-term investment resulting in growth.4
Conversely, the case study of Philippines is cited to illustrate how crony capitalism can cripple growth, as it can result in exorbitant transaction cost and low economic growth. In Philippines, the business groups competed with each other over the spoils of the state, with power shifting rapidly between groups. Both property rights and elites were not stable. Business was not able to organize itself and therefore, it had no coherent voice with which to press the government for consistent policies; and more signicantly, business devoted a lot of resources to competing among themselves for securing government favour.5
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Keynesian School: It refers to a school of economic thought which is inuenced by the work of British economist J M Keynes who believed that government intervention becomes necessary for correcting market imperfections. Rent Seeking : It refers to an activity in which an individual, organisation or rm seeks economic gain by using its resources to manipulate or exploit the existing economic or political structures, and not by creation of wealth or contributing to the economy.
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the market economy based on private property and prot-seeking had led to the economic miracle of southeast Asia, the existence of cronies (friends and relatives) between business and government led to a breakdown of checks and balances . The invisible hand of the free market was shackled by cronyism which led to a lack of checks and balances .and encouraged the growth of inefciencies, through political patronage, resulting in the economic crisis. Thus, the journal has analysed that the implicit objective of such argument was to defend the basic tenets of free market economy. It has observed that the recent global nancial and economic crisis which gathered momentum from New York (the centre of global capitalism) was not associated with crony capitalism, despite the fact that easy ow of personnel between business and government was evident and close relations between the business class and the politicians are endemic in the United States and other developed countries. The journal has also attacked the hypocrisy involved in the selective use of the term and insulating nonAmerican and non-European market economies from any association with crony capitalism. It has observed that the recent global nancial and economic crisis which gathered momentum from New York (the centre of global capitalism) was not associated with crony capitalism, despite the fact that easy ow of personnel between business and government was evident and close relations between the business class and the politicians are endemic in the United States and other developed countries. The journal sarcastically comments : clearly, crony is an adjective to be used for the developing world .Or perhaps it carries a racial code where non- white societies , even if with a successful capitalism as Japan has, were tarred
with this disgurement to show-up their irrational side. Well known economists Joseph Stiglitz and Paul Krugman have also brought to fore the hypocrisy of the US government in lecturing the world on crony capitalism while promoting the entrenched structures of crony capitalism in the American economy. In some of their works, they have cited many examples to argue that US economic policy regarding various sectors energy, defence, nance, etc., have been used to protect and promote the interests of the politicians and their cronies in big business corporations7. Krugman has also critically analysed manipulation of the environment policy in the US for favouring vested business interests.8
have sought to analyse the relation between the state and the capitalists in a different framework. The relative autonomy approach and the subsequent Poulantzas-Miliband debate on the nature of relative autonomy are relevant in this context. The relative autonomy theory conceded a limited degree of autonomy to the state but argued that such autonomy of the state is relative to the restrictions dened by the socio-economic structures within which the state exists and which the state functions to uphold. Nicos Poulantzas considered the separation between the capitalist state and capitalist production as the basis of the relative autonomy, through which state serves the interests of the capitalists without making the capitalist class direct participants in the state apparatus, and in the process gains popular legitimacy. However, he argued that the objective place of the state in a capitalist society determines the capitalist character of the state, irrespective of who controls the state apparatus. Ralph Miliband offered a different explanation of the capitalist nature of the state and he disagreed with the structural limits that Poulantzas had applied to the concept of state autonomy. Milibands simple assertion was that the capitalist nature of the state was determined by the pro-capitalist forces9 which control the state apparatus and not by the states objective place in a capitalist society. Thus, Miliband attributed greater degree of autonomy to the state. It could be inferred that he took notice of the possibility of shaping and reshaping of the class character of the state through class struggle. It is relevant to note here that some Indian neo- Marxists, like Pranab Bardhan, have used the concept of state autonomy to analyse the Indian political economy. Pranab Bardhan argues that in certain historical cases, as in the case of India, the state is an autonomous actor and plays an important role in shaping and moulding the class power rather than being dened by the class power.10 Interestingly, some scholars , like Achin Vanaik, are of
3 (a) Outlines of how the Marxist thought has responded to the state- capital relations and crony capitalism
The Marxist approach has tended to demolish the conceptual core of crony capitalism in a very holistic sense. Marx himself never considered crony capitalism as a distinct system deserving theoretical attention. The classical Marxism has viewed the modern state as a bourgeois(capitalist) institution and this view is cogently expressed in the Manifesto of the Communist Party , as Marx and Engels wrote : The executive of the modern state is a committee for managing the common affairs of the whole bourgeoisie. Though Marx gave indications of further developing his formulations on the state in his later work The 18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte , he never moved away from the essence of his argument which dened the modern state as a bourgeois institution. Thus, in classical Marxism, it can be inferred that the concept of crony capitalism becomes irrelevant because it asserts that state itself has a capitalist character.
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3(b) Some Later developments in the Marxist thought on the statecapital relations
Some later strands in the Marxist approach
Classical Marxism: The tradition of Marxist thought which is originally rooted in the writings of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, and precedes later developments in Marxism.
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the view that Pranab Bardhans approach is closer to Skocpols concept of potential autonomy than to the different concepts of relative autonomy found in the works of Poulantzas and Miliband.11 The Relative Autonomy of the State: It refers to a later development in Marxist theory of the state which concedes a limited degree of autonomy to the state from the capitalist economy which the state sustains. It argues that autonomy of the state is relative to the restrictions dened by the socio-economic structures within which the state exists and which the state functions to uphold. The Potential Autonomy of the State: It refers to a concept developed by Skocpol who argued that the states had the potential for autonomy and society centric studies had ignored such autonomy. She premised her argument on her observation that the state system and the economic system worked on the basis of different sets of principles and dynamics. Tautology: It refers to a statement in which the same thing is said twice in different words, when it is unnecessary.
Advocates of liberalisation have always argued that by reducing state intervention and increasing transparency, economic reform will reduce corruption. The allegations of and evidence on largescale corruption show this is not true. In fact, they make it clear that liberalisation does not mean that the state withdraws from intervention but merely that there is a change in the form of its intervention, which also enables the state to deliver illegitimate gains to individuals and private players.14
4. (b) Some Perspectives on the nature of state capital relations and the crony capitalism in Post Liberalisation India
Some commentators are of the opinion that in the post liberalisation period , cronyism has sprung from a race among private capitalists to manipulate the state and the public policy to suit their interests. But this is a two- way trafc because the state functionaries are also demanding a share for acting as facilitators of private capital. As former bureaucrat S P Shukla has explained, the nature of corruption in the post liberalisation period has been dened by the entry of market interests into the functioning of the government to such an extent that corporate houses have started deciding policies and price of government transactions.15 Arguing that the liberal policy regime has tended to legitimise the conversion of state into a site for the primitive accumulation of capital, C P Chandrasekhar has identied two ways in which the Indian state and the capital are forming a collusive pattern- (a) the state promotes private investment and helps it to grow in new areas and to expand its activities (b) those capitalists ,who draw benet from state support ,are asked to share the a part of the monetary returns that they receive with the decisionmakers involved. 16 It has been noticed that crony capitalism also gets sustenance from the procedural aspects of transition to a liberal regime (the process of liberalising the economy), for instance,
Neo- Marxism: It is a term for referring to a number of new approaches that developed within contemporary Marxist thought (mostly in twentieth century) as some Marxist thinkers attempted to either extend or revise Marxism, by engaging with other intellectual traditions.
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the undervaluation of public assets and favouritism in disposing off public properties to the private players. Sitaram Yechury cites the example of dubious deals struck in disposing of public sector unit Balco and Centaur Hotel (Juhu, Mumbai) as part of the disinvestment policy of NDA government(1998-2004).17 Establishing a clear link between liberalisation and corruption, The Economic and Political Weekly has remarked in its editorial comment: Historical experience suggests that as India continues to liberalise controls on capital and privatise its resources , there will be a corresponding increase in corruption and a further growth in nexus between business and politics. The strapline of the editorial tersely states: Corruption and cronyism are integral to capitalism; they are not a curable deviation.18 Apart from the Indian capitalist class, globalisation and the arrival of foreign capital in the Indian market have also opened some new spheres of engagement between the Indian state and capital . Some scholars , like Aseema Sinha ,have noted that in the context of these new elements emerging in the relation between the politics-business interaction in India , a more systematic study is required.19 There have also been attempts to analyse the structural issues concerning crony capitalism from a different perspective. Eminent political scientist Pratap Bhanu Mehta has sought to explain crony capitalism in terms of the vulnerability and even surrender of the Indian capital to the power of Indian state. He has made following observations in this context: (a) The state still has inordinate power over capital. Business is vulnerable at the hands of the state at so many levels: at every moment it is taxed, licensed, stamped, assessed, audited, authorised, given permission. Liberalisation and reform have helped alter the structure of corruption in some sectors. But the blunt truth is that the state has such an extraordinary ability to convert even basic procedural rights into
discretionary entitlements. (b) One larger consequence of this is how timid Indian capital still is in relation to the state. The horror is not whether a particular industrialist was lobbying for a particular minister; the deeper horror is how the private sector is still so vulnerable, at every level, to the state. (c) The picture that has emerged is not one of capital buying out the state, it is still one of capital in an abject state of dependence, where their very life depends upon getting politics right.
s, Patronage and Prots, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2nd edition, 1999 5. Karl Fields, Strong States and Business Organization in Korea and Taiwan, in Sylvia Maxeld and Ben Ross Schneider (edited), Business and the State in Developing Countries, Cornell University Press, Ithaca , 1997 6. Editorial comment Capitalism, Cronyism, Corruption, The Economic and Political Weekly, December 25, 2010 7. J Stiglitz, The Roaring Nineties: Seeds of Destruction, Allen Lane, 2003 8. P Krugman, The Great Unravelling: From Boom To Bust in Three Scandalous Years, Penguin, 2003 9. Bob Jessop, Poulantzas, Nicos in Tom Bottomore, Laurence Harris, V G Kiernan and Ralph Miliband ( edited) A Dictionary of Marxist Thought, Blackwell , 1983 10. Pranab Bardhan, The Political Economy of Development in India, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1984 11. Achin Vanaik ,The Social Character of the Indian State in Zoya Hasan (edited) Politics and the State in India, Sage Publications, Delhi, 2000 12. Sitaram Yechury, Its pay back time, The Hindustan Times, 22 November 2010 13. P Sainath, The republic on a banana peel, The Hindu, 3 December, 2010 14. C P Chandrasekhar, Capital Gains, Frontline, 17 December, 2010 15. Venkitesh Ramakrishnan, Tainted System, Frontline, 17 December 2010 16. C P Chandrasekhar, op.cit. 17. Sitaram Yechury, op.cit. 18. The Editorial comment in The Economic and Political Weekly, op.cit. 19. Aseema Sinha, Business and Politics in Niraja Gopal Jayal and Pratap Bhanu Mehta (edited), The Oxford Companion to Politics in India, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 2010
Conclusion
The different perspectives on the structural and systemic aspects of crony capitalism and public corruption should not ignore the crucial subtext : corruption is an issue of moral reasoning. In the nal analysis, the greed and pull of materialist gratication, that is driving the murky side of the capital-state relations, have to be made accountable to the individual value system and moral bre of the society. The issues of governance, public policy, legislation and basic contradictions of the political economy are also premised on larger questions of public morality, probity, welfare and egalitarian values. But to nally use a clich, you cannot legislate for virtue.
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References
1. David C.Kang, Transaction Cost and Crony Capitalism in East Asia, Comparative Politics, Vol.No-4 , July 2003 2. Oliver E. Williamson, The Economic Institutions of Capitalism, The Free Press, New York, 1985; Barry Weingast, Constitutions as Governance Structures: The Political Foundations of Secure Markets, Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics, March 1993 3. Paul Krugman, What Happened to Asia?,Manuscript, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology, 1998 4. Kunio Yoshihara, The Rise of Ersatz Capitalism in South-East Asia ,Oxford University Press, Kuala Lumpur ,1988 cited in E T Gomez and K S Jomo, MalaysiasPoliticalEconomy:Politic
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MOSAIC...
Indian Cinema
A lm, also called a movie or motion picture, is a series of still or moving images. It is produced by recording photographic images with cameras, or by creating images using animation techniques or visual effects. The process of lmmaking has developed into an art form and industry. The history of lm spans over 100 years, from the latter part of the 19th century to the present day. Motion pictures developed gradually from a carnival novelty to one of the most important tools of communication and entertainment, and mass media in the 20th century and into the 21st century. rst short lms in India were directed by Hiralal Sen, starting with The Flower of Persia (1898). The rst full-length motion picture in India was produced by Dadasaheb Phalke, a scholar on Indian languages and culture, who brought together elements from Sanskrit epics to produce his Raja Harishchandra. made in 1916 by R Nataraja MudaliarKeechaka Vadham. As the title indicates the subject is again a mythological from the Mahabharata. Another lm made in Madras - Valli Thiru-Manam (1921) by Whittaker drew critical acclaim and box ofce success. Hollywood returned Ananthanarayanan Narayanan founded General Pictures Corporation in 1929 and established lmmaking as an industry in South India and became the single largest producer of silent lms. Kolhapur in Western Maharashtra was another centre of active lm production in the twenties. In 1919 Baburao K Mistry popularly known as Baburao Painter formed the Maharashtra Film Co. with the blessings of the Maharaja of Kolhapur and released the rst signicant historical Sairandhari (1920) with Balasheb Pawar, Kamala Devi and Zunzarrao Pawar in stellar roles. Because of his special interest in sets, costumes, design and painting, he chose episodes from Maratha history for interpreting in the new medium and specialised in the historical genre. The exploits of Shivaji and his contemporaries and their patriotic encounters with their opponents formed the recurring themes of his historicals which invariably had a contemporary relevance to the people of a nation, who were ghting for liberation from a colonial oppressor. The attack against the false values associated with the Western way of life and their blind imitation by some Indians was humorously brought out by Dhiren Ganguly in his brilliant satirical comedy - England Returned (1921) - presumably the rst social satire on Indians obsessed with Western values. And with that another genre of Indian cinema known as the contemporary social slowly emerged. Baburao Painter followed it up with another signicant lm in 1925 - Savkari Pash (The Indian Shylock) - an attempt at realistic treatment of the Indian peasant exploited by the greedy moneylender.
