august 2014 12 18 nav. 12
TRANSCRIPT
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NEWSPAPERS ASSOCIATION OF INDIA
Volume 19 okZ 19 No.9 vad- 9 August- 2014 vxLRk- 2014 Rs. 5/- Per copy
Pune: With over 160 feared
trapped under debris after a land-
slide hit Malin village of Pune dis-
trict, the Maharashtra state govern-
ment has mobilised all its resources
in search and rescue operations. At
least 21 people died in the tragedy
amid fears that the toll may go up
substantially. Union Home Minister
Rajnath Singh visited the site to
take stock of the situation. NCP
chief Sharad Pawar may also head
to the village.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi
has expressed anguish over the
tragedy.
Situated around 120 kilometres
from Pune city, Malin was once a
bustling village of about 50 homes.
Now barely six structures, including
the village panchayat office, exist.
Rest of the village was wiped off
the map.
Chavan, Deputy Chief
Minister Ajit Pawar besides
cabinet colleagues
Harshvardhan Patil and
Madhukarro Pichad visit-
ed the accident spot yes-
terday. A 300-strong team
comprising National
Disaster Response
Force, state
r e s c u e
force, police,
villagers and
others braved
i n c l e m e n t
w e a t h e r ,
searching for
people trapped
under stones,
boulders and
s t i c k y
mud. As
per the police, the accident
occurred in the village located in
Ambegaon taluka of Pune district at
about 5 am, as heavy downpour
loosened earth and dislodged
rocks and boulders. However. eye-
witnesses claimed the
landslide may have
occurred at about 7 am
as a driver of a state
transport bus passing
through failed to find
the village which was
his regular service
stop. Heavy rains,
which lashed the pictur-
esque region over the
past four days, continued
to hamper relief
ope ra t i ons
whole day
and pre-
v e n t e d
r e s -
cuers from approaching the site, as
flowing water kept shifting the mud.
As a precautionary measure, the
district administration has ordered
evacuation of about half-a-dozen
other villages in the hilly neighbour-
hood.
Toll rises to 23, rain hampers
rescue efforts
The death toll in the landslide at
Malin village near here rose to 23
on Thursday morning even as res-
cue workers resumed operations,
which were hampered during the
night due to rain and poor visibility.
As many as 44 houses were
crushed in Malin village, situated in
Ambegaon taluka, some 120km
from the district headquarters here
in western Maharashtra, by the
massive landslide that occurred on
Wednesday morning trapping
about 160 people under the debris
after large parts of a hillside col-
lapsed on them. According to
National Disaster Response Force
(NDRF) officials, 23 bodies have
been recovered so far from under
the debris by NDRF jawans, who
also saved eight injured persons
pulling them out alive. Meanwhile,
Union home minister Rajnath Singh
has left for the mishap site on
Thursday morning after an
overnight halt at Pune, city police
control room said. Maharashtra
chief minister Prithviraj Chavan vis-
ited the mishap site on Wednesay
night and reviewed rescue opera-
tions, appealing to people not to
crowd the village as it could affect
the ongoing work.
More landslides likely in 5km
radius of Dimbhe dam
Geology experts warned of the
likelihood of more landslides after
Wednesday's catastrophe at Malin
village in Ambegaon tehsil left over
150 villagers trapped. They said
landslides could occur in villages
located along the backwaters of
Dimbhe dam. They recommended
that the state government under-
take a survey of these villages and
identify the hills that display "land-
slide symptoms". The Geological
Survey of India (GSI), Nagpur
region, has sent a team to survey
the areas. The survey must identi-
fy cracks in hills, tilting of trees and
electric poles. Wherever such signs
are seen, villagers must be relocat-
ed to safer places, they added.
Landslide expert Satish Thigale,
who has studied the Bhimashankar
area with several study groups,
said, "The root cause of the land-
slide at Malin appears to be level-
ling of land on the hill for cultivation.
