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Wednesday, 31 May 2017

Profile of Nandini KR


Profile of Nandini KR

Nandini KR was born and brought up in the Kolar Gold Field of Karnataka. She did schooling from St. Joseph Convent Girls High School. She had decided to become an IAS officer during her school days itself. It was natural for her to not look for private job after engineering and rather start preparation for Civil Services. In between, she had also worked for Karnataka PWD department as an engineer. It should be noted that Nandini has done B. Tech (Civil Engineering) from prestigious M S Ramaiya Engineering College, Bangalore.

Nandini cracked Civil Services Examination in her third attempt in   CSE 2015. However, her rank was not good enough and she was allotted Indian Revenue Services (IRS). She joined IRS without compromising with her preparation.
This year she appeared with better preparation and the result justifies her hard work.
By caste, Nandini KR is an OBC. She took Kannada literature as her optional subject for Civil Services Mains Examination.

Nandini KR became topper in her fourth attempt.

Germany looks eastward as it welcomes Modi

Angela Merkel believes the U.S. and the U.K are no longer dependable and her nation hence has to shift its gaze and find new friends

•A day after warning that Europe can no longer “depend” on its Western partners, the U.S. and the U.K., German Chancellor Angela Merkel met Prime Minister Narendra Modi shortly after he landed in Berlin on Monday.

•Ms. Merkel’s comments are likely to set the atmosphere for her meetings this week with Mr. Modi, followed by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang, who will visit Germany on May 31, as she discusses closer cooperation with leaders from the “East” after her stated disappointment with those from the “West”.

•Mr. Modi and Ms. Merkel, who met informally for dinner at the Schloss Meseberg castle outside Berlin, will address a press conference on Tuesday after the announcement of expected agreements on investment, technology, counter-terror, clean energy and water partnerships as well a joint statement likely to focus on cooperation on global issues such as climate change and UN Security Council reform.

G-20 agenda

•Germany will host the next G-20 summit in Hamburg in July, and Mr. Modi is expected to discuss Chancellor Merkel’s agenda at the multilateral forum.

•Germany is expected to raise issues over trade with India after their bilateral treaty lapsed this year and push for the resumption of the India-EU Free Trade Agreement talks. Mr. Modi is likely to pitch his government’s recent reforms on foreign investment and the rollout of the GST to attract more German investment in India, and take trade beyond its current levels of €17.42 billion.

•“Both (the German and Indian) governments are firmly committed to strengthening economic relations,” Mr. Modi was quoted as saying in an interview with the Handelsblatt newspaper of Germany. “I am very optimistic about our future partnership.”

•After his meeting with Ms. Merkel, Mr. Modi will meet many top CEOs and business leaders to strengthen the push for bettering economic ties.

•While the economy was always expected to top the agenda for the Prime Minister’s Germany visit, it is now likely to be overshadowed by Ms. Merkel’s comments after the just-concluded G-7 summit in Italy as well as the NATO-U.S. summit. The Chancellor told a party convention in Munich on Sunday that the “days when Europe could completely count on others are over to a certain extent”.

•Ms. Merkel was responding to U.S. President Donald Trump’s refusal to commit to the U.N. climate change accord this far, his insistence on more contributions from other NATO partners, as well as Britain’s exit from the European Union.

Concern over OBOR

•In what is being described as her version of the U.S.’s “Pivot to Asia”, Ms. Merkel is expected to discuss closer cooperation with both India and China as part of Europe’s quest for alternative coalitions, raising speculation that the moves could make Germany an unusual new venue for India-China rivalry.

•“It would be wrong to see Germany-India and Germany-China as a zero sum game,” said the spokesperson of the Federal Foreign Office, when asked at a press briefing on Monday in Berlin, ahead of the high level visits. “Improving our relations with any country in the world will not come at the cost of any other.”

•Mr. Modi would also like to discuss shared concerns over China’s Belt and Road initiative that India has refused to join on sovereignty issues. Germany is part of the B&R connectivity initiative, but refused to sign a statement on trade — along with other EU countries — that they said would contravene World Trade Organisation (WTO) commitments.

•“We maintain concerns over China’s ambiguity on free trade commitments and human rights,” conceded a foreign ministry official who didn’t wish to be named. “But the fact is there is no way around China if you want to achieve anything on the global stage in today’s world,” he added, in a possible reference to a bilateral trade partnership of €169.9 billion which saw China surpass both U.S. and France in 2016.

SourceThe hindu��

Tuesday, 30 May 2017

New National Commission for Backward Classes to be constituted in the same manner as National Commissions for SCs & STs

New National Commission for Backward Classes to be constituted in the same manner as National Commissions for SCs & STs

Rs. 242.36 Crores Loans Sanctioned to 65 SC Entrepreneurs till date under venture capital fund for Scheduled Castes Scheme

2.5 Lakh Beneficiaries trained under Skill Development Programmes of M/O SJ&E Corporations & Scheduled Castes sub plan during last three Years

Shri Thaawarchand Gehlot interacts with media on 3 Years Achievements Of M/O Sj&E

The new National Commission for Backward Classes will be constituted under Article 338B and will commence functioning as a constitutional authority, in the same manner as the National Commission for Scheduled Castes under article 338 and the National Commission for Scheduled Tribes under Article 338A. This was stated by Shri Thaawarchand Gehlot, Minister for Social Justice and Empowerment while interacting with media persons on the three year’s achievements of his ministry here today. The new Commission will exercise the function of hearing the complaints/grievances of socially and educationally backward classes. It will have the powers of a Civil Court for this purpose. It will have the duty of advising of the socio economic development of the socially and educationally backward classes and evaluate the progress of their development, unlike the present Commission which does not have this role.

