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                <channel>
                    <title>TIGblogs - Dr.A.Prabaharan's TIGBlog</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/</link> 
                    <description>What's on the minds of young leaders from around the globe?</description> 
                    <language>en-us</language> 
             
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                    <title>Karunanidhi Course in Tamil Nadu</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/895061</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Sycophants are crossing all limits to appease their leaders. Tamil Nadu which is well-known for the sycophancy is always in news for high pitch sycophancy. It is the state where followers fire walk, commit suicides, fast unto death and many other tamashas to catch the attention of their leaders. DMK supremo Karunanidhi who is known for encouraging these sycophants in an indirect manner initiated naming of streets in the alive person's names. One can find Kalaignar Karunanidhi nagar in Chennai, Tiruchirapali and other towns. It is insane to name a place after an alive person. Generally in memory of the dead person's name streets, buses, programmes are named. But for DMK glorifying the alive leader is the favourite past time. The latest one is chilling.<br />
<br />
The Times of India writes (15 October 2009)<br />
<br />
<br />
A proposal by the University of Madras to offer a Master of Arts degree in ‘Kalaignar Thought’, as mooted by new vice-chancellor G<br />
Thiruvasagam, has sparked a debate on whether a state university can start a course based on the ideals and philosophy of a serving chief minister. ( Watch Video )<br />
<br />
While there have been instances of theses and dissertations being done by research scholars on the work of chief ministers in the past, academicians do not recall any specialised course based on a living leader’s thoughts. Academicians are cautious about the idea, but made it clear that such courses could not be started solely on the basis of the V-C’s views; rather, it could be offered only if it was cleared by the academic council and other university bodies.<br />
<br />
‘‘Any new course is welcome, but I don’t think such courses are essential,’’ said Prof P K Ponnusamy, a former vice-chancellor of the University of Madras as well as the Madurai Kamarajar University. He also pointed out that students should also evince interest in these courses. ‘‘We have to wait and see how many students join the course.’’<br />
<br />
V-Cs could not make any independent decision, and the planned courses should be cleared by the syndicate, senate and academic council, Prof Ponnusamy said. He added that politics and academics had become inseparable in recent times and it was ‘‘inevitable’’ that such courses would come into being. ]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Sun, 18 Oct 2009 04:34:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Hoax Mail from Income Tax</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/886175</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Life online is 24x7 risk. With the increasing number of people online the criminals are galloping. Imagine the global cyber crime syndicate hacking millions of internet users passwords and stealing money from their accounts. Oh! unimaginable disaster. This is not a science fiction prologue but reality which is going rounds around the world. Two days back more than 10000 hotmail accounts were hacked and passwords phised. Generally people use the same password for bank accounts and other important transactions. Ghosh! it is gone. Peace of mind is gone. The latest salvo fired by the cyber criminals is asking people to disclose their bank accounts for income tax payment. This hoax email is in circulation in the name of I.T department. Please save your life online and leave the rest to the Men and Women sitting above all human beings.<br />
<br />
The Times of India writes (9 October 2009)<br />
<br />
Your inbox might show a mail requesting your personal particulars on behalf of the income tax department. But do not respond. In case you respond to it, do so at your personal risk.<br />
<br />
The mail which is doing rounds for quite sometime now has made complaints reach the IT department and department has distanced itself from the whole controversy already. Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) on Wednesday issued a press note informing all and sundry that department has not sent any such mail and hence taxpayers should not disclose any of their personal information as requested by it.<br />
<br />
The contents of the mail inform the tax payer that they have a refund due, which IT department will make, provided they disclose their bank account and other details. The mail has been received by a lot of people in Jodhpur, Lucknow, Bareilly and other places. IT department has come to know about it from various parts of the country. ]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Fri, 09 Oct 2009 01:42:00 EDT</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Regional Educational Imbalance</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/594553</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Regional Educational Imbalance<br />
<br />
The southern and western states are in the forefront of educational development in India. Now it is reaching such a flashpoint that higher educational institutes are popping up everywhere. Is this going to create heavy migration of students? <br />
<br />
<br />
Hemali Chhapla writes in The Times of India “A common wisecrack among engineering aspirants in Andra Pradesh is that every second building in the state is an engineering college. It may cease to be a joke when institutes dishing out management and engineering degrees start mushrooming all over the country.<br />
<br />
Global depression may have taken the wind out of campus placements but the rush for starting professional institutions is at an all time high. Data from the All-India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) shows that the dash to start professional colleges is more pronounced when it comes to engineering and management as compared to other streams like pharmacy, hotel management and catering technology or architecture.<br />
<br />
AICTE has received 886 applications for starting engineering colleges and 1,084 applications for new anagement institutes. Fie states – Tamil Nadu, Andra Pradesh, Maharastra, Karnataka and Kerala – account for 69% of engineering graduates , implying that they also have most of India’s engineering colleges  <br />
<br />
Rush year<br />
States                  Engineering                     MBA<br />
                            Existing   Fresh               Existing      Fresh<br />
Maharashtra         239         85                     216             160<br />
MP                       161         50                       63               80<br />
Tamil Nadu         352         144                   158                41<br />
AP                       527         176                   255              209<br />
UP                       241         83                    213              214<br />
Haryana               116         38                       66                47<br />
Across India      2388        886                  1516            1084<br />
<br />
Source: AICTE. Fresh applications are for colleges from academic year 2009-10<br />
<br />
Five Indian sties – Tamil Nadu, Andra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Karnataka and Kerala – account for almost 69% of the country’s engineering graduates, implying that these states also have most of India’s engineering colleges.<br />
<br />
This year, too, most applications for starting new institutes have come from these states, making educationists worry about a high regional imbalance creepin in; states like UP, Bihar, Gujarat, Rajasthan and Orissa together account for a measly 14% of Indian’s technological colleges.<br />
<br />
Colleges that receive a nod by June 30 will be allowed to start classes this academic year itself; so officials expect even more applications to pour in.<br />
<br />
Several academicians feel quality is losing out in the race to expand seats. “Can the country boast of even 100 engineering colleges that impart cutting-edge education?” asked a principal of Pune engineering college.<br />
“So what is the point in a thousand new colleges every year? He asked. Part of the problem lies in the fact that most trusts running professional colleges are backed by politicians who pay little attention to quality, he added.<br />
<br />
But the AICTE feels that meeting the massive demand for professional education is imperative. Twenty years ago, merely one per cent of a aspiring engineers got a seat.<br />
Now nearly 70% manage to find a place, note AICTE officials, “It may come as a surprise but very few engineering seats wee left vacant last year”. AICTE chairman R.A.Yadav told TOI. “There is also a yawning gap between management aspirants and the number of seats in Indian B-schools.<br />
<br />
“But how many management schools boast of full campus placement? And are even 30% of MBA institutes accredited by the NBA (National Board of Accreditation) asked an IIM-Bangalore faculty member.<br />
<br />
Increasing the existing number of professional colleges is a must. In a view of the galloping population and raising educational aspirations of people more availability of higher educational institutes are must. But not by compromising the quality of the education offered.  <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Thu, 19 Feb 2009 01:07:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Spiceless Interim Budget</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/594269</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Guesses were in the air. Whether Pranab Mukherjee, the acting Prime Minister and finance minister will unveil a voter populist interim budget? Contrary to the popular expectations he just presented the economic scenario and expenditure statement. In the past most of the heavy loaded interim budgets got backfired. The government which presented voter-centric interim budgets got defeated. This may be the dampener on the UPA dispensation. Nevertheless the politics of budget presentation was much stronger than any astrological calculations. <br />
<br />
Sudipto Mundle writes in  The Times of India (17.2.2009, p.20), reacting to the great bull run in US markets a few years ago, Allan Greenspan famously remarked that the market displayed ‘irrational exuberance’. Today it is tempting to misquote Greenspan that our our markets are suffering from ‘irrational pessimism’. The sensex dropped by about 3 per cent and the Nifty too headed down, while Pranab Mukherjee was still reading his Budget speech. <br />
<br />
The Interim Budget is more a stock taking, along with expenditure proposals for parliamentary approval to keep the government running till the regular Budget by the next government. But even in such an exercise, which is by design underwhelming, there are a few important points worth noting. We had hoped in these columns earlier, as had others, that the government would temporarily shelve the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act. This has been done. The government has provided a huge fiscal stimulus during the fiscal 2008-09 amounting to over Rs.1,93,000 crore or 4.5 per cent of GDP over and above what was envisaged in last year’s Budget, which already provided for a deficit of over Rs.1,33,000 crore.<br />
<br />
The true fiscal stimulus must include not only what was announced under the two packages in December 208 and January 2009, but also the expenditure under the two supplementary demands for grants approved by Parliament last September and December. It is another matter that these supplementary demands made up for the creative under provisioning of some known items of expenditure in last year’s Budget to remain within the fiscal parameters of the FRBM. The total consolidated deficit for 2008-09, including the actual budget deficit of the central government (6 per cent), the state governments (3.5 per cent) and some off-budget items such as the additional contingent liability for oil and fertilizer bonds (1.8 per cent), amounts to over 11.5 per cent of GDP or nearly Rs.6,26,000 crore.<br />