Pre-cinema age
Telling stories from the epics using hand-drawn tableaux images in scroll paintings, with accompanying live sounds have been an age old Indian tradition. These tales, mostly the familiar stories of gods and goddesses, are revealed slowly through choreographic movements of painted glass slides in a lantern, which create illusions of movements. And so when the Lumire brothers representatives held the rst public showing at Mumbais (Bombay) Watsons Hotel on July 7, 1896, the new phenomenon did not create much of a stir here and no one in the audience ran out at the image of the train speeding towards them, as it did elsewhere. The Indian viewer took the new experience as something already familiar to him. Harischandra Sakharam Bhatwadekar, who happened to be present for the Lumiere presentation, was keen on getting hold of the Lumiere Cinematograph and trying it out himself rather than show the Lumiere lms to a wider audience. The public reception accorded to Wrangler Paranjpye at Chowapatty on his return from England with the coveted distinction he got at Cambridge was covered by Bhatwadekar in December 1901- the rst Indian topical or actuality lm was born. The
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Regional Cinema
The rst lm in Southern India was
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In Bengal, a region rich in culture and intellectual activity, the rst Bengali feature lm in 1917, was remake of Phalkes Raja Harishchandra. Titled Satyawadi Raja Harishchandra, it was directed by Rustomjee Dotiwala. Less prolic than Bombay based lm industry, around122 feature lms were made in Calcutta in the Silent Era. The rst feature lm in Tamil, also the rst in entire South India, Keechakavatham was made during 1916-17, directed by Nataraja Mudaliar.
became one of the largest documentary lm producers in the world with an annual production of over 200 short documentaries, each released in 18 languages with 9000 prints for permanent lm theaters across the country. Today, the technology of lm-making in India is perhaps the best among all developing countries though the lms themselves remain mostly repetitive in storyline and content. Superior movies, in thematic and creative terms, are made in many developing countries with less sophisticated technologies. According to unofcial estimates available in January 2010, the Indian lm industry has an annual turnover of Rs. 300 billion (approximately US$6.8 billion) including Music Industry. It employs more than 8 million people, most of whom are contract workers as opposed to regular employees. The above statistics cannot however be used to calculate the movie industrys share in the GDP or employment generation. This is because a vast proportion of the turnover takes place outside the legal economy. Though Indias overall entertainment industry is taking on professional colours (with the rise of TV production companies), Indias movie industry per se remains highly informal, personalityoriented and family-dominated. Until the late 1990s, it was not even recognised as an industry. Even though it has since been recognised as an industry, banks and other nancial institutions continue to avoid the industry due to the enormous risks involved in the business. Two banks, Canara Bank and Indian Bank, have reportedly lost heavily by nancing lms. However, the prospects of bank nancing and risk insurance are becoming brighter. The provision of 100% foreign direct investment has made the Indian lm market attractive for foreign enterprises such as 20th Century Fox, Sony Pictures, Walt Disney Pictures and Warner Bros. As a result Indian lm industry is fast turning professional and it adds to Indias tremendous soft power.
Cinema today is considered as one of most important Indian export to the world. At the end of 2010 it was reported that in terms of annual lm output, India ranks rst, followed by Hollywood and China. Enhanced technology paved the way for upgrading from established cinematic norms of delivering product, altering the manner in which content reached the target audience, as per regional tastes. Indian cinema found markets in over 90 countries where lms from India are screened
Cinema in India
The rst Indian chain of cinema theaters was owned by the Calcutta entrepreneur Jamshedji Framji Madan, who oversaw production of 10 lms annually and distributed them throughout the Indian subcontinent. During the early twentieth century cinema as a medium gained popularity across Indias population and its many economic sections. Tickets were made affordable to the common man at a low price and for the nancially capable additional comforts meant additional admission ticket price. Audiences thronged to cinema halls as this affordable medium of entertainment was available for as low as an anna (4 paisa) in Bombay. The content of Indian commercial cinema was increasingly tailored to appeal to these masses. Young Indian producers began to incorporate elements of Indias social life and culture into cinema. Others brought with them ideas from across the world. This was also the time when global audiences and markets became aware of Indias lm industry. After Indian independence the cinema of India was inquired by the S.K. Patil Commission. S.K. Patil, head of the commission, viewed cinema in India as a combination of art, industry, and showmanship while noting its commercial value. Patil further recommended setting up of a Film Finance Corporation under the Ministry of Finance. This advice was later taken up in 1960 and the institution came into being to provide nancial support to talented lmmakers throughout India. The Indian government had established a Films Division by 1949 which eventually
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commercial success ofSatya (1998), a low-budget lm based on the Mumbai underworld, directed by Ram Gopal Varma and written by Anurag Kashyap. The lms success led to the emergence of a distinct genre known as Mumbai noir , urban lms reecting social problems in the city of Mumbai. Later lms belonging to the Mumbai noir genre include Madhur Bhandarkars Chandni Bar (2001) and Trafc Signal (2007), Ram Gopal VarmasCompany (2002) and its prequel D (2005), Anurag Kashyaps Black Friday (2004), Irfan Kamals Thanks Maa (2009), and Deva KattasPrasthanam (2010).
counterparts in several ways. For example, the Hollywood musicals had as their plot the world of entertainment itself. Indian lmmakers, while enhancing the elements of fantasy so pervasive in Indian popular lms, used song and music as a natural mode of articulation in a given situation in their lms. The sixth inuence was European cinema: Indian Parallel Cinema was also inuenced by European cinema (particularly Italian neorealism and French poetic realism) rather than Hollywood
making, and they cannot even articulate sometimes why they make successful lms. From Dadasaheb Phalke to Farhan Akhtar, every decade of Bollywood has reected various hues and aspects of real life on reels of cinema. When Dadasaheb integrated centuries old mythological narratives with emerging medium of cinema in forms of lms like Raja Harishchandra and KaliyaMardan, it was instantly lapped up by audience and showed spiritual bent of mind of society of those times. Ashok Kumar starred Kismet, released during Quit India Movement, was a cinematic rendition of resistance against imperialistic British by Indians. Post independence Nehruvian socialist era was time of Guru Dutts, Satyajit Rays and Bimal Roys, ruthless perfectionists, who vividly captured the growing pains of infant democracy and universality of human emotions in their lms. During the time of 70s and 80s, with lms like Ankur, Manthan etc, art cinema nally came of age and showcased common mans struggle with the system and striving for basics of life. Post 90s, when Indian society woke up to globalisation and liberalisation, new-age cinema makers too broke traditional Bollywood s denitive cinematic boundaries. Thus we see that Films are cultural artifacts created by specic cultures, which reect those cultures, and, in turn, affect them. Film is considered to be an important art form, a source of popular entertainment and a powerful method for educating or indoctrinating citizens. The visual elements of cinema give motion pictures a universal power of communication.
Inuences
There have generally been six major inuences that have shaped the conventions of Indian popular cinema. The rst was the ancient Indian epicsof Mahabharata and Ramayana which have exerted a profound inuence on the thought and imagination of Indian popular cinema, particularly in its narratives. The second inuence was the impact of ancient Sanskrit drama, with its highly stylized nature and emphasis on spectacle, where music, dance and gesture combined to create a vibrant artistic unit with dance and mime being central to the dramatic experience. The third inuence was the traditional folk theatre of India, which became popular from around the 10th century with the decline of Sanskrit theatre. The fourth inuence was Parsi theatre, which blended realism and fantasy, music and dance, narrative and spectacle, earthy dialogue and ingenuity of stage presentation, integrating them into a dramatic discourse of melodrama. The fth inuence was Hollywood, where musicals were popular from the 1920s to the 1950s, though Indian lmmakers departed from their Hollywood
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Expert Advice
Hobby is taken as a clich term by the students, a struck part; but is it so? Certainly not. Hobbies are the mirror to your unexplored, unsaid character. So, this aspect is like manna for the interviewer enabling them to cut through the outer veils of your personality and to discover the depths. Questions about your hobby are actually the most enjoyable part of the whole process. I know and can tell it with certainty how I used to get amazed at the way those learned people tried to unravel me. It is also true that questions about your hobby are the deciding factor, so to speak pragmatically, of the whole interview. Truth and only truth is expected out from you, which means that manufacturing hobbies while you ll the form for mains exam, so, that easy questions come up, can prove quite fatal. Just explore the deepest part of you and what you do the best. Ask what makes you even oblivious of spatio-temporal limitations and what you get as answer, is your hobby. It can be anything. Write that word and come out successful.
Cinema
Moving picture is the best way through which humans has ever come closer in recreating reality. Most of us, in fact all of us cannot forget the nights when we traded our sleep with the Amitabh starrer and yes, felt grumpy in the morning. Cinema is an art where science collaborates with our human vision limitation to create an aura of its own world- avataar to speak in todays lingo. Watching lms as a hobby is the most ordinary and general personality trait that anyone can have. However, a creative approach can make this ordinary trait quite extraordinary. An inherent inquisitiveness must be developed so that when someone gets to know (or reads in the form) that cinema is your hobby, then one must be able to truly justify that. Knowing, some initials of your hobby (mostly of academic value and that, which justify your inquisitiveness) is a-must. For eg. Cinema came in, as a machine patented in the United States that showed animated pictures or movies with a device called the wheel of life or zoopraxiscope. Patented in 1867 by William Lincoln, moving drawings or photographs were watched through a slit in the zoopraxiscope. However, this was a far cry from motion pictures as we know them today. Modern motion picture making began with the invention of the motion picture camera. The Frenchman Louis Lumiere is often credited with inventing the rst motion picture camera in 1895. But in reality, several others had made similar inventions around the same time as Lumiere. What Lumiere invented was a portable motionpicture camera, lm processing unit and projector called the Cinematographe, three functions covered in one invention (such specicities might not be so important but they do boost your condence.) Apart from this, you must also know the journey of cinema in India (Indian connection or angle should be explored in details in any hobby). Some of the most common names like Dhundiraj Govind aka Dada Saheb Phalke must be known to you inside out; so, that you carry that whiff of condence with the interviewer. In any fraternity there are many rsts attached to it. Cinema is no different, so, you should also know things like, the rst moving picture made in India, to give you an example. There could be many rsts of this type; all this is nothing for a person who truly relishes cinema. Besides all this factual information, with a hobby like cinema, other things like- cinemas social and cultural impact and relevance, its various genres, various commissions, boards, your preferences and its reasons etc becomes quite signicant. Reading all this about something you like to do becomes quite an interesting journey in itself.
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KNOW IT ALL...
SPORTS
CRICKET
Indias worst defeat in England since 1959: Indias horror run in the Test series against England came to a tame end at The Oval as England completed a 4-0 whitewash by taking seven wickets in the post-Lunch session on day ve to beat the visitors by an innings and eight runs. The Indian cricket sides performance in England this summer ranks as their worst in England after the 5-0 whitewash in 1959 - which included three innings defeats and others by 171 runs and eight wickets. Rahul Dravid: Indian batsman Rahul Dravid has hit his 35th Test century surpassing Sunil Gavaskars mark of 34 hundreds. He is now the fourth batsman in the world having most Test centuries after Sachin Tendulkar (51), Jacques Kallis (40) and Ricky Ponting (39). Dravid achieve this feat during the rst innings of the fourth Test between India and England at Oval. Tendulkar and Zaheer Khan in ICC Test Team of the Year: Indian cricketers Sachin Tendulkar and Zaheer Khan earned a place in the ICC Test Team of the Year, chosen by a specially appointed selection panel headed by West Indian legend Clive Lloyd. ICC Test Team of the Year: Alastair Cook (Eng), Hashim Amla (SA), Jonathan Trott (Eng), Sachin Tendulkar (Ind), K. Sangakkara (SL, wicketkeeper/captain), A.B. de Villiers (SA), Jacques Kallis (SA), Stuart Broad (Eng), Graeme Swann (Eng), Dale Steyn (SA), James Anderson (Eng). 12th man: Zaheer Khan (Ind). Tendulkar made the side for the third year in a row, having appeared in the ICC World Test Team of the Year in 2009 and 2010. Dhoni got Spirit of Cricket Award & Trott is cricketer of the year: The Indian skipper M.S. Dhoni won the Spirit of Cricket Award at the annual International Cricket Council (ICC) awards function in London. Jonathan Trott, the England batsman, has been named the Cricketer of the Year for 2011, the ICCs top accolade. He received the Sir Gareld Sobers trophy at the annual ceremony in London, after his team-mate Alastair Cook had won the Test Cricketer of the Year award. Also De Montfort University in Leicester has conferred an honorary degree of Doctor of Law on MS Dhoni. Four more inducted into Hall of Fame: The International Cricket Council (ICC) announced its latest inductees into its Hall of Fame. Alan Davidson, Belinda Clark, Curtly Ambrose and the late Frederick Spofforth joined the earlier list of 64, nalised over the years. The ICC Cricket Hall of Fame recognises the achievements of the legends of the game from crickets long and illustrious history. It was launched by the International Cricket Council (ICC) on 2 January 2009, in association with the Federation of International Cricketers Associations (FICA), as part of the ICCs centenary celebrations. The initial inductees were the 55 players included in the FICA Hall of Fame which ran from 1999 to 2003, but further members are added each year during the ICC Awards ceremony. David Boon: David Boon will make his debut as a member of the Emirates Elite Panel of ICC match referees when he will ofciate in the series between Zimbabwe and Pakistan starting on September 1 in Bulawayo. Boon, who played 107 Tests and 181 ODIs for Australia replaced compatriot Alan Hurst, who retired on July 9 after the fth and last ODI between England and Sri Lanka in Manchester, in the elite panel after joining the panel in April 2004. Lasith Malinga: Lasith Malinga grabbed a record third hat-trick in the fth and nal ODI against Australia in Colombo. The paceman dismissed Mitchell Johnson, John Hasings and Xavier Doherty in his eighth over to become the rst bowler to take three hat-tricks in one-dayers. Museum in UK County honours former Indian cricketer Ranji: Authorities in Englands Hove city dedicated a portion of the Sussex Cricket Museum in the memory of late cricketer, K. S. Ranjit Singh Ji. This section of the museum was inaugurated by acting Indian High Commissioner to U.K., Rajesh Prasad. Ranjit Singh was an Indian prince and a test cricketer who played for the English cricket team and county cricket for Sussex. He has been credited for bringing an unconventional technique of batting backed with fast reactions; he brought a new style to batting that revolutionised the game. Ponting celebrated 100 Test wins: Ricky Ponting became the rst cricketer to play in 100 Test wins after Australia defeated Sri Lanka by 125 runs in the rst Test in Galle. The former skipper was already Test crickets most successful captain with 48 wins.
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FOOTBALL
FIFA has banned Syrian national football team from the 2014, World Cup qualiers for elding an ineligible player. Brazil has lifted the Under-20 Soccer World Cup defeating Portugal by 3-2 in the Colombian capital of Bogota.
