Inside This Brief Editorial Team Maritime Editorial………….Pg.4 Cdr Gurpreet S Khurana
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Comparative Connections a Triannual E-Journal on East Asian Bilateral Relations
Comparative Connections A Triannual E-Journal on East Asian Bilateral Relations China-Russia Relations: Navigating through the Ukraine Storm Yu Bin Wittenberg University Against the backdrop of escalating violence in Ukraine, Sino-Russian relations were on the fast track over the past four months in three broad areas: strategic coordination, economics, and mil- mil relations. This was particularly evident during President Putin’s state visit to China in late May when the two countries inked a 30-year, $400 billion gas deal after 20 years of hard negotiation. Meanwhile, the two navies were drilling off the East China Sea coast and the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia (CICA) was being held in Shanghai. Beyond this, Moscow and Beijing were instrumental in pushing the creation of the $50 billion BRICS development bank and a $100 billion reserve fund after years of frustrated waiting for a bigger voice for the developing world in the IMF and World Bank. Putin in Shanghai for state visit and more President Vladimir Putin traveled to Shanghai on May 20-21 to meet Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping. This was the seventh time they have met since March 2013 when Xi assumed the presidency in China. The trip was made against a backdrop of a deepening crisis in Ukraine: 42 pro-Russian activists were killed in the Odessa fire on May 2 and pro-Russian separatists in Donetsk and Luhansk declared independence on May 11. Four days after Putin’s China trip, the Ukrainian Army unveiled its “anti-terrorist operations,” and on July 17 Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 was downed. -
Unexpected Feature of the Lepidoptera Assemblages on The
ioprospe , B cti ity ng rs a e n iv d d D o i e v B e f l Journal of Biodiversity, Bioprospecting o o l p a m n r e Beljaev, J Biodivers Biopros Dev 2014, 1:1 n u t o J ISSN: 2376-0214 and Development DOI: 10.4172/2376-0214.1000113 Research Article Open Access Unexpected Feature of the Lepidoptera Assemblages on the Small Shelf Islands in the Peter the Great Gulf (Sea of Japan, South of Russian Far East) Evgeny A Beljaev* Institute of Biology and Soil Science, Vladivostok, Russia *Corresponding author: Evgeny A. Beljaev, Institute of Biology and Soil Science, Far Eastern Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Vladivostok, 690022, Russia, Tel: +74232311133; Fax:+7423310193; E-mail: [email protected] Received date: Apr 02, 2014, Accepted date: May 26, 2014, Publication date: May 29, 2014 Copyright: © 2014 Beljaev EA. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Abstract The article describes and discusses unexpected feature of agrological structure of the moths' species assemblages on four small shelf islands in the Peter the Great Gulf (Sea of Japan, south of Russian Far East). Before insect fauna of these islands was almost unknown. The study was conducted according to standard entomological procedures of insect collecting and chorological analysis of local faunas. Statistical analysis was performed using the detrended correspondence analysis. Typification of areas was made following the principles by Gorodkov. -
Coleoptera Carabidae
Biodiversity Journal , 2012, 3 (4): 479-486 Preliminary notice on the genus Carabus Linnaeus, 1758 (Co - leoptera Carabidae) of the islands of Peter the Great Gulf in the far East of Russia, Primorski province, Vladivostok area with description of a new subspecies Ivan Rapuzzi Via Cialla, 47 - 33040 Prepotto, Udine, Italy; e-mail: [email protected] ABSTRACT In the present paper the Fauna of Carabus Linnaeus, 1758 of some islands of the Peter the Great Gulf in the Far East of Russia (Vladivostok area) is investigated. After the study of large series of Carabus specimens from the islands and the mainland a new subspecies, Carabus (Morphocarabus) hummeli putyatini n. ssp., is described and figured; moreover, comparative notes with the closest taxa are provided. KEY WORDS Carabus ; new subspecies; Peter the Great Gulf; Vladivostok; Russia. Received 12.05.2012; accepted 24.06.2012; printed 30.12.2012 Proceedings of the 1 st International Congress “Insularity and Biodiversity”, May 11 th -13 th , 2012 - Palermo (Italy) INTRODUCTION The first notice for the genus Carabus for the Is - lands of Peter the Great Gulf was the paper dated The Peter the Great Gulf is the largest gulf of the 1932 by Semenov and Znojko with the description Sea of Japan adjoining the cost of Primorski Krai of C. (Aulonocarabus) praedo Semenov & Znojko, (Fig. 1). The Muravyov-Amursky Peninsula and a 1932 now considered a mere synonym of C. (Aulo - chain of outlying islands divide the gulf of about nocarabus) careniger careniger Chaudoir, 1863 by 6,000 km 2 into the Amur Bay and the Ussuri Bay. -
