13 May 2016

Uttarakhand Burns: Road ahead for the state

Uttarakhand Burns: Road ahead for the state
The recent forest fires in Uttarakhand torched more than 2,000 hectares. In the last of a three-part series, Business Standard looks at how community engagement is crucial in fighting forest fires
On a drizzly Sunday morning, around a hundred students and teachers gathered at the gates of All Saints' School in Nainital. Led by environmental activist Ajay Rawat, they came to pick up all the flammable organic matter on the forest floor and put it in composting pits, to prevent a fire.
"Pine needles and twigs had become so dry that they were an inferno waiting to happen," said Rawat.
During the exercise, students discussed ways to prevent forest fires. "We should know what to do, for we live here and want to save our forests," said one of the students.
Uttarakhand government could learn a crucial lesson from these students. Across the world, governments involve, train and empower local communities to put off forest fires before they spread. In Uttarakhand, however, the community has been excluded from this exercise altogether.
"The focus of the forest department has remained the same since it was established by the British, i.e. revenue generation - not conservation, afforestation and community participation," said Mukti Dutta, Binsar-based environmentalist. "If the government engages local villagers to clear fire lines, plant local trees and create seedling nurseries, they would feel more like they have a stake in the well-being of the forests."
Instead, many observers have noted, the friction between the forest department and villagers has been growing, mainly because villagers are restricted from using forests resources. "A massive snowfall in December 2014 caused a lot of trees and branches to fall in Binsar. Even though allowing locals to clear the debris of fallen trees inside the buffer zone of the sanctuary would have given them access to timber and kept the forest floor free from flammable organic matter - the forest department didn't allow them. The result is that today, because of huge buildup of dry organic matter, 80 per cent of Binsar forest has been burnt…" said Dutta.
The growing distance between local communities and the forests is worrying. "Most of the fires today are caused by sheer negligence, or worse, on purpose, because of discontentment with the way forests are being managed," said KC Suyal, joint secretary, Forest Rangers Association, Uttarakhand.
The other procedural failure is that forest fires are not recognised as National Disasters. This might be because of the erroneous but popular belief that fires are a natural aspect of the forest ecology. This is one reason why the government responded to the emergency in Uttarakhand very late.
"By recognising forest fires as National Disasters, the government will acknowledge that they are not natural," said Rawat. Further, such a move would create awareness among local communities to engage in fire-safety practices, not throw smouldering cigarette/beedi butts in the forest or burn crop waste close to the forests," he added. Most importantly, the government will be compelled to take timely action with involvement of the army or Indo Tibetan Border Police Force, when needed.
Increasing community participation and recognising forest fires as national disasters will both require policy changes. The destruction caused by recent fires should push all stakeholders to do everything possible to save what is left of the great Himalayan forests.

