14 July 2017

India have topped the medal tally for first time in the history of Asian Athletics Championships.

India have topped the medal tally for first time in the history of Asian Athletics Championships.
In a stunning show of dominance on the fourth and final day of competitions in Bhubaneshwar today, India clinched five gold, 1 silver and 3 bronze.
With that, the hosts ended the championships on top with a haul of 29 medals which included 12 gold, 5 silver and 12 bronze.

Needed: A mutual restraint pact with China

Needed: A mutual restraint pact with China
The 2015 India-China statement on ‘respect and sensitivity to each other’s concerns’ should be narrowed down to primary concerns and core interests
During Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Beijing in May 2015, India and China issued a well-considered joint statement. The first section of the document, subtitled “Strengthening Political Dialogue And Strategic Communication”, stated: “Full use will be made of the opportunities provided by the presence of their leaders at various multilateral fora to hold consultations on bilateral relations and issues of regional and global importance.”
Yet when such an opportunity was presented last week in the G20 summit, both sides went out of their way to insist that they had not sought a meeting. Against the backdrop of a serious stand-off along the border, there could be no starker proof of the fraying of India-China ties over the past two years.
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To consider why things have come to this pass, it is important to understand how this difficult relationship was managed over the past 25 years. The Border Peace and Tranquility Agreement of 1993 was a decisive break from the pattern of Sino-Indian relations since the 1962 war. The agreement formalized the two sides’ commitment to maintaining status quo on the border until they arrived at a negotiated settlement. The agreement also enabled them to bracket the boundary issue and allow the bilateral relationship to develop in other areas.
The agreement was enabled by a particular domestic and international conjuncture. Having embarked on major economic reforms, prime minister P.V. Narasimha Rao was keen to ensure a stable relationship with China. This would help check defence expenditure and allow India to focus on its internal transformation.
In the wake of the Tiananmen massacre and the ensuing international opprobrium, China too was keen to avoid confrontation with its adversaries and create a suitable external environment to spur its economic growth. Both China and India were also reconciled to the fact of American unipolarity and sought to leverage it for their own power and purposes.
The peace and tranquillity agreements of 1993 and 1996 delivered their core promise. When certain aspects of them, such as clarification of the Line of Actual Control, proved difficult, the two sides responded not by restricting cooperation but expanding it. Think of Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s bold decision in 2003 to embark on political negotiations on the border. Over the following decade, the common refrain was: “There is enough room for the growth of both China and India”.
The strategic and political context today is rather different. Having gained an upper hand on border infrastructure, the Chinese are keen to prevent India from catching up. Hence, the new forms of Chinese military activity along the border over the past five years.
More broadly, China’s relative power in the international system has risen since the global financial crisis. Not surprisingly, China’s definition of its core interests and its willingness to pursue them has also increased. India’s interests too have expanded with its growing power. Not only is it prepared to adopt a more assertive posture on the border, but it also harbours concerns about South China Sea and China’s rising footprint along India’s periphery.
Even as New Delhi attempts to resolve the current stand-off, it should think ahead. We now need a restraining pact with China. Diplomatic history is replete, as historian Paul Schroeder reminds us, with such examples of managing antagonistic relations by associative means—also known as pacta de contrahendo.
The Holy Alliance after the Napoleonic Wars stabilized Russia’s relations with Austria and Prussia—countries that had been its enemies recently and that continued to compete with Russia along its periphery. The Entente Cordiale, similarly, helped stabilize Britain’s ties with its historic enemy, France. Contrary to popular wisdom, the entente was aimed not at a rising Germany but at managing Britain’s rivalry with France over colonial possessions.
What could be the elements of an agreement on mutual restraint with China?
The 2015 statement spoke of “respect and sensitivity to each other’s concerns, interests and aspirations”. This should be narrowed down to primary concerns and core interests. For instance, Chinese military activism along the border is a primary concern for India. Not so the political cover they provide in the UN to Pakistan’s sponsorship of terrorism. Yet India should make it clear that Pakistani terrorism jeopardizes regional security—especially in the context of Chinese projects in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir.
Both sides should also set aside aspirational or status goals: be it India’s desire for Chinese support on Nuclear Suppliers Group membership, or China’s desire for Indian support on the Belt and Road Initiative and China’s leadership more generally.
As for the border, both sides could build on previous agreements. Former national security adviser Shivshankar Menon has observed that neither side has explored the reference in the 1993 agreement (and subsequent statements) to the need for “mutual and equal security” and for agreement on force levels. An accord based on these principles could help arrest the downward slide on the border and assure both sides of their core interests pending a boundary settlement.
It is easy to naysay the possibility of such a restraining pact. However, diplomacy is not about pessimism but realism—especially if the alternative is heading to hell in a handcart.