The Minister of State for Social Justice & Empowerment, Shri Ramdas Athawale, the Secretary, Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment, Smt. G. Latha Krishna Rao and the Principal Director General (M&C), Press Information Bureau, Shri A.P. Frank Noronha and senior officers of M/o SJ&E were also present.

He informed the media persons that the objective of Venture Capital Fund for Scheduled Castes is to promote entrepreneurship amongst the Scheduled Caste and to provide concessional finance to them. The projects/units are promoted in manufacturing and services sector ensuring asset creation. The Scheme provides higher level of loans ranging from Rs. 50 lakhs to Rs. 15 crores. Till date loans amounting to Rs. 242.36 crores were sanctioned to 65 Scheduled Cast entrepreneurs and Rs. 118.99 crores has been disbursed.

The Minister said that the Skill Training is under taken by the three corporations of the Ministry viz. National Scheduled Caste Finance and Development Corporations (NSFDC), National Backward Classes Finance and Development Corporation (NBCFDC) and National Safai Karamcharis Finance and Development Corporation (NSKFDC). During the last three years i.e. from 2014-15 to 2016-17, 2.5 lakh beneficiaries have been trained under the skill development programme of the Corporations and the Scheduled Castes Sub Plan. Out of these beneficiaries, 48.42% have got wage/self-employment.

Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment has released scholarships to 3.45 crore students through Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) providing direct benefit to the students. Amount released is Rs. 18000 crores in the last 3 years.

He said that the five places relating to Dr. Ambedkar such as Janam Bhoomi, Mhow; Shiksha Bhoomi 10, King Henry Road, London; Deeksha Bhoomi, Nagpur; Chaitya Bhoomi, Mumbai; and Parinirvan Bhoomi, 26 Alipur Road, New Delhi were declared ‘Panchtirth’ by the Government of India. Besides this, the Dr. Ambedkar Foundation under Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment had sponsored 100 students for study tour to Universities of Columbia and London School of Economics (UK) where Dr. Ambedkar studied.

The Minister informed that the Government of India declared 26th November as Constitution Day. Various programmes by Ministries/Departments/ State Government’s were organised throughout the country and Indian Mission abroad. It has been decided to increase income limit from Rs. 1.00 Lakh to Rs. 2.50 Lakh on yearly basis to provide assistance to families under Dr. Ambedkar Medical Aid Scheme. Under Dr. Ambedkar Scheme for Social Integration through inter-caste caste marriage, 126 Married couple benefitted during the last three years. The Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment has enhanced Overseas Scholarship for boys and girls belonging to SC/ST community from 60 to 100 for pursuing higher studies aboard.

He said that his Ministry has launched the Rashtriya Vayoshri Yojana for the welfare of Senior Citizens, which aims at providing Senior Citizens, belonging to BPL category and suffering from any of the age related disabilities/infirmities viz. Low vision, Hearing impairment, Loss of teeth and locomotor disabilities, with such assisted-living devices which can restore near normalcy in their bodily functions, overcoming the disability/infirmity manifested.

The Minister said that the Department of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities has created 4 Guinness World Records, during the year 2016-17, as detailed in the list below: -

First record, created by Biggest Wheelchair Logo/Image by 1000 PwDs at Navsari, Gujrat;
Second world record, created by fitting 1200 Hearing Aids to 600 persons within 8 hours at a single location at Navsari, Gujrat;
Third world record, created in Gujrat by lighting most oil lamps simultaneously at a single venue by Divyangjans; and
Fourth Guinness World Record was created when 3911 persons with hearing impairment were fitted with hearing aids in 8 hours in Manipur.
The Minister informed that the financial assistance under Voluntary Organisations working for Welfare of SCs is released to NGOs/VOs to provide an environment for Socio-Economic up-liftment and overall development of Scheduled Castes (SCs). Also, the Ministry introduced the Self Employment Scheme for Rehabilitation of Manual Scavengers (SRMS) in January 2007, with the objective to rehabilitate the remaining manual scavengers and their dependents in alternatives occupations

He said that Scheme for Prevention of Alcoholism and Substance (Drugs) Abuse aims at creating awareness and educate people about the ill-effects of alcoholism and substance abuse on the individual, the family, the workplace and society at large. There are 431 Drug-de-addiction centres functioning through NGOs, supported by the Ministry.

Source. PIB

Regional comprehensive economic partnership

Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership

What is the issue?

There’s a rush to finalise RCEP this year which is pushing India into covering most tariff lines that destroy its economy.

What is RCEP?

RCEP is being negotiated between India and 15 other countries including the 10-member Asean, Japan, South Korea, New Zealand, Australia and China.
India had very rightly maintained a cautious approach in its FTAs on goods, intellectual property rights, and many new issues such as investment, government procurement and competition policy.

Why RCEP is becoming a disaster for India?

There was clearly huge pressure on India to conclude negotiations this year and to make major concessions in goods, services and investment at the ministerial of the RCEP in Hanoi.
It has the potential to overthrow India’s policies of rural development and industrialisation especially ‘Make in India’, and the promise of the Prime Minister to provide accessible healthcare and medicines to all.
Most important, it threatens the policy flexibility and sovereignty to pursue independent economic, social and environmental policies.
In goods trade, India has already agreed to give up the three-tier tariff reduction proposal that offered different coverage for Asean, Japan and South Korea, and a much lower level of tariff reduction coverage for New Zealand, Australia and China.
In agriculture and allied products, the plantation sector is already reeling from the impact of the India-Asean FTA even with relatively high protection of agriculture and a tariff-coverage of 73-80%.
If tariff cuts cover 92-80% of products, the impact will be huge.
On the other hand, New Zealand’s export-oriented dairy products will decimate India’s growing dairy sector, which is still largely small-scale.
If India has to cut duties on 92% of goods in RCEP, India will face threats from both Asean and China.

What are the other possible threats to Indian economy?