Deterioration in Indian political discourse

Deterioration in Indian political discourse
Both the selection of issues and the choice of language are deeply worrying
Woody Allen once said, “In Beverly Hills, they don’t throw their garbage away. They make it into television shows.” While this quote is especially applicable to 24x7 news channels in India, it is difficult to claim that the political discourse in the country even outside the television studios is top-notch. Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal and his Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), to put it mildly, have not helped. Kejriwal’s claim that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has faked his educational qualifications and forged his degrees is just the latest example. That the Delhi University has contradicted his claims has had little effect on AAP’s histrionics.
The controversy has thrown up two worrying features of the Indian political discourse. The first is the very shallow nature of the discourse itself. The prime minister’s educational qualification is the last concern on the minds of people after two consecutive years of drought have taken a toll on rural, and consequently national, purchasing power. Alleged corruption in the purchase of helicopters from an Italy-based firm is another area of concern. And there are innumerable other relevant issues if one were to scan the length and breadth of this country.
The second is the kind of language in use. Victims of unsavoury language themselves during the Delhi election campaign of 2015, AAP leaders have been quick to fall for the same cheap political thrill. Cabinet ministers of Delhi have used Twitter to ridicule Modi with “‪#‎12thPassModi‬” and accuse him of being an agent of Inter-Services Intelligence, the rogue intelligence agency of Pakistan. To be fair, AAP has no monopoly on crass language and third-rate political rhetoric. Many specimens in other established parties, including the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (think Yogi Adityanath, Giriraj Singh, etc.), behave similarly. The combatants in AAP, however, are led from the very top. Kejriwal has himself, at an earlier instance, called Modi “a coward and a psycopath [sic].”
Top leaders of other parties have also, at various instances, made avoidable comments. At a recent election rally in Kerala, Modi made insinuations about the role of Sonia Gandhi in the helicopter scam on the basis of her Italian origins. While campaigning for the 2007 Gujarat assembly elections, Gandhi had infamously used the phrase “merchants of death” for Modi and his administration. Condemnable as such utterances are, they perhaps can be explained to an extent by the charged atmosphere elections in India generate. However, no explanation can be conceived for a chief minister of an Indian state calling the prime minister of the Union a psychopath.
It is not at all inevitable that political and ideological differences translate into an abject lowering of the discourse and disappearance of interpersonal courtesies. The obituary C. Rajagopalachari wrote weeks after Jawaharlal Nehru’s demise is instructive in this regard. He wrote in Swarajya: “Eleven years younger than me, eleven times more important to the nation, eleven hundred times more beloved of the nation, Sri Nehru has suddenly departed from our midst... I have been fighting Sri Nehru all these ten years over what I consider faults in public policies. But I knew all along that he alone could get them corrected.”
Even today, the grand old men of Indian politics such as Mulayam Singh Yadav, Somnath Chatterjee and Sharad Pawar are good examples in how not to concede an inch politically to the BJP without resorting to foul language. Even Nitish Kumar, whose ego battles with Modi are well-known, has refused to be drawn into the degree controversy, declaring it to be a “non-issue”. But to learn from them would require Kejriwal to shed the illusion that his politics is superior to that of others in India. It simply is not.
An anecdote from the unpublished memoirs of the late filmmaker J.B.H. Wadia is a fitting note to end on. One particular morning in 1938, Wadia and his wife were surprised to find M.N. Roy, a founding member of Communist Party of India and someone Wadia admired immensely, dressed in “a long flowing dhoti in Bengali style, a kurta and shawl and a cap”. Roy cleared the air: “I am going to pay my respects to Veer Savarkar and I thought I should do it in the fittest manner possible. I am sure the old man will be pleased to see me dressed as a full-fledged Indian rather than a Westernised revolutionary.” Savarkar and Roy were ideologically poles apart. Yet, Wadia suspected that Roy “must have touched [Savarkar’s] feet in the traditional Indian way”.
Should political rivals resort to unseemly language just to score brownie points?