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Brazilian player Oscar scored hat-trick goals in the match. The match was sent to extra-time after the full-time saw the deadlocked at 2-2. With this win Brazil won the U-20 World Cup for the fth time. Earlier Mexico has beaten France 3-1 in the third-place play-off. Bhaichung Bhutia: Bhaichung Bhutia, the only Indian footballer to play more than 100 international matches, has announced his retirement after serving the country for 16 years. The 34-year-old soccer player is better known as the Sikkimese Sniper for his extraordinary shooting skills. During his international career spanning across 1995-2011 he played 110 matches and scored 43 goals. He was born on 15 December, 1976 at Tinkitam in Sikkim. He made his debut in 1995 in Santosh Trophy under captainship of Tanumoy Bose. His nal appearance came in January this year in the Asian Cup contest against South Korea in Doha. Bhutia was a much decorated player. The Padma Shri in 2008 followed the Arjuna Award in 1998. He was the AIFF player of the year twice in 1995 and 2008. He also won the Golden Boot in the National League (199697), Federation Cup (1995, 1996, and 2006), LG ASEAN Cup (2003) and the Calcutta League (1994). He played for football clubs like East Bengal, JCT Mills and Mohun Bagan. Lionel Messi has won the inaugural UEFA Best Player in Europe award for the 2010-11 season. Messi beat his Barcelona teammate Xavi Hernandez and Cristiano Ronaldo of Real Madrid in a poll of journalists from across Europe. Messi scored 53 goals, as he and xavi led Barcelona to the Champions League and Spanish titles. Salt Lake Stadium in Kolkata hosted the FIFA international friendly between Argentina and Venezuala on September 2. In this match, Argentina was defeated by a solitary goal.
three Grand Slam tournaments have tie breaks in every set other than the last set (i.e. the fth set for men and third set for women), and therefore their last set continues indenitely until a two-game lead is reached. List of 2011 US Open Winners Mens Singles: Novak Djokovic won his sixth consecutive tournament nal match over second ranked Rafael Nadal, the defending champion. Djokovic overcame a stern ve set test from third seed Roger Federer in the seminals and defeated Nadal 6-2, 6-3, 6-7 (3), 6-1 in a rousing nal. The win marks Djokovics 3rd Grand Slam of the Year. Womens Singles: Samantha Stosur staked claim to her rst Grand Slam Title in a stunning upset of bookmaker and media favorite Serena Williams. After a string of upsets in the bottom half of the draw Stosur, the ninth seed, served and played perfectly against the stronger Williams and denied the American her 14th Grand Slam. The 6-2, 6-3 nal was a convincing victory, featuring another Serena controversy at the US Open. Mens Doubles: Austrian Jurgen Melzer and German Phillip Petzchner downed Polands Mariusz Frystenberg and Marcin Matkowski 6-2, 6-2 to complete an upset prone draw. The heavily favored Mayer brothers were bounced in the rst round. Melzer and Petzchner were the ninth seeds. Mix Doubles: Melanie Oudin & Jack Sock (USA) defeated Gisela Dulko & Eduardo Schwank (ARG) by 7-6, 4-6, 1-0 Womens doubles: Liezel Huber (USA) and Lisa Raymond (USA) defeated Vania King (USA) and Yaroslava Shvedova (KAZ) by 4-6, 7-6, 7-6. Boys Singles: Great Britains 13th seed Oliver Golding downed top seed Jiri Vesely. 2011 has been a strong season for UK juniors on the male and female side. Golding showed sound ground strokes and a determined will to win in coming back after dropping the rst set. Girls Singles: Grace Min gutted out a tense upset of Frances top seed Caroline Garcia. The unseeded Min marched
US Open
The US Open, formally the United States Open Tennis Championships, is a hard court tennis tournament which is the modern iteration of one of the oldest tennis championships in the world, the U.S. National Championship, which for mens singles was rst contested in 1881. Since 1987, the US Open has been chronologically the fourth and nal tennis major comprising the Grand Slam each year; the other three are the Australian Open, French Open and Wimbledon. The main tournament consists of ve different event championships: mens and womens singles, mens and womens doubles, and mixed doubles, with additional tournaments for senior, junior, and wheelchair players. Since 1978, the tournament has been played on acrylic hard courts at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center at Flushing Meadows-Corona Park in Queens, New York City. The US Open has tie breaks in every set, including the last set. The other
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through the lower bracket to notch a series of upsets before putting away the popular Garcia, who gives France another solid female prospect.
OTHER SPORTS
New records in World athletics championship, 2011 An eight-member Indian team have participated in the World athletics championships, held in Daegu, Korea, from August 27 to September 4. In this meet Jamaicas Yohan Blake won the World championships 100m nal after red hot favorite and defending champion Usain Bolt was sensationally disqualied after a false start and Oscar Pistorius historymaking participation at the world championships is at an end after the South African double amputee failed to make the 4x400m relay team for nal. The controversial Blade Runner, who runs with carbon bre prosthetic running blades and was the rst amputee to compete at the worlds, nished last in his seminal heat in the individual 400m. But Bolt has got his chance in 200m sprint. The 25-year-old Jamaican defending champion and World record-holder crushed the eld in the 200m, winning in the fourth fastest time ever run 19.40 seconds at the world championships in Daegu. And he also brought the World athletics championships to a thrilling climax as his Jamaican team smashed the 4x100m relay World record in Daegu. It was Bolts second gold of the World championships after winning the 200m crown. Deepika wins gold Indias Deepika Kumari has won the junior recurve individual womens gold medal getting the better of South Korean top seed Kim Minjung 6-2 in the nal at Legnica in Poland. This is for the rst time an Indian archer is winning a back-to-back world title. Deepika, 17, had won the cadet recurve individual crown in 2009 at Ogden (US). The Tata Archery Academy cadet had won the 19th Commonwealth Games womens recurve individual event last year for her rst individual gold medal in the senior section.
India wins title The Indian senior team has won the Presidents Cup international volleyball tournament, beating Tunisia in the nal held at Almaty, Kazhakstan. Narang receives Khel Ratna award Ace shooter Gagan Narang has received the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna award from the President Pratibha Patil, at the Rashtrapati Bhawan. Narang had also been bestowed with the honour of Padma Shri. This year number of Arjuna awards was increased to 19. This includes Virdhawal Khade (swimming), Suranjoy Singh (Boxing), Preeja Sreedharan (Athletics), Tejaswini Sawant (shooting), Rajpal Singh (Hockey), Sunil Chhetri (Football), Rahul Banerjee (archery), G. Jwala (badminton), Rakesh Kumar and Tejeswini Bai (kabaddi), Sanjay Kumar (volleyball), Ravinder Singh (wrestling), K. Ravikumar (weightlifting), Sandhyarani Devi (wushu), Prasanta Karmakar (paralympics) Somdev Devvarman (Tennis), Vikas Gowda (athletics), Ashish Kumar (gymnastics) and Zaheer Khan (cricket). Coaches Kuntal Kumar Roy (athletics), I. Venkateshwara Rao (boxing), Devender Kumar Rathore (gymnastics), Rajinder Singh Jr. (hockey) and Ram Phal (wrestling) received the Dronacharya award. Shabbir Ali (football), Sushil Kohli (swimming) and Raj Kumar (wrestling) were presented the Dhyan Chand award. Reena Kaushal, Mamta Sodha, Dilip Donde and Balwant Singh Sandhu (posthumous) were presented the Tenzing Norgay national adventure award. The Petroleum Sports Promotion Board was presented the Rashtriya Khel Protsahan Puraskar. Quite notably the Maulana Abul Kalam Azad trophy, given to the best University for its sports achievements in an academic year, was not presented for the rst time in 54 years since its inception, as the Association of Indian
HOCKEY
India beat Pakistan, takes trophy in inaugural Asian Champions Hockey Tournament India defeated Pakistan 4-2 in the penalty shootout in a nerve-wrecking nal to clinch the inaugural Asian Champions Trophy hockey tournament in Ordos (China). Indian goalkeeper S Sreejes was the star for India as he saved twice in the shoot-out to ensure India won the Trophy in september 2011. Rajpal Singh, Danish Mujtaba, Yuvraj Walmiki and Sarvanjit Singh scored for India in the penalty shootout while Muhammad Rizwan and Waseem Ahmed sounded the board for Pakistan after both the sides were locked goalless in the regular and extra time.
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Two-year bans for Sardara, Sandeep: Sardara Singh and Sandeep Singh have been handed two-year bans from international hockey on disciplinary grounds. The two, members of the Indian team to play in the Asian Champions Trophy, had left the training camp in Bangalore recently without permission. The team was scheduled to leave for China on 28th August. Sardara and Sandeep had rst made themselves unavailable for the Azlan Shah tournament by opting to play in the Belgium league. Then they left the camp to attend an event organized by the Indian Hockey Federation (IHF) in Mumbai. This was the nal act that landed the two key players in a tough spot. Sardara and Sandeep, according to Batra, would not be allowed to take part in any Hockey India-organised tournament. They, however, were free to play in any hockey league overseas and in the World Series Hockey to be held late this year.
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Universities (AIU) had reportedly failed to nalize the winner. Indian wrestlers win nine medals Indian wrestlers won nine medals, including gold, in the World cadet wrestling championships at Szombathely, Hungary. India bagged six medals in freestyle and three in womens section. However, the Greco Roman wrestlers returned emptyhanded. The medallists: Freestyle: Gold: Ashish (58kg). Silver: Bajrang Singh (54kg), Dinesh Kumar (69kg). Bronze: Mangal Kadyan (42kg), Devi Singh (50kg), Praveen (63kg). Women: Silver: Pooja Dhanda (56kg). Bronze: Ritu (46kg), Lalita (52kg) Madhumita Bisht Former national champion Madhumita Bisht will be the new Indian badminton coach for the upcoming China Masters Super Series (13-18 September). She will act as coach in the place of chief national coach Pullela Gopichand, who will not accompany her to China. India won team medal at Nomura Cup after 18 years A brilliant performance by teenager Khalin Joshi helped the Indian golf team to end an 18-year long medal drought with a bronze in the team championships of the Asia-Pacic Golf championships for Nomura Cup at Denarau, Fiji. Australia won the Nomura Cup for a record ninth time. Krishna Poonia won discus title Commonwealth Games gold medalist Krishna Poonia won the discus title in the Portland annual athletics meet in Portland, U.S., with a season best 58.88 metres. She had registered her previous season best of 56.23m while nishing fourth in the Asian championships in Kobe, Japan, last month. Poonia is training in Portland under the guidance of former Olympic champion Mac Wilkins. The qualication standard is 59.50m, a mark that Poonia and the other leading discus thrower in the country,
Harwant Kaur, should be capable of achieving. Advani falters in nal again Indian cueist Pankaj Advani faltered in the nal as Englands Mike Russell successfully defended his pointformat title in the IBSF World billiards championship being played in Carlow, Ireland. In a repeat of last years nal in the point-format, former champion Advani went down 3-6 to ten-time World champion Russell in the summit clash.
using high-performance thin-layer chromatography. The work has been done on an Indian medicinal plant, Centella asiatica, commonly known as Indian Pennywort (Kodangan in Malayalam). The study has helped detect elite types from 60 varieties of the plant collected from South India and the Andaman islands. Top China honour for Indian China has conferred its highest literary award on Prof B R Deepak for his translation of classical Chinese poems into Hindi. Deepak, who is from Centre of Chinese and Southeast Asian Studies, JNU, is the rst Indian to receive the Special Book Award for his contribution to Chinese studies and culture. Lata Mangeshkar Lata Mangeshkar has been honoured with the Pazhassi Raja Sangeetha Ratna award by the Maharashtra Governor for her contribution to music industry. Gulshan Grover Gulshan Grover has been honoured with the best actor international award at the New York City International Film Festival for his performance in Hollywood lm Desperate Endeavours.
AWARDS
Lifetime award for Shahryar Eminent Urdu poet, academician and Hindi lm lyricist A. M. K. Shahryar has been honoured with the Sir Syed Lifetime Achievement Award by the Aligarh Alumni Association, New York Tristate, US, for his outstanding contribution to Urdu language and literature. Southern sweep at the National Film Award K. Balachander, doyen of Tamil cinema, was honoured with the Dadasaheb Phalke Award by President Pratibha Patil at the 58th edition of National Film Awards 2010 function at Vigyan Bhawan. It was a southern sweep as Malayalam lm Adaminte Makan Abu bagged the Swarna Kalam for the best feature lm. For the same lm, versatile Malayalam actor Salim Kumar collected the Rajat Kamal. Sahitya award for Kashmiri author Noted Kashmiri writer and poet Gulam Nabi Aatishs book Nov Kehtsha Mentsha has bagged the prestigious Sahitya Akademi Award in the childrens literature category. The award comprises a cash prize of Rs.51,000, a citation and a robe of honour. TBGRI scientists won Sethi award A team of researchers from the Tropical Botanic Garden and Research Institute (TBGRI) have won the Dr. P.D. Sethi Award-2010 for their analysis of herbs
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APPOINTMENTS
Four new Governors appointed The Union government formally announced the appointment of the former Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister, K. Rosaiah, as the Tamil Nadu Governor. He is among four new Governors, whose appointments were announced by the Rashtrapati Bhavan. The former Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister, Ram Naresh Yadav (83), was appointed the Madhya Pradesh Governor and the former Kerala Assembly Speaker, Vakkom Purushothaman, has been named as the Governor of Mizoram. Syed Ahmed, a former Maharashtra Minister, has been appointed Jharkhand Governor.
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R.A Mehta New Lokayukta of Gujarat: Modi Government Challenges its Constitutionality Gujarat Governor Kamala Beniwal has appointed R.A Mehta, a retired judge of the Gujarat High Court, as the state Lokayukta. Justice Mehtas name was recommended by Chief Justice of Gujarat High Court, S J Mukhopadhyaya and was approved by the Congress. The announcement on the appointment was made by Leader of the Opposition in the Assembly Shaktisinh Gohil. Earlier Gohil had requested the Governor to appoint a Lokayukta, arguing that the government had failed for the past seven-and-a half years to ll the post in keeping with its constitutional obligations. 75-year-old Mehta had served as a judge of the High Court from 1982 till his retirement in May 1998 and has also held the post of the Acting Chief Justice several times. However, the Narendra Modi government has accused the Governor of bypassing the government and has moved to the High Court challenging the constitutional propriety of the appointment. Allahabad High Court gets 9 new judges Nine judicial ofcers, mostly from the district courts, have been promoted as judges to the Allahabad High Court. They will take oath following which the total number of judges in the high court will go up to 71. The high court, including the Lucknow bench, has a sanctioned strength of 160 judges, but has been working with a depleted staff. Supreme Court judges sworn in President Pratibha Patil has appointed the Chief Justice of the Gujarat High Court, S.J. Mukhopadhaya; the Chief Justice of the Karnataka High Court, J.S. Khehar; and Justice Ranjana Desai of the Bombay High Court as Supreme Court Judges. They were sworn in by Chief Justice of India S.H. Kapadia on September 13 in his court hall. Justice Desai is the second woman
Judge in the Supreme Court. In its sanctioned strength of 31 judges, Justice Gyan Sudha Misra is the only woman judge now. Khanduri replaces Pokhriyal as Uttarakhand Chief Minister Uttarakhand Chief Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank has been asked by the Bharatiya Janata Party high command to put in his papers. The State legislature party is to meet in Dehradun to elect B.C. Khanduri to replace Mr. Pokhriyal as Chief Minister of the hill State. Lamine Diack Senegals Lamine Diack has been reelected President of the International Association of Athletics Federation (IAAF). Diack received 173 of 200 votes at the governing bodys congress in balloting. The 78-yearold was expected to make the fouryear term his nal one after serving as the federations top ofcial since November 1999. Diack, the former Dakar mayor, came to power after the death of iron-sted IAAF leader Primo Nebiolo. M P Veerendrakumar M P Veerendrakumar, CMD of the Mathrubhoomi group of newspapers, has been elected Chairman of the Board of Directors of Press Trust of India.
unity among various trade unions and among other Left organisations. A measure of success came recently when the Congress-backed Indian National Trade Union Congress joined hands with other organisations to pressure the government to secure the rights of workers and highlight common issues like price rise. Harischandra Prasad dead Mullapudi Harischandra Prasad (91), a doyen of industry in Andhra Pradesh, passed away. A rst generation entrepreneur, Harischandra Prasad was born in an agricultural family in 1921. A leading light in the States industrial history, named as Andhra Birla of yesteryears, Prasad ventured into the sugar industry by setting Andhra Sugars in 1947 in Tanuku to help sugarcane growers. Economist D.U. Sastry passed away D.U. Sastry, eminent industrial economist, passed away. He was 81. Professor Sastrys career started with a short stint at the Indian Institute of Economics in Hyderabad. He then moved to the Institute of Economic Growth in Delhi, then headed by V.K.R.V. Rao, in 1961. Ganapati Sthapati dead V. Ganapati Sthapati, the architect of modern-day wonders such as the 133-foot Thiruvalluvar statue in Kanyakumari, Valluvar Kottam in Chennai and the Kannagi and Madhavi statue in Poompuhar, died. He was 84. He was a winner of various awards including the Padma Bhushan. A documentary The Living Tradition - Shilpi Speaks was made on the shilpaic tradition as enunciated by him and won the Presidents Award for the best documentary in 1992. Ram Sharan Sharma Eminent Marxist historian and Indologist Ram Sharan Sharma known for his trenchant observations on institutions in ancient Indian society and his report on Bihar-Bengal boundary has passed away. He was 92. He was a stalwart among the
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OBITUARY
Jehangir Sabavala passed away Well-known painter Jehangir Sabavala, 89, passed away. He had been suffering from lung cancer for the past two years. Veteran trade unionist, CPI(M) leader M.K. Pandhe passed away In the passing away of veteran trade unionist and CPI(M) Polit Bureau member Madhukar Kashinath Pandhe, 86, the party has lost one of its foremost leaders who worked for the welfare of the working class for more than seven decades. One of the central themes of his work was to bring about
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Delhi Group of Historians. His 1977 book, Ancient India ran foul of the Morarji Desai-led Janata government, and it was banned the following year. The book courted controversy for Dr Sharmas views on the historical role of Krishna in the Mahabharata. He was the founding Chairman of Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR) in 1972. He also served as President of the Indian History Congress in 1975. He was the recipient of Jawaharlal Nehru award in 1989.