It appears that at various levels,
land has been made plain and
trees uprooted." Environmental
activist Sumaira Abdulali said some
areas are landslide-prone be cause
of their structure. "Parts of the
Himalayas are rocky and have
nothing to hold the soil.
landslide in Pune
Its a Very a Sad News
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Kerry hails PM Modi's governance formula
ashington: Calling
India an indispensa-
ble partner for the 21st
century, US Secretary of
State John Kerry said on
Monday that the dynamism
and entrepreneurial spirit
of this bilateral relationship
is needed to solve some of
the world's greatest chal-
lenges.US Secretary of
State John Kerry. Getty
ImageUS Secretary of
State John Kerry. Getty
Image Laying out a
roadmap for a long-term
strategic partnership
between the largest and
oldest democratic coun-
tries, Kerry said that deep-
ening America's ties with
India is a strategic impera-
tive. Noting that the India-
US ties is yet to "blossom"
together, Kerry said, "This
is a potentially transforma-
tive moment in our relation-
ship with India."
Kerry was referring to the
post-election scenario and
the formation of the new
government, which he said
has received historic man-
date from its people to
deliver change.
"The US and India can and
should be indispensable
partners for the 21st centu-
ry. The dynamism and
entrepreneurial spirit of our
relationship is needed to
solve some of world's
greatest challenges," he
said. He said the two coun-
tries can work together to
tackle global challenges
from climate change to
clean energy and others.
Kerry, who heads to New
Delhi tomorrow to co-chair
the fifth India-US Strategic
Dialogue on July 31 with
his Indian counterpart
Sushma Swaraj, said,
"This is a potentially trans-
formative moment and we
are determined to deliver
on opportunities we can
create together." Kerry will
be accompanied by the US
Secretary of Commerce
Penny Pritzker, as well as
other members of the inter-
agency, including
Department of Energy,
Department of Homeland
Security and NASA. The
trip will mark the first US
cabinet-level visit to New
Delhi since Prime Minister
Narendra Modi took office.
"The new Indian govern-
ment plans 'Sabka Saath,
Sabka Vikas' -- together
we all development for all -
- is a vision that we want to
support," the Secretary of
State said in his address
on 'The United States and
India: A Shared Vision for
2020 and Beyond' at the
Center for American
Progress (CAP), a major
US think-tank. "We believe
this to be a great vision,"
Kerry said as he praised
the vision and develop-
mental concept of Modi.
W
Farmers deserve a standing
ovation: Narendra Modi
Addressing the 86th foundation day of the Indian Council of
Agricultural Research here, Mr. Modi at the outset said that
Indian farmers deserve a standing ovation for providing for
the nation and changing the face of the country in the food
and farm sector. Yet, there is potential for more not only in
crops but in fisheries and animal husbandry where a global
market is available, he added. In his first public event since
becoming Prime Minister, Mr. Modi told the farm
researchers and scientists upfront that it was not enough to
sit in five-star seminar rooms to analysis why something
cannot be done but to think how it can be done.
Design programmes for people and the country that
mobilise human resource and bring solutions.
Emphasising the need for raising productivity when land is
shrinking and population is increasing, he said, with tradi-
tional knowledge of farmers and scientific intervention this
challenge can be addressed. There is no other way out.
Scientists must come out with innovations that can produce
crop in lesser number of days without erosion of quality.