The Crisis After the Crisis: How Ladakh Will Shape India's Competition with China
ANALYSIS The Crisis after the Crisis: How Ladakh will Shape India’s Competition with China ARZAN TARAPORE MAY 2021 THE CRISIS AFTER THE CRISIS: HOW LADAKH WILL SHAPE INDIA’S COMPETITION WITH CHINA The Lowy Institute is an independent policy think tank. Its mandate ranges across all the dimensions of international policy debate in Australia — economic, political and strategic — and it is not limited to a particular geographic region. Its two core tasks are to: • produce distinctive research and fresh policy options for Australia’s international policy and to contribute to the wider international debate • promote discussion of Australia’s role in the world by providing an accessible and high-quality forum for discussion of Australian international relations through debates, seminars, lectures, dialogues and conferences. Lowy Institute Analyses are short papers analysing recent international trends and events and their policy implications. The views expressed in this paper are entirely the authors’ own and not those of the Lowy Institute. ANALYSIS THE CRISIS AFTER THE CRISIS: HOW LADAKH WILL SHAPE INDIA’S COMPETITION WITH CHINA KEY FINDINGS • The still-unresolved Ladakh crisis has created a new strategic reality for India, marked by renewed political hostility with China, and an increased militarization of the Line of Actual Control. • This new strategic reality imposes unequal costs on India and China. India is likely to defer much-needed military modernization and maritime expansion into the Indian Ocean – which would impair its ability to compete strategically with China. • In contrast, China incurred only marginal material costs; it was probably more concerned with the prospect of continued deterioration in its relationship with India. -
Corporate Presentation
Global Ports Investments PLC Corporate Presentation January 2018 1 Definitions for terms marked in this presentation with capital letters are provided in the Appendices at pages 27-28 DISCLAIMER Information contained in this presentation concerning Global Ports Investments PLC, a company organised and existing under the laws of Cyprus (the “Company”, and together with its subsidiaries and joint ventures, “Global Ports” or the “Group”), is for general information purposes only. The opinions presented herein are based on general information gathered at the time of writing and are subject to change without notice. The Company relies on information obtained from sources believed to be reliable but does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness. These materials may contain forward-looking statements regarding future events or the future financial performance of the Group. You can identify forward looking statements by terms such as “expect”, “believe”, “estimate”, “anticipate”, “intend”, “will”, “could”, “may”, or “might”, the negative of such terms or other similar expressions. These forward-looking statements include matters that are not historical facts and statements regarding the Company’s and its shareholders’ intentions, beliefs or current expectations concerning, among other things, the Group’s results of operations, financial condition, liquidity, prospects, growth, strategies, and the industry in which the Company operates. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, because they relate to events and depend on circumstances that may or may not occur in the future. The Company cautions you that forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and that the Group’s actual results of operations, financial condition, liquidity, prospects, growth, strategies and the development of the industry in which the Company operates may differ materially from those described in or suggested by the forward-looking statements contained in these materials. -