REPORTS
UNAIDS Report The new report of Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) has said that the Asia and Pacic region has seen a 20 per cent drop in new HIV infections since 2001 and a three-fold increase in access to antiretroviral therapy since 2006, but its progress is threatened by inadequate focus on key populations at higher risk of HIV infection and insufcient funding from domestic and international sources. Launched at the 2011 International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacic (ICAAP), the report, titled HIV in Asia and the Pacic Getting to Zero found that most of the countries in the region are a long way from achieving universal access goals for HIV prevention, treatment, care and support. The AIDS response in Asia and the Pacic is underfunded, the report found. In 2009, as estimated $ 1 billion was spent of AIDS response in 30 countries across the regionapproximately one third of the funding needed to achieve universal access goals to HIV services. Though China, Malaysia, Pakistan Samoa and Thailand are funding the bulk of their HIV responses from domestic resources, many countries in Asia and the Pacic depend heavily on foreign funds, particularly for the provision of antiretroviral therapy. Funding cutbacks from international donors also threaten progress in the regional AIDS response. In 2009, international assistance for the global AIDS response leveled off for the rst time in a decade, and in 2010 it declined. According to the report, investments to protect key populations from HIV remain insufcient. Among countries reporting detailed expenditure data in 2010, only 8 per cent of total AIDS spending in South Asia and 20 per cent in Southeast Asia focused on HIV prevention among key populations at higher risk of HIV infection. An
estimated 4.9 million people were living with HIV in Asia and the Pacic in 2009, a gure that has remained relatively stable since 2005. The majority of people living with HIV in the region are in 11 countries: Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Thailand and Vietnam. Mytheen Kunju Commission Justice Mytheen Kunju Commission, which probed into the Thekkady boat tragedy on September 30, 2009 resulting in the loss of 45 lives, has indicted many persons including the boat driver in the list of guilty and recommended awarding apt punishment in accordance with law. The Thekkady tragedy occurred when the boat Jalakanyaka which was on a cruise, overturned 2 km away from the boat landing point. The vessel sank after the boat driver reportedly took a sharp turn in the waters to facilitate the tourists view wild animals on the shores from a close range. Most of the victims were from outside the state.
REMOVALS
Deven Sharma Deven Sharma, Indian-American president of credit rating agency Standard & Poors, has resigned less than three weeks after his company found itself at the receiving end of the Obama administrations ire following its downgrade of the United States credit rating from AAA to AA+. S&Ps downgrade of the U.S.s debt from AAA to AA+ on August 5, based on its perception that the decit reduction measures agreed by the administration were insufcient to stabilize national debt. Douglas Peterson, chief operating ofcer of Citibank N.A. would be its next President effective September 12. Mr Sharma will take on a special assignment working on the Companys strategic portfolio review until the years end. Steve Jobs step down as Apple CEO Legendary technology entrepreneur Steve Jobs has logged out as CEO of Apple Inc., a company that started form the garage of his family home about 35 years ago. Mr Jobs is the main force behind iconic brands like Macintosh and iPad computers, iPod music players and iPhone mobiles. It was long anticipated because of his bad health. Mr Jobs was diagnosed with cancer in 2003 and aloes went for liver transplant in 2009, when he had taken a break from the company. He has passed on the baton to run Apple to 50-year-old Tim Cook. While Mr Cook has now become the CEO Mr Jobs has assumed the role of Chairman with immediate effect.
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MISCELLANEOUS
Jharkhand women scale peak in Karakoram Range Binita Soren and Sheelarani Mahato, who hail from Jharkhand, have become the rst women mountaineers to climb Mt. Saser Kangri IV in the Eastern Karakoram Range of Himalayas in Ladakh. The expedition, sponsored by the Tata Steel Foundation between July 10 and August 21, is considered to be one of the toughest in India. Jammu & Kashmir The Jammu & Kashmir State Human Right Commission (SHRC) has created ripples by revealing that 2,156 unidentied bodies are lying in mass graves in three districts of north Kashmir. The special investigation team of SHRC revealed 2,730 unidentied bodies had been buried in 38 sites in north Kashmirs Baramulla, Bandipore and Kupwara districts.
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These were claimed to be the bodies of unidentied militants by the police and handed over to local people for burial in various unmarked graveyards of north Kashmir. Subsequently, 517 bodies were identied. Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner Austrian climber Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner become the rst woman to conquer all fourteen 8,000 meter summits without articial oxygen, when she reached the top of the K2 on 23rd August. Ms. Kaltenbrunner, is the third woman only to climb all 14 highest summits but the rst to do so without articial oxygen. She had already attempted the 8, 611 meter K2 six times before but had to turn back each time before the summit. This recent victory marks the end of Ms. Kaltenbrunner 8-000-meter summits race that began in May 1998 with her escalation of Cho Oyu on the border between Nepal and Tibet. The rst person to scale the worlds 14 highest peaks in 1986 was the Italian Reinhold Messner.
Dick Cheney Recent book In My Time: A Personal and Political Memoir Indra Nooyi Indra Nooyi Chief Executive of Pepsico was ranked ahead of Congress chief Sonia Gandhi by Forbes on their worlds 10 most powerful women list. The other Indians who gured in the top 100 list were Chanda Kocchar, CEO ICICI Bank (43) and Kiran MazumdarShaw Founder, Biocon (99). TOP TEN 1. Angela Merkel, Germany Chancellor 2. Hillary Clinton, US Secretary of States 3. Dilma Rouseff, Brazilian President 4. Indra Nooyi, Pepsico CEO 5. Sheryl Sandberg, COO Facebook 6. Melinda Gates, Co-Founder of Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation 7. Sonia Gandhi, Congress Chief 8. Michelle Obama, US Fist Lady 9. Christine Lagarde, IMF MD 10. Irene Rosenfeld, CEO, Kraft Foods
Rani Avantika Bais life to be part of school syllabus Human Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal has assured the Rajya Sabha that a chapter on the life of freedom ghter Rani Avantika Bai would be included in school curriculum. Rani Avantika Bai was a Lodhi warrior-queen in princely state of Ramgarh, now in Madhya Pradesh, and had fought against Britishers in 1857 and sacriced her life. River Found 13,000 ft Beneath the Amazon Scientists led by Indian-origin researcher have discovered a huge under-ground river which, they believe, is owing some 13,000 feet beneath the mighty Amazon River in Brazil. The researcher at Brazil,s National Observatory (BNO) believe the subterranean river is about 6, 000km long, about the same length as the Amazon on the surface. The researcher have named the river Hamza after the team supervisor Valiya Hamza, an Indian-origin scientist who has been studying the region for over four decades.
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INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP
QUESTIONS@IP...
2. Match the following cricket umpires with their country and select the correct answer using codes below. Cricket umpire 1. daryl harper 2. billy Bowden 3. billy doctrove 4. rudi koertzen Options are: A B C D (a) 4 3 2 1 (b) 1 2 3 4 (c) 2 3 4 1 (d) 1 4 3 2 3. Which among the following statement is not correct? (a) Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) of India is the supreme audit institution for enforcing the nancial accountability of the central and state governments. (b) CAG, at the time of appointment takes an oath similar to that taken by the judges of the Supreme Court. (c) CAGs act 1971 lays down a committee procedure for the selection and appointment of CAG. (d) The role of Indian CAG as comp troller is very limited. 4. Many dormant volcanoes in different Country A. south Africa B. west Indies C. new Zealand D. Australia
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4. Black necked
10. According to the proposed rights of persons with disabilities bill, 2011: 1. A person with disability, needing assistance, shall have the right to be accompanied by a service animal by paying an extra charge for the animal. 2. All limited guardians shall operate as plenary guardians and will have to act in close consultation with the person with disability to arrive at legally binding decisions. 3. Six per cent seats to be reserved for the disabled people in all courses of higher education and setting up an Education Reform Commission for advancement of disability rights. 4. Creation of a National Fund for Persons with Disabilities and to resolve any disputes, a National Disability Rights Tribunal to be set up.
7. Consider following statements: 1) National capital territory of Delhi is the largest metropolis by area and the second largest metropolis by population in India. 2) Although technically a federally administered union territory, the political administration of Delhi today more closely resembles that of a state of India. 3) It was King George VI who declared Delhi as the capital of India on December 12, 1912. Correct statement/s is/are: (a) 1 and 2 (b) 2 and 3 (c) 3 and 1 (d) 1, 2 and 3
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP Correct statements are: (a) 1,2 (c) 2,3,4 (b) 3,4 (d) 2,3 14. Consider following statements about 2011 FIFA Womans World cup: 1. It was held in Germany 2. Japan won the nal against Brazil on a penalty shootout. 3. By wining this cup, Japanese women team has become the rst Asian team to win a FIFA world cup. Correct statement/s is/are: (a) 1 and 2 (c) 3 and 1 (b) 2 and 3 (d) 1, 2 and 3
Vol.1 Issue1 October 2011 (a) 1 and 2 (c) 3 and 1 (b) 2 and 3 (d) 1, 2 and 3
18. Consider following statements: 1. 17-30 % rise in wages have been made for over ve crore Mahatma Gandhi NREGA workers by linking wage rate with the Consumer Price Index for Agricultural labour (CPIAC) by Ministry of Rural Development. 2. In many states like Arunanchal Pradesh and Nagaland, statutory minimum wage is as low as Rs. 80 and Rs. 81.40 respectively. Correct statement/s is/are: (a) 1 and 2 (c) Only 2 (b) Only 1 (d) Neither 1 nor 2
11. Consider following statements: 1. Wimbledon 2011 was the 125th edition of the championship and the third grand slam tournament of the year. 2. Novak Djokovic of Czech Republic won his rst wimbledon title in 2011 by beating Rafael Nadal. 3. Petra Kvitova of Serbia won ladies single wimbledon 2011 which is her rst grand slam title in singles. Correct statement/s is/are: (a) 1 only (c) 3 and 1 (b) 2 and 3 (d) 1, 2 and 3
15. Which among the following statement is not correct? (a) The rst Lokpal bill was introduced and passed in the fourth lok sabha in 1968. (b) The last time it was introduced was in fourteenth lok sabha in 2008. (c) According to the draft Lokpal bill 2010, Lokpal will be an executive body with police powers. (d) Lokpal has been derived from the institution of Ombudsman which was rst created in Swedon. 16. As per recently released WTO report: 1. India emerged as the 10th largest service exporter and the 16th largest merchandise exporter in 2010. 2. India emerged as the third largest importer after US and China. 3. Indias goods exports went up by 46% in 2010, helping the country to expand its market share to 1.4% from 1.2% in 2009. Which is/are correct? (a) 1 and 2 (b) 1 and 3 (c) 2 and 3 (d) None of the above. 17. 2nd Administrative Reforms Commission in its 4th report Ethics in Governance gave which of the following recommendations: 1. Constitution should be amended to provide for a national ombudsman to be called as Rashtriya Lokayukta. 2. The prime minister should be kept out of the jurisdiction of the Rashtriya Lokayukta. 3. Chairman of the Rashtriya Lokayukta shall be selected by the president on the advice of Council of ministers headed by the prime minister. Correct statement/s is/are:
12. Consider following statements: 1. Newly formed Gorkhaland Territorial Administration ( GTA) will be an appointed body for the Darjeeling hill area in west Bengal. 2. With this new setup, Gorkha Janmukti Morcha ( GJM) has given away its demand for a separate state.