Scientists must come out with innovations
that can produce crop in lesser number
of days without erosion of quality"
Will Rahul's failure force Sonia Gandhi to continue as Congress chief?Sonia Gandhis five-year term as Congress president ends next year. But after the
partys debacle in the Lok Sabha elections --- which saw its seats plummeting from 206
in 2009 to a mere 44 in 2014 --- it would appear that the partys longest and uninter-
rupted serving chief until now may have to reconsider any plan she may have had of
officially passing on the mantle to her son and Amethi MP
Rahul Gandhi. The spate of bush fires in the Congresss
backyards in Maharashtra, Assam, Haryana, Jharkhand
and other places have only made it more difficult for Sonia
to complete the unfinished task she had set upon herself to
elevate her son who, in the last 10 years, has had a mete-
oric rise from being a mere MP to general secretary and
vice president and was expected to be anointed party pres-
ident. Indeed, until the Lok Sabha polls, the general
impression was that Sonia would retire and hand over the
baton to Rahul. It seemed a natural progression of events
when Rahul was made vice president at a specially con-
vened Congress conclave in Jaipur in January 2013, one
step short of becoming the party chief. Almost in keeping
with this plan of action, the Amethi MP had begun to make
a generational change in the party, bringing new young and
fresh faces and investing them with responsibilities. The
2004 and 2009 elections saw the party fielding a whole
new line of young leaders, many of whom however fell by
the wayside in 2014 as the party paid the price of 10 years
of incumbency, price rise, inflation, allegations of corruption
and the paralysis in decision-making of the Congress-UPA
government of Manmohan Singh.
Sonia and Rahul Gandhi. AFP.Sonia and Rahul Gandhi.
AFP.
Rahuls own report card is filled with red lines barring a
stray victory of 21 parliamentary seats in UP in 2009. He
had to sweat it out in his constituency this time, his three
lakh plus victory margin reduced a little over a lakh. His fail-
ure to deliver in the slew of assembly elections, including in
Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Delhi,
Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh, and in the 2014 Lok
Sabha polls brought with it its own aftereffects.
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Add- A- 115, Piller No. 34- 35 Top Floor,Vikas Marg, Shakarpur, New delhi- 110092
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Pramesh Jain
Bangalore: Persistent efforts for 2
years against attention diverters
pay off for B'lore Police
The Commissioner Of Police
Sri.M.N Reddi, Told that The
organised crime wing of central
crime branch (CCB) has formed a
special team under guidance of
senior officials have been success-
ful to nab the notorious Irani gang,
a team led by, Addl Commissioner
of police Crime,Pronab Mohanty,
joint commissioner of police crime,
Hemanth Nimbalkar,and DCP
Abhishek Goyel, has formed a spe-
cial team with the ACP of OCW Sri
Ravi Kumar , PI as Poojar, PSI as
Dayanand,and with the crime staff
of the CCB police has arrested five
persons belonging to the inter-state
Irani Tribal Community in India. and
recovered Gold Ornaments
Weighing about 2Kilo 100 grams,
also 1 Bolero Jeep and 1 Pulsar
motor cycles used for offense were
also recovered and the gold was
recovered from Gulbarga and Lala'S
House at Ambivali Mumbai pertain-
ing to above mentioned 60 offences
also been solved by CCB police said
by commissioner M N Reddi, gang
whose modus operandi was to
divert the attention of elderly
women, and others to rob gold jew-
ellery from them by masquerading
as police officers and they used to
do this by telling them that give all
your valuables there is a murder
happened in the neighbourhood and
murderers can take away your valu-
ables,and tells them as we are
police officers and they used to
divert the attention of common pub-
lic or senior citizens . The arrested
have been identified as Lala
Sameer Jaffer Hussain alias Lala,
35; Jafar Ali Syed, 31; Gulam Ali
Faruvali Syed, 26 all three from
Thane district, Maharashtra; and
Usman, 32, and Abbas Ali, 28, from
Gulbarga in the state.Above arrest-
ed accused belong to Irani Tribal
Community in India.Originally they
are from Iran who came to India as
horse traders during Mughal
period.After the collapse of Mughal
Dynasty and they continued to live in
India as Vagabonds.After the arrival
of EUROPIANS in India and as the
railway services were started they
started travelling in the train and
used to camp near railway sta-
tions.After the Independence they
started settling near railway stations
at many places throughout India
Ambivali is such place as there set-
tlement location near Ambivily rail-
way stations of Kalyan, Mumbai and
the Arrested accused are not having
any profession of their own and they
are habitual offenders indulging in
criminal offenders like attention
divertion, cheating,chain snatching
etc. and The gang was caught after
two years of persistent efforts,by
Bangalore CCB police and they are
wanted in 10 states. The gang
members, who operated in
Bangalore and other major cities,
used to impersonate police officers
to target elderly women and rob
them of their gold jewellery by
diverting their attention. They used
to stop lonely women in their tracks,
and in a voice oozing with concern,
narrate to them a cooked-up story
about a woman's murder in the
neighbourhood and the theft of her
jewellery by the murderers, police
said. Having so scared the women,
they would suggest that it's risky for
them to wear gold in public. They
would then help them remove and
keep the jewellery in a bag wrapped
in a cover. After diverting the atten-
tion of the women, the Irani gang
would quickly swap the bag with
another containing stones. It was
their routine to target five to 10 eld-
erly women in a day, police said.