E-commerce commitments, if any, will allow companies such as Alibaba from China to displace Indian manufacturing especially in the SME segment.
Further, India is being asked to eliminate export restrictions on minerals and raw material by Japan and South Korea, which may threaten domestic raw material availability.
India is openly pitching services as its offensive area of interest and may be willing to sacrifice goods tariffs for gains in services.
This can be the most dangerous of India’s current trade policy stance.

India has demands for both Mode 3 (investment) and Mode 4 (movement of people) with a proposal for a RCEP business visa for professionals.
India’s demand for Mode 4 is unlikely to be granted.

What India hopes to gain in Mode 3 for its outward FDI is not clear as it is not competitive in most services except for IT and ITES.

India is under heavy pressure to agree to the investor state dispute settlement provision in RCEP without the safeguards provided in the Model BIT.

The investment chapter in RCEP is also pitching for strong provisions on IPRs.
Agreeing to data exclusivity, extending patent terms and unduly strong enforcement measures will weaken the entire generic medicine sector and take away several health safeguards in India’s Patent Act, notably section 3(d).

This will make medicines inaccessible not only for Indian patients but for those in the entire developing world.

In addition, since India has rightly fought against ‘TRIPS plus’ provisions in its FTA negotiations with EU and European Free Trade Association, there is no rationale for it to change its stance in RCEP.

Source: Business Line

Friday, 26 May 2017

India Japan's plan for Africa

While China has been able to attract all global powers towards its OBOR initiative, this increases tensions for India from various viewpoints. Japan also faces similar fate as India in terms of relations with China (Senkaku Islands dispute) and a foe’s foe is a friend. Let the issue develop further and we will discuss it in detail once some op-eds come up related to it.
From UPSC perspective, following things are important:
Prelims level:  Asia Africa Growth Corridor, Mombasa port ☞ (Mark it on map and note related geographical features)
Mains level: India Africa relations. Also try to explore them from the prism of China and Japan involvement in African subcontinent and what it means for India. India Japan relations. India and Japan have been partners for a long time and Japan has provided assistance to India in multiple fields.
 News:
India and Japan unveiled a vision document for the Asia Africa Growth Corridor, proposed by the Prime Ministers of the two countries last November
Proposal for growth corridor was presented to the Board of Governors of African Development Bank
More details are likely to be firmed up by September in time for Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s visit to New Delhi
Different from OBOR:
Unlike China’s One Belt One Road (OBOR) project, about which India has raised several concerns, the Asia Africa Growth Corridor is conceived as a more open and inclusive programme that will be based on more consultations and keep people as the centre piece rather than just trade and economic ties
Four key elements:
Enhancing capacity and skills
Building quality infrastructure and connecting institutions
Development and cooperation projects in health, farming, manufacturing and disaster management and
People-to-people partnerships
Important partners in mutual growth:
Corridor will facilitate greater trilateral or triangular cooperation among Japan, India and Africa as a win-win-win
As African countries continue to grow against the background of their abundant resources and growing population, they are becoming important partners of Japan and India with deeper relationships, politically and economically
Greater synergy is expected to emerge between Japan’s technology and capital and India’s strong network and experiences in Africa
Greater cooperation sought:
Japan’s Ambassador also called for greater cooperation between Indian and Japanese firms in furthering Africa’s development
He urged Indian investors to participate in the new economic zone coming up around Kenya’s Mombasa port with Japan’s assistance

for more clickhere

Con of GM mustard

Why in news?

Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC) recently cleared the proposal for genetically modified (GM) mustard.

How effective was Bt Cotton?

Bt cotton promised of higher yield and lower pesticide usage in the 1990s.
Despite increased fertilisers and irrigation, the expectations of enhanced cotton yield have not been realised.
Most of the countries that have higher cotton yields than India do not grow GM cotton.
What are the shortcomings of GM Mustard?

Yield - The yield claims on GM mustard are not very reliable.
U.S. and Canada uses GM mustard.
But the highest yields in mustard are from the five countries which do not grow GM mustard — U.K., France, Poland, Germany and Czech Republic.
Evaluation - The risks to health, environment and agriculture have not been evaluated.
Those inadequate tests which were conducted on Bt brinjal were also ignored, even though mustard is far more extensively grown and consumed than brinjal.
HT (herbicide tolerant) GM crops have been condemned by a number of medical professionals.
Weed - A herbicide-tolerant crop promotes constant exposure to a single herbicide — which eventually results in weeds becoming resistant.
Health - A scientific report from Argentina found a fourfold increase in birth defects and a threefold increase in childhood cancers in HT soya areas.
Studies have shown a strong correlation between growth of GM crops & herbicides used in U.S. and diseases such as acute kidney injury, diabetes, autism, Alzheimer’s and cancers.
Seventeen of the 20 most developed countries — including Japan, Russia, Israel and most of Europe — refuse to grow GM crops.
The millions of poor women who depend on weeding to support their family will be displaced.
Indian will lose its seed diversity and the international competitive advantage of its non-GM mustard.
What should be done?

If India wants to increase its mustard yield rapidly and safely, this can be done by adopting the practice of System of Mustard Intensification.
Successful trials have been done in Bihar through a World Bank and results showed higher yields and better income.

Source: The Hindu
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Thursday, 25 May 2017

Continental ties

The Hindu

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Context

India begins the heavy-lifting needed to transform economic partnerships in Africa

What has happened?

The 52nd Annual Meetings of the Board of Governors (the Bank’s highest decision-making body) of the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the 43rd Meetings of the Board of Governors of the African Development Fund (ADF) officially opened in Ahmedabad, India, on Tuesday, May 23, 2017 with calls for greater cooperation between the Bank and India to help drive Africa’s transformation.

What is AfDB?

The African Development Bank (AfDB) Group is a regional multilateral development finance institution established to contribute to the economic development and social progress of African countries that are the institution’s Regional Member Countries (RMCs).