Ahmedabad takes giant leap, becomes India's first World Heritage City

Ahmedabad takes giant leap, becomes India's first World Heritage City
The historic city Ahmedabad has been declared as a World Heritage City at the 41st session of Unesco's world heritage committee meet in Karkow in Poland on Saturday. This day (July 8, 2017) will be remembered in history as for the first time an Indian city was declared a world heritage property.
The nomination of Ahmedabad was supported by close to 20 countries, including Turkey, Lebanon, Tunisia, Portugal, Peru, Kazakhistan, Vietnam, Finland, Azerbaijan, Jmaica, Croatia,Zimbabwe, Tanzania, South Korea, Croatia, Angolam, Cuba, and the host country of the Unesco session, Poland.
The countries unanimously supported Ahmedabad citing a secular co-existence of Islamic, Hindu and Jain communities along with exemplary architecture of intricately carved wooden havelis dating back hundreds of years. The countries also recognized that the city was a cradle for India's non-violent freedom struggle led by Mahatma Gandhi.
The walled city has 26 ASI-protected structures, hundreds of 'pols' that capture the essence of community living and numerous sites associated with Mahatma Gandhi who lived here from 1915 to 1930.
It will now join the likes of Paris, Cairo and Edinburgh. Of the 287 world heritage cities across the globe, there were only two cities in the Indian subcontinent-- Bhaktpur in Nepal and Galle in Sri Lanka. The Unesco tag will add immense value to the city and boost tourism.

ukpcs mains :test series running.make out of it by doing writting practice. lower pcs mains batch from 22nd july.

ukpcs mains :test series running.make out of it by doing writting practice.
lower pcs mains batch from 22nd july.
12 candidates out of 16 had qualified ukpcs mains 2012.

NGT declares 100m from edge of Ganga river as ‘no-development zone’

NGT declares 100m from edge of Ganga river as ‘no-development zone’
National Green Tribunal (NGT) also prohibits dumping of waste within 500 metres of Ganga river, declares Rs50,000 fine on anyone found doing so
The National Green Tribunal (NGT) on Thursday passed a slew of directions to rejuvenate the Ganga river, declaring a “No-Development Zone” 100 metres from the edge of the river between Haridwar and Unnao and prohibiting dumping of waste within 500 metres from the river.
A bench headed by NGT chairperson Swatanter Kumar also declared that an environment compensation of Rs50,000 will be imposed on anyone who dumps waste in the Ganga river.
The apex environment regulator directed all authorities concerned to complete various projects including setting up of a sewage treatment plant and cleaning drains within two years. It also said the Uttar Pradesh government should be “duty-bound” to shift tanneries within six weeks, from Jajmau in Kanpur to leather parks in Unnao or any other place it considers appropriate.
The NGT also directed the Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand governments to formulate guidelines for religious activities on the ghats of Ganga or its tributaries. The tribunal also appointed a supervisory committee, headed by the secretary of the water resources ministry and comprising IIT professors and officials from UP government to oversee implementation of the directions passed in its 543- page verdict. It also asked the committee to submit reports at regular intervals.
The NGT said the concept of zero liquid discharge and online monitoring of affluents should not be applied to industrial units. It said that all industrial units falling in the catchment area of the Ganga river should be stopped from indiscriminate extraction of groundwater.
The tribunal had heard the arguments of the Centre, the Uttar Pradesh government, pollution control boards and various other stakeholders for almost 18 months before reserving the judgement on 31 May.
The green panel has divided the work of cleaning the river in different segments—Gomukh to Haridwar (Phase-I), Haridwar to Unnao (termed as segment B of Phase-I), Unnao to border of Uttar Pradesh, border of Uttar Pradesh to border of Jharkhand and border of Jharkhand to Bay of Bengal. It has already delivered the verdict in December 2015 with regard to first phase between Gomukh to Haridwar. The verdict came on a 1985 PIL of noted environment activist M.C. Mehta which was transferred to the NGT from the Supreme Court in 2014.