Strategy for South Asia
See page 7 August-September 2014 Volume 9 No. 4 `100.00 (India-Based Buyer Only) Indispensable Reference Yearbook Milita SP’s SP’s 2014- Military r y Yearbook 2015 since 1965 42nd isSUE 2015 2014 - www.spsmilitaryyearbook.com Finmeccanica and India: www.spsnavalforces.com in the spirit of partnership. ROUNDUP SP's MYB 1415 ADVERT.indd 1 07/05/14 2:46 PM 42nd isSUE 42nd THE ONLY NAVAL MAGAZINE FOR NAVIES ACROSS ASIA-PACIFIC PAGE 4 EDITOR-in-chief Price: Inland Rs 8,275.00; JAYant bARANWAL COVER STORY Foreign (Surface Mail): Stg. £ 436.00; US$ 776.00 NavalSP military yearbook 110x181_11.indd 1 Combat Management27/06/12 10.39 SP's MYB Cover 2014-2015_Final.indd 1 heritage_220-275_2013-10-11.indd 1 11/10/13 10:36 Systems 18/04/14 11:12 AM Naval Combat Management System is a software-intensive system which has to be flexible enough to operate in a complex naval battle environment Lt General Naresh Chand (Retd) China’s Maritime PAGE 6 Breaking New Grounds in Indigenous Warship Building Strategy for South Asia The idea of Maritime Silk Road was to increase maritime cooperation between China and the ASEAN countries and would involve diplomacy and economic development GRAPHIC: Sonu S. Bisht “INS Kolkata is a floating technology marvel. It will provide security to those who use the sea route to carry out trade activities.” CHINA —Prime Minister Narendra Modi IRAN Rear Admiral Sushil Ramsay (Retd) PAKISTAN PAGE 8 Helicopter Voids Hit Navy’s Operations BANGLADESH Modern multi-role helicopters operate nearly autonomously in reconnaissance, ASW, anti- -
Ministry of Defence Government of India
MINISTRY OF DEFENCE Government of India www.mod.nic.in About messages Mandate Mandate “To preserve peace and harmony and promote all round development, it is imperative for us to have an effective deterrence TASKS and a strong defence. Though as a Nation we are firmly committed to peace, we must be prepared to use our might to safeguard the ORGANISATION sovereignty of our Nation, should the need ever arise. * Our Armed Forces give us the confidence in the nation’s ability to face any aggression and safeguard its interests” ** ACHIEVEMENTS Shri Pranab Mukherjee President of India * President’s Standard awarding ceremony Tezpur / ** Air Force Day Message MINISTRY OF DEFENCE Government of India 1/50 www.mod.nic.in About messages Mandate Mandate TASKS ORGANISATION which represent the world’s largest democracy, are second to none in professionalism, valour, commitment, service and duty. The Armed Forces have always vindicated the faith and confidence that people of India placed in them, whether it is for our nation’s security, or for relief in times ACHIEVEMENTS of natural calamities. Shri Narendra Modi Prime Minister of India At the Combined Commanders’ Conference MINISTRY OF DEFENCE Government of India 2/50 www.mod.nic.in About messages Mandate Manohar Parrikar Rao Inderjit Singh Mandate RAKSHA MANTRI RAKSHA RAJYA MANTRI PROLOGUE TASKS The Government of India is responsible for ensuring the Defence of India. The Supreme ORGANISATION Command of the Armed Forces vests in the President of India. The responsibility for Defence of the country rests with the Cabinet. This is discharged through the Ministry of Defence, which provides the policy framework and wherewithal to the Armed Forces to discharge their responsibilities for defence of the country. -
PICES Sci. Rep. No. 56, 2020
ISBN 978-1-927797-38-9 ISSN 1198-273X PICES SCIENTIFIC REPORT No. 56, 2020 Report of Working Group 31 on Emerging Topics in Marine Pollution PICES Scientific Report No. 56 2020 Report of Working Group 31 on Emerging Topics in Marine Pollution Edited by Juan José Alava, Olga N. Lukyanova, Peter S. Ross and Won Joon Shim February 2020 North Pacific Marine Science Organization (PICES) P.O. Box 6000, Sidney, BC, V8L 4B2, Canada www.pices.int PICES Scientific Reports Published since 1993, the PICES Scientific Report series includes final reports of PICES expert groups, proceedings of PICES workshops, data reports and reports of planning activities. Formal peer reviews of the scientific content of these publications are not generally