Established on:
The AfDB was founded following an agreement signed by member states on _August 14, 1963_, in Khartoum, Sudan, which became effective on September 10, 1964

HQ
The AfDB headquarters is officially in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire

The AfDB comprises three entities:

*The African Development Bank (ADB)
*The African Development Fund (ADF)
*The Nigeria Trust Fund (NTF)

Mission of AfDB

AfDB’s mission is to

Help reduce poverty, improve living conditions for Africans and mobilize resources for the continent’s economic and social development

Members

The Bank Group has 80 member countries, comprising 54 regional member countries (RMC) and 26 non-regional member countries (NRMC).

Future cooperation

Maritime cooperation: India is working on a maritime outreach to extend its Sagarmala programme to the southern coastal African countries with ‘blue economies’
Solar connection : India is also building its International Solar Alliance, which Djibouti, Comoros, Cote d’Ivoire, Somalia and Ghana signed on to on the sidelines of the AfDB project

Involving other powers

In its efforts, India has tapped other development partners of Africa, including Japan, which sent a major delegation to the AfDB meeting
It has also turned to the United States, with which it has developed dialogues in fields such as peacekeeping training and agricultural support, to work with African countries
It is significant that during the recent inter-governmental consultations between India and Germany, both countries brought in their Africa experts to discuss possible cooperation in developmental programs in that continent

Conclusion

At a time when China is showcasing its Belt and Road Initiative as the “project of the century” and also bolstering its position as Africa’s largest donor, a coalition of like-minded countries such as the one India is putting together could provide an effective way to ensure more equitable and transparent development aid to Africa.

(This is imp topic related to India Africa relation for IAS /KAS mains GS under IR)

Wednesday, 24 May 2017

India become no 2 stainless steel maker

International Stainless Steel Forum (ISSF):
 According to ISSF, India overtook Japan to become the second-largest producer of stainless steel in the world, behind China, in 2016
India’s stainless steel production rose 9% last year to 3.32 million tonnes, from 3 million tonnes in 2015.

basics
Stainless Steel
Stainless steels are iron alloys with a minimum of 10.5% chromium. Other alloying elements are added to enhance their structure and properties such as formability, strength and cryogenic toughness. These include metals such as:
Nickel
Molybdenum
Titanium
Copper
Non-metal additions are also made, the main ones being:
Carbon
Nitrogen  
The main requirement for stainless steels is that they should be corrosion resistant for a specified application or environment. The selection of a particular “type” and “grade” of stainless steel must initially meet the corrosion resistance requirements. Additional mechanical or physical properties may also need to be considered to achieve the overall service performance requirements.

Tuesday, 23 May 2017

Agriculture in j&k

Introduction

The state of J&K is basically an agrarian state. Agriculture occupies an important place in the economy of the state. The share of agriculture and allied sectors in the Gross state Domestic Product (at 1999-2000 prices) for the year 2010-11 as per preliminary estimates stands at 20.59%. On the other nearly 70% of the population in the state derives its livelihood directly or indirectly from agricultural sector. Agriculture is the main stay of the state's economy.

Statistics of Agriculture in the State

The state of J&K is predominantly a mono cropped and rain fed with about 40% of the area in Jammu division and 60% in Kashmir Division having assured means of irrigation. Irrigation is crucial input for development of agriculture in the state. The major area in the state falls under the command of canal irrigation.

Rice, Maize and Wheat are the major crops in the state. While in Kashmir region Wheat, Oil Seeds and Fodder is being introduced as the secondary crop. In Jammu farmers are raising paddy as an additional crop. The production level of paddy adds about 40 quintals per hectare in Kashmir Valley and is highest in the country
(Source: SoER, J&K 2012-13)

Land Use Statistics

Land use statistics is available for 2416 thousand hectares. Over the year land use statistics has not undergone any significant change. The total reporting area as per revenue papers is 2416 thousand hectares for the year 2011-12.

Area not Available for Cultivation

As per the figure for 2011-12 area not available for cultivation accounts for 574 thousand hectares. The category consists of 245 thousand hectares following under land put to non agriculture use and 312 thousand hectares under barren and uncultivable land, 5 thousand hectares is under still water, marshy and water lodged category which is negligible proportion.

The crop yield for the year 2011-12 regarding principal agriculture crops was estimated to be 1.6 metric tonnes per annum for maize, 2.078 metric tonnes per annum for rice and 1.68 metric tonnes per annum for wheat, which are the major crops of the state.
✦✦✦✦✦✦✦✦✦
Jammu and Kashmir State is a food deficit State. There is a big gap between production of food grains and their consumption as a result State has to import about 07 lakh MTs of food grain  every year.The Food grain production in Kashmir Division has touched 9.9 lakh M.Ts figure by the end of 2013-14. But still the deficit is 21.70% (about 2.65 lakh M.Ts). The deficit in production in Kashmir Division is mainly due to geographical and climatic conditions as most of the area is mono cropped. Another factor responsible for this is small and fragmented land holdings that minimize the scope of mechanization and other scientific practices for more production.
Moreover conversion of agricultural land for Horticulture and other non-agricultural purpose is also contributing to this deficit.
In order to bridge this gap to the maximum possible extent Agriculture Department has been striving hard for increasing the production level of various crops including food crops. To achieve this objective the Agriculture Department is implementing a number of Centrally Sponsored Schemes to incentivize farmers for adopting latest technology to enhance the production. During past few years we have achieved remarkable success in enhancing the production level of some important crops like Paddy, Maize, Vegetables and Saffron thereby improving the economic condition of the Farmers. However, there is yet lot more to be done to bring further improvement in the implementation of Agriculture schemes to make the State self sufficient. For this all stakeholders are required to join hands

Centrally Sponsored Schemes

Rashtirya Krishi Vikas Youjana (RKVY)
National Saffron Mission (NMS)

National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA)

National Mission on Oilseed and Oil Palm (NMOOP)

Crop Insurance
PMFBY
National Mission on Agriculture Extension & Technology (NMAET)

Prime Minister's Krishi Sinchai Youjna(PMKSY)

Submission on seeds & Planting Material (SMSP)

Submission on Agriculture Mechanization (SMAM)

Submission on Plant Protection & Plant Quarantine

National Food Security Mission (NFSM)
National e-Governance Plan in Agriculture (NeGP-A)

Mission on Integrated Development of Horticulture (MIDH)

Jammu and kashmir general land use

What is the Real Estate Regulation Act (RERA)?