11 May 2016

Proud of uttarakhand :gajal bhardwas


सेकेंड IAS टॉपर कश्मीर के अतहर के ये हैं सफलता के मंत्र

सेकेंड IAS टॉपर कश्मीर के अतहर के ये हैं सफलता के मंत्र
जम्मू-कश्मीर के अनंतनाग जिले से ताल्लुक रखने वाले 23 वर्षीय अतहर ने लोकसेवा परीक्षा में दूसरा स्थान हासिल किया है। यह उनका दूसरा प्रयास है। साल 2014 के अपने पहले प्रयास में उन्होंने भारतीय रेल यातायात सेवा (आईआरटीएस) हासिल किया था और वे फिलहाल लखनऊ में भारतीय रेल परिवहन प्रबंधन संस्थान में प्रशिक्षण ले रहे हैं।
अतहर ने कहा, मैंने जम्मू-कश्मीर कैडर का चुनाव भी किया है। मुझे वहां काम करने का मौका मिला तो खुशी होगी। मुझे लगता है कि मेरे राज्य के लोगों की आकांक्षाओं को पूरा करने की बहुत गुंजाइश है।
अतहर ने पहले 2014 में यूपीएससी की परीक्षा दी थी तब उनकी 570 रैंक आई लेकिन अतहर इससे खुश नहीं थे। अतहर ने आईआईटी मंडी हिमाचल प्रदेश से ग्रेजुएशन की है। इसके बाद 22 साल में पहला सिविल सर्विस एग्जाम क्रैक करने के साथ ही अतहर ने बीटेक पूरी की। हालांकि अतहर के पास कई एमएनसी कंपनी के ऑफर आए लेकिन अतहर ने आईएएस को चुना।
कुछ समय पहले हिन्दुस्तान टाइम्स से हुई बातचीत में उन्होंने अपने सफलता के मंत्र दिए थे।
मेरी प्रेरणा मेरे दादा
मेरी सबसे बड़ी प्रेरणा मेरे दादा हैं। उनकी कठिन मेहनत, किसी काम को करने का उनका नजरिया और पैशन से मुझे काफी कुछ सीखने को मिला।
कठिन परिश्रम और परिवार का साथ
उन्होंने मेरा कठिन परिश्रम और मेरे परिवार साथ ही मुझे यहां तक लाया है। मेरी मां एक गृहणी और पिता एक लोक्चरार हैं। मैं अपने दोस्तों अध्यापकों का आभारी रहूंगा, जिन्होंने मुझे मार्गदर्शन दिया।
Athar Aamir-ul-Shafi Khan, a 23 year years old youth from South Kashmir’s Anantnag district stood second in Civil Services Examinations, the results of which were declared today while seven other youths from the State passed the exams.
Besides Athar, seven others, who qualified the Civil Services Examinations, included Sheema Qasba Wani, Baseer-ul-Haq, Ruveda Salam, Afaq Giri, Deeba Farhat, Choudhary Yaseen and Ankit Koul.
Sheema is the daughter of former Commissioner of Srinagar Municipal Corporation (SMC) while Choudhary Yaseen is nephew of CAPD Minister and PDP leader Choudhary Zulfikar.
Interestingly, all these Civil Services exam crackers excepting Sheema Qasba, had passed the prestigious exam last year also. This year, they had given the exam for upgradation.
Meanwhile, in a proud achievement, Athar Aamir-ul-Shafi Khan, 23, from South Kashmir’s Anantnag district, emerged as second topper in 2015 Indian Administrative Services (IAS) examinations, results of which were declared today. Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti has congratulated Aamir for his brilliant achievement.
Athar Khan, who was among seven qualifiers of IAS 2014 examination from Kashmir, secured the second place in the prestigious examinations. A total of 1,078 candidates cleared the UPSC exam — 499 from the general category, 314 from the other backward classes, 176 from the Scheduled Castes and 89 from the Scheduled Tribes. Delhi-based Tina Dabi topped the test, followed by Athar and and Delhi’s Jasmeet Singh Sandhu.
Hailing from a modest family of Siknar, a remote village, in Devipora hamlet of Mattan area of Anantnag district, Athar completed his earlier schooling from his native village and later was admitted in Iqbal Memorial Institute (IMI) Anantnag from where he qualified 10th examinations. He then joined prestigious Biscoe Memorial School Srinagar and passed his secondary examinations.
Son of a senior lecturer, Mohammad Shafi Khan, Athar cracked almost all major professional entrance examinations in 2009-10 and finally joined IIT Roorkee and completed his Engineering from IIT Himachal Pradesh in July 2014. Athar had up to 2010 passed CET, AIEEE and BITSAT but IITJEE eluded him. He even joined Government Medical College (GMC) Jammu but continued to pursue his IIT dream. As Athar was studying BTech, at the same time, he prepared for civil services and qualified IAS for the first time in 2015. After completing his degree in July 2014, he joined a coaching academy in National Capital.
Athar, who is putting up in Delhi as he after cracking IAS exams for the first time was offered Indian Railway Traffic Services (IRTS), said that he wasn’t expecting second rank but good results compared to last year. The second topper was inspired by 2009 IAS topper, Dr Shah Faesal, who now is Director School Education Kashmir.
In his Anantnag home, his family’s joy has no limits and they want him to serve people of the Kashmir. “I am extremely happy. I want him to serve my own people and work for their welfare. I, from the day one, urged him to work hard and today all this is because of Athar’s hard work. He has made us and entire Valley proud by this achievement,” said his father Amir-ul-Shafi Khan.
Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti congratulated Athar for having secured the second position in the prestigious IAS 2015 exams. She also lauded the performance of all those who cracked the country’s premier civil services examination from the State.
Admiring Khan for his amazing success, the Chief Minister said she is sure that his feat will inspire many other youngsters to follow suit. “There is no dearth of talent in our State which Athar has proved today. Many congratulations for having successfully cleared the exams with flying colours and my best wishes as you start your journey to serve the people,” she said in her congratulatory message.
Athar’s grandfather, Ghulam Qadir Khan, wants him to be posted as Deputy Commissioner Anantnag “so that he serves his people first”. “Today Athar has made us, our village and our State proud by securing second position in prestigious IAS,” he said. Khan remembers a taunt of one of the village elder’s decade ago for being illiterate but today he is feeling proud as his grandson has achieved major feet. “First time, I answered that taunt when my son became lecturer,” he says proudly.
The 120-year old grandmother of Athar is eager to see her grandson. “There is no trust on life. I want him to come back as soon as possible,” she says as Athar’s house is abuzz with guests and congratulatory phone calls from relatives, friends, politicians and others.
Meanwhile, Union Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Development of North Eastern Region (DoNER), MoS PMO, Personnel, Public Grievances, Pensions, Atomic Energy and Space, Dr Jitendra Singh has congratulated the three toppers of the IAS/ Civil Services Exam 2015,the result of which was declared here today.
In a message to Tina Dabi, Athar Aamir Ul Shafi Khan and Jasmeet Singh Sandhu who stood first, second and third respectively, Dr Jitendra Singh said, in his capacity as a Minister dealing with the Department of Personnel & Training as well as the Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration (LBSNAA), Mussoorie, it gives him a special sense of pride to note that all the three toppers represent the hitherto lesser represented sections of society in Civil services, which is an indication that the IAS and Civil Services have finally moved away from being “elite services” as they were generally described earlier.
With Tina hailng from weaker section of society, Aamir hailing from Jammu & Kashmir and Jasmeet Singh belonging to minority community, he said, the top brass of future civil services servants will truly represent the aspirations of the average common man of this country. This will also go a long way in achieving Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s commitment to provide citizen centric governance through civil servants who actually represent the common citizen of India, he added.
Working president National Conference and former Chief Minister Omar Abdullah has also felicitated the candidates from Jammu and Kashmir for their phenomenal success in Civil Services Examination.
“I am particularly delighted over the phenomenal success of Athar Aamir Ul Shafi Khan, who has got second rank in the results declared today”, Omar said while conveying his good wishes to Athar and others.
He hoped that success of candidates from Jammu and Kashmir will inspire others to participate in such coveted exams in a big way and make their mark.