<br />
It is this massive fiscal stimulus combined with sustained monetary stimulus measures from the RBI, that have kept the Indian economy chugging along at 6-7 per cent growth, even as most of the developed world has gone into a deep recession. It has also helped to arrest the free fall of stock market and the depreciation of the rupee. Conventional wisdom suggests that to be successful, such stimulus packages have to be timely, targeted and temporary. With these measures having come within a few weeks of the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008, and with much of the stimulus directed at the worst affected sectors – exports, infrastructure, real estate, transport – the government and the central bank have clearly passed the first two tests.<br />
<br />
But what does the Interim Budget have to tell us about the future? It provides for a central government deficit of 5.5 per cent in 2009-10, though Mukherjee indicated that this could rise by a further 1 per cent. Adding to that 3.5 per cent deficit of state governments, and possibly some further off-budget provisions, 2009-10 could also end up with a massive deficit of 10-11 per cent. Coming on top of the huge stimulus this year, this could indeed go a long way in pump priming demand, compensating for the loss in export demand from developed countries. Moreover, much of the additional spending is targeted at infrastructure, employment programmes and education and health programmes.<br />
<br />
However, the question is how this massive deficit will be financed. The large government borrowing this year has crowded out the private sector. This is why interest-rates have not come down substantially, and banks are still shy of lending to private borrowers despite all the policy measures taken by the RBI. If next year’s deficit too is to be financed by market borrowing, that could be bad news for the private sector, and severely put at risk the recovery of private investment.<br />
<br />
It is important, therefore, that a large part of the deficit be monetized .e financed by government borrowing from the RBI which prevents RBI financing of government deficits. The finance secretary did indicate that something of this kind may be in the offing. Low inflation minimizes the risk of inflationary pressures arising from the consequent increase in money supply. The shelving of the FRBM and the putting on hold of the MoU with RBI would set aside the two key anchors of prudence that have guided fiscal policy in recent years However, exceptional times require exceptional measures.<br />
<br />
That being, said, it has to be added that abandoning fiscal prudence is fraught with risk, as we have learned to our cost in the past. Hence the third test of the stimulus, that it must be temporary. The fiscal and monetary stimuli are like major shocks being applied now to revive the economy. Research shows that the lag generated by such shocks being applied now to revive the economy.<br />
<br />
Research shows that the lag generated by such shocks can last for years, making the recover itself fragile. It is imperative that the fiscal and monetary breaks be applied as soon as the economy returns to a high growth path. As Mukherjee indicated, strong fiscal and monetary compression, return to the FRBM regime and the MoU with RBI must remain high priorities. Hopefully, recovery will occur by 2010, so the fiscal consolidation can be initiated within the first half of the next government’s tenure, before the compulsions of the next electoral cycle take over.<br />
<br />
Wisely the UPA government had presented the economic scenario as the interim budget. Without stirring the hornet’s nest it has moved to face the electoral battle. It is true that major decisions can be announced few days before the election code of conduct comes  into force. In that sense one has wait for the last minute to see the government’s mood to restructure the economy. Anyway, decision without many controversies affecting public lives with adequate coalition arithmetic can win elections. One can assume that the government is steering the no controversy ship rather than high pro activity with controversies. This cool and calm may win another term for UPA not its ability to put the economy on the high speed track.   <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 17 Feb 2009 04:13:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Slow Down Life</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/594267</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Everyone is in a hurry. No one knows where they are heading. This speed breaker free world is dangerous. Money, career, achievements, promotions ----- there is no end to the human desires. But at the end of the day those high end chasers are not happy. They are anywhere and everywhere but without happiness. After the recession they have added financial worry to their kitty of troubles. Are we in the right direction?<br />
<br />
Sadhu Vishwamurtidas writes in The Times of India (17.2.2009 p.20)“ The best of countries and corporations are so because they have the best of budgets. Hence the concern over the national budget. However, if people spent as much time worrying about their domestic budget as they did about the national one, globally, things would be different. How many focus inwards to analyse how exactly they have budgeted their own hard-earned money.<br />
<br />
Many of us continue to spend well beyond our income, inviting debts. Bhagwan Swaminarayan advises in his Shikshapatri, “One should keep a daily record of one’s expenditure and income and should always live within one’s means. All of us, rich or poor, should give something to charity”.<br />
<br />
Still fewer people have worked out a ‘life’ budget for themselves. A life budget includes committing time to self, family, society and God. The lives of those who do this get enriched not just financially, but also socially and spiritually.<br />
<br />
Many corporate executives invest all their time and effort in pursuing their careers and climbing the professional ladder. It is at all worthwhile? Most discover that their victory is empty and that they won it at an irreparable loss to their health, family and psyche, incurring obesity, heart disease and fatigue on the physiological front; separated spouse, estranged children and uncared-for-parents on the familial front; frustration, depression and stress on the physio-psychological front.  <br />
<br />
In many societies, this phenomenon has resulted in a tragic burgeoning of societies and cardiovascular and cancer-related deaths. The Royal bank of Canada devoted one of its  monthly letters to this problem with the title, “Let’s Slow Down’, “we are victims of mounting tensions”, it enunciated. “We have difficulty relaxing: we are not living fully”.<br />
<br />
For many in India too, life has taken on these contours, and living it is rather like going downhill in a truck without brakes. But it is still not too late. The World Health Organisation (WHO) predicts that stress will be the Number One killer in the world by 2020. And stress is usually nothing more than an individual’s failure to balance his lifestyle.<br />
<br />
Living life is a healthy manner and living it fully means we have to maintain regular food habits and follow a sensible diet, regular exercise and rest, going out with family, working for charity and spending some time in reflection, mediation and prayer.<br />
<br />
There is only one way to survive overwork or burnout. Be brave and bailout or you will be a loser. Life’s rat race only produces losers. It has no winners. Even if it does, the winner is still a rat. And usually a very large one.<br />
<br />
A sage asked a prosperous king, “If you were about to die of thirst and starvation and someone offered you a glass of water and a loaf of bread in exchange for your wealth and kingdom, would you give them to him?” “of course I would”, replied the king. “Anybody would”. “then why”, asked the sage, “have you wasted your entire life amassing all this land and wealth when they are worth no more to you than a glass of water and a loaf of bread?”<br />
<br />
Human life is priceless. God has bequeathed this limitless treasure trove to all. And as diversification is one of the secrets to successful investment, so is it the secret to a joyous and blessed life. Reach into your soul, and reach out to your family, society and God. Budget well.<br />
<br />
Fast driving on the lifeway without control over the vehicle amounts to suicidal attempt. No one’s live is a straight line. Ups and downs are normal. There is no prediction or forecast which can help us to avoid. Crisis and cyclone can come without prior warning. Knowing this one should slow down and take time out to read the bold signals on the sides. Calm going can help to get rid of the bad consequences and make life ha<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 17 Feb 2009 04:10:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Different ways of polluting</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/594265</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[There is not a single culprit in the climate change crisis who wants to mend their ways. Every day new pollutants are emerging with more dangerous contributions. From electronic junks to eating habits air, water, soil and other essential common properties are damaged. In this nature destructive game advanced countries are the real villains. <br />
<br />
The Times of India (16.2.2009) writes “When it comes to global warming, hamburgers are the real Hummers of food, scientists say. Simply switching from steak to salad could cut as much carbon as leaving the car at home a couple days a week. That’s because beef is such an incredibly inefficient food to produce and cows release so much harmful methane into the atmosphere, said Nathan Pelletier of Dalhousie University in Canada.<br />
<br />
The livestock sector is estimated to account for 18% of the global greenhouse gas emissions and beef is the biggest culprit. Even though beef only accounts for 30% of meat consumption in the developed world it’s responsible for 78% of the emissions, Pelletier, said.<br />
<br />
That’s because a single kilogram of beef produces 16 killograms carbon dioxide equivalent emissions: four times higher than pork and more than ten times as much as a kilogram of poultry. Pelletier said. If people were to simply switch from beef to chicken, emissions would be cut by 70%, Pelletier said.<br />
<br />
Another part of the problem is people are eating far more meat than they need to. “Meat once was a luxury in our diet,” Pelletier said. “we used to eat it once a week. Now we eat it every day.”<br />
<br />
If meat consumption in the developed world was cut from the current level of about 90kg a year to 53kg a year, livestock related emissions would fall by 44%.<br />
<br />
“Given the projected doubling of meat production by 2050, we’re going to have to cut emissions by half just to maintain current levels.” Pelletier said.<br />
<br />
<br />
No one knows the consequence of beef eating. The awareness about beef and pollution should be spread intensely. Anything excess is detrimental to both people and environment. What affects personally in certain matters undermine the environment too. Unlimited beef eating is dangerous for individuals health and ecology.<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 17 Feb 2009 04:05:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Costly justice in Delhi</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/594261</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Indian courts are notorious for prolonging the legal battles. People who filled petitions in their young age of 30 are not alive today to hear the final pronouncement. It takes decades for the courts to arrive at a conclusion. By the time court decides the petitioner is not alive. Due to this inordinate delay few people have faith in the judiciary. Rape, murder, property misappropriation or arson not many people would like to lodge a police complaint and seek judicial recourse. They know very well the petitioner will be harassed endlessly without any justice coming in his or her life time. The immediate help for any justice to the crime committed is underworld and criminal gangs. The instant revenge and justice are vented by these gangsters who are fully time involved in killing. If the situation is allowed to continue the judicial and police systems will lose its relevance permanently.<br />