The Real Estate (Regulation & Development) Act, 2016, the landmark realty law to protect home buyers from unscrupulous developers,

What is Real Estate Act, 2016?

The Act which is envisaged to regulate both commercial and residential real estate projects, seeks to set up a state level regulatory authority called Real Estate Regulatory Authority (RERAs) for regulation and promotion of the real estate sector.
The Act makes it mandatory for uploading the details of a Real Estate project on the website of the RERAs. Real estate agents also need to register with the RERAs.
The Act also makes it mandatory for the builders to put 70% of the amount collected from buyers in a separate bank account. This must only be used for construction of the project. However, the state government can alter this amount to less than 70%.
The Act also seeks to establish fast track dispute resolution mechanisms for settlement of disputes through adjudicating officers and Appellate Tribunal.

Here’s all you need to know about the new realty law:

• It makes it mandatory for all builders - developing a project where the land exceeds 500 square metre - to register with RERA before launching or even advertising their project. Developers have been given time until July 31 to register.
• Not doing so will invite up to a maximum imprisonment of 3 years or fine of up to 10% of the total project cost.

• Developers will have to submit as well as upload project details, including approved layout plan, timeline, cost, and the sale agreement, that prospective buyers will have to sign to the proposed regulator.

•Only developers who fulfil this disclosure clause would be permitted to advertise their project to prospective buyers.

•Real Estate Appellate Tribunals to be set up in every state.
•As of now, the real estate sector was largely unregulated in India. If a consumer had a complaint against a developer they had to make rounds of consumer or civil courts. Now, in case of any grievance, the consumer can go to the real estate regulator for redressal.

• Developers will have to put 50% of the money collected from a buyer in a separate account to meet the construction cost of the project. This will put a check to the general practice by developers to divert buyer’s money to start a new project instead of finishing the one for which money was collected. This will ensure that construction is completed on time.

• The law is likely to stabilise housing prices. It will lead to enhanced activity in the sector, leading to more housing units supplied to the market.

• It will weed out fly-by-night operators from the sector and channelise investment into it.

• Builders will also benefit as the law has penal provisions for allottees who do not pay dues on time. The builder can also approach the regulator in case there is any issue with the buyer.

What are some of the key issues?

Major issue is Parliament’s jurisdiction to make laws related to real estate as “land” is in the State List of the Constitution. However, the primary aim of the act is to regulate contracts and transfer of property, both of which are in the Concurrent List.
Some states already have laws to regulate real estate projects. And the act differs from these state laws on several grounds.
The Bill mandates that 70% of the amount collected from buyers of a project be used only for construction. In certain cases, the cost of land more than 30%.
The real estate sector has some other issues such as a lengthy process for project approvals, lack of clear land titles, and prevalence of black money. Some of these also fall under the State List.

Why establishing RERA is important?

Only 4 States and 6 Union Territories so far notified the final Real Estate Rules. So, the Minister of Housing & Urban Poverty Alleviation has urged the Chief Ministers of states to implement the Act before April 30, 2017.
From May 1, 2017, under the provisions of the Act, both buyers and developers of real estate property can approach RERA seeking relief against violation of the contractual obligations and other provisions of the Act.
For this to happen, Real Estate Authorities and Appellate Tribunals were required to be in place and in a position
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How it works in other countries

United States

Real estate in the US is regulated at numerous levels. There is no single regulatory body, but a series of bodies that regulate different ownership and usage aspects. To safeguard the interest of the end-users, the US department of housing and urban development (HUD) has rules under the real estate settlement procedures act to protect consumer interests pertaining to residential properties.

If a buyer enters a contract with the developer, and the developer does not deliver on the terms agreed upon in the contract, the developer can be taken to court for breach of contract. In the US, there are state real estate licensing laws and a code of ethics in place.

United Kingdom

There is no regulator to monitor development. The financial services authority (FSA), which is now part of the Bank of England, regulates almost all investments in real estate. The Property Misdescriptions Act, 1991, prohibits making false or misleading statements on property matters in the course of estate agency business and the property development business.

(Source: Realty decoded: Investing across borders by Ernst & Young and Ficci)

Universal basic income

What is a Universal Basic Income?
•    A universal basic income (UBI) is an unconditional and universal right. It requires that every person should have a right to a basic income to cover their needs, just by virtue of being citizens.
•    The Economic Survey (ES) 2016-17 says the time has come to think of UBI for a number of following reasons
•    Social Justice - A UBI promotes many of the basic values of a society which respects all individuals as free and equal.
•    Poverty Reduction - Conditional on the presence of a well-functioning fnancial system, a Universal Basic Income may simply be the fastest way of reducing poverty.

•    Agency - The poor in India have been treated as objects of government policy. An unconditional cash transfer treats them as agents, not subjects.
•    By taking the individual and not the household as the unit of beneficiary, UBI can also enhance agency, especially of women within households.

•    Administrative Effciency -  It is a way of ensuring that state welfare transfers are more effcient so that the state can concentrate on other public goods.

What are its basic principles?

The main features of UBI are that it should be universal and not targeted, it should be unconditional and not tied to work or employment, and it should be in cash.
UBI is envisaged as a method of redistribution of resources from the rich to the poor.
It is envisaged as providing all persons (especially, the poor) with an income to lead a dignified life, with basic needs taken care of.
The UBI proposed in the ES is hostile to each of these objectives.
What are the flaws in proposed UBI?