19. Consider the following statements about MPLAD Scheme: 1. The Scheme was started in 1993-94 under the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs for creating durable assets at the grass root level. 2. Member of Parliaments can spend up to Rs. 10 lakh from their MPLAD fund to assist physically disabled people. 3. The annual allocation for each Member of Parliament under the Scheme is Rs. 5 crore. Which of the above is INCORRECT? (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) 3 only (d) None of these 20. Consider the following statements: 1. Sushil Kumar Modi has been elected as the Chairman of the Empowered Committee of State Finance Ministers on GST (Goods and Services Tax). 2. The earlier Chairman was former West Bengal Finance Minister, Asim Dasgupta, who quit the post due to poor health. Which is/are correct? (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2 21. Consider following statements: 1. Indira Gandhi National Open University received the best public choice award for innovation in vocational education and skills training at the World Education Summit 2011. 2. Jamia Milia Islamia bagged the best
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3. The demand for a separate administrative unit in this region has existed since 1907 when the Hillmens association of Darjeeling submitted a memorandum to MintoMorley reforms demanding a separate unit. Incorrect statement/s is/are: (a) 1 and 2 (c) 3 and 1 (b) 2 and 3 (d) 1, 2 and 3
13. Consider following statements: 1. Jaduguda in Singhbhum Thrust Belt (in the state of Jharkhand, formerly part of Bihar) is the rst uranium deposit to be discovered in the country in 1951. 2. Recent studies have shown that Tummalapalle in Karnataka could have one of the largest uranium reserves of 49,000 tonnes in the world. 3. At present, india is estimated to have a total reserve of about 1,75,000 tonnes of uranium apart from tummalapalle region. Correct statement/s is/are: (a) 1,2,3 (c) 2,3 (b) 1,2 (d) 3,1
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP jury award for ICT enabled higher education institute of the year at the World Education Summit 2011. Incorrect statement/s is/are: (a) 1 and 2 (c) Only 2 (b) Only 1 (d) Neither 1 nor 2 about M.F. Husain is not true: (a) He was awarded with Padma Shri in 1955, Padma Bhushan in 1973 and Padma Vibhushan in 1991. (b) He was nominated to the Rajya Sabha in 1986 (c) Although a Qatari national at the time of his death, he has been widely regarded as the Picasso of India. (d) He made his rst lm, Gaja Gamini in the year 2000 and another movie Meenaxi: A Tale of Three Cities in 2004. 26. Consider following statements: 1. The rst test of the series in July 2011 at Lords London between India and England was the 2000th test and the 100th between India and England. 2. The rst ofcially recognised Test match commenced on 15 March 1877, was contested between England and Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) and the rst test played by India was in 1932 at Lords London. 3. India recorded their rst Test victory against England at Madras (now Chennai) in 1952. Later in the same year, they won their rst Test series, which was against Pakistan. 4. The ICC Test Championship is an international competition run by the International Cricket Council in the sport of cricket for the 9 teams that play Test cricket and as of 5 December 2010, India lead the ICC Test Championship with a rating of 129, while the lowest rated team, Bangladesh, has a rating of 7. Correct statement/s is/are: (a) 1, 2, 3 and 4 (b) 1, 2 and 3 (c) 1, 2 and 4 (d) 2, 3 and 4 27. Which among the following statements is not true? (a) NASAs Space Shuttle program, ofcially called Space Transportation System (STS), was the United States governments manned launch vehicle program from 1981 to 2011 in which the winged Space Shuttle orbiter was launched vertically into
Vol.1 Issue1 October 2011 low Earth orbit (LEO). (b) The shuttle is the only winged manned spacecraft to achieve orbit and land, and the only reusable space vehicle that has ever made multiple ights into orbit. (c) In 135 missions, six space shuttles have been used from which two shuttles have been destroyed, both with the loss of crew. (d) The rst fully functional orbiter was the Columbia and the last orbiter to be launched was Atlantis which saw the nal launching on July 8, 2011. 28. Consider following statements: 1. Parliament passed the Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act in 1988, but it was never implemented as the rules were not framed. 2. According to the Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Bill 2011, Properties held by a coparcener in a Hindu Undivided Family and property held by a person in duciary capacity are excluded from the denition of benami transaction. 3. The benami transactions are one of the sources of circulation and investment of black money. Correct statement/s is/are: (a) 1 and 2 (c) 3 and 1 (b) 2 and 3 (d) 1, 2 and 3
22. Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) was signed between India and Sri-Lanka in July 2011 to resume the passengers ship liner service which was discontinued in early 1980s. This service will be available between which of the following places: 1. Rameshwaram- Talaimannar 2. Tuticorin- Colombo 3. Ennore port- Galle 4. Beypore- Hambantota Correct option is: (a) 1, 2, 3 and 4 (b) 1, 2 and 4 (c) 1 and 2 (d) 3 and 4 23. Which among the following statements is not correct? (a) Mullaperiyar dam has been a bone of contention between Tamil Nadu and Kerala governments. (b) Thekkady Periyar National park is located around the Periyar reservoir formed by the back waters of this dam. (c) Periyar is an east owing river of kerala state. (d) None of the above 24. Consider the following statements about Suresh Tendulkar: 1. He was an eminent economist and the chairman of the prime ministers economic advisory council from 2004 to 2008. 2. He was the chairman of an expert group on the methodology for estimation of poverty constituted by planning commission which submitted its report in November 2009. 3. He was also the part time member of the rst disinvestment commission (1996-1999), and the fth central pay commission (1994-1997). Correct statement/s is/are: (a) 1 and 2 (c) 3 and 1 (b) 2 and 3 (d) 1, 2 and 3
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29. Consider the following statements about the World Investment Report 2011: 1. The report is released by the World Economic Forum. 2. According to the report the Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) inows into India declined by about $10 billion to $25 billion in 2010. 3. In terms of ranking India dropped to the 10th position. 4. Last year Indias rank was 8. Which of the above are correct? (a) 1, 2 and 3 (b) 2, 3 and 4 (c) 2 and 4 (d) All of the above. 30. Consider the following statements: 1. The Special Industry Initiative Scheme is a Rs. 1000 crore scheme with 100% Central assistance for
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP Jammu and Kashmir only. 2. The scheme will be implemented in partnership with the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC). 3. The scheme launched is based on the recommendation of the C Rangarajan Committee on Jammu & Kashmir. 4. The target of the scheme is to provide industrial training to 20,000 graduates, post graduates and professional degree holders over a period of ve years. Which of the above are correct? (a) 1, 2 and 3 (b) 2, 3 and 4 c) 2 and 3 d) All of the above 31. Which of the following athletes has decided to return the gold medal she won in the weightlifting in the 58 kg category at the Commonwealth Games in 2010 to the Sports Minister at being ignored for the prestigious Arjuna Award? (a) Renu Bala Chanu (b) Kunjarani Devi (c) Sanamacha Chanu (d) Laishram Monika Devi 32. Match List 1 with List 2 and select the correct answer using the code given below the Lists: List 1 A. Pronab Sen Committee B. M. Damodaran Committee C. Naresh Chandra Committee D. Justice Mukul Mudgal Committee List 2 1. Review security apparatus in the country 2. Doping scandals 3. Denition of Slum 4. Customer Service in Banks Codes: A (a) 4 (b) 3 (c) 4 (d) 3 B 3 4 3 4 C 2 2 1 1 D 1 1 2 2 1. Project SANGAM 2. Project SUVIGYA 3. Project AASHRAYA 4. Project SANKALAN. Codes: (a) 1 only (c) 1, 2 and 3 (b) 1 and 2 (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Vol.1 Issue1 October 2011 (a) 1 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2 37. Match List 1 with List 2 and select the correct answer using the code given below the Lists: List 1 (Sangeet Natak Akademi fellowship winner) A. Girija Devi B. Nataraja Ramakrishna C. Rahim Fahimuddin Dagar D. T.K. Murthy List 2 (Related elds) 1. Dhrupad 2. Classical Singing 3. Mridangam 4. Dancing Codes: A (a) 1 (b) 2 (c) 2 (d) 1 B 3 4 3 4 C 2 1 1 2 D 4 3 4 3 (b) 2 only
34. Which one of the following statements related to PRHAAR missile is NOT correct? (a) It is a Surface-to-Surface tactical ballistic missile developed by Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) and Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL). (b) It has a range of 150 km and can carry a payload of 200 kg. (c) It is a single stage missile based on solid propulsion system. (d) It is launched from a Road Mobile System developed by Larsen & Toubro. 35. Consider the following statements: 1. The National Optical Fiber Network (NOFN) has been launched by the Department of Telecommunications (DoT). 2. The Rs. 20, 000 crore scheme aims to provide broadband connectivity to all village panchayats in ve years by 2016-17. 3. The Telecom Commission, the highest decision-making body within the department, has said that the network can be nanced through the Universal Service Obligation (USO) fund. 4. The USO fund was created by the telecom department to give grants for connecting rural areas. Which of the above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 (c) 1, 3 and 4 (b) 1, 2 and 3 (d) All of the above
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38. Which of the following is NOT a Talwar class frigate being jointly developed by India and Russia? (a) INS Trikhand (b) INS Teg (c) INS Tarangini (d) INS Tarkash 39. Consider the following statements about PSLV-C17: 1. Indias Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C17) was successfully launched from Equatorial Rocket Launching Station (TERLS), Thumba. 2. It put the communication satellite GSAT-12 in orbit by using an indigenous computer, Vikram, with advanced software in the rockets navigation, guidance and control systems. 3. GSAT-12 was successfully injected into polar sun synchronous orbit with a perigee of 284 km and an apogee of 21,020 km. 4. This is the second time that PSLV has been used to launch a communication
36. Consider the following statements: 1. Uruguay won the Copa American Cup 2011, defeating Paraguay in the nal. 2. Uruguay has won the prestigious Cup 15 times, the highest by any country. Which is/are INCORRECT?
33. Which of the following Projects, launched by Defence Accounts Department (DAD), is/are related to Defence Pensioners?
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP satellite. Which of the above are correct? (a) 1, 2 and 3 (b) 3 and 4 (c) 2, 3 and 4 (d) 2 and 4 40. Election Commission of India has signed a Memorandum of Understanding for cooperation in the eld of election management with the Election Commission of which of the following countries? (a) Nepal (c) Egypt (b) Mauritius (d) Indonesia Which of the above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 (c) 1, 3 and 4 (b) 1, 2 and 3 (d) All of the above
Vol.1 Issue1 October 2011 (a) 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 (b) 1, 2, 3 and 4 (c) 2, 3 and 4 (d) 3, 4 and 1 47. What is Ujjawala ? (a) It is a scheme to check children and women trafcking and their protection and rehabilitation. (b) A scheme for adolescent girls. (c) It is an electrication programme in the rural areas launched by the government of India. (d) A scheme for children for their education in the rural areas. 48. Vanuatu, a small island nation is set to become the 154th member of the world trade organization (WTO), as the panel overseeing Vanuatus membership talks has adopted the nal accession package of tariff and rules-related commitments. Vanuatu is situated in (a) North Pacic Ocean (b) South Pacic Ocean (c) North Atlantic Ocean (d) South Atlantic Ocean 49. Which are the two main trade economies which are still not the members of WTO? (a) Russia and Algeria (b) China and Venezuela (c) Columbia and Venezuela (d) Russia and cuba 50. Consider the following statements 1. Union health and family welfare ministry banned the manufacture, sale and distribution of Gatioxacin and Tegaserod under the drugs and cosmetics act. 2. Gatioxacin is an antibiotic that inhibits the bacterial enzymes DNA gyrase and Topoisomerase IX. 3. Tegaserod is used for the management of irritable bowels syndrome and constipation. Correct statement/s is/are: (a) Only 1 (c) 1 and 2 (b) Only 2 (d) 1, 2 and 3
43. Consider the following statements about the Pranab Sen Committee on Slums: 1. It has dened a slum as a compact settlement of at least 50 households with a collection of poorly built tenements, mostly of temporary nature, crowded together usually with inadequate sanitary and drinking water facilities in unhygienic conditions. 2. For the Slum Census 2011, the Committee has recommended that for policy formulation purposes it is absolutely essential to count the slum population even in cities having population less than 20000. 3. According to the committee Maharashtra has the highest slum population. Which of the above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 (b) 2 and 3 (c) 1 and 3 (d) All of the above 44. Consider the following statements: 1. Recently Government of India has signed a Bilateral Aviation Safety Agreement (BASA) with USA. 2. The India Aviation-2012, the 3rd international Exhibition and Conference on Civil Aviation, is being organized by the Ministry of Civil Aviation jointly with the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII). Which is/are correct? (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2 45. What is the name of the crater that has been picked up by NASA for the $2.5billion Mars rover, Curiosity, to probe for signs of life when the unmanned vehicle is lowered onto the red planet in 2012. (a) Eagle (c) Erabus (b) Galle (d) Gale
41. Match List 1 with List 2 and select the correct answer using the code given below the Lists: List 1 (State) A. Bihar B. Delhi C. Uttar Pradesh D. Jharkhand List 2 (Lokayukta) 1. Mr. Justice Ram Nandan Prasad 2. Mr. Justice Manmohan Sarin 3. Mr. Justice Mehrotra Codes: A (a) 1 (b) 3 (c) 1 (d) 3 B 2 4 2 4 C 3 1 4 2 D 4 2 3 1 Narendra Kishore
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42. Consider the following statements: 1. The Indian Air Force (IAF) has shortlisted the Boeing C 17 Globemaster III as its new Very Heavy Lift Transport Aircraft (VHTAC). 2. India will get ten C-17 Globemaster III at a cost of $ 4.1 billion. 3. The rst aircraft, under Indias biggest defence deal with the U.S. , would be delivered during 2013-14. 4. The Indian Air Force (IAF) will induct C-17 Globemaster III at Palam Air Base in Delhi.
46. Which among the following states have already setup the institution of Lokayuktas: 1. Orissa 3. Bihar 2. Maharashtra 4. Rajasthan
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP
ANSWERS
1. (d) Exp. Indian railways uses four gauges, the 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) broad gauge which is wider than the 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge; the 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in) metre gauge; and two narrow gauges, 762 mm (2 ft 6 in) and 610 mm (2 ft) . The Narrow gauges are present on a few routes, lying in hilly terrains and in some erstwhile private railways (on cost considerations), which are usually difcult to convert to broad gauge. Broad gauge is the predominant gauge used by Indian Railways. 2. (a) 6. (b) 3. (c) no committee procedure is there. President appoints the CAG. 4. (d) it is in Italy 5. (d) in Indonesia 7. (a) it was King George V who declared Delhi as the capital of India on December 12, 1911.
8. (a). Exp. Established in 1999, the International Disability Alliance (IDA) is the network of global and regional organizations of persons with disabilities (DPOs) promoting the effective implementation of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. IDA currently comprises eight global and four regional DPOs, with two other regional DPOs having observer status. 9. (c) Pinaka has the range of 40 kms. 10. (b). Exp. No charge to be paid for the animal and replacing the existing practice of plenary guardianship with limited guardianship. A limited guardianship is a system of joint decision-making, which operates on mutual understanding and trust between the guardian and the person with disability, as against the plenary guardianship where the guardian took all the decisions on the presumption that a disabled person was incapable to taking a decision. 11.(a) Novak Djokovic is of Serbia and Petra Kvitova is of Czech Republic 12. (a) Gorkha Janmukti Morcha ( GJM) has not given away its demand for a separate state and view this development as a step towards separate state. GTA will be an elected body. 13. (d). Exp. Tummalapalle is in Andhra Pradesh. 14. (c) Japan won the nal against United States. 15. (c) According to the draft Lokpal bill 2010, Lokpal will be an advisory body with no police powers. 16. d. Exp: India is 20th largest merchandise exporter. India emerged as the 5th largest importer after EU, US, China and Japan. Indias goods exports went up by 31% in 2010. 17. (a) Chairman of the Rashtriya Lokayukta shall be selected by a committee consisting of vice president, prime minister, leader of opposition, speaker of the lok sabha and chief justice of India. 18. (a) 19. a. Exp: Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation. 20. a. Exp: Dasgupta had to bow out following his defeat in the Assembly elections.