<br />
According to The Times of India report (11.2.2009, p.1  7), 3,32,141 cases came up before the Delhi High Court in 2007-08. Each of these cases received five minutes of hearing (4 minutes, 55 seconds to be precise) and each minute of the court’s time cost a staggering Rs.6,327 to the state exchequer. Even adjournements without hearing don’t come cheap. All listed cases cost the court Rs.1,300 (on average), even if many got adjourned. The report released by Chief Justice A.P. Shah, claims HC disposed of 56,612 cases, including 47,017 filled in that year alone.<br />
<br />
While clearing 56,612 cases, Delhi High Court worked with 32 judges, much below its sanctioned strength of 48, Chief Justice A.P. Shah said. While pointing to the “Crushing load” on the courts, the Chief Justice said at present rate of disposal, it would take 466 years for the high court to clear its backlog of cases entirely. He, however said “we have been able to reduce the cases of arrears from 79,818 in 2007 to 74,599 in 2008”.<br />
<br />
The report adds that the rate of disposal of criminal cases in the year worked out to be 0.5 case per day. While such “working ours” analyses are done every year for bodies like Parliament and state legislatures, this is perhaps the first time a judicial body has come up with its figure.<br />
<br />
Case study<br />
No of cases listed before HC 332,141<br />
Total expenditure incurred Rs. 42,45,47,490<br />
No of cases dealt on a single day 64<br />
Total number of working days 213<br />
Time available for one hearing 4 min 55 sec<br />
Cost incurred for one minute of a hearing 6,327<br />
Average number of benches during ’07-08 24(8 division  16 single)<br />
<br />
The time and money spent have been worked out excluding “matters handled during  summer vacation (June) and on three working Saturdays during 2007-08”. In order to calculate the time judges gave for each hearing. HC factored in the total number of cases dealt by judges. Sitting as a single bench or division bench, in a day (64 cases on average) with the total time available for them to hold court (315 minutes).<br />
<br />
The total expenditure incurred by the court last year was Rs.42.45 crore for 213 working days. “the average cost of listing each case before a judge worked out to Rs.1,297 and the average court expenditure per minute by the court was Rs.6,327 or Rs.19,93,180 for each working days.<br />
<br />
The judiciary must ensure justice is dispensed atleast during the life time of the petitioner if not immediately. With multiple options available for reformation, courts should not delay further. Immediately it should implement all the suggested reforms. Decentralising and expanding the judiciary are two crucial steps. Above all the top leadership should have the requisite will to cleanse the system and make it functional. <br />
<br />
<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 17 Feb 2009 03:56:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Statistics Contradict Reality</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/589569</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[The forecasts by economists provide feel good statistics about the economic health. But on the ground nearly two-third of the citizens feels the heat of economic crisis. They do not have enough means to sustain their lives. Inadequate food, clothing, shelter and other essentials frustrate them. Without taking common people’s living standards economic data simply bracket them into Purchasing Power Parity and bundle them into the larger GDP dimension. The result of macro definition of the economic health without fine tuning the problems on the surface twists the tale and offers it all rosy. Countries like Bhutan define human happiness index along with the GDP. It is a tiny mountainous nation with no big income. People in Bhutan are bubbling with happiness despite low incomes and no skyscrapers to boost. France is trying to redefine its economic outlook. It is high time that all nations go beyond GDP and bring out the crux of the crisis and minimize people’s problems.<br />
<br />
Sanjeev Sanyal writes in The Times of India (10.2.2009, p.14) “The world is reeling from two major crises, the financial/economic crisis and the crisis of climate change and ecological collapse. Both are a result of the same human error, a colossal misallocation of resources, financial capital in one case and natural capital on the other. A combination of counter-cyclical policies and time will eventually get us out of the financial mess. However, climate change and catastrophic environmental degradation threaten human civilization as we know it.<br />
<br />
Many blame globalization and capitalism for the large-scale misallocation of resources. However, isolationism and socialism provide no alternative we tried them for decades with disastrous results. A market-based system is clearly more efficient. The problem is not with the tools of capitalism but the failure to define its goals. The power of the markets is being harnessed to maximize the wrong paradigm.<br />
<br />
The most commonly used paradigm for measuring human progress is provided by national income accounts and, more specifically gross domestic product (GDP). Virtually all economic policy-making is oriented directly or indirectly towards maximizing GDP growth. It is so ubiquitous that people forget it as an entirely artificial construct created in the 1940s as part of the war effort.<br />
<br />
Of course, rulers from ancient times have kept some record of economic activity for taxation purposes. National accounts as we know them were created during World War II by Richard Stone and James Meade with support from John Maynard Keynes, as a way to keep track of war-time economic activity. Given the circumstances, their framework was necessarily ‘industrial’ in its essence, without space for niceties like environmental degradation and socio-demographic developments.<br />
<br />
Post-war, this framework was adapted to create the GDP number now used. Unfortunately, the system remains an arbitrary way to measure value creation, especially in areas relating to externalities and natural capital. For instance, if we cut down a pristine rain forest we are destroying value in terms of biodiversity, watersheds, carbon sequestration, flood control, non-timber forest produce and so on. Yet, in the current system, destruction of value will show up as GDP growth from logging!<br />
<br />
This does not mean the creators of GDP were unaware of its limitation. In his Nobel Memorial Lecture in 1984, Richard Stone stated, “The three pillars on which analysis of society ought to rest are studies of economic, socio-demographic and environmental phenomena.” He added that his work had focused mostly on economic accounting and he had not spent much time on environmental accounting even though “environmental issues, such as pollution, land use and non-renewable resources offer plenty of scope for accounting.” In short, the creators of GDP thought of it as work-in progress. Unfortunately, the world has continued to focus much of its energy on maximizing an incomplete and out-of-date paradigm.<br />
<br />
There are ways to adjust for the short comings of GDP. One is to create additional matrices for measuring progress. The Human Development Index and Carbon Footprint are concepts that can be used to enhance the raw GDP approach. Unfortunately, they failed to gain a serious following beyond the world of activists and conferences because these measures lack the simplicity of a single GDP number.<br />
<br />
The only real alternative then is to recalibrate GDP itself to reflect genuine value generation. This can be done by assigning monetary values to things like water pollution, deforestation, land degradation and other changes in the stock of natural capital. Similar adjustments can be made to account for changes in human capital stock (health, education etc). The result would be a new GDP number more closely reflecting true value generated by various human activities.<br />
<br />
Economists should redefine GDP and incorporate ground situation. They should make economy fly in the air when there is no possibility of sustaining its stay on the sky. By infusing a course correction they can perform a social reengineering which is need of the hour. Poor must get the attention and priority. Simply giving the number of poor people is not sufficient. Using the latest technological prowess economists should filter down the most needy people and those in the seat of power should help those identified poor people to improve their lives. There is no alternative to this model. ]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2009 03:56:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/589569</guid>
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                <item> 
                    <title>Patenting India</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/589567</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[In the age of intellectual property rights, patenting our traditional knowledge is essential. Without patenting plagiarism will be rampant and it will affect the hard built wisdom of the age-old civilization. India has been a victim of soft pedaling patenting rights. The advanced nations with an eye on the patent rights and safeguarding its knowledge base have cleverly started patenting at an early age. As in other cases developing countries like India were dead slow in picking up patent rights. With the ball set rolling it should not stop in converting all its traditional knowledge sources into a digital form and steps must be taken to protect it from external possession and ownership.<br />
<br />
<br />
ü India has lost over 15,000 patents of medicinal plants to the West<br />
ü On an average, it takes 5 to 7 years to oppose a granted patent and costs between Rs 1 to 3 crores<br />
ü Over 200,000 medical formulations have now been documented into India’s Traditional Knowledge Digital Library (TKDL)<br />
ü Creating TKDL took over 8 years and cost Rs 7 crore<br />
ü The library will prevent those living abroad from claiming patent for existing formulations<br />
ü Without the library India would have lost 2000 patents every year concerning Indian Systems of Medicine (ISM)<br />
ü At any given time, 50 patent applications based on ISMS are awaiting grant of patient<br />
ü The decision to create TKDL was taken after wrong patents were granted on wound-healing properties of turmeric (1995) at the United States and on anti-fungal properties of Neem granted at European Patent Office (EPO)<br />
ü The patents were revoked in 1997 and 2005 respectively<br />
ü In the past, patents have been granted at EPO on the use of over 285 Indian medicinal plants. These include Papaya, Indian long pepper, Kali Tulsi, pudina, ginger, aloe, Isabgol, Aamla, Jira, Soyabean, Tomato, Almond, Walnut and Methi.<br />
<br />
Over two lakh medical formulations of Ayurveda, Siddha and Unani were documented by Traditional Knowledge Digital Library (TKDL). This is an outcome of eight years of painstaking efforts by the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) and union health ministry’s department of Ayush. This collaborative effort has converted information of traditional Indian medicine from Hindi, Sanskrit, Arabic, Persian, Urdu and Tamil to five international languages – English, Japanese, French, German and Spanish.<br />
<br />
All efforts must be made to dig every possible information about traditional wisdom and it must immediately digitalized and patented. This will go a long way in putting Indian knowledge on the top of global top list. <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2009 03:53:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/589567</guid>