Compensatory Afforestation Fund bill passed to create special funds

Compensatory Afforestation Fund bill passed to create special funds
The bill paves the way for unlocking of nearly Rs.41,000 crore earmarked for forest land which is lying unspent, Javadekar said.
Lok Sabha has passed the much talked about Compensatory Afforestation Fund bill, 2015 that seeks to establish setting up of a National Compensatory Afforestation Fund and also a State Compensatory Afforestation Fund.
Thanking the members for their cooperation in passing the bill, Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar on Tuesday evening said it will be a historical legislation and will go a long way in ensuring countrywide afforestation programme.
Members cutting across party lines supported the bill.
The bill paves the way for unlocking of nearly Rs.41,000 crore earmarked for forest land which is lying unspent, Javadekar said.
The salient features of the afforestation programme will be people’s participation, social audit and there will not be any displacement, the minister said while replying to specific queries from Asaduddin Owaisi of All India Majlis—e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM).
“Besides the exotic plants, emphasis will be on native species,” Javadekar said.
The bill also ensures that the funds encourage compensatory afforestation. The national fund will receive 10 percent of it, and the states will receive the remaining 90 percent of the fund.
“These funds will be primarily spent on afforestation to compensate for loss of forest cover, regeneration of forest ecosystem, wildlife protection and infrastructure development,” he said.
However, Javadekar said the funds under the new law under the provisions of the Compensatory Afforestation Fund bill should not be the only forest budget for the states.
“The states must give their regular budget to forest (department). But this will be only an additional funding,” he said.
Stressing the importance of people’s participation in the afforestation programme, he said: “Wherever people’s participation is there, and wherever people’s livelihood is connected to the forest, they just don’t allow illegal destruction of forest.”
Among others, Pinaki Mishra of Biju Janata Dal also lauded the bill.
“Odisha is already doing very good in afforestation programme under the personal supervision of Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik. This bill only gives the efforts further boost,” Mishra said.
The bill was passed by voice vote and at the end of the process even the Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan appreciated the draft legislation passed unanimously with members from different parties making their positive contribution by way of suggestions to improve the system.