Police said they were caught red-
handed around 8 am on July
8, at Vijayanagar. The arrest-
ed disclosed that they were
working under Lala Sameer
Jafar Hussain alias Lala. Their vic-
tims are spread across Bangalore,
Mangalore, Udupi, Kundapura,
and Mysore in Karnataka, and the
states of Andhra Pradesh, Tamil
Nadu, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Goa,
Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar
Pradesh, and Delhi. Abhishek
Goyal, said Lala is among the
most-wanted criminals in more
than 10 states in India.
His Irani gang preyed on their tar-
gets on ring roads.and with the
help of fast cars and motor cycles
they used to come to Bangalore
City. Moving in ring roads and tar-
geting lonely elderly women and
commits series of attention diver-
tion offences and go back.
By this kind of serial offences they
have created fear and panic among
the citizens of Bangalore City. on
ring roads.
There was some limited success
last December, when the CCB
caught two gangsters identified as
Asadulla Jafri alias Kalia, and
Sameer Syed. The then commis-
sioner of police,Raghavendra
Auradkar had ordered to book them
under the Goonda Act and they are
still cooling their heels in jail he
added.
5 Notorious inter-State Irani Gang Arrested by Blore CCB Police
Jurists want change in collegium system that appoints judges
ew Delhi: Several top jurists today
pushed for scrapping the existing col-
legium system where judges appoint judges
but government's plans to bring a bill to
make the process of appointments more
transparent may take some more time.
Supreme Court of India. AFPSupreme
Court of India. AFP At a meeting to discuss
judicial reforms, the "predominant" view was
that collegium system needs to be
"changed", Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi
said after three-and-a-half hour long deliber-
ations.
The Attorney General said those present in
the meeting gave their point-of-view as to
whether the collegium system should
remain or not, but the debate has not ended.
He said on how exactly it will be changed
and what should be the composition, is still
being discussed. Asked on the next step, he
said the Law Minister will decide on the
issue and perhaps there could be another
exchange of ideas. Law Minister Ravi
Shankar Prasad said, "there was a consen-
sus for improvement and the need for mak-
ing it (appointment of judges) more trans-
parent." Asked whether there was a consen-
sus to scrap the collegium system, Prasad
said it will not be appropriate for him to make
a public statement in this regard. The
Narendra Modi government plans to bring
the Juduicial Appointments Commission Bill
in this session of Parliament. Also on the
agenda today was other reforms related to
the judiciary including the Judicial Standards
and Accountability Bill which the previous
UPA government had brought.
But those who attended the meeting said
most of the time was used on discussing the
collegium system. Almost all those present
in the meeting were of the view that the
Executive should not assume control of the
appointments in higher judiciary -- the
Supreme Court and 24 High Courts -- riding
on the wave of anti-collegium clamour.
Those who attended the meeting said the
predominant view was that the judiciary
should continue to have the majority say in
the proposed JAC and the Government
should only be represented by the Law
Minister. Constitution experts Fali Nariman
and Soli Sorabjee are learnt to have said
that there must be no tinkering with the
basic structure of the Constitution. The gov-
ernment is learnt to have assured the jurists
that the exercise was aimed at ensuring
more transparency in the appointment
process to allow the best of judges enter the
higher judiciary.