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                <item> 
                    <title>Increasing Mental Disorders</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/589565</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[There are various reasons for the increasing mental disorders. One of the major factors is the negative social attitude towards the mental patients. Generally people misbehave with the mentally ill patients. The hospitals meant for these patients do not give adequate sympathy, love and care. Most of the mental patients feel better outside the hospitals. They are treated like animals in the cages. While this is the sorry state of mental health treatment in the country there is fast rise in the number of patients. Due to the severe economic crisis and lack of social support mental ill health is becoming common nowadays. The government is preparing for the worst. It must be countered with all out efforts.<br />
<br />
WHO estimates 30 crore people globally suffer from mental health disorders<br />
In India 15-20 crore people suffer from some sort of mental illness, the commonest being depression and anxiety syndromes, stress and psychosomatic disorders, bipolar mood disorders, schizophrenia and dementia.<br />
1.6 of them need institutional intervention<br />
According to WHO, at lease 3 in 4 mental health patients in developing countries receive no treatment<br />
75% of mentally ill patients in India are treated through traditional interventions and by tantriks<br />
8.1% of all disabilities in India are due to mental illnesses, as against 5.8% due to cancer and 4.4% due to heart diseases<br />
India needs 32,000 psychiatrists but has 3300 trained psychiatrists, 3000 of whom are in metros<br />
By 2020, depression is expected to become the 2nd largest illness in the world<br />
Most countries allocate less than 2% of their health budget to mental disorders<br />
Suicide is one of the commonest manifestations of mental illness<br />
In India, 1.2 lakh people end their lives every year by committing suicide<br />
4 lakh attempt commit suicide<br />
Globally, one million people die from suicide annually<br />
The global mortality rate is 16/100,000, or one death every 40 seconds.<br />
In the last 45 years, suicide rates have increased by 60% worldwide<br />
Mental disorders, particularly depression and substance abuse, are associated with more than 90% of all cases of suicide<br />
Asia accounts for 60% of the world’s suicides<br />
India, China and Japan account for 40% of this number<br />
Over 71% of suicides in India are by persons below the age of 44.<br />
<br />
The Union health ministry is getting nervous over the alarming rate of mental patients in the country. A shocking number of 13 crore Indians suffering mental disorders have shaken the ministry from its slumber. It is going to circulate a cabinet note next week to handle the rising mental disorders. It has proposed to upgrade the existing eleven mental hospitals, increase of at least 44 post-graduate seats in psychiatry, 176 M.Phil seats in clinical psychology and 220 seats for psychiatric nursing each years. The ministry envisages that 616 qualified mental health professionals would be produced from these centres. One hopes for the better situation in the coming days.<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2009 03:46:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/589565</guid>
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                <item> 
                    <title>Soaring School Fees</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/587459</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Private schools want freedom in deciding fees. It should be given if there is sincerity in delivering services to the public. But most of the schools are money milking machines. The over commercialization of education leaves less to desire. Human capital is the biggest source for the success of economy and society. It should be developed without compromising. Any efforts by private or public to water down the quality of education and making education unreachable for the average India should be ended immediately. It seems all the noise by the private schools about the government interference in fee decision is farce. <br />
<br />
Manas Pratim Gohain writes in The Times of India (9.2.2009 p.2) “Schools have created a hue and cry about the “meager” fee hike of up to Rs.500 hike allowed by the government to raise teacher’s salary in line with the 6th Pay Commission proposals. But tuition fees is not the only source of income for schools – it accounts for only 35% roughly of the total expenditure that a parent incurs in sending his child to a reasonably good private school. The rest – around 65% - of school’s earning comes from transportation, uniforms, books, student welfare fund, club activities, annual day, excursions and development fund among others.<br />
<br />
When schools determined to take their appeal for revising the hike to courts, parents are spending sleepless nights. A parent who pays tuition fee of more than Rs.2000 per month ends up paying approximately Rs.90.500 annually for transportation, school uniforms and other dresses for different fests and events organized by the school. “There are schools which charge even half yearly fees which are over and above the tuition and admission fees. We spend around Rs.1.80 lakh annually on my two kids. My husband is the only earning member and now we will have to shell out Rs.12,000 extra annually for my two kids as their tuition fee will go up Rs.500 per month,” said Monika Sharma from R.K Puram.<br />
<br />
However schools find the government approved hike inadequate. The School Action Committee (SAC) has been meeting to discuss on fee hike of private schools in the capital on fee hike of private schools in the capital and the challenges ahead. S.K. Bhattacharya, Chairman, SAC, said: “We are going to appeal for a reconsideration on the hike. Otherwise how will the schools pay the salary of the teachers as per the 6th Pay Commission recommendation?”<br />
<br />
Shomie Das the former headmaster of Doon School says that setting up a first-rate non-residential private school spread over a minimum of 5 acres of land for about 2,000 students would cost about Rs.30-35 crore.<br />
<br />
“The construction cost, including the land, will lead to expenses of about Rs.25 crore. This is assuming the different buildings such as classrooms, auditoriums, and swimming pool are built over a total area of 200,000  square feet,” says Das who has helped set up 50 schools, including heritage (Kolkata) and Sanskriti (Delhi) in the past few decades.<br />
<br />
Item                                    Annual Payment (in Rs)<br />
Tuition fee                          6,000 -36,000<br />
Transportation                    4,800 –36,000<br />
(School’s own transportation)<br />
School Uniforms                3,000-4,000<br />
Blazers*                                   700-1,500<br />
Books*                                3,000-4,000<br />
Building Fund                         500-1,500<br />
Annual day                              200-500<br />
Excursion/tours                       300-500<br />
Development Fund                  500-1,000<br />
Pupil/student Fund                   500,1,000<br />
Half-yearly charge                   500-1,000<br />
Ticket Selling                           500-1,000<br />
(Given to students for selling)<br />
Club activities                          500-3,000<br />
Festival                                     200-500<br />
<br />
Total 21,200-90,500<br />
*Shops owned or set up by schools<br />
The list is indicative<br />
<br />
Expensive Affair<br />
Non-residential pvt school                      		                             <br />
<br />
•	Cost of setting up a school spread over 5 acres of land for about 2,000 students Rs.30-35 crore<br />
•	Construction cost of different buildings Rs.25 crore (assuming total area is about 2 lakh sq.feet)<br />
•	Staff salaries are 70% of operational cost<br />
•	Teacher-student ratio 1:15 to 1:20<br />
<br />
Residential school<br />
Setting up a school over a minimum area of 20 acres Rs.75-100 crore<br />
Construction cost Rs.50-60 crore plus the cost of land<br />
Site development cost Rs.2-3 crore<br />
Sports equipment, fittings Rs.5 crore<br />
Staff salaries are 50% of operational cost<br />
Catering expenses 30-40%<br />
Teacher-student ratio 1:12<br />
<br />
Keeping the crucial necessity of education for the overall development of the society, private school managements should fix their fees. Over ambition in making profit from the schools by taxing parents will lead to the large scale migration of private school students to government schools. This may create chaos and permanent deterioration of private schools financially. Better they act after analyzing the negative consequences of fee hike rather than blank demand for fee hike.<br />
 <br />
<br />
    <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Mon, 09 Feb 2009 04:57:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/587459</guid>
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                <item> 
                    <title>Jail Nuclear Peddler Khan</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/587457</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[ <br />
Abdul Qadeer Khan the well-know nuclear secrets peddler of Pakistan is totally free now. After five years of house arrest under the pressure from USA administration, then President Prevez Mushraff kept him inside. Khan seems to have sold nuclear bomb components and its formula to Iran, North Korea and other rogue states. He also had clandestine relations with the top leadership of Al Qaeda. No one knows the logic behind the release of notorious nuclear proliferators. It sounds death bells to the south Asian security in particular and world in general. A.Q. Khan should be tried by the international court and punished for the violation of international order on nuclear weapons.<br />
<br />
K. Subrahmanyam writes in The Times of India (9.2.2009, p.16) “Khan was a nuclear spy who was able to obtain the centrifuge technology and the list of contractors from Dutch facilities and transfer them to Pakistan. According to the former Dutch prime minister, Rudd Lubbers, Khan was detained twice by Dutch authorities, once in the 1970s and again in the 1980s. On both occasions he was let off after the CIA intervened. In late 1980s, Richard Barlow, a assembled its nuclear weapon in transgression of the Pressler Amendment. At that stage, Pakistan was not taken to task but instead Barlow was punished for a wrong analysis; he had to fight for two decades to clear his name.<br />
<br />
The connection between Khan and the CIA is a mystery just as the American permissiveness about China conducting a nuclear test on behalf of Pakistan on May 26, 1990. This has now been confirmed by Thomas Reed and Danny Stillman of the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory in a recent book. In the 1950s, Ethel and Julius Roosenberg were executed for their help to the Soviet Union in the development of nuclear weapons. Alan Nunn May and Klaus Fuchs were sentenced to long terms of imprisonment for what would today be called nuclear proliferation activity. They all acted out of ideological allegiances just as Khan claimed that his proliferation was to Islamic states out of good faith. Khan’s case is unique in that he had played an active role both in inward proliferation into Pakistan and outward proliferation from Pakistan. <br />
<br />
Khan being freed under an agreement with the Zardari government raises several issues. Benazir Bhutto in an interview in the US before her return  to Pakistan had promised that if she became prime minister she would permit both Washington and the International Atomic Energy Agency to have access to Khan. In an interview she had disclosed details about the Pakistani nuclear enrichment technology exchange with North Korean missile technology. Now Benazir’s husband, as president of Pakistan has entered into an agreement to set Khan free.<br />
<br />