What exactly are antibiotics? How do they work? And why haven’t we curbed their use, despite the overwhelming evidence of growing antibiotic resistance?

What exactly are antibiotics? How do they work? And why haven’t we curbed their use, despite the overwhelming evidence of growing antibiotic resistance?
Today, less than 100 years after the serendipitous discovery of penicillin, antibiotics have almost become a household remedy. Though we were quick to exploit the therapeutic values of antibiotics, for too long we paid scant heed to the sustainability of these wonder drugs (long-term thinking has rarely been mankind’s forte).
In a few decades, antibiotics may very well be as useless as placebo sugar pills. On the bright side, a few of us at least are watchful of fast-approaching threats. For years now, scientists have issued dire warnings about the dangers of antibiotic resistance (unfortunately, we still have a long way to go). But before we get into why that is, let’s consider a simple question: exactly what are antibiotics?
It may surprise you to know that antibiotics were not made by, or for, humans. Many microbes produce various substances, including antibiotics, to kill other microbes that are their competitors for food and space. Humans just happened to find a way to take advantage of this microbe-on-microbe conflict.
The molecular weapons deployed are nasty chemicals which can harm the enemy in different ways. They can bore holes in the sheath that protects microbial cells. Or they can short circuit important life processes when ingested.
The microbial artillery of antibiotics varies widely, with different capacities and specificities. Some antibiotics merely arrest the growth of their enemy, while others outright kill their target. Every environment on the planet—from soil to water to sand to the bodies of other living beings (like us)—is the battleground for this bacterial warfare for food and space.
Some of the parties involved bode ill for human beings. Our organs are 'space' for them, and the stuff inside those organs, including our cells, serves as food. Our natural defences against these enemies: the wonderfully complex and effective human immune system.
The battle has been raging for millions of years—our ancestors, and the ancestors of the microbes we battle today, kept evolving new weapons and defence systems. Each side loses some of its battles and, quite naturally, in spite of multiple lines of defence employed by our immune system, bacterial infections can often maim or kill. This happens most often when the immune system is not at its best—for instance, when an individual is severely wounded or suffers from long-term illnesses, or when people are on immunosuppressive medication.
Wonder drug
The discovery of antibiotics was a fortunate accident. On 3 September 1928, in St Mary’s Hospital in London, Alexander Fleming, a professor of bacteriology, found something curious while studying a Staphylococcus specimen (this particularly notorious bacterium is often responsible for food poisoning, abscesses, boils and sore throats).
Fleming saw that the petri dish was full of Staphylococcus colonies, thriving on the nutritious jelly, save for a blob of unwanted fungus growing in the middle and a nice clear zone around it. Clearly, the fungus was somehow inhibiting the growth of Staphylococcus. A substance oozing out of the miracle fungus was later identified as penicillin. The rest is history.
Let’s come back to the present for now. We have reached a stage where antibiotics have become an indispensable part of our medical system. Hundreds of different antibiotics have now been identified and many more are discovered every year. Their chemical structure, mechanism of action and possible targets are well known.
Scientists first found the microbes that make the weapons against microbes that infect humans, and then devised a way to separate these weapons from their makers. Afterwards, they took it a step further and synthesized antibiotics chemically, without any microbial aid.
In 2000, a staggering 150 million pounds (68 million kg) of natural and synthetic antibiotics were produced worldwide. We use antibiotics not only to treat the bacterial infections but also to prevent infections.
So, what's the problem?
Amid all this, though, we underestimated the bacteria. Not unlike us, microbes have millions of years of experience in this warfare and over time, more and more grew resistant to the antibiotics. Our estimates for the evolution and spread of these defence strategies, unfortunately, were quite off the mark.