About the MPC:

About the MPC:
Last year, the government and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had agreed to adopt a monetary policy framework, which will make taming inflation the primary priority of the central bank’s policy decisions.
What it does?
The MPC will set interest rates to keep retail inflation within targets. Inflation targets will be set once every five years.
Composition:
The committee will have six members. Of the six members, the government will nominate three. The RBI Governor will chair the committee. The governor, however, will not enjoy a veto power to overrule the other panel members, but will have a casting vote in case of a tie. No government official will be nominated to the MPC.
The other three members would be from the RBI with the governor being the ex-officio chairperson. Deputy governor of RBI in charge of the monetary policy will be a member, as also an executive director of the central bank. Decisions will be taken by majority vote with each member having a vote.
The government nominees to the MPC will be selected by a Search-cum-Selection Committee under Cabinet Secretary with RBI Governor and Economic Affairs Secretary and three experts in the field of economics or banking or finance or monetary policy as its members.
Members of the MPC will be appointed for a period of four years and shall not be eligible for reappointment
Present scenario:
At present, the RBI’s Monetary Policy Department (MPD) assists the governor in formulating the monetary policy. Views of all key stakeholders in the economy, advice of the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) contribute to the process for arriving at the key decision on policy repo rate — the rate at which the central bank lends to banks. The governor, however, has overriding powers to decide on interest rates.

India ranks 9th in crony-capitalism index: The Economist

India ranks 9th in crony-capitalism index: The Economist
India is ranked at ninth position in crony-capitalism with crony sector wealth accounting for 3.4 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP), according to a new study by The Economist.
In India, the non-crony sector wealth amounts to 8.3 per cent of the GDP, as per the latest crony-capitalism index.
In 2014 ranking also, India stood at the ninth place.
Using data from a list of the world’s billionaires and their worth published by Forbes, each individual is labelled as crony or not based on the source of their wealth.Germany is cleanest, where just a sliver of the country’s billionaires derives their wealth from crony sectors.
Russia fares worst in the index, wealth from the country’s crony sectors amounts to 18 per cent of its GDP, it said.
Russia tops the list followed by Malaysia, the Philippines and Singapore.
“Thanks to tumbling energy and commodity prices politically connected tycoons have been feeling the squeeze in recent years,” the study said.
Among the 22 economies in the index, crony wealth has fallen by USD 116 billion since 2014.
“But as things stand, if commodity prices rebound, crony capitalists wealth is sure to rise again,” it added.
The past 20 years have been a golden age for crony capitalists/tycoons active in industries where chumminess with government is part of the game.
Their combined fortunes have dropped 16 per cent since 2014, according to The Economist updated crony-capitalism index.
“One reason is the commodity crash. Another is a backlash from the middle class,” it said.
Worldwide, the worth of billionaires in crony industries soared by 385 per cent between 2004 and 2014 to USD 2 trillion, it added.
.....................................................................................
‪#‎Cronycapitalism‬ is a term describing an economy in which success in business depends on close relationships between business people and government officials. It may be exhibited by favoritism in the distribution of legal permits, government grants, special tax breaks, or other forms of state interventionism.
What is 'Crony Capitalism'
Crony capitalism is a description of capitalist society as being based on the close relationships between businessmen and the state. Instead of success being determined by a free market and the rule of law, the success of a business is dependent on the favoritism that is shown to it by the ruling government in the form of tax breaks, government grants and other incentives.
BREAKING DOWN 'Crony Capitalism'
Both socialists and capitalists have been at odds with each other over assigning blame to the opposite group for the rise of crony capitalism. Socialists believe that crony capitalism is the inevitable result of pure capitalism. This belief is supported by their claims that people in power, whether business or government, look to stay in power and the only way to do this is to create networks between government and business that support each other.
On the other hand, capitalists believe that crony capitalism arises from the need of socialist governments to control the state. This requires businesses to operate closely with the government to achieve the greatest success.

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