Given the past American tolerance of Pakistani proliferation and Khan’s activities, is the Obama administration a party to the present arrangement previous US administrations were? What kind of message will this send to Iran and other countries? Asif Zardari and General Ashfaq Kayani were in a position to continue the Musharraf-Bush humanitarian and health grounds. But they have choosen to free him on the basis of a mutual agreement which blows up the credibility of the earlier arrangement by indicating that Khan has things to disclose which could embarrass Pakistan.<br />
<br />
In a sense, Khan emerges as a hero whose proliferation was sanctioned. This is a defiance of the international community by Pakistan. It will mean that Khan cannot be blamed since he acted with the approval of past Pakistani regimes and the world is in no position to pressure the present Pakistani government as the international community needs their help. The way in which the Khan case is going to be handled will give a clear indication of whether the civilian government in Pakistan wants to break with the past. The chances are the Zardari government will opt for continuing past policies as it have done in respect of permissiveness towards jihadis.<br />
<br />
The timing of this agreement and the court order is also significant. It comes in the wake of nuclear saber-rattling by sections of Pakistanis following the 26/11 Mumbai attack. It also comes on the eve of the visit of US special envoy, Richard Holbrooke, to Pakistan. Islamabad’s nuclear arsenal had been the subject of wide coverage in the US media in recent weeks. This may be Pakistan’s way of reminding the international community, ahead of the donor nations’ meeting, that it cannot be allowed to fail and that Islamabad is capable of taking a defiant stand. <br />
<br />
The US is in a position similar to early 1980s. It was prepared to sacrifice its non proliferation policy to enlist Pakistani support for the mujahideen campaign against Soviet forces in Afghanistan. Now it may have to sacrifice its missile defence and NATO expansion policies to have logistics facilities via Russia and Central Asia to deal with the situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The slap in the face for Americans implied in freeing Khan via a secret agreement makes it all the more imperative for US to make every effort to secure the Russian and Central Asian routes to complete their task in the Pakistan-Afghanistan region.<br />
<br />
Under these circumstances it is not advisable to let A.Q. Khan roam freely. The deadly network of Al Qaeda, ISI, A.Q. Khan and the nuclear black marketers can damage the world peace. The window dressing to Khan issue does not augur well. All the governments especially USA, India and Pakistan should end his hidden death blow permanently.      <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Mon, 09 Feb 2009 04:56:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                <item> 
                    <title>Glamour  Ladies in IPL Auction</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/586845</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Diamond shining, Gucci flashing Bollywood heroines walked with pomp and show into the Indian Premier Leauge (IPL) auction venue. Preity Zinta, Juhi Chawla and Shilpa Shetty are the star attractions in Goa. Along with the beauty ladies industrialists paraded their wealth. Blackberrys, Bentleys, Mercs and no doubt unstoppable flow of money brought IPL once again into the limelight. In this game war superstition was not staying back. Preity Zinta wore her lucky red every time she came to the bidding process. Raj Kundra sponsored his girl friend Shilpa the bid amount as valentine’s day gift. All those entered for auction were cross fingered and waiting for the luck at the end. <br />
<br />
Defeating the popular expectation that this year 20-20 cricket show’s player hunting auction will be a flop, IPL surpassed last year’s target. In a single day it made $ 8 million worth business. Cash strap King Fisher chairman Vijay Mallaya paid $1.55m for Kevin Pietersen. This selective showering of money by Mallaya mocks his claim that King Fisher is seriously crushed by recession. <br />
<br />
Team Chennai<br />
Adrew Flintoff (1.55m)<br />
Thilan Thushara (1,40,000)<br />
George Bailey (50,000)<br />
<br />
Bangalore Royal Challengers<br />
Kevin Pietersen (1.55m)<br />
Jesse Ryder (160,000)<br />
<br />
Mumbai Indians<br />
J.P. Duminy (950,000)<br />
Kyle Mills (1,50,000)<br />
Mohd Ashraful (75,000)<br />
<br />
Kolkata Knight Riders<br />
M. Mortaza (600,000)<br />
<br />
Team Jaipur<br />
Shaun Tait (375,000)<br />
T Henderson (650,000)<br />
<br />
Delhi Daredevils<br />
Owalis Shah (275,000)<br />
P. Colingwood (275,000)<br />
<br />
Team Mohali <br />
Ravi Bopara (450,000)<br />
Jerome Taylor (150,000)<br />
<br />
Team Hyderabad <br />
Fidel Edwards (150,000)<br />
Dwayne Smith (150,000)<br />
All figures in US$<br />
 <br />
The spenders<br />
Rajasthan $1.25m out of $1.87m<br />
Chennai $1.6m out of $2m<br />
Mumbai $1.17m out of $1.76m<br />
Kolkata 650,000 out of $1.21m<br />
Punjab 600,000 out of $1.4m<br />
Hyderabad 250,000 out of $1.9m<br />
Delhi 550,000 out of $1.45m<br />
<br />
In the last one year of its origin IPL has glamourised and totally commercialized cricketing in the country. Adding entertainment to the game the league is spinning dollars in revenue. One has to wait and watch how far it is going to improve the cricket quality and inspire youth of India become best cricketers. IPL should focus its attention in other games to make India a formidable player in the world.<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Sun, 08 Feb 2009 03:47:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                <item> 
                    <title>Relationships in Recession</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/586843</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Money matters in human relationships. Few can be exceptions to this universal practice. The global economic melt down tests the love capacity of people. When the money flow is affected, jobs are cut and purchasing power is down, one can feel the heat in day to day lives. Not only his smile is missing but the real charm of life is gone. The person is pushed to the extreme of frustration. He feels empty without income and enough money to spend. Suddenly all his friends are deserting and girl friend dumped him. Love is boiling in the extreme financial climate. Very few candlelight dinners, spa tours, beach swims and exotic vacations. Romantic relationships are getting dumped and switched for the lack of money.<br />
<br />
In another case wife is distancing and children are not taking his words seriously. Is this universal or India specific? In comparison to the western nations, India may be better off in this matter. With the strong support of family and fair saving culture, there is an insulation for men during the time of recession. Women tend to keep safety valves. Beyond these savings and safety valves some people are prone to the break offs. This is due the fragile nature of relationships. Where there is a strong human bondage, no money flow would not affect the relationship much. <br />
<br />
When the job was there men did not have time now the reverse is happening. Time spending is not sufficient. Money is required to keep women and time happy. How can time fly without giving money punch to it? In a matter of months there is an upside down of situations. From time short to money short corporate men lives are undergoing massive changes. If the saving and alternative sources of income are there human relationship suffer less.<br />
<br />
Anjali Kaur (23) says “Chemistry with my boyfriend topsy turved after the recession news broke. He was fired from his job. I tried analyzing from all angles. There is no point in keeping the relation alive. How far I can go with him without money”.<br />
<br />
Aparajita Mukherjee writes in Times of India (7.2.2009, p.10) “And these power women aren’t concerned about society’s opinions on their decisions. They have a very clear idea of what they want from their relationships in the long term, ali points out, “I can’t take a man with no job to my parents and ask them to be proud of my decision, na!” Kanak also agrees, saying “Like I said, it’s important that I lead a good life. I’m making the best decision for my future and even my parents would advise me against continuing a relationship with a man who is unable of giving me the standard of life I’m used to. So I don’t care about the gold-digger tag, really!”<br />
<br />
Fast-track relationships have a short shelf-life according to this power-woman. “Life is too short and I want to lead a good life, I have to make sure I have a partner who gives me that,” says Kanak. Charu Parashar, a designer, who’s happily married. In her perspective, “the disposable income in the hands of youngsters these days has increased and they believe in instant gratification. These days, if a woman is suddenly faced with no additional resources at her disposal, which she counts as important for fulfilling of her needs, then she makes a quick exit.”<br />
It is nothing but natural to have such money based relationship when basic social norms were abandoned for instant happiness. Where there is no ethics human relationship are bound to fail. The current recession should bring back human instincts and ensure a strong family bondage and genuine human love. Money is required for living but it should not be a pre condition for any human relationships. There are innumerable incidents where husband and wife struggled to built their relationship and family. Who can wait? is the common question in today’s world. Remember! Relationship can be sustained only through sacrifices. <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Sun, 08 Feb 2009 03:44:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                <item> 
                    <title>Chander Mohan - Latest Marriage Convert</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/584415</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Rulers leaving their throne to live with beloved are part of the historical folklore. In the recent times only Chander Mohan the former Haryana deputy Chief Minister did the age-old act. For the sake of his extra legal love – Anuradha Bali, Mohan deserted his first wife Seema and children. More than a month he disappeared from his government duty and family responsibility. It seems that Chande Mohan and Anuradha converted into Islam. Thus they got a new identity – Chand Mohammad and Fiza. In the dargah town of Ajmer both of them got married according to the Islamic customs. Islam provides such liberty to divorce the first wife and get married ample number of times. This kind of act was staged by Dharmendra and Hemamalini and Kishore Kumar and Madhubala. <br />
<br />
Generally the extra lovemaking Hindus uses the Islamic provision to legitimize their illegal affair. According to the Hindu Marriage Act of 1955 bigamy is strictly prohibited for Hindus. When people started using Islam, Supreme Court stepped in and made it illegal. In the Sarla Mudgal vs Union of India it was made clear that any asylum in the Islamic provision is considered void. The apex court rejected the marriage and made it illegal. Under Section 494 of the Indian Penal Code if the second marriage is void which is not the case under Muslim personal law.<br />
<br />
Article 44 was sought by the Supreme Court from the government for implementation that wants to make a uniform civil code. But Article 44 is non justiciable directive principle of Stae policy and it is datable whether the court can direct the government to implement it.<br />
<br />
Sudhanshu Rajan writes in the Hindustan Times (5.2..2009, p.9), “Men take refuge in such loopholes, causing cruelty to their first wives – in this case both wives – only because India lacks a common civil code. We are a signatory to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 1966, and International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), 1979. India is under a legal obligation to ensure gender equality but it has hardly taken any steps to comply. It accepted the prevalence of discrimination against women under various personal laws of different communities before the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women in 2000. The committee noted India’s failure and had warned that “the government’s policy of non-interference perpetuates sexual stereotypes, son preference and discrimination against women.’<br />