The first wrong committed by the ES is that its proposal constitutes an attack on welfare schemes.
The ES wants UBI not to supplement, but to replace, all existing social welfare schemes.
European scholar Mr. Parijs says, that while fighting towards greater income security, we must not neglect the importance of providing people with quality basic education and health care.
It is thus technically and ethically wrong to compare the costs and benefits of UBI with those from a range of subsidies relating to food and nutrition (PDS, school meals, ICDS), education etc., as is done in ES.
The second wrong is, the argument that the UBI should also replace all current in-kind (such as food subsidies) and cash transfers (such as maternity benefit).
The third wrong, is the ES’s assertion that “UBI is not framed as a transfer payment from the rich to the poor.”
A basic income needs resources. Thus, the comparatively rich would need to pay both for their own basic income and for much of the basic income of the comparatively poor.
While the basic income is given to all, the manner in which the basic income is funded has to ensure that society transfers resources from the rich to the poor.
The ES also does not propose any new resource mobilisation or taxation to meet the goal of UBI.
Rather, it says the existing programmes will have to be cut to fund the universal basic income. There is no intention of making the rich pay for the basic income.
What are the justifications provided by ES?

UBI reduces the incentive to work - The levels at which universal basic income are likely to be pegged are going to be minimal guarantees. Thus they are unlikely to crowd incentives to work.
Should income be detached from employment? Any society where any form of inheritance or accepting nonwork related income is allowed, already detaches income from employment.
Should income be unconditional, with no regard to people’s contribution to society? Individuals, in most cases contribute to society. In fact, UBI can also be a way of acknowledging non-wage work related contributions to society.
What a genuine UBI would entail?

UBI equivalent to the expected income transfer under MGNREGA itself would cost Rs. 510,000 crore.
This is more than 10 times the allocation in the current Budget for MGNREGA (Rs. 48,000 crore).
Resource mobilisation has to increase ten-fold forfor India to afford the universal basic income without cutting back on other social welfare programmes.
Unless the government seriously increases tax resources, the proposal for a universal basic income is at best a fantasy idea.

Addressing the court within

India must use this initial victory at The Hague to appeal to our own finest sense of conscience

•By itself, the International Court of Justice’s order, delivered on May 18, imposing provisional measures injuncting Pakistan from executing an Indian national, Kulbhushan Jadhav, is entirely unexceptional. The ICJ has merely arrived at a prima facie satisfaction — based on an analysis at first sight — that it possesses the power to rule on India’s application, and that India’s rights, under the 1963 Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, have plausibly been violated by Pakistan’s detention, trial and ultimate sentencing to death of Jadhav. There is now a worry, not without cause, that Pakistan may not comply with the ICJ’s direction, despite its explicitly binding status. What’s more, the internationalisation of the dispute potentially comes with its political ramifications for India. But much as all these considerations can serve as a basis for cynicism, we mustn’t despair at India’s choice. Its victory, impermanent as it may ultimately prove to be, must be celebrated for what it is: a vindication of the rule of law.

Dispelling old concerns

•Too often ontological concerns encumber the study of international law — questions tend to revolve around whether international law is really law at all, and, if so, whether its principles even matter. Despite consistent empirical evidence which shows that international law positively influences state behaviour, these questions, seeped in scepticism, somehow never seem to go away. India’s choice of the ICJ as a legitimate site for dispute resolution, even if it was borne out of self-interest, can help dispel some of these age-old concerns. But for that to happen, India must take on the additional responsibility that comes with its choice, to show us that it possesses the moral authority to charge other nations with a breach of the law. To achieve this, we must drive the Indian government towards greater domestic compliance with its own obligations under both treaty and customary law alike, to demonstrate that our own sense of conscience is stirred by the mandates of the world order.

•First, though, let’s consider the facts of the present dispute, as they are. Although India and Pakistan disagree over the precise nature of who Mr. Jadhav is and where he was arrested, the crux of India’s case, which Pakistan hasn’t particularly disputed on facts, is this: that Mr. Jadhav was denied consular access, despite numerous requests from India. Pakistan claims that these actions do not breach the Vienna Convention, as Jadhav was involved in espionage and sabotage. India submits that the treaty creates no such exception and that the denial of consular access is an infringement for which Pakistan must make reparations. To this end, India has sought, among other things, an order that would declare the sentence of the Pakistani military court as violating Article 36 of the Vienna Convention, which both countries as parties are bound by.

•This provision defines the rights granted to consular officials, with a view to helping them exercise their consular functions. Specifically, it accords a privilege to officials to not only freely communicate with any national of its state detained in the other country, but also the right of visiting the detained individual, and arranging for legal representation, if the détenu so desires. It is India’s case that these privileges were denied to it. Pakistan alleges that the Convention’s privileges were not only inapplicable, but that the ICJ, in any event, lacks the jurisdiction to decide the dispute. Or, in other words, the court, it says, does not possess the power to make a legal determination on the dispute.

•Ordinarily, rows between nations can be taken to the World Court only if both parties consent to the court’s jurisdiction. In this case, however, India relies on Article 36(1) of the Statute of the ICJ which accords to the court the power to decide disputes arising out of treaties or conventions that specifically vest the court with compulsory jurisdiction. The Vienna Convention, through an optional protocol that both India and Pakistan are signatories to, is one such agreement.

ICJ in the picture

•As India has pointed out in its application, the ICJ has, at least in two notable instances, entertained applications under Article 36(1) of its statute for breaches of the Vienna Convention. In 2001, the court ruled that the United States had violated its obligations to Germany in denying consular access to the LaGrand brothers, citizens of Germany who had been convicted and sentenced to death in the state of Arizona. Similarly, in the Avena case in 2004, the court ruled that the U.S. had failed to comply with the Vienna Convention in several instances involving Mexican nationals. The court here directed the U.S. to review and reconsider its convictions and sentences, in a manner that would take into account the breaches made of the treaty.