In 1950, 20 years after penicillin was discovered, scientists were largely of the opinion that antibiotic resistance would be a rare phenomenon. We now have ample evidence to the contrary.
In the face of the antibiotic menace, microbes evolve different kinds of mechanisms to render the drugs useless. For instance, one common strategy is to recognize the harmful antibiotic and pump it out of the cell. Another is to change the structure of the the socket where the antibiotic would plug in, preventing the short-circuit. A microbe with any of these tricks, unhindered by the presence of antibiotics, will reproduce happily.
And what’s more, once evolved, the genes for resistance are swiftly circulated through a microbial game of passing the parcel. Unfortunately, the music never stops and the resistance can spread across continents. On top of that, it is only (relatively) recently that we began to fathom the magnitude of this problem. And when it comes to predicting the course of antibiotic resistance, we are only slightly better than cavemen trying to judge the distance between the moon and the earth.
The laws of physics allow us to predict the movements of planets and stars. Remember that scene from 2001: A Space Odyssey (the book, not the film) where a spaceship uses the gravitational field of Jupiter to speed itself up, sort of like a slingshot, and propels itself towards Saturn? Well, we’ve actually managed to pull off something similar, during the Voyager launch. And with superb precision. The same, alas, cannot be said for most of things in biology.
The most important reason for this failure is the fact that, unlike astrophysicists, biologists deal with living things. In the antibiotic wars, we fight against beings that have been selected through billions of years of evolution and whose survival skills are second to none.
A way out
Does this mean that the trick, i.e. resistance to any given antibiotic, needs to evolve only once on our planet? Before spreading to every microbe?
Not at all. Life is rarely wasteful—if there isn’t an antibiotic in the environment of the microbe, building the defences to keep it out is a waste of energy. If the antibiotic is not encountered for a long time, storing and sharing the defensive trick is also a waste.
And there lies the crux of the problem. We now use antibiotics to such an extent that most environments are teeming with them. The pressure to retain survival techniques is always on. And hence the resistance is persisting and spreading.
What does this mean for us? Soon, antibiotics might not be effective at thwarting the infections. We might have to suffer our day-to-day infections a bit longer. But we still have our almighty immune systems, right?
Yes, we do. But many medical procedures, from common surgeries to cancer treatments to organ transplants, involve the active suppression of immunity. The patient faces a tremendous risk of infections. Simple accidents, like stepping on a nail, could prove tragic in the absence of effective antibiotic treatment.
This might sound overly pessimism to many, but unless we take immediate measures, it may become reality in the not-too-distant future.
This brings us to another question: what is it that we can do? Currently, our best bet is the moderation of antibiotic use. How, though, can we achieve this without serious drawbacks? There are quite a few options.
One is to minimize the administration of antibiotics to domesticated animals. Nearly 50% of antibiotics produced in the world are administered to animals, not as a treatment, but to improve the yields of meat.
Two, for humans, antibiotics are often prescribed before the disease-causing agent is identified. In the majority of instances, the culprit is some kind of virus, against which antibiotics are useless. But testing samples of bodily fluids is costly and time consuming. This results in blind prescription of antibiotics—sometimes even a cocktail of them—by physicians.
In many countries, India included, antibiotics can be bought over the counter without a prescription, and hence are consumed more than actually necessary or even effective.
If globalization has bought world the closer, it has also bought its own “global” problems with it. We should try, and I dare say we are trying, to fight them globally.
Across the world, attempts are being made to regulate the usage of antibiotics. Scientists are trying to discover more and better antibiotics, as well as new ways to utilize the existing repertoire. We might even stumble upon a new wonder weapon. But these attempts will require much time and, of course, large amounts of money. For now, though, we must build awareness of the issue and minimize the use of antibiotics.