<br />
When the SC directed the government in Vishaka v. State of Rajasthan to make a law to stop the sexual harassment of women at work places, it ruled that the provisions of the Constitution have to be interpreted as informed by CEDAW. The SC has been emphasizing the need for a uniform civil code since the 1985 Shah Bano case when it lamented that Article 44 has remained “a dead letter”. But in the Ahmedabad Women’s Action Group case, the court held that the removal of gender discrimination in personal laws fell in the domain of State policies in which the court could not interfere.<br />
<br />
The first major step towards enforcing a uniform civil code was taken when the Hindu Code Bill was enacted, engendering the Hindu marriage Act of 1956, and Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act of 1956. These acts did away with the prevailing personal laws among Hindus, which permitted men to keep more than one wife, denied women the right to divorce and rights over their ancestral property. Making bigamy an illegal and bequeathing the right of divorce to wives was revolutionary, since a Hindu marriage was considered sacrament.<br />
<br />
More than laws there should be social rules and customs which motivates individuals not to do injustice to their fellow beings. Gender discrimination is socially evolved and patronized by the male mindset. Any number of laws will not be deterrent to anti-women thinking. It should be ended at the earliest to give meaning to the techno civilization.  <br />
<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Thu, 05 Feb 2009 00:06:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/584415</guid>
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                    <title>Fitting Recession Solutions</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/583429</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Economists are much sought after during the recession periods. Although they are responsible for both good and bad prescriptions governments keep them close to its time-to-time advices. Like the popular bipolar socio-economic ideologies - capitalism or socialism, recession solutions too are neatly divided. Hayekian or Keynesian solutions dominate the tables. In this age of private sector collapse many governments are compelled to go for Keynesian solution. This model makes the establishment to spent a large amount of its funds in the social sector. The USA administration under George Bush II spent injected $2 trillion to cool down the boiling economy.<br />
<br />
 A Keynesian recession is a sudden trip down in demand and it can be remedied by pumping in adequate money in the hands of people. Some countries are fancying the idea of airdropping currency notes on the rooftops of rural households. Keynesian solution envisages six months to rescue the bad economy to get back to normalcy after giving enough purchasing power to the people. <br />
<br />
On the contrary Hayekian model wants long term to correct the imbalances in the economy. The structural adjustments or solutions are advocated to the set the economy straight. Economist of Hayekian order quote the grave crisis during the great oil problem in the seventies and successful rescue operation carried out by its ideologues. The Oil shock of 1973 attracted initially heavy Keynesian solution. But the trade union activism diluted the huge pumping of money into the public services and stopped the intentions of the government and attracted Hayekian method. For nearly three decades this model worked may be due to the absence of various detrimental factors rather than the good effect of Hayekian principles.<br />
<br />
A careful study into the economy tells that neither of the two in full dose is detrimental. Long term abandoning of social sector by the government and structural adjustments are equally dangerous. While doing the former the latter should not be forgotten.  Swaminathan S Anklesaria Aiyar writes in the Economic Times (28.1.2009, p.16) “The current recession is deeply structural. For decade, the US has run the biggest trade deficits in history, matched by corresponding trade surpluses of China, OPEC and other Asian countries. After the financial crisis of 1997-99, any Asian countries swore to build large forex reserves to avoid another debacle. So they deliberately undervalued their exchange rates, ran large current account surpluses, and so generated large forex reserves. This had to be mirrored in correspondingly large current account deficits in some other countries. The biggest turned out to be the US.”<br />
<br />
This defied conventional economic logic. Normally, rich countries run trade surpluses and send their excess savings to poor countries with scarce capital that are running trade deficits This normally was turned on its head by Asian countries determined to build large forex reserves after the trauma of 1997-99. These forex reserves went mainly into US gilts.<br />
<br />
“These bubbles have now burst. A Keynesian stimulus amounts to an attempt to re-inflate those bubbles. That is neither practical nor wise. The US government in 2008 mailed $80 billion to households to stimulate spending, but households spent only $1.2 billion of that and saved the rest they knew, even if politicians did not that the old spending spree had to stop.”<br />
<br />
Now the governments are in do or die situation. It should follow Keynesian model at the moment and take Hayekian course in the long run. An adequate mix of both is necessary to keep the economy on track. A mere spending on the public programmes is not sufficient. There should be satisfactory outcomes. As the global development depends on the correct prescriptions of the economists and other important knowledge holders, they should constantly strive to advise the governments with suitable policies. Just marshalling out few archaic theories and outdated data is not enough. The world needs visionary thinkers to steer the governments to a right course. <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 03 Feb 2009 23:55:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/583429</guid>
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                    <title>No Nursery Vacancy in Delhi</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/583307</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Nearly 1.75 lakh children couldn’t get admission into nursery schools this year. It is due to the over population and shortage of schools. The mismatch between population and the availability of infrastructure creates a massive problem. Taking advantage of this gap, government officials, politicians and private players milk enormous money from the admission-seeking parents. Although Delhi is well established in the quality and quantity of education the future looks dim due to the heavy shortfall in the availability of seats. From nursery schools to universities there is a heavy shortage. Apart from the 14 million Delhi population there is a massive migration of students from Northern and Northern eastern states. This is bound to increase multifold with the better transport facilities available now. It can be controlled only by providing good social facilities like education and other infrastructure in the big migration states.<br />
<br />
According to S.K. Bhattacharaya, chairman of School Action Committee: “government recognized private schools received over four lakh applications this year and approximately 1.75 lakh children were left out. The demand is far more than supply  and thus those left out generally opt for playschools.”<br />
<br />
Parents blame autonomous points system for the mess up in the nursery school admissions. Few brand names like DPS, Apeejay, Vasant Valley, Amity there is a big push and pull for the nursery school seats. Priyanshi Kapoor of New Friends Colony shuttled between her home and 15 different schools in south Delhi for her child’s admission She says “The admission procedure in schools is hardly transparent. My daughter couldn’t get through in the school where my husband and I scored alumni points. The entire nursery admission procedure has been a nightmare for us”<br />
<br />
Schools give their own reasons for rejecting certain children. One of the hidden agenda of the school management during admission process is nepotism and highhanded corruption. Those in the high level of the school management are much sought after people in the capital. They use their clout to make substantial money in this time period. Transparency International should look into the amount of money changing hands in this huge corruption area. <br />
<br />
One of the west Delhi principal says, “We look for a particular set of parents. For instance, children of businessmen don’t get enough points. In the admission process as many schools often prefer parents from the service class. It is seen that businessmen do not value education much ad it affects our results,”. This may sound reasonable but bribery can take the genuine sheen out of Delhi school admissions.<br />
<br />
How many students can be accommodated in 1,976 private schools? The meager number of private schools create stampede. Even poor families want to send their children to private schools as they think that the government schools are not good for the children’s overall development. Those who cannot afford three square meals only opt for government schools.<br />
<br />
The Delhi government has been constantly striving to develop the education in the capital. An extreme level of politics played by the public representatives and bureaucrats has been destroying the education. Now the challenge is to increase the number of schools in partnership with private and civil society organizations. Reducing the migration is another Himalayan challenge. All the neighborhood areas should have schools and the children must be encouraged to attend only their neighborhood schools. The biggest challenge for the government is to divert the public craze from private schools to sarkari ones. Before doing that it must give high quality education and better facilities. This is the most urgent work for Delhi government for now and in the future.<br />
<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 03 Feb 2009 22:23:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Kissing is Crime</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/582853</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[India is not America or Europe. Kissing in public is strictly unacceptable. Due to certain social code of conduct followed down the ages the culture of kissing in public is not seen in the India and other traditional countries. Love expressed to the opposite sexes is totally in a private place. Even a newly married couple shy away from holding hands outside their bedroom. One may be thinking that it is the Indian custom not to express affection publicly. But then the law of India too bars one from kissing or engaging obscenely in public.<br />
<br />
India is extremely cautious society in allowing young people in exercising their freedom. For ages there is a control over the lives of youth. Despite they attaining adulthood family control is high. Even some of the families exercise authority over senior people. Here parents of senior when alive like to have their say firmly and finally.<br />
<br />
Justice. S. Muralidhar of the Delhi High Court stayed an FIR lodged against a married couple for kissing each other in Dwarka metro station. In his stay order Justice Muralidhar said “The FIR doesn’t make a case for offence under Section 294 (Obscenity) read with 34 IPC. It is inconceivable how, even if one were to take what is stated in the FIR to be true, an expression of love by a young married couple would attract offence of obscenity and trigger the coercive process of law”. <br />
<br />