N
Saharanpur communal riots: 20
arrested, curfew strictly implemented
SAHARANPUR: An uneasy
calm prevailed in violence-hit
Saharanpur on Sunday
where 20 people were arrest-
ed even as curfew and shoot-
at-sight orders remained in
force following clashes
between two communities
over a land dispute. Uttar
Pradesh additional director
general of police (law and
order) Mukul Goel said, "No
incident has been reported
since on Saturday. Curfew is
in force and is being enforced
strictly." He said steps were
being taken to normalize the
situation at the earliest. "It has
been directed that action
should be taken against
whosoever is found guilty," he
said in Lucknow.Saharanpur
district magistrate Sandhya
Tiwari, who toured the vio-
lence-hit areas, said, "The sit-
uation is better than yester-
day. I have to just impose law
and order in the city and the
situation is quite normal now."
She said 20 people have
been arrested in connection
with the violence. On the land
dispute, Tiwari said, "I'm not
going into it ... The construc-
tion is on hold." Three people
were killed and 19 others,
including policemen, injured
in the clashes on Saturday as
mobs indulged in arson after
which curfew was clamped
and shoot at sight ordered.
Prohibitory orders under sec-
tion 144 of CrPC have been
invoked in the district and cur-
few was clamped in six
areas, according to Tanveer
Zafar Ali, commissioner,
Saharanpur. Meanwhile, a
political blame game has
begun over the violence with
Congress accusing the UP
government of "administra-
tive lapse" while BJP alleged
that Samajwadi Party was
indulging in "vote-bank poli-
tics". Reacting to the charges,
Samajwadi Party said there
was an effort to "disrupt
peace in the state" and that
there was "no place for com-
munalism, anti-social ele-
ments".
-
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Editorial Board
8vxLr 2014 U;wt isilZ ,lksfl,ku
Publishing on 10th of every month
RNI No. 62500/95REGD. No. DL (E)-01/5149/2012-2014LICENCE TO POST WITHOUTPRE-PAYMENT NO. U(C)223/12-14
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Founder Late Dr. M.R. Gaur
Editor Publisher- Printer- Vipin Gaur
Consultant Editor: Dr. Smita Mishra
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RanawatChennai: Mr. P.C.R. Suresh
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Ext. Laxmi Nagar, New Delhi- 92, and Published from J-51,DLF Dilshad Garden Delhi-95, Editor Gayatri G aur, All Disputes Solved in Delhi Court Only
New Delhi: Amongst the
many projects that the
Korean Cultural Centre
undertakes to promote cul-
ture and various forms of
arts, the Dream Project is
one of the most prestigious
ones. The Korean National
University of Arts, which is
the largest Arts University in
South Korea, gave birth to
this project in order to give
free training in a variety of
arts to selected candidates
across the world and the
Korean Cultural Centre,
New Delhi takes immense
pride in having brought it to
India in 2013. The Dream is
an engaging and inspiring
project initiated by South
Korean Ministry of Culture,
sports and tourism and The
Korean National University
of Arts in collaboration with
Korean Cultural Centre
focuses onhelping the aspir-
ing music students discover
and pursue their passions. A
team of young excellent
Korean musicians from
Korea National University of
Arts have come down to
India to serve as mentors to
aspiring Indian musicians
for free. Their mission is to
encourage and help young
Indian musicians discover
and pursue their dreams
and to excel in their own
respective areas. The
Korean National University
of Arts has brought this proj-
ect to life through Korean
Cultural Center India to pro-
mote music and cater to the
musical needs of Indian
musicians. After the Audition
best students are selected
who receive the chance to
attend regular classes/ train-
ing by these teachers. At the
end of the training period
each student perform what-
ever they have learned
through their training period
out of which exemplary stu-
dents got a chance to visit
Korea for Korean Art Camp.