•Pakistan, for its part, has resisted references to LaGrand and Avena . It claims that the two countries are governed by a 2008 bilateral agreement on consular access, which effectively exempts Pakistan from its obligations under the Vienna Convention, and which also ousts altogether the ICJ’s jurisdiction. More ominously, however, it argues that the Vienna Convention does not apply when a person has been detained for offences involving espionage or terrorism, as concerns over national security always trump the demands of consular relations.

•The ICJ is yet to rule conclusively on any of these arguments. It has only granted India provisional measures pending a final adjudication. But, on any reasonable final consideration, Pakistan’s arguments ought not to pass muster. The 2008 bilateral understanding between the countries no doubt imposes particular responsibilities on them, but by no means does it relieve either country from its obligations under the Vienna Convention. As the opinions in LaGrand andAvena make clear, once a foreign national is arrested the state making the arrest has a duty to allow the consular officials of the sending state to visit the détenuand to render to him all the assistance that he needs. It’s easy to see that Pakistan is in breach of this fundamental obligation. Its endeavour to wriggle out of this responsibility citing concerns over national security is also likely to fail. Were such an argument to be accepted, it would potentially lead to a most dangerous situation, where countries can ignore their consular obligations purely because they consider the sending state an enemy.

•Whichever way the ICJ’s decision might eventually go, the critical question, for now, though remains this: will Pakistan obey the court’s provisional measures? Should it choose to ignore the order, it can glean much from the American experience. The U.S., after all, went ahead in executing one of the LaGrandbrothers despite an explicit injunction from the ICJ, prohibiting it from carrying out the death sentence, pending a final adjudication. Ultimately, in 2005, the U.S. withdrew altogether from the Optional Protocol, which grants the ICJ compulsory jurisdiction over claims made under the Vienna Convention.

A glass already half full

•When we see naked expressions of power such as this, it’s easy to conclude that international law exists in vacuity, that its principles aren’t merely flawed but that they are also law only in their name. However, we can still see the present proceedings as a tunnel that ends with the optimistic light of day. Even if Pakistan were to disregard the ICJ’s order, the case shows us that there do exist concrete sources — a treaty in this case — which impose an ethical duty on nation-states to follow the rule of law. It allows us to consider what the scholar Thomas M. Franck described as “post-ontological” questions, to address not whether international law really is law, but the more normative concerns over how best to enforce its commands. We must therefore use this opportunity to shun scepticism, and appeal to our finest sense of conscience. We can only do this by resisting a push for greater governmental freedom at the domestic level, which invariably tends to carry itself into the sphere of international relations, where our own obligations — think climate change, customary refugee law, fundamental human rights, among others — often stand breached. To set the right moral example we must start from within.

‘Critically endangered’ endemic plant species recently rediscovered in the Nilgiris

What happen?

Arisaema translucens, more commonly remembered as the cobra lily, was recently rediscover-ed in the western Nilgiris after 84 years.

By nature enthusiasts K.M. Prabhu Kumar and Tarun Chhabra

it was last collected by E. Barnes in 1932 and described by C.E.C Fischer in 1933.

“The Toda tribals of the Nilgiris, who know the planet well, have an embroidery motif known as the ‘podwarshk’, which resembles it,” Mr. Chhabra, author of The Toda Landscape told

Risk of extinction

He added that such was the depth of the indigenous community’s knowledge that they could predict the early arrival of monsoons from the blooming of the cobra lily's ‘translucens’. Prized for their beauty around the world, cobra lilies are at even greater risk of extinction from the commercial trade in exotic plants.

Of the handful cobra lily species found in the Nilgiris, only two are endemic, said Mr. Chhabra, who has called for the protection of the patch of land where the Arisaema translucens were found. Likely to have been quite common once, cobra lilies have vanished in the past decades along with the disappearance of the shola tree patches in which they were found. The rediscovery of the plant highlights the importance of preserving whatever is left of shola tree patches, even inside plantations and tea fields.

Dr. Prabhu Kumar, a senior scientist from Kerala and one of the co-authors of the paper, said that based on its tiny population and distribution, the Arisaema translucens could be considered ‘critically endangered’, and concurred that measures must be put in place immediately for their long-term survival.

Source:  the hindu

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Monday, 22 May 2017

Wastewater Treatment And Sustainable Development

Wastewater Treatment And Sustainable Development
22-May-2017

Why in news?

International World Water Day  was  celebrated on March 22
This year’s theme was “wastewater”, which is defined as any water that has been adversely affected in quality by anthropogenic influences and as a result of domestic, industrial, commercial and agricultural activities.

What is the global issue?

Population growth, accelerated urbanisation and economic development have resulted in an increase in the quantity of wastewater.
Most of our freshwater sources are under threat.
Industrial water consumption accounts for 22% of the global water used, when public awareness of pollution is limited the cost of pollution to our health and the ecosystem is huge.
The victims are generally the poor or socially vulnerable communities, and the end result is a high financial burden on the community and government.
What is the problem in India?

By 2030, the global demand for water is expected to grow by 50%. Most of this demand will be in cities.
In low-income areas of cities/towns within developing countries, a large proportion of wastewater is discharged directly into the surface water drain, without or with limited treatment.
Traditional wastewater treatment plants may not remove certain pollutants.
In India, about 29,000 million l/day of waste water is generated from class-I cities and class-II towns, out of which about 45% is generated from metro cities alone.
A collection system exists for only about 30% of the wastewater through sewer lines, while treatment capacity exists for about 7,000 ml/d.
The industrial sector in India discharges around 30,730 million cubic metres of effluents, without proper treatment, into water bodies.
Run-off from agriculture fields is another major source of pollution.
India, extracts water significantly for various developmental purposes.
Hence, the water flow or storage capacity of water bodies has declined substantially, adversely affecting their waste assimilation/sink functions.
What are the water Management strategies?