The newly wedded couple was taken to the Dwarka police station by ASI Vidhyadhar on September 4, 2008. The policeman saw them “sitting an objectionable position near a Metro pillar and kissing each other due to which passersby were feeling bad”. Despite the couple pleading the policeman that they are legally married their words went unheeded by khaki clad moral police. <br />
<br />
The Times of India (3.2.2009) informs neither in the FIR nor in the subsequent chargesheet did the police attest any statement of witnesses or ‘passerby leaving no doubt in the mind of the court that charges were cooked up. The couple alleged both to the police and the bar council that the lawyer who promised to get the marriage registered connived with Singh to extort  money from him and his wife as they wee unware of the intricacies of law.<br />
<br />
In his petition before HC seeking quashing of the FIR, the couple mentioned how, while they were being interrogated by the cops his ATM was misused to polish off Rs.20,000 from his bank account. He said the couple got married in first week of September last year at an Arya Samaj temple without the knowledge of their respective parents<br />
<br />
Therefore, both continued to stay separately as they tried to get the marriage registered and sought services of a lawyer who, as it turns out, cheated them. The petition in fact denies tat they were kissing each other and says they were just clicking self portraits on the mobile phone camera.<br />
<br />
What Section 294 of IPC says<br />
Whoever, to the annoyance of others<br />
(a)	Does any obscene act in any public place or<br />
(b)	Sings, recites or utters any obscene song, ballad or words, in or near any public place ‘<br />
Shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term wich may extend to three months or with fine or with both<br />
<br />
Meenakshi Lekhi, a senior lawyer in the Delhi High Court says “The definition of obscenity depends on social norms. Our society is conservative and what may be permissible elsewhere would be looked on askance in India”<br />
<br />
In such vague definition of legal terms it is natural for the corrupt policemen to randomly pick up people in the pretext of combating crime. Although this act of the couple does not fall under the criminal activity in strong terms, for money police can harass common public to any extent. The popular solution to such problem is abolishing law. One should not swing to extreme levels while handling funny situation such as arresting kissing couple. Laws are needed to rein in erroneous citizens but not be applied blindly. <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 03 Feb 2009 10:39:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/582853</guid>
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                    <title>Election Commissioners in a Battle</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/581951</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[It seems that N. Gopalaswamy sings L.K.Advani’s tunes very strongly. Due to the proximity to the BJP leader Gopalaswamy got appointed as CEC. By inserting Navin Chawla in the election commission in 2006, Congress had cleverly charted its election course. It may be with an intention to rig the election with the help of its man at the helm or control opposition from taking control of the election. In most of the cases it is the former that gets top priority. According to the article 324(5) only the president of India can remove the election commissioner. As these positions are totally political at present there is no possibility of neutrality. Only one can wish the continued smoothness and fairness in the conduct of Lok Sabha election in 2009.<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Mon, 02 Feb 2009 03:34:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/581951</guid>
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                    <title>Halt Holiganism</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/577597</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Halt Hooliganism in Mangalore<br />
Cultural policing is common in certain parts of the country. After the people’s recognition of Shiv Sena with political mandate there are several groups trying to ape its model. Luckily most of these groups were rejected by people and lost steam in due course. Sri, Rama Sene (SRS) a fringe group in Mangalore attacked a pub where girls and boys were dancing. SRS founder Pramod Mutalik told that there is no need to raise a hue and cry about the Mangalore pub attack on women on Saturday.  “Women were being misused and misguided. We oppose this. Women have to be protected as the law has failed. Parents are worried about their wards going astray in materialistic pursuits. We are the custodians of Indian culture, he said.<br />
<br />
Times of India (27.1.2009 p.6) reports “Mutalik is the national president of the right-wing political group, Rashtriya Hindu Sena. The SRS founded in late 2007 is its militant outfit. Mutalik is apologetic about inconvenience caused to the girls but thinks that the hue and cry is all to sully the image of the BJP government in Karnataka. <br />
<br />
Times view “Organisations like the Sri Rama Sene are emboldened to act as they did in Mangalore because the cost-benefit equation works out very well for them. The benefit from such boorish moral policing is in the form of national publicity that lures fresh recruits to the ‘cause’. And the costs is possible arrest and a very short jail term. It’s important, therefore, to raise the costs. In this case, for instance, they could be charged under Section 153A that deals with offences against public tranquility and carries a sentence of up to three years. It must be used not just against the actual miscreants, but also office-bearers of the Sene. Rigorous prosecution leading to conviction should help persuade them to desist from such anti-social behaviour in future.”<br />
<br />
MNS, SRS and likes should be completely crushed. The government needs to have spinal cord. Unfortunately none of those in the power corridors have will to act. All of them are staying to keep their position alive. If there was a stern action against the hooliganism in the past they may not ventured out again. Voting in such hooligans to power inspires other groups. Naturally they aspire to become prototypes of Shiv Sena and hope to grab the upper power in ten years or twenty five years. It is another matter that most of these groups fizzle out in the middle. There is no other way than to crush the self proclaimed moral police forces.<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 27 Jan 2009 05:23:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/577597</guid>
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                    <title>Slum Age's Arrival</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/577595</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[After Slumdog Millionaire’s Golden Globe awards sweep and nomination to the Oscars all attention is on the slums. One needs to wait and watch how far the present excitement is going to help the slum dwellers. P. Chidambaram told BYST (Bhartiya Yuva Shakti Trust of CII) audience “lot of young men and women in slums have the necessary qualities of being innovative and are willing to take risks to carry out a business venture”. <br />
<br />
The Times of India (27.1.2009, p.13) brought out the successful slum dwellers across the country.<br />
 <br />
Vicky Roy (21) ran away from his home in Purulia in West Bengal when he was 11 years old. This poor tailor’s son have bright dreams brimming from his eyes. He used to be a rag picker after arriving in Delhi. Salam Balak Trust got hold him and took him to school. He completed class IXth through the trust. Today the slum dweller of Delhi is a celebrated international photographer. This former rag picker is going to shoot the reconstruction work of World Trade Center and study advanced photography in Visual Arts Institution in New York. In his maiden exhibition abroad, Vicky brought “Street Child” to the world through his photos. This exhibition was a big hit in London, Durban and Cape Town<br />
<br />
Luck came to Vicky during his stay in Salam Balak Turst. He says “At that time  , a foreign filmmaker came to the trust to make a documentary and I realized photography was where my heart lay. I followed him around and tried to understand the nuances of shooting. But the real break in 2005 when I was 18 and was picked up by a renowned photographer. I jumped at the job which paid me Rs.3,000 and got me a cellphone and a bike”<br />
<br />
Sanjay Malhotra (25) is a transformed man today. From a street bully near Sai Baba mandir, Lodhi road, Delhi few years back, Malhotra is rendering social service by rehabilitating poor people. Through a NO Chetna (Childhood Enhancement through Training  Action)<br />
<br />
Rani escaped from a marriage to a man double his age when she was 14. She used to sell pooja materials and sundry items in Delhi’s Kalkaji temple. Today she is the leader for 5000 street children. Recently she was awarded for Clean India Campaign in Hyderabad. <br />
<br />
With above 20% extreme poverty and 15% of the urban population leaving in slums it is essential to focus on these unprivileged areas. If there is already identification survey carried out in all the slums in the country then it should be used to rehabilitate the slum dwellers in low cost housing with all essential facilities. Adequate space, school, hospital recreation facilities, sports and revenue generation activities should be provided. <br />
<br />
There are innumerable loopholes and vast corruption are there in the slum rehabilitation programs. Although a separate wing in the government works with a budget of sizeable amount of Rs.1000 crores annually it is less effective. The biggest reason is all round corruption. In Delhi last year Ashok Malhotra, a canteen operator in the secretariat made a huge fortune by buying and selling slum lands. Now the government and likes of Chidambaram should get into the microscopic issues in uplifting the poor. Simply allocating money is not enough. India needs to sustain well-motivated people to solve the perennial crisis like slums. Otherwise it can only become silver screen hits with the extreme poverty, slums and corruption. <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Tue, 27 Jan 2009 05:19:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Real Estate Madness</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/575565</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Indians are capable of outsmarting anyone in the world. With the growing number of millionaires and billionaires there is a skyrocketing of real estate price. More than the value of the land hype and sensationalism built around the real estate pushes price to unimaginable level. This is clear from the rental of mere 133 sq.ft shop  on Delhi’s Ramgarhia, Safdarjung Road which is opposite to AIIMS for Rs.12,09,000 per month. This is Rs.9,022 per sq.ft a month. This higher than New York’s Fifth Avenue which charges Rs.10 lakh for the same piece of shop, Hong Kong’s Causeqay Bay (Rs.9.8 lakh) and Avenue des Champs Elysees in Paris (Rs.6.25 lakh). Even in Khan Market of Delhi which was charging the costliest rent till yesterday got Rs1.45 lakh for the same size of shop in rent.<br />
<br />
Steep Rates<br />
The rates at which shops are <br />
Rented out in the world’s most ritzy locations<br />
<br />
Country                     City               Street                        Rental<br />
India                          Delhi             Safdarjung Road       Rs.12,09,000<br />
USA                           New York     5th Avenue                Rs.10,15,000<br />
Hong Kong                Hong Kong   Causeway Bay          Rs.  9,80,000<br />
France                        Paris              Champs Elysees       Rs.  6,25,000<br />
Italy                            Milan           Via Montenapoleone Rs.   5,40,000<br />
Ireland                        Dublin          Grafton Street            Rs.  4,50,000<br />
UK                              London         New Bond Street       Rs.4,45,000<br />
Japan                           Tokyo           Ginza                         Rs. 4,40,000<br />
Switzerland                 Zurich           Bahnhofstrasse          Rs.  4,00,000<br />
 <br />
<br />