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21. (d). Exp. The event was organised by IGNOU in association with the Centre for Science Development and Media Studies (CSDMS) and Elets Technomedia in july 2011 at new delhi. 22. (c) 23. (c) Periyar is a west owing river. 24. (b) died recently, he was only the member and not chairman between 2004-2008. he chaired prime ministers economic advisory council from 2008-2009 when C. Rangrajan vacated the position to enter the Rajya Sabha. 25. (d) his rst lm was Through the Eyes of a Painter in 1967 which also won a Golden Bear at the Berlin lm festival. 26. (a). Exp. ICC Test Championship is notional in the sense that it is simply a ranking scheme overlaid on all international matches that are otherwise played as part of regular Test cricket scheduling. 27. (c) ve space shuttle orbiters have been used. They are Columbia, Challenger, Discovery, Endeavour and the Atlantis. 28. (d) all are correct 29. c. Exp: The report is released by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). India dropped to the 14th position. 30. a. Exp: Target is 40,000. 31. a. 32. d. 33. c. Exp: Project SANKALAN is to facilitate dissemination of various orders, instructions and manuals electronically. 34. a. Exp: developed by Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) and Bharat Dynamics Limited (BDL). 35. c. Exp: The scheme will provide broadband connectivity to all village panchayats in three years by 2014-15. 36. d. 37. b. 38. c. 39. d. Exp: It was launched from Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC) SHAR, Sriharikota and put into sub-Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit (sub-GTO). 40. a. Note: Election Commission of India has already signed Memorandum of Understanding with United Nations and the Electoral Management Bodies of Ivory Coast, Mexico, Bhutan, Afghanistan, Brazil and Russia. 41. a. 42. b. Exp: They will be inducted at Hindan Air base, Ghaziabad. 43. b. Exp: The minimum number of households is 20. 44. a. Exp: India Aviation-2012 will be organized by the Ministry of Civil Aviation jointly with Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FICCI). 45. d. 46. (a) 47. (a) 48. (b) 49. (a) 50. (d)
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d) through purchase of excess foreign exchange 3. Why is nancial stability a necessary pre-condition for monetary policy effectiveness? a) because they are inter dependant b) Because lot of monetary policy tools are indicative and thus work on trust c) because monetary policy determines the nancial stability d) because nancial stability determines the monetary policy 4. Global income, trade and industrial production had fallen during depression, why? a) because businesses went bankrupt b) because of bearish expectations about future c) because banks have gone bankrupt d) because countries protectionist policies adopted
6. Consider the following statements. 1) Women participation in labour market is lower in urban areas than rural areas. 2) Women prefer household activities to outside work. Which of the statement/s given above is/are correct? a) 1 only c) Both 1 and 2 b) 2 only d) Neither 1 nor 2
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP 7. Which of the following statements convey the main inference of the passage? a) Women face lot of social and family related problems, thus their low participation in the labour market. b) There is a demand for women workers in labour market. c) There is a need to re-dene economic activity so that womens contribution to economic growth could be recognized. d) Given adequate family support, women participation could be increased considerably. 8. Consider the following statements. 1) Cooking, cleaning, collection of fuel and fodder consume most of womens day time, leaving little or no time for professional work. 2) Policy interventions can address number of social and family related barriers. Which of the statement/s given above is/are correct? a) 1 only c) Both 1 and 2 b) 2 only d) Neither 1 nor 2 facts. Read the conclusions and then decide which of the conclusions can be logically derived. Statements: I. All Apples are Brinjals. II. All Brinjals are Ladyngers. III. Some Ladyngers are Oranges. Conclusions: I. Some Oranges are Brinjals. II. Some Brinjals are Apples III. Some Apples are Oranges. IV. All Ladyngers are Apples. (a) None follows (b) Either I or III follows (c) All follow (d) Only I and III follow Directions: the question given below consists of a statement, followed by three or four arguments numbered I, II, and III. You have to decide which of the argument is/are strong argument(s) and which is/are weak argument(s) and accordingly choose the answer from the alternative given below each question. 14. Statement: Should administrative ofcers be transferred after one or two years? Arguments: I. Yes. They get friendly with local people and manipulated by them. (a) 1300 (c) 1200
Directions for the following 9 (nine) items: Read each of the following two passages and answer the items that follow. Your answers to these items should be based on the passages only. Passage 1 (Q. 17- 22) Pakistan is a rare instance of being constantly wooed by the two most powerful countries in the world, the USA and China. And this very unique situation also colours Moscows policy toward Islamabad. Shortly after the assassination of Osama bin Laden, the Russian and Pakistani Presidents met and reiterated their resolve to continue to be in close collaboration with each other in combating the two menaces their countries were ghting, terrorism and drug trafcking. In several other ways, such as, regional energy projects like the supply of electricity from Tajikistan to Afghanistan and Pakistan and the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-PakistanIndia gas pipeline, the Russian Government has expressed its interest in seeing these fructify and offered its assistance. And where does the growing relevance of the Pakistani state leave India? To its innite credit, the UPA-II Government has been steadfast in sticking to its time-honoured policy of cultivating better relations with Pakistan. At the same time, it has sought to pressure Islamabad increasingly to honour its commitments to curb terrorism and, specically, to eradicate the anti-Indian jihadist outts from its territory. We can choose our friends but not our neighbours, Indias current Defence Minister A.K. Antony was reported to have quipped in explaining Pakistans relevance for India. (In fact, the phrase he used was used on earlier occasions by severa of his predecessors as also by various Prime Ministers.) And that about sums up India s Pakistan policy. However, there are still two other factors that doubly strengthen Pakistans relevance for the region and the world, its nuclear arsenal and Afghanistan. Like the USA and a host of other countries, India is immensely worried by the apparent expansion of Islamist militancy coupled with the continuing weakening of Pakistans state institutions, which also makes it most dangerous country in world. It might sound like a supreme irony but the fact is that it would go against Indias vital interests if the Pakistani military is eventually weakened unless, of course, the democratic institutions like the parliament, judiciary,
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9. In an examination 70% of the candidates passed in Accountancy, 65% in Economics, 27% failed in both the subject and 248 passed in both the subjects. Find out the total number of the candidates. (a) 450 (a) 105 (b) 600 (b) 115 (c) 400 (d) 500 10. Find the missing term 6 : 39 : : 12 : ? (c)149 (d) 150 Directions for question 11 and 12: Refer to the data below and answer that follow. A, C, D, E, F and G are six members of a family. A is father of C but C is not his son. D is sibling of C. E is Ds brother-inlaw. F is Gs grandson. G is Ds mother. 11. How many male members are there in a family? (a) 3 (b) 2 (c) 4 (d) Either (a) or (c) 12. D is: (a) Fs uncle (b) Cs sister (c) Gs grandchild (d) Either (a) or (b) 13. The question below has a few statements, followed by four conclusions numbered I, II, III and IV. You have to consider every given statements as true, even if it goes not conform to the well known
II. No. By the time policies and schemes start taking shape, they have to leave. III. No. This will create a lot of administrative hassles and cause a lot of inconvenience to the ofcers. (a) Only II. Is strong (b) Only I and II are strong (c) Only II and III are strong (d) Only I and III are strong 15. Two men start together to walk to a certain destination, one at 3 kmph and another at 3.75 kmph. The latter arrives half an hour before the former. The distance is: (a) 6 km (c) 8 km (b) 7.5km (d) 9.5 km
16. Mansi has a certain no of mangoes, of which 13% are bad. She gives 75% of the remainder to charity, and then has 261 left. How many did she have initially?
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Questions@IP elected government, and civil society are accorded their rightful place in a democracy. In such a scenario, a weakened and chastened military which knows its place in a democracy, would be an asset for Pakistan and no source of nuisance for its neighbours. Unfortunately, not even the most incorrigible optimist in Pakistan can dream of such a scenario at the present juncture. Almost every option being considered today to ensure an eventual success story in Afghanistan seeks to involve Pakistan, and therefore Islamabads response to them engages the immediate attention of the world. Pakistans continuing recalcitrance enormously worries the US because the Obama Administrations plan to begin a gradual withdrawal from Afghanistan cannot be undertaken without a fully responsible Pakistani participation in the post-withdrawal scenario. Similarly, India is reconciled to its realisation that Pakistan enjoys a special relationship with the Taliban, the very Islamist force that the US and its allies once sought to destroy and now plan to cultivate in order to forge a workable model of governance in Afghanistan so that they can get away without further collateral damage. Pakistan had traditionally considered India its chief rival in Afghanistan and has till date jealously acted to preserve its relatively superior status among the majority Pushtuns by virtue of its long association with the Taliban. But the situation has slightly eased for India now with the Indian Governments patient and wise policy nally bearing fruit. For, Islamabad has begun to sound as if it gives credence to Indias claim that it is not strategically interested in Afghanistan and wishes to play strictly the role of a responsible regional power. To sum up, the weaker the Pakistani state grows, the stronger becomes its nuisance value, its capacity to facilitate iniction of mortal harm to its neighbours and to countries far and near. As the Indian Government and every other government that counts have emphasised time and again, an eventually failed Pakistani state would be a Frankenstein that the world can ill-afford and cannot allow to be a reality. 17. Why Pakistan enjoys such a strategic position? a) because of geographic location b) because of troubled history with India. c) because it never had its own independent foreign policy d) because Pakistan can easily be used by any country for its strategic purposes. 18. Why is Pakistan being wooed by Russia? a) because Russia is interested in gaining a foot step into south Asia b) because Pakistan is a important country to Russia c) because Russia wants to counters American and Chinese inuence there
Vol.1 Issue1 October 2011 to build food storage warehouses! That is not apriority in their economic policy which works on the principle of He who hath, shall be given. The rich have become richer and they are also immune to many of the societal rules that govern the poor. The gap between the haves and the haves-not has not only widened, the purchasing capacity of the poor has gone down signicantly. While the new industrial tycoons get all kinds of incentives, the poor farmer has to pay through the nose for his daily needs with the ever-increasing market value of his produce. Poverty, in addition, is a double-edged weapon. While poverty is the womb of disease, the poor are also robbed of their daily wage earning when they fall ill. The result is that they pay for their poverty with their own lives. 23. Consider the following statements 1) In India, our economic policies are formulated by rich people. 2) Government doesnt have enough funds for building food storage warehouses. Which of the statement/s given above is/are correct ? (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2 24. Which statement conveys the message of the passage? a) Indian economic policies reect the concerns of rich only leaving poor people to fend for themselves. b) Government needs to bridge the gap between rich and the poor by providing poor people subsidies and incentives. c) There are different norms and rules governing rich and the poor. d) Budgetary allocation under various heads reect their importance in national development. 25. Consider the following statements 1) Poverty is the breeding house of diseases. 2) Hospital bills rob them of little money they have, leaving them poorer. Which of the statement/s given above is/are correct ? (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2
d) all of the above 19. What makes Pakistan on of the most dangerous country in world? a) its nuclear arsenal b) its terrorist outts c) a,b & d d) its political instability 20. Why is afganistan so important to pakistans foreign policy? a) because Pakistan use it as a buffer territory b) because Pakistan use the territory there to raise its terrorist groups c) because Afghanistan is the hub of Al - qaida and thus of premier importance d) because of lucrative opium trade 21. What is most favourable scenario for India in Pakistan? a) strong democratic institutions b) strong civil society & weak military c) economic development in Pakistan d) all of the above 22. What is the chief risk involved with USAs withdrawal from Afghanistan? a) Re-emergence of Taliban b) Pakistan will once again gain foothold in territory c) Afghanistan may witness a civil war and communal strife like 1980s once again d) china may use that opportunity to gain foothold in Afghanistan Passage-2 (23-25) Our present policies could only be termed richonomics economics of the rich, by the rich and for the rich. While funds are owing like water for building SEZs, malls, and highways and byways, they have no resources
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INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP 26. Mr. $ saved ` 4 more each year than the preceding year. If he saved ` 20 in the rst year, after how many years he will save ` 1065? (a) 10 years (c) 18 years (b) 12 years (d) 19 years
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27. Aaditya travelled from a point x straight to y at a distance of 80 meters. He turned right and walked 50 meters, then again turned right and walked 70 meters. Finally, he turned right and walked 50 meters. How far is he from the starting point ? (a) 70 meters (c) 50 meters (b) 20 meters (d) 10 meters
of monetary policy will likely mean that the impact of policy will be its greatest when the bubble is bursting only adding to the damage. Second, the problem in the current crisis was not that central banks failed to burst bubbles but rather that they created them. If interest rates had not been held so low and we still had bubbles then such a proposal might have merit. But that is not what happened. Yet another reform, recently suggested by the IMF research department, is that central banks should raise their ination targets. The reason is that with the two percent target in policy rules such as the Taylor rule the interest rate would have to go negative in a severe crisis, and this is not possible. But in the current crisis, the Taylor rule has interest rates going close to zero and not remaining there for long. Moreover, raising ination targetsespecially when government debts are rising and central banks balance sheets are expanded could easily reduce credibility about an ination target at all, further damaging central bank credibility. This would be especially inappropriate for central banks in emerging market countries. For the most part, the policy implications of the crisis are that those central banks that deviated from good policy should get back to what they were doing before the crisis. They need to earn back credibility and preserve their independence. Systematic monetary policies focusing on a credible goal for ination worked well in the past and they will work well in the future. For central banks that were following sounder policiesand here credit should be given to the progress made in India and other emerging market central banksthey should continue to do so. There is no reason to change. But the crisis does reveal some potential new fault lines, largely related to the increased globalization and international connection between nancial markets, which was so evident during the panic. These interconnections raise questions about the impact of central banks on each other. In the period leading up to the crisis there is evidence that the European Central Bank and other central banks held interest rates lower than they would otherwise be because the Federal Reserve set its interest rate so low. The reason, of course, is the exchange rate. A large gap between interest rates would cause the exchange rate to appreciate with adverse consequences on exports. And during the panic the shock from the developed world on the developing world was severe and central banks had to cope with this.