Integrated Nature conservation policies between Union and states and Water pollution should be made a punishable offence.
The effectiveness and power of the “polluter pay principle” should be considered.
Strategies to protect water resources should be Public-Private Partnership and Capacity building at local levels.
Market-based strategies such as environmental taxes, pollution levies should be implemented.
Incentive mechanisms such as subsidies, soft loans, tax relaxation should be included in installing pollution management devices.
In industries cleaner production-technology must be encouraged.
The application of eco-friendly inputs such as bio fertilizers and pesticides in agriculture and the use of natural dyes in textile industries can reduce the pollution load considerably.
Way forward:

Past experience shows that significant progress has not been achieved despite legislative and policy measures being introduced with huge budgets to solve water pollution issues.
Water pollution is not a major topic of political debate as yet.
Unfortunately, most common effluent treatment plants are not performing satisfactorily due to improper operations and maintenance.
There is sufficient evidence to suggest that the problem, though complex, is solvable. While it is not realistic to aim for zero water pollution, a level of socially acceptable pollution, respecting the integrity of ecosystems and service provision, can be reached.
The benefits to our health, and in terms of economic development and environmental sustainability, business opportunities and ‘green’ jobs far compensate the costs of wastewater management.

Source:-The-Hindu

Chakmas And Hajongs

Chakmas And Hajongs

22-May-2017

Why in news?

A long-standing demand of the Chakma and Hajong refugee community for Indian citizenship may be met soon.

Who are these people?

Chakmas and Hajongs were originally residents of the Chittagong Hill Tracts of erstwhile East Pakistan, who had to flee when their land was submerged by the Kaptai dam project in the 1960s.
The Chakmas, who are Buddhist, and Hajongs, who are Hindus, also faced religious persecution in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh).
Chakmas and Hajongs entered India through the then Lushai Hills district of Assam (now Mizoram).
Within the Chittagong Hill Tracts, the Chakmas are the largest ethnic group and make up half of the region's population.
The Chakma possess strong genetic affinities to Tibeto-Burman groups in Northeast India and to East Asian populations.
In Assam Chakma people have scheduled tribe status.
They also have high frequencies of mainland Indian genetic ancestry.
Hajong are the fourth largest ethnicity in Meghalaya.
Hajongs are predominantly rice farmers and have the status of a Scheduled Tribe in India(Assam and Meghalaya)
According to officials, the number of these refugees has increased from about 5,000 in 1964-69 to 1,00,000.
While some stayed back with the Chakmas already in the district, the Indian government moved a majority of Chakmas and Hajong to the North East Frontier Agency (NEFA), which is now Arunachal Pradesh.
At present, they do not posses citizenship and land rights, but are provided basic amenities by the state government.
What is the issue about?

The Centre and the Arunachal Pradesh government are in talks to accord citizenship to them, though without extending the rights available to Scheduled Tribes in the state.
This is the third generation of the refugees who first settled in the region in the early 1960s.
The Supreme Court had given a three-month deadline in 2015 to the Centre to process the demand.
Only about 5,000 persons of the original 14,888 persons of 2,748 refugee families settled in Arunachal between 1964 to ’69 are reportedly alive, which means most persons in the two communities were born in India and hence, qualify for Indian citizenship by birth.
Stiff opposition from the state government had stalled implementation of the SC directive.
The move, however, has political implications for Arunachal Pradesh.
Since the 1980s, the All Arunachal Pradesh Students’ Union (AAPSU) has spearheaded a mass movement against granting citizenship to Chakmas and Hajongs.
The AAPSU fears that the refugees could soon outnumber the indigenous population and influence electoral outcomes.

Source: Indian Express

Bacterial pollution

Bacterial Pollution

Why in news?

European study finds, the pharmacy industry in Hyderabad is polluting the environment with antimicrobials.

What are the key findings of the study?

The pollution contributes to a rise in drug-resistant infections, a new study published in the journal Infection alleges.
Drug resistance in India is the sheer number of neonatal deaths attributed to it, an estimated 58,000 every year, followed by hospital-acquired infections that fail to respond to last-resort treatment.
The crisis of drug resistance is exemplified by the spread of drug-resistant tuberculosis in India and the disease could spread to the international community.
More significantly, the study claims that all samples contained antimicrobials in concentrations far exceeding maximum permissible environmental concentrations of these drugs.
For long now low-level exposure to antimicrobial drugs in the environment has been feared for inducing resistance.
While industrial units can claim there is no chemical discharge, the water bodies continue to receive inflows clearly loaded with chemicals, this is miserable here.
Now it’s clear that not only water bodies are getting polluted, the bacteria are also getting polluted.
If this tends to continue microorganisms will evolve into drug resistive and spread across the nation which will be a global threat.
What is the reaction of the Industry?

Drug manufacturers in Hyderabad maintain that it does not sufficiently link antibiotic resistance to pharma effluents and that they comply with Pollution Control Board norms.
University of Hyderabad (UoH) scientists have carried out a study commissioned by the Bulk Drug Manufacturers Association (India) that shows multidrug-resistant bacteria can also be found in areas where no pharma units exist.
As it looked only for bacteria, the UoH study could not respond to specific allegations made by the Infection study of drug residues in high concentrations around specific pharma units.
Industry representatives say they will commission another study before responding to this accusation.
What is the way forward?

Claiming that Indian authorities have not done enough, the study also calls upon European regulators to ensure enforcement of regulations during the manufacturing process.
It is important, that government should take needful action for prevention, rather than seeking complex methods for cure.

Source: The Hindu
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