Indian astronomers discover supercluster of galaxies, name it ‘Saraswati’

Indian astronomers discover supercluster of galaxies, name it ‘Saraswati’
The Saraswati supercluster, 4 billion light years away from us, has 43 galaxies, discover Indian astronomers
In a significant discovery, a team of Indian astronomers have identified a previously unknown, extremely large supercluster of galaxies located in the direction of constellation Pisces.
The supercluster of 43 galaxies, which they named “Saraswati”, is one of the largest known structures in the nearby universe, and is 4 billion light years away from us and may contain the mass equivalent of over 20 million billion suns
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A supercluster is a chain of galaxies and galaxy clusters, bound by gravity, often stretching to several hundred times the size of clusters of galaxies, consisting of tens of thousands of galaxies. The Saraswati supercluster, for instance, extends over a scale of 600 million light years.
The Milky Way, the galaxy we are in, is part of a supercluster called the Laniakea Supercluster, announced in 2014 by Brent Tully at the University of Hawaii and collaborators.
The Saraswati discovery was made by astronomers from India’s Inter University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA) and the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER), both in Pune, and members of two other Indian universities. IUCAA is an autonomous institution set up by the India to promote the nucleation and growth of active groups in astronomy and astrophysics at Indian universities.
“This novel discovery is being published in the latest issue of The Astrophysical Journal, the premier research journal of the American Astronomical Society,” said an official statement from IUCAA.
“The Saraswati supercluster is observed as it was when the universe was 10 billion years old,” IUCAA said in the statement. Thus, the findings could push researchers to rethink the popular theories of how the universe got its current form.
“The long-popular ‘cold dark matter’ model of the evolution of the universe predicts that small structures like galaxies form first, which congregate into larger structures. Most forms of this model do not predict the existence of large structures such as the Saraswati Supercluster within the current age of the universe. The discovery of these extremely large structures thus force astronomers into re-thinking the popular theories of how the universe got its current form, starting from a more-or-less uniform distribution of energy after the Big Bang,” the statement said.
Interestingly, Somak Raychaudhury, currently director of IUCAA and a co-author of the paper, had also discovered the first massive supercluster of galaxies on this scale (the Shapley Concentration), during his PhD research at the University of Cambridge decades ago.
In his paper published in the journal Nature in 1989, Raychaudhury had named the supercluster after the American astronomer Harlow Shapley, in recognition of his pioneering survey of galaxies.
Joydeep Bagchi from IUCAA, the lead author of the paper, and co-author Shishir Sankhyayan (PhD scholar at IISER, Pune) said, ‘’We were very surprised to spot this giant wall-like supercluster of galaxies, visible in a large spectroscopic survey of distant galaxies, known as the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.”
“This supercluster is clearly embedded in a large network of cosmic filaments traced by clusters and large voids. Previously only a few comparatively large superclusters have been reported, for example the ‘Shapley Concentration’ or the ‘Sloan Great Wall’ in the nearby universe, while the ‘Saraswati’ supercluster is far more distant one. Our work will help to shed light on the perplexing question; how such extreme large scale, prominent matter-density enhancements had formed billions of years in the past when the mysterious Dark Energy had just started to dominate structure formation,’’ the duo said in a statement.

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UKPCS2012 FINAL RESULT SAMVEG IAS DEHRADUN

    Heartfelt congratulations to all my dear student .this was outstanding performance .this was possible due to ...