X 25
From above, value of X is: (a) 1 (b) 2 (c) 3 (d) 4 Directions for the following 9 (nine) items: Read each of the following two passages and answer the items that follow. Your answers to these items should be based on the passages only. Passage 1 (Q. 35 - 40) Reform of nancial regulation is clearly in order. Based on recent experience, closing present and future regulatory gaps and de-conicting overlapping and ambiguous responsibilities would help reduce risk, especially as new instruments and institutions evolve. Examining new instruments, looking for new risks and gaps, and making recommendations for changes in regulations by using the ideas from conferences like this one would also help. Some have suggested the creation of a new systemic risk regulator, either at the national or international level. However, it is doubtful that such a systemic risk regulator would have prevented the current crisis. It would not have prevented the very low interest rates or the other government actions I have described in this lecture. Moreover, the experience during the panic of fall 2008 raises doubts that such an agency could resolve failing private institutions without causing more systemic risk. It would be helpful if it could warn about the major existing systemic risks, including the exploding debt, central banks balance sheet, and the bailout mentality. But groups such as the Financial Stability Board, working along with the IMF and G20, are better suited to that role. Another suggestion is that central banks, including emerging market central banks take actions to burst market bubbles in nancial or other markets. I do not think that is a good idea. First, the lags in the effect
28. Amit plant his orchard with 625 trees and arranges them so that there are as many rows as trees in a row. How rows are there? (a) 125 (c) 75 (b)25 (d) None of these
29. A man bought a Mobile set priced at ` 2,000. He was given successive discount of 20% and 10%. The price he paid was: (a) ` 1200 (b) ` 1224 (d) ` 1152
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(c) ` 1440
30. If a person get ` 50 by investing Rs. 5000 for a year, What rate of interest he charge? (a) 10% (c) 5% (b) 1% (d) None of these
31. Annual incomes of sunil and Ankur are in ratio 4 : 3 and there expenses, as 3 : 2. If each saves ` 600 at the end of the year, nd the annual income of the each. (a) 1200, 900 (c) 2400, 1800 (b) 1500, 1125 (d) 3600, 2700
32. If 10 men can do a work in 4 days, in how many days can 8 men do it? (a) 5 days (c) 7 days (b) 6 days (d) 8 days
33. A Mango costs Rs. 7 each. An apple costs Rs. 5 each. X spends Rs.38 on these fruits. The number of mango purchased is: (a) 2 (c) 4 (b) 3 (d) Data inadequate
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP Is there a better way? Making the movements in the interest rates less erratic in the developed countries would help the emerging market countries. I note that for the most part deviations from policy rules, such as the Taylor rule, have increased interest rate volatility, so keeping interest rates more on track will have the added advantage of reducing their erratic nature. Another possibility, which I recommended before the crisis, is that we think about a global target for the ination rate, or at least a multicountry target, a G20 target perhaps. If there was a multi-country target and this was at least considered in the deliberations of each central bank then there would be a smaller tendency to swing individual interest rates around by large amounts. 35. What is the meaning of regulatory gap hereclosing present and future regulatory gaps ? a) it means that regulators do not exist for certain sections b) it means that regulatory bodies are too weak to enforce regulations c) it means that regulation job is not being done properly d) it means that watchdogs are either weak or not present in certain sector and sub sectors 36. With the two percent target in policy rules such as the Taylor rule the interest rate would have to go negative in a severe crisis, and this is not possible, what is targeted in statement? a. Interest rate c. Bank Rate b. Growth Rate d. Ination Rate c) Absence of a common scal policy d) Absence of a consensus 39. A large gap between interest rates would cause the exchange rate to appreciate with adverse consequences on exports, what is the meaning of gap? a) Gap between interest rates of two countries b) Gap between interest rates of two Banks c) Gap between interest rates of two Central Banks d) Gap between interest rates offered by two different investment streams 40. These interconnections raise questions about the impact of central banks on each other, what are these interconnections? a) interdependence of monetary policy b) impact of foreign trade c) impact of FDI d) All of the above Passage 2 (41-43) For some peace activists today, it is enough that hindus and muslims do not kill each other. Many others still seek a reconciliation well beyond this, one that positively builds trust, condence and eventually empathy between previously embroiled people; a genuine meeting again of hearts and minds. The path to authentic forgiveness and reconciliation must traverse at least four milestones: acknowledgement; remorse; reparation and justice. The rst acknowledgement, is a public acceptance by direct perpetrators, by State authorities, but also by people and organizations who openly or tacitly ratify the violence or were silent or indifferent as it unfolded. The second, remorse is a public expression of collective sincere regret or contrition for the hate, violence, injustice and suffering that transpired. Reparation entails adequate and timely assistance to enable victim survivors to rebuild shelters, livelihoods, common resources, habitats and cultural environments that are at levels at least comparable, perhaps better than what they enjoyed prior to the conict. Justice involves application and protection of the law, so that those who committed hate crimes are punished, and public ofcials charged with preventing and controlling communal violence are held accountable. It also entails restoring peace;
Vol.1 Issue1 October 2011 a sustainable environment of harmony and amity founded on legal and social justice, guarantees of non-repetition, freedom from fear and distrust between communities, and strengthening of social, economic and cultural bonds between them. 41. With reference to the passage, consider the following statements. 1) Reconciliation between hindus and muslims is important to conserve muslim population 2) Reconciliation together. is about living
Which of the statement/s given above is/are correct? a) 1 only c) Both 1 and 2 d) Neither 1 nor 2 42. Which of the following statement conveys the main inference of the passage? a) A public acceptance and an apology by the perpetrators are the most important ways to reconciliation. b) Hindus and muslims need to learn to forgive and forget. c) Providing victims shelter, livelihood. Resources can effectively compensate their losses. d) When state, the perpetrator and the survivor all join hands to re-build broken lives and when justice is done and seen to have been done, a way of living together can be rediscovered. 43. Consider the following statements 1) Through reparation, we can compensate for the loss of human lives and valued ways of living 2) Punishing the perpetrators and holding state authorities accountable are important to render justice to victims. Which of the statement/s given above is/are correct ? a) 1 only c) Both 1 and 2 d) Neither 1 nor 2 Direction (Question 44 to 48) Study the following information to answer the given questions: Percentage of different types of employees in an organization Total employees 7000 b) 2 only b) 2 only
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37. Making the movements in the interest rates less erratic in the developed countries would help the emerging market countries Why ? a) Because emerging markets dont have strong institutional structure to reect policy change quickly b) because in developed countries governments are too strong c) because in developing countries governments are too weak d) Both b) and c) 38. What will be the biggest hurdle in creating the multi country target? a) Absence of a Common Central Bank b) Absence of a common monetary policy
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP
Of Ofcer A 8% cer B1 1%
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o 10 Sten
for vacancies in the same post. The probability of husbands selection is (1/7) and the probability of wifes selection is (1/5). What is the probability that only one of them is selected? (a) 4/5 (c) 8/15 (b) 2/7 (d) 4/7
pe
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7%
51. The average rainfall from Monday to Saturday is 0.3 inches, but the average for the whole week is 0.5 inches. What was the rainfall on Sunday? (a) 1.7 inches (c) 1.9 inches (b) 1.8 inches (d) 1.6 inches
importance: The perpetrators of this heinous crime are those who do not want the IndiaPakistan negotiations to succeed. He did not fail to point to the fact that just as in 26/11 (that is, the direct Pakistan-sponsored terror strikes in Mumbai in November 2008), this time too the terror acts were committed with the objective of foiling the meeting between the two countries Foreign Ministers that has been xed. While the authorities are as yet tightlipped on the identity and motivation of the terrorists who struck in Mumbai on July 13, the fresh serial blasts in the city are widely believed to be the handiwork of the Indian Mujahideen whose links with the terror-instigators in Pakistan are quite well known. Even otherwise there is a general view, based on the history of recent terror strikes, that terror attacks in various regions of the country, and Mumbai in particular, have a Pakistani connection given the depths of animosity towards India in the Pakistani military establishment, especially its intelligence wing, the ISI. And as far as the serial blasts in the city on July 13 are concerned, they reveal coordinated strikes the rst explosion at Zaveri Bazar was at 6.45 pm, followed by the second at the Opera House a minute later and the third outside Kabutarkhana at a bus stop in Dadar around 7.00 pmby high explosive timer devices, similar to the ones carried out and employed by the IM earlier. 53. What is spirit of Mumbai in this context? a) that mumbai insensitive people are
Assisstant 15%
Supervisor 50
52. The average marks of 15 students in a class is 145, maximum marks being 150. If the two lowest scores are removed the average increases by 5. Also, the two lowest scores are consecutive multiples of 9. Find out the lowest score in the class. (a) 126 (c) 108 (b) 117 (d) None of these
44. What is the difference in direct recruits and promotee assistants? (a) 210 (b) 280 (c) 180 (d) 110 45. The Promotee Clerk-A is approximately what percent of that of Direct Recruit Clerk-A? (a) 10 (c) 11 (a) 1050 (c) 1109 (b) 1019 (d) None of these (b) 9 (d) 10.50
Directions for the following 7 (seven) items: Read each of the following two passages and answer the items that follow. Your answers to these items should be based on the passages only. Passage - 1 (Q. 53 - 56) Mumbaikars are naturally overtaken by a mixture of grief, sorrow, anguish and anger. They are sick and tired of hearing hackneyed phrases like the spirit of Mumbai. Life is back to normal on July 14 after the previous evenings blasts and the killings that followed. Or so it seems. Actually the citizens have returned to work because they do not have any other option. But deep within, apart from the misery and pain the successive terror strikes have left, there is a silent resolve to bring an end to such terror acts once and for all. This is where the words of BJP patriarch L.K. Advani (we must have zero tolerance to terror) and Shiv Sena supremo Bal Thackery (Mumbaikars themselves must ensure their own safety without depending on the government) strike the right chord in tune with the current sentiments of the citys inhabitants. (However, whatever their pronouncements, the ulterior designs of these leaders cannot possibly be overlooked given past experience.) This is precisely where the sane observation of Dr Farooq Abdullah, the former J&K CM now a member of the Manmohan Singh Cabinet at the Centre, assumes undeniable
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47. How many total Direct Recruits among all types of employees are there? (a) 4000 (c) 3000 (b) 3885 (d) 3115
b) that mumbai people are not afraid of death c) that mumbai people are too busy to think about terrorism d) that acts of terrorism doesnt affect city business and work 54. Mumbaikars are tired of phrases like spirit of mumbai, why? a) because such phrases doesnt redeem their emotional and nancial losses b) because spirit of mumbai phrases by politicians ,is just like making fun of people after their losses. c) because spirit of mumbai is a lifes necessity to run family and not choice. d) all of the above 55. Why is mumbai targeted repeatedly by terrorists?
48. Which type of employees has maximum number of Direct Recruits? (a) Clerk A-and Ofcer-A (b) Ofcer-A (c) Clerk-A (d) Clerk-B 49. In a class, 30% of the students offered English, 20% offered Hindi and 10% offered both. If a student is selected at random, what is the probability that he has offered English and Hindi? (a) 2/5 (c) 3/5 (b) 3/4 (d) 3/10
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP a) because it is nancial centre of india b) because it is political centre of india c) because its centre of media and entertainment industry in india d) all of the above 56. Why terrorists wants negotiation between india and pakistan to fail? a) because peace between two countries will render them useless b) because peace between these two countries will cause legal problems for them c) because peace between these two countries will defeat their purpose d) because they want to discourage people and demolish their morale and peace will do opposite to it. Passage-2 ( 57-59) Of the several common characteristics that the modern states in the South Asian region shared, their multicultural and multireligious compositions have been the most conspicuous. They shaped the demographic pattern, inuenced the course of social relations, dened the contours of cultural life and, above all, set certain parameters for the mutual relations of different countries in the region. Given the commonly shared historical experience, particularly of colonial oppression and resistance, the region had the potential to develop a distinct personality in the post-colonial world through cultural solidarity, economic cooperation and political collaboration. The history of South Asia during the past 60 years, however, did not realize such a possibility. Instead, the relationship between different states was inuenced more by recriminations of the past rather than the possibilities of the future, leading to mutual suspicion, distrust and occasional hostility and even armed conict. Among many reasons that led to such a situation, an important factor was the compulsions of mutual vigil undertaken by these states about the conditions of the minorities who were the followers of their religion. What prompted such an interest and consequent vigil was the nature of distribution of religious communities. The demographic make-up of South Asia has helped reinforce identity politics in each country. For, India is present in the communal discourse of Pakistan and Bangladesh, so are Pakistan and Bangladesh in India. 57. Consider the following statements 1) Modern states in the South Asia have multi cultural and multi religious populations. 2) Historically, these states were under foreign rule. 3) In the post colonial era, these states developed cultural and political solidarity. 4) Their religious composition has played a crucial role in inuencing their bilateral relations. Which of the above statement/s is/ are true? a) 1,2,3 c) 1,2,4 1) b) 2,3,4 d) All of the above.
Vol.1 Issue1 October 2011 are two couples in the family. (ii) R is a CA and his wife neither is a doctor nor likes green colour. (iii) Engineer like red colour and his wife is a teacher. (iv) M is mother-in-law of S and she likes Orange colour. (v) V is grandfather of T and T, who is a principal, likes black colour. (vi) N is granddaughter of M and she likes blue colour. Ns mother likes white colour 60. Who is Engineer? (a) N (c) S (a) Engineer (c) Teacher (b) M (d) None of these (b) Doctor (d) none of these
58. Consider the following statements Mutual vigil is the result of concern and anxiety of a cultural or religious group that gets transmitted to their co-religionists in the other countries.
62. How much ladies are there in the family? (a) Two (b) Three (b) Four (d) Five 63. Which colour is liked by CA? (a) Green (d) Blue Directions for question 64 and 65: Each question is followed by two statements, I and II. Answer each question using the following instructions: Choose (a): if the question can be answered by using one of the statement alone, but cannot be answered using the other statement alone. Choose (b): if the question can be answered by using one of the either of the statements alone. Choose (c): if the question can be answered by using both of the statements together, but cannot be answered using either of the statement alone. Choose (d) : if the question cannot be answered even by using both the statement together 64. What is the population of the village? I. 7/100 of the village comprises of married people. (b) White (c) Either white or green
2) This concern often amounts to interference in the internal affairs of the other country. Which of the above statement/s is/ are correct? a) 1 only c) Both 1 and 2 d) Neither 1 nor 2 59. Consider following statements: 1) The relationship between various religious and cultural groups in these countries is marked by mutual conict and hostility. 2) Religion and culture compete with national identity of a person. Which of the above statement/s is/ are correct? a) 1 only b) 2 only c) Both 1 and 2 d) Neither 1 nor 2 Direction (question 60 to 63) Read the following information to answer the question given below it: (i) In a family of six persons, there are people from three generations. Each person has separate profession and also they like different colour. There b) 2only
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II. 200 widows comprise 10% of the single population. 65. What would be Amitabhs share in the prot of a partnership with Abhishek if they put money in the ratio 7: 3 respectively?
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP I. Amitabh put in Rs 2100 for 3 months. set by the FCC and the ICNIRP were 1.6W/ kg and 2W/kg respectively. The question is whether these standards are sufcient to protect against health effects owing to long-term exposures. Neither the FCC nor the ICNIRP has recommended any changes in their present standards on the basis of the scientic evidence of the adverse effects of RF-EMF available so far. It remains to be seen how these agencies interpret the IARCs conclusions and act on them. 67. Consider the following statements 1) Mobile phone radiations, X-rays and gamma rays are non ionizing.