Source: The Times of India 23.1.2009, p.1  3<br />
<br />
Is this world’s costliest shop for rent announces the arrival of economic giant? If someone thinks India’s economy is decided on the basis of high rents then it is misleading. India cannot be this alone. It can be this and that. Along with this world highest rented shop it also houses poorest places. Slumdog Millonaire showcases the other side of the nation. For the drip down welfare there should be a moderation of real estate prices. Government intervention may not be the best idea but at the same time private sector is not the complete solution. A mix of both without red tapism should be unveiled at the earliest to smoothen the real estate prices.<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Sat, 24 Jan 2009 03:53:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/575565</guid>
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                    <title>Rich and Poor Mallya</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/575561</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Vijay Mallya the colourful corporate honcho wears many hats at a time. He fancies Tipu Sultan’s sword, Ferraris, latest jets and costliest yachts. After UB group unveiled King Fisher airlines Mallya hogged global limelight for his entrepreneurial adventures. He turned off the low cost airlines cultures and tuned in king on the skies style. This was his successful turn around of the industry. He always broke stereotypes and set high standards. <br />
<br />
In the recession affected economy he chooses to be an ordinary industrialist rather than a smart corporate hero. He got submerged in the global corporate fashion of carrying begging bowl to the government quarters for bailout. A month back he applied for a bailout of his King Fisher. He told government authorities that he is almost broke and no money to sustain his airlines. While giving this dark picture about his financial situation he went on to spend lavishly on his personal fancies.<br />
<br />
 This contradictory lifestyle of Mallya had got him equated with other corporate fraudsters. In USA this double standards of corporate heads are common. While their companies are reeling under meltdown crisis their salaries and lifestyles are the same. They might have chucked out million workers but they have not scaled down their expenses.<br />
<br />
In the latest spin off Mallya had stirred public controversy over his buying intention of an island off Monte Carlo. The news report put that Mallya paid between $100 million and $150 million (Rs.500 to Rs.750 crore) for the private island near Monte Carlo. He puffed off the rumour. <br />
<br />
Mallya own islands in Maldives and Lakshadweep. He also bought 1000 acres of land in Himalayas. This land is going to be used for mountain tourism. The UB group chairman runs Mabula Game Lodge near Johannesburg in South Africa.  This lodge is 12,000 hectares which is one of the largest and finest private game reserves. <br />
<br />
The Times of India (23.1.2009) p.13 reports “Mallya’s lifestyle – the sheer lavishness of it – leaves most bedazzled. He has houses around the globe; castles in Scotland, town houses in London, Monte Carlo, Manhattan (Trump Towers), Sausalito and innumerable properties in India. While ‘Niladri in Mumbai and ‘Kingfisher Villa’ in Goa are the best known, he has hidden gems like the heritage, colonial bungalow with the best garden in Ooty, besides houses in Delhi and his home town Bangalore.<br />
<br />
His three yatchs: Idian Empress, Indian Princess and Kalizma, his four private jets, his 240 strong vintage car collection, his Force India Formula 1 tem and thoroughbreds not to mention the Porsches, Bentleys, Maserattis and Ferraris make Mallya the most colourful of Indian businessmen.”<br />
<br />
One should not complain about Mallay’s lifestyles. As long as he keep his business profit and loss to himself. During profit session he did not help Government with funds nor he gave a good sum for the social cause. But he came to the government to eliminate his loss and asked for waiving off the pending arrears with AAI and oil PSUs. This is totally contradictory and shames him in the eyes of public. Whatever he fancies is tabloid news and it helps others to compete for such a lifestyle. Although it negatively races the consumer culture it can be allowed. One thing which cannot be tolerated is his selective application of rich and poor status of himself according to the situations. If he wants social support and government aid he should help both when his finances are sound.<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Sat, 24 Jan 2009 03:49:00 EST</pubDate> 
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                    <title>Softpedaling Criminals</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/575559</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Freeing hardcore criminals before their punishment schedule goes off is currently the world fashion. From Guantanamo Bay to India, governments are tuned into release criminals. The most pressing problem is human rights. In the Gutanamo Bay the American troops have crossed all limits and tortured the detainees below all human methods. In the seven years of Bay there were four suicides, hunger strikes an innumerable complains about third grade tortures. This has created anger among the public on the American government. That is the reason Barack Obama had issued his first presidential order to close the infamous Bay in next one year and stop all sorts of punishment execution for next 120 days. <br />
<br />
<br />
“The guiding principles for closing the center should be protecting our national security, respecting the Geneva Conventions and the rule of law, and respecting the existing institutions of justice in this country. I also believe we should revitalize efforts to transfer detainees to their countries of origin or other countries whenever that would be consistent with these principles. Closing this center and satisfying these principles will take tie and is the work of many departments and agencies.” Said Admiral Blair in a statement<br />
<br />
Obama wants to close all the secret camps of USA. The order disarms CIA from torturing detainees and takes away its boundless powers.  He may want to convey the humane angle of his personality. But this has caught the minds of other countries rulers too. One can feel that there is a swing on the extreme right- from torture to total freedom for the criminals. This does not augur well for the smooth going of society. Punishments are necessary to control crime. <br />
<br />
In India the criminal procedure code (Crpc) got amended without much discussion in the Lok Sabha. The new amendments are soft on the criminals. Jag Suraiya writes in The Times of India (21.1.2009) “Who says the law is an ass? If you’re a criminal, or a would-be criminal, in India the law is a gas. And it just gassier. On December 23, 2008, the Lok Sabha gave criminality a Christmas bonaza by passing a radically amended Criminal Procedure Code Bill – along with seven other Bills all of which were passed within a mere 17 minutes without any time-wasting frivolities such as debate and discussion – which, in effect, prevents law enforcement authorities from arresting someone who has committed a crime which carries a prison sentence of up to seven years.”<br />
<br />
For false way of safeguarding human rights the government should not sacrificing its prime duty of steering a crime minimal society. One reason for this new amendment to relax detention rules may be the overflowing number of prisoners and exorbitant cost in maintaining them. Again there was no fair play in the detention. For petty crime of spitting pan on the enemy’s face a man was jailed for 2 years. This is another extreme way of punishment. At present 30 million cases are pending in India’s courts. Naturally the undertrials are growing in the jails. <br />
Maharastra            15,784<br />
Madhy Pradesh      15,777<br />
The 1,140 central, district and sub jails with total capacity of 2,33,543, currently house 3,26,519 inmates of which as many as 66.7 per cent are undertrials. Each prisoner, convict or undertrial costs the taxpayer an average of Rs.11,901.30 (2003-04) figures per annum in maintenance.<br />
<br />
The government of India should apply logic and understand the consequences of the relaxation given to the hardcore criminals. While improving the policing and legal mindsets it should be tough on crime. Already innumerable loopholes block the law enforcing authorities in swiftly punishing the criminals. This is what happens if the government over centralizes its administration. Criminal justice is the core area of governance. Can we say the Indian forefathers were visionaries to enforce village level justice system. If we modernized the village legal systems without completely destroying it India may not have to come to the stage where justice takes four decades to come.<br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Sat, 24 Jan 2009 03:47:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/575559</guid>
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                    <title>Judges should be accountable</title> 
                    <link>http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/573573</link> 
                    <description><![CDATA[Some people wanted to escape from accountability. Some are protected due to their sensitive jobs. Judiciary has the immunity from day-to-day pin pricks. This is given to the guardians of constitution to defend them from any sort of trouble. A professional without protection cannot deliver his duty properly. Unfortunately this magnanimous rule has been misused by few people in the judiciary. In the wave of open information some people are demanding that judges should be brought under the income disclosure and be available for scrutiny. This has pros and cons.<br />
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With judiciary getting tainted in several corruption cases including the infamous Provident Fund case of Ghaziabad, the demand to include judges in the asset disclosure sounds reasonable. Extreme corruption and nepotism have infiltrated into every sphere of the society. Judiciary is not an exception. Most times India is proud to have efficient and honest judges. Sometimes black cats enter judiciary and spoil the image of the highest rule safeguarding body. They are big blot in the society.<br />
<br />
Instead of putting a blanket ban on scrutiny of judges there should be efficient mechanism to expose corrupt elements and at the same protect the honest officers. Without a visionary approach to the present problem, judiciary will be messed up. An internal mechanism to monitor the wealth of judges can be installed. Although the vigilance department is meant to tap the illegal eagles in government machinery its efficiency is doubted. <br />
<br />
Fali S. Nariman the eminent jurist says “Judges of the highest court who have powers to life and death over us citizens, judges who can (and do) send people to jail to jail for contempt of its order must – I repeat must – show that they too are amenable to good practice”<br />
<br />
“that is how they earn the respect of us commoners. We in India learn by example – never by precept. For judges of the highest court to litigate as to whether or not they should disclose their assets is as bad as judges going to the court on whether it was lawful for income tax to be deducted from the salaries they get! We have good judges, but we need more judicial wisdom”.<br />
<br />
The Central Information Commission has asked judges to disclose their assets after a petition filled. The Delhi High Court stayed the order and now it has gone to the Supreme Court. Instead of dismissing the petition the Supreme Court must impose a code of self-regulation for judges to maintain integrity. The vigilance department should be active to tap erring judges and pass on the higher authorities for weeding them out immediately. <br />
]]></description> 
					<pubDate>Wed, 21 Jan 2009 02:41:00 EST</pubDate> 
					<guid isPermaLink="true">http://Prabaharan.tigblog.org/post/573573</guid>
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