However, this year due to
vacations we could only get
83 applicants. But quality of
the Auditions is astonishing
according to the Dream
Team, as they never expect-
ed Indian music students to
reach up to a high level.
Somehow, India is consid-
ered to have a very low
interest in western classical
music. However, due to the
growing interest in the
Indian music students and
their talent the Dream team
decided to give India first pri-
ority and plan to give longer
training period in the future.
The Dream Project has
given hope to many Indian
music students as well as
Music Teachers who are now
demanding for personal
training for the teachers
themselves. The Dream proj-
ect has become a bridge
connecting two countries,
India and South Korea.
Dream Project brings new Opportunities
for budding Indian musicians!
NAME OF THE JUDGES AREA OF EXPERTISE
Yoon Dae Jin PR
Kim Hey Young Vocalist
Yoon Dae Jin Vocalist
Hwang JunYoung Pianist
Lee Haewon Pianist
An Wangsik Saxophonist
Yoon Taewan Saxophonist
Choi Yohan Classical Guitarist
New Delhi: Recently a study con-ducted by The Centre for Scienceand Environment (CSE), found outthat chicken are fed on antibiotics asgrowth promoter, to gain weight andgrow fast.. Public health expertshave long suspected that such ram-pant use of antibiotics could be a rea-son for increasing antibiotic resist-ance in India. But the governmenthas no data on the use of antibioticsin the country, let alone on the preva-lence of antibiotic resistance. Thefindings were alarming. It suggestsan indiscriminate use of antibiotics inpoultry. "Repeated and prolonged exposureto antibiotics by natural selection leadto the emergence of resistant strainsof bacteria," says, Dr .NarendraSaini, Hony. Secretary General, IMA.These mutated robust strains bypasstoxic effects of antibiotics, makingthem ineffective. They can easilyspread among the flock raised in
squalor and contaminate the foodchain. They can also alter the genet-ic material of other bacteria, oftenpathogenic ones, making themresistant to several drugs and result-ing in a global pandemic.RESISTANCE IN HUMANS TOANTIBIOTICS FOUND IN CHICK-ENBased on analysis of the data from
various hospitals in India, it is evidentthat a very high level of resistance ispresent against the antibiotics suchas ciprofloxacin, tetracycline and
doxycyclin. Bacteriasuch as Escherichiacoli, Klebsiella spp.,
Pseudomonas spp., Enterobacterspp. and Enterococcus spp. whichare responsible for a large number ofinfections in humans are found resist-ant. Are found to beDETAILS
Five out of six antibiotics testedwere found present in chickens.Antibiotics were found in all types oftissues tested i.e. muscles, kidneyand liver. The levels found were in therange 3.37-131.75 g/kg. Forty percent (28) chickens had atleast one antibiotic. 22.9 percent (16)chickens had one antibiotic and 17.1percent (12) had more than oneantibiotic. Fluoroquinolones were found inmore number of chickens i.e. 28.6percent (20). Tetracyclineswerefound in 14.3 percent (10) of thechickens.ANALYSIS Presence of antibiotics in chickensuggests that they have been used
for growth promotion, disease pre-vention or therapeutic purposes.Antibiotic residues also suggest thatthe designated withdrawal period isnot followed. Fluoroquinolones as a class ofantibiotics are of critical importancefor human use. They are banned tobe used in many parts of the world.Enrofloxacin is particularly regulatedas its use in animals is linked withresistance to ciprofloxacin which iswidely preferred to treat gut infectionsin humans. Tetracycline is also con-sidered as a highly important class ofantibiotics. Classes of antibiotics that are usedin poultry but have not been tested byPML(CSE) include cephalosporins,penicillins and macrolides.Cephalexin, a cephalosporin, amoxi-cillin from the pencillin group andazithromycin, which is a macrolideare used in broilers and are critical forhuman use as per the World HealthOrganization (WHO) list of 2011.1Antibiotics of these classes are mostcommonly used in India."
Press conference held in IMA