6 cm
Vol.1 Issue1 October 2011 1) Group 2A for carcinogenic elements include agents that are probably carcinogenic. 2) Group 2B includes agents that are possibly carcinogenic. Which of the above statement/s is/ are correct? a) 1only c) Both 1 and 2 d) Neither 1 nor 2 71. Consider the following statements 1) Radiations that have enough energy to move atoms in a molecule around or cause them to vibrate but not enough to remove electrons are called non-ionizing radiations. 2) Sound waves, microwaves are nonionizing. Which of the above statement/s is/ are correct? a) 1 only c) Both 1 and 2 d) Neither 1 nor 2 Psaaage-2 (72-74 ) Thomas Hobbes and Jean-Jacques Rousseau were 17th and 18th century philosophers with similar, yet contrasting theories about human nature. Hobbes theory is based upon the assumption that human nature is naturally competitive and violent; while Rousseaus theory about the state of natural man is one living in harmony with nature and in a better situation than what he was seeing throughout his life in Europe. Hobbes has been criticized because of his overly cynical view of human nature, whereas Rousseau has been criticized because of his nave view of human nature. Hobbes theory is based on the notion of individualism: that society can only be explained in terms of the individuals comprising it. Consequently, he claimed that we are all selsh and concerned only with our own self-preservation even if it comes at the cost of others. This would result in conict, and eventually descent into a State of War. Self-interest was based upon the theory of psychological egoism, where the motivation for all actions is benet for oneself. Even altruistic actions could be explained in this manner because, according to Hobbes theory, our primary desire is self-preservation and in others misfortune ones own plight is foreseen, therefore providing motivation to act in this seemingly unselsh manner. Rousseaus theory contrasted with that b) 2 only b) 2 only
II. Abhishek put in money for 6 months. 66. In the gure, AB//DE and AC = 2 cms, CE = 6 cms. And DB =12 cms. Find DC? (a) 6cm. (c) 12cm. A C B
2 cm
2) Mobile phone radiation are non harmful to cell tissues. Which of the above statement/s is/ are correct?
a) 1 only b) 2 only c) Both 1 and 2 d) Neither 1 nor 2 68. Consider the following statements 1) Cell phone radiations energy is insufcient to break a chemical compound. 2) Heating caused by RF-EMF can damage cells. Which of the above statement/s is/ are correct? a) 1 only b) 2only c) Both 1 and 2 d) Neither 1 nor 2 69. Which of the given statement/s is/are not correct? 1) Group 2B signies elements that are highly carcinogenic 2) Mobile phones with SAR limits 1.6w/ kg or 2w/kg are not carcinogenic. 3) FCC and ICNIRP do not feel the need to change the SAR limit. 4) Concrete action on IARCS ndings will require more evidence and time. a) 2 and 3 b) 2,3, 4 c) 3 only d) 1, 2 ,3 70. Consider the following statements
Directions for the following 8 (eight) items: Read each of the following two passages and answer the items that follow. Your answers to these items should be based on the passages only. Passage 1 ( 67-71)
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The World Health Organisations (WHO) International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classied RF-EMF as a possible cancercausing agent in the case of humans, under Group 2B of its classication system of carcinogens. Mobile phones emit non-ionising radiation, which, unlike X-rays or gamma rays, does not strip electrons away from molecules(ionize) in cell tissue and thus cannot damage deoxyribonucleic acid(DNA) and other biomolecules. The energy Of mobile phone radiation is, in fact, a million times smaller than the energy required to break a chemical bond and cause chemical reactions. However, RF-EMF can cause heating of the material on which it deposits its tiny energy and at high enough levels can damage the cell tissue by thermal effect. In the late 1990s, this resulted in the United States Federal Communication Commision (FCC) and the International Commission on NonIonising Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) in Europe to set limits on the emitting power of mobile phones in terms of what is called the specic absorption rate (SAR), a measure of the energy deposited in biological systems. SAR is dened in watts/kg and is the rate of absorption of electromagnetic energy in a unit mass of tissue. The limits
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP of Hobbes, as he thought human nature is largely good. Society is the corrupting force that transforms natural man into the selfobsessed beast illustrated by Hobbes. Rousseau does not deny that Hobbes account of the State of Nature is correct, just that Hobbes did not dene the State of Nature correctly. For Rousseau, the State of Nature is much more than just a removal of government, it is the removal of all cultural clothes including beliefs, language and even an understanding of ourselves. 72. Who doesnt show the signs of pessimistic Darwinian socialism in his analysis of human nature? (a) Hobbes (c) Both of them (b) Rousseau (d) None of them a) Altruism can become self interest as an act of charity meant for better self perception b) Altruism can become self interest as an act of charity done for hidden agenda c) Altruism can become self interest as an act of helping others for expectation of returns later d) All of the above Directions: (Q. Nos. 75 to 77) Read the following statements carefully and ned answer the question that follow. Mumbai airport has only one ight departing at every 1.5 hours each day. The last ight is for Singapore at 7:30 p.m. Flight for Flight for Japan is exactly at 12:00 hours and it is the third ight. The maximum time gap between two consecutive ights is between that for Singapore and Pakistan. Flight for France is the fth ight and is followed by Canada. Time gap between France and Nepal is same as that between Australia and Korea. 75. First ight is for: (a) Australia (c) Nepal (b) Pakistan (d) Korea (a) 9 a.m.
Vol.1 Issue1 October 2011 (b) 1:30 p.m. (d) 3:00 (b) Korea (d) Cannot be determined
73. What does the Rousseau mean by state of nature? a) Its the absence of state b) Its the absence of society c) Its the absence of entire social and identity system d) Its the absence of all type of external perceptions 74. How can altruism be best explained by self-interest?
78. A labourer work on daily wages at Rs. 180 per day. He works for all 31 days in a months and his salary is cut if he fails to come. Also he has to pay a ne of Rs. 5 per day if he is absent for 1 day, Rs. 10 per day if he is absent for two days continuously, Rs. 15 per day if he is absent for three days continuously . He take leaves on following dates of a month 15th, 16th, 18th, 20th , 21st and 22nd. Find the salary he received at the end of the month? (a) Rs. 4430 (c)Rs.4500 (b) Rs. 4400 (d) Rs.5510
79. A garrison of 500 men had provision for 24 days. However, a reinforcement of 300 men arrived. The food will now last for: (a) 18 Days (c) 10 Days (b) 15 Days (d) 16 Days
76. If the Flight for Nepal is at 10:30 a.m. ight for Korea could be at:
80. If cash discount is 10%, a pair of shoes bought for Rs. 900 is priced at: (a) 1100 (b) 810 (d) 990 (c) 1000
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ANSWERS
1. (d) 2. (c) 3. (b) 4. (b) 5. (b) 6. (d) 7. (c) 8. (b) 9. (c) 400, Solution: Let A & E represents student passed in Accountancy and Economics n (A U M) = (100-27)% = 73% n (A U M) = n(A) + n(E) n(A n M) 73% = 70% + 65% - X%, X% = 62% 62% = 248 Total no. of candidates = 248/0.62 = 400 10. (d) 150, Solution: (n)2 + n/2 = (12)2 + 12/2 = 150 11. (d) Solution: D can be male or female. 12. (d) Solution: D can be Fs uncle if D is male or Cs sister if D is female. Hence, [d] 13. (a) Solution:
Lady nger Brinjals Apples Orange
None follows 14. (c) 15. (b) Solution: Let the distance be x km. Then, x x 1 = < = > 2.5x - 2x = 375 < = > x = 3.75 = 15 =7.5 km. 3 375 2 50 2
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP 16. (c) 1200, Solution: 25% of the good mangoes represent 261 261 Total number of good mangoes = = 1044, 87% of the total mangoes is represented by 1044. 0.25 1044 Total number of mangoes = = 1200, Hence, [c] 0.87 17. (a) 18. (c) 19. (c) a,b & d 20. (a) 21. (d) 22. (a) 23. (d) 24. (a) 25. (a) 26. (d) 19 years Solutions: a = 20; d = 4; Sn = 1064 Sn = n/2 [2a + (n -1) d] 27. (d) 10 meters Solution: The movements of Aaditya as shown in gure. (X to Y, Y to A, A to B, B to C). \ Aadityas distance from the starting point = XC =(XY YC) =(XY BA) = (80 70)m = 10m. X C 80m Y
50m B 28. (b) 25 Solution: n2 = 625, n = 30. (b) 31. (c) 32. (a) 70m = 25 Hence, [b]. A
50m
29. (c) Rs. 1440 Solution: 2000 x 0.8 x 0.9 = 2000 x 0.72 = Rs.1440. Hence [d]
33. (c) 4, Solution (c) Let the number of Mango and Apple are X and Y respectively. Then, 7x +5Y = 38 or 5Y=(38-7X) or Y = (38-7X)/5. Clearly, Y is a whole no, only when (38-7x) is divisible by 5. This happens when X= 4.
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34. (a) 1, Solution: (a) : The two end of each line segment contain a number and its square. So, missing number = 1 35. (d) 36. (d) 37. (a) 38. (d) 39. (a) 40. (d) 41. (d) 42. (d) 43. (b) 44. (a) 210, Solution: Total no. Of assistants = 15% of 7000 = 1050 No. Of direct recruits = 40 % of 1050 = 420 Now no. of promotee assistants = 1050 420 = 630 Hence, required difference is = 630 420 = 210 45. (c) 11, Solution: Number of clerk-A = 19% of 7000 = 1330 Number of direct recruits = 90% of 1330 = 1197 Now, number of promotes = 1330 1197 = 133 Hence, required % = (133/ 1197)x100 = 13000/1200= 11% 46. (d) None of these, Solution: (d) Number of supervisors = 17% of 7000 = (17/100)x7000=1190 47. (b) 3885 48. (c) Clerk-A, Solution: Clerk-A has maximum number of Direct Recruits. 49. (a) 2/5 Solution: P(E)= 3/10, P(H) = 1/5, and P (E n H) = 1/10 P (E OR H) = P(E) + P(H) P (E n H) [3/10 +1/5 -1/10] = 2/5 50. (b) 2/7 Solution: A = husband is selected; B = wife selected P(A) =1/7 , P(A) 6/7 and P(B) = 1/5, P(B) = 4/5 P(A).P(B) + P(B).P(A) = [(1/7 x 4/5) + (1/5 x 6/7)] = 2/7 51. (a) Solution: Rainfall from Monday to Saturday is 6 x 0.3 = 1.8 inches Rainfall for the whole week = 7 x 0.5 = 3.5 inches Rainfall on Sunday = 3.5 1.8 = 1.7 inches. 52. (c) Solutions : Total marks of students = 15 x 145 = 2175. Average marks of 15 students (excluding two lowest scores) = 13 x (145+5) =1950.
INDIA PREPARES
Questions@IP Total of two lowest scores = 2175-1952=225 Give that the two scores are consecutive multiples of 9 We have: 9x+9x+9 = 225 18x = 216 X = 216/18 Lowest score = 9x = 216/18 x 9 = 108. 53. (d) 54. (c) 55. (a) 57. (c) 58. (c) 59. (b) 60. (d) 61. (d) 62. (b) 63. (a)
64. (c) Solution: Statement I : Since 7/11 of the population comprises of marriage people, the single comprises 4/11 of the population. But we cannot say what is the total population. Statement II: 200 widows comprises 10% of the singles population. The single population is 2000 people. But we cannot nd the total population of the village. On combining both, 2000 = 4/11 of the population Whole population = 2000 X 11/4 = 5500 Hence, both statement are required to answer the question. 65. Solution: (c), lets their investment be 7x and 3x respectively. Statement I givens that: 7x = 2100 Hence, we got the value of x. But we cannot get the ratio of division of prot as we do not know the period of investment of Abhishek. Statement II : tells us that Abhishek put in money for 6 months. But it does not tell us for how long Amitabh invested his money. Statements I and II together gives us their respective amounts and investment periods. Thus, both statements I and II are together required to solve the question. 66. (b) 9cm. Solution : BC = x, DC = 12 x As AB //DE AC/CE =BC/CD 2/6 = x/12-x 2 (12-x) = 6x = 24 -2x = 6x 8x = 24 = x= 3 cm. DC = 12 x = 12-3 = 9cm. 67. (d) 68. (c) 69. (d) 70. (c) 71. (c) 72. (b) 73. (d) 74. (a) 75. (b) 76. (b) 77. (d) Solution for question 75 to 77 1 9:00 Pakistan 2 10:30 3 12:00 Japan 4 1:30 5 3:00 France 6 4:30 Canada 7 6:00 8 7:30 Singapore
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Sol. 75. First ight is for Pakistan. Hence (b) Sol. 76. If ight for Nepal is at 10:30 a.m., then ight for Korea would be at 1:30p.m. Hence (b) Sol. 77. Flight for France is denitely after two of the three given choice but extra information is not given. Hence (d) 78. (a) 79. (b) 15 Days, Solution = x = 15 days, Hence [b]
80. (c) 1000, Solution Market price is 900/0.90 = RS.1000, Hence [c]
INDIA PREPARES
The Unfolding
INTERVIEW
Mr. Vijay Jha, Vice-President, Academics, Career Launcher (CL).
Editor (IP): Sir, how do you see the replacement of optional paper by the CSAT paper in the preliminary examination? Is it a right move on the part of the UPSC? VP (CL): I consider the step of replacing the optional subject by CSAT a positive one. There were a few things that required immediate attention. First, the preliminary examination is a qualifying examination to select close to 10,000 well-prepared candidates for the main examination. The purpose is also to find people who are good at aptitude so that once they are part of the executive they are in a position to complete the work assigned to them in an efficient and effective manner. It is important to mention here that some types of aptitude testing questions asked in this years paper were part of the old format as well, but their number fluctuated between 15 to 20 out of 150 questions. So, it was possible for a candidate to not attempt those questions at all and still clear the preliminary examination. Second, multiplicity of optionals created a lot of problems for the UPSC. The main problem was to put all the subjects at the same level (to provide level playing field). It was almost impossible to make twenty plus papers on different subjects of the same difficulty level. Keeping this in mind, UPSC had to come up with scaling to provide a level playing field. But this system was not foolproof and candidates who opted for less popular subjects were at a loss. Third, most of the candidates who appeared for the examination used to choose a subject, which was common in the preliminary as well as the main examination. So, preliminary examination was repeating the process of checking a test-takers knowledge in a particular subject twice (preliminary as well as mains). This is an unnecessary duplication. Hence, the new step from the UPSC is in right direction. Editor (IP): How CSAT will impact the Civil Services test takers from the rural background? Will the exam now favour aspirants from urban areas? VP (CL): UPSC is a great leveller. It is a constitutional body and it has shouldered the responsibility of equal opportunity in the matters of public employment in letter and spirit. One can safely assume that it has incorporated aptitude testing to find the people who suit the requirements of the job.
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After glancing through the CSAT paper, one can easily make out that it has not favoured anyone or any particular group. The questions were simple and it just required little aptitude and training to attempt the paper and to score 120+ marks in the same. Just as a person prepares for public administration or sociology or geography (without having any formal education in the subject) so he/ she can also prepare for aptitude. Moreover, there were only nine questions, which were only in English language; rest of the paper was bi-lingual. So, the test-takers from the Hindi heartland would not find it difficult at all to get good marks in the CSAT paper. Editor (IP): There was a general perception before the exam that CSAT has put students from humanities background at a disadvantage. Has it changed after the exam? (there were nearly 50% comprehension questions) VP (CL): Nothing can be further from the truth. Comprehension is one of the most important tools of reading and acquiring knowledge. A test-taker has to read history, geography, polity etc and has to comprehend it at the same time. This comprehension is no different from the comprehension questions that were asked in examination (actually comprehension asked in the examination was much easier). I assume that humanities students have to read a lot and hence they have to comprehend a lot as well. Moreover, humanities students have one advantage over students from other fields. Most of the reading comprehension questions come from polity, economy, sociology, art and culture etc. They already know many things about them and so it is easy for them to comprehend the same. So, to my understanding, the real challenge for most of the students from humanities is from the quantitative ability section and they should work hard on it and this is not a disadvantage; it is a challenge that humanities students should take up. Editor (IP): What is your advice to the students so that they can score well in CSAT Paper-2? VP (CL): I will suggest that students should first understand the requirements of the examination and then prepare for it. They should understand the syllabus and the questions that were asked in the examination. One of the observations, after the 2011 preliminary examination, is that the CSAT paper is the deciding factor in the Civil Services Preliminary examination. The reason for this is not very difficult to comprehend. It is very difficult even for a very good candidate to score 90-95 marks in general studies but one can easily score 120+ in the CSAT paper. So the students who are preparing for the next year preliminary examination should take the CSAT very seriously. They should prepare for it well and should practice as much as possible. At the same time they should also sharpen their GS skills/knowledge. Editor (IP): One last question sir, what are your expectations for next years prelims? VP (CL): I expect that paper will retain the same flavour that was showcased this year. At the same time I expect that topics like interpersonal
communication skills, which were missing from this years paper, will be there in the next years examination.
INDIA PREPARES