conducted. PICES Scientific Reports can be found at: https://meetings.pices.int/publications/scientific-reports This report was developed under the guidance of the PICES Science Board and its Marine Environmental Quality Committee. The views expressed in this report are those of participating scientists under their responsibilities. Front cover From top: Killer whales (Orcinus orca) offshore from a pulp mill, Strait of Georgia (Photo credit: Dr. Lance Barrett-Lennard, Ocean Wise/Vancouver Aquarium); Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus) entangled in netting gear in Baynes Sound, Strait of Georgia (Photo credit: courtesy of Denman Island resident, Association of Denman Island Marine Stewards-ADIMS); marine debris accumulation after the passing of a typhoon, Osaka Bay (Photo credit: Dr. Hideaki Maki, NIES); Kobe University T/S Fukae-maru undergoing antifouling procedure (Photo credit: Dr. Yohiji Yano, Kobe University). This document should be cited as follows: Alava, J.J., Lukyanova, O.N., Ross, P.S. -
Understanding of Floating Marine Litter Distribution in the NOWPAP Region
1312-32, Yuseong-daero, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 34103, Republic of Korea Korea Research Institute of Ships and Ocean Engineering (KRISO) Tel: (+82-42) 866-3638, FAX: (+82-42) 866-3630 E-mail: [email protected] Website: http://merrac.nowpap.org Understanding of floating marine litter distribution in the NOWPAP region Understanding of floating marine litter distribution in the NOWPAP region 1312-32, Yuseong-daero, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 34103, Republic of Korea Korea Research Institute of Ships & Ocean Engineering (KRISO) Tel: (+82-42) 866-3638, FAX: (+82-42) 866-3630 E-mail: [email protected] Website: http://merrac.nowpap.org NOWPAP MERRAC 1312-32, Yuseong-daero, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 34103, Republic of Korea Korea Research Institute of Ships and Ocean Engineering (KRISO) Tel: (+82-42) 866-3638, FAX: (+82-42) 866-3630 E-mail: [email protected] Website: http://merrac.nowpap.org Understanding of floating marine litter distribution in the NOWPAP region First Published in 2017 by Marine Environmental Emergency Preparedness and Response Regional Activity Centre the Northwest Pacific Action Plan (NOWPAP MERRAC) 1312-32, Yuseong-daero, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 34103, Republic of Korea Korea Research Institute of Ships & Ocean Engineering (KRISO) Printed in Republic of Korea by Sinkwangsa ISBN 978-89-93604-36-8 Copyright © NOWPAP MERRAC 2017 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may, for sales purposes, be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, electrostatic, magnetic tape, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without prior permission in writing from the NOWPAP MERRAC. For bibliographical purposes this document may be cited as: MERRAC Technical Report No. -
MONTHLY November 2020 CONTENTS
MONTHLY November 2020 CONTENTS 12 19 30 RUSSIA’S CORONAVIRUS IN THE INTEREST OF U.S.-RUSSIA NAVY INCIDENT VACCINE RACE CONTINUES THE KREMLIN? RUSSIAN IN THE NORTH PACIFIC OLIGARCH CREATES FAR-RIGHT MOVEMENT IN THE INTEREST OF THE KREMLIN? MOLDOVA PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION: RUSSIAN OLIGARCH CREATES FAR-RIGHT 3 RUSSIA HELPS DODON 19 MOVEMENT WEAK ROUBLE, TIGHT BUDGET: NEW LAVROV VISITS MINSK: LOCKDOWN WOULD SMASH RUSSIAN RUSSIA WANTS LUKASHENKO 4 ECONOMY 20 TO IMPLEMENT COMMITMENTS U.S. ELECTION: WHAT SECHIN’S “STEEL” BUSINESS RAISES SERIOUS 6 IS RUSSIA COUNTING ON? 22 DOUBTS RUSSIAN POLICE AND INTELLIGENCE DISAGREE OVER WHAT REALLY HAPPENED MOLDOVA’S SANDU ON WITHDRAWING 7 TO NAVALNY 24 RUSSIAN FORCES FROM TRANSNISTRIA RUSSIA DEPLOYS ITS “PEACEKEEPERS” OPEC+ STUTTERS OVER OIL CUT DEAL, 9 TO NAGORNO-KARABAKH 25 RUSSIA’S SECHIN FORECASTS OIL PRICES RUSSIA LAUNCHES CABINET RESHUFFLE TURMOIL OVER TURKSTREAM LOAN: IS 10 ALSO IN ENERGY MINISTRY 27 SERBIAN LEG OF THE PIPELINE IN DANGER? RUSSIA’S CORONAVIRUS VACCINE RACE RUSSIA POURS MONEY 12 CONTINUES 28 INTO IRAQI OILFIELDS MORE LIBYAN OIL CAUSES HEADACHE MOLDOVA ELECTION: SANDU FOR RUSSIANS MORE LIBYAN OIL CAUSES 14 SMASHES RUSSIA’S CANDIDATE 30 HEADACHE FOR RUSSIANS ROSNEFT AND GAZPROM NEFT LET FOREIGN INVESTORS ENTER ARCTIC U.S.-RUSSIA NAVY INCIDENT 16 PROJECTS 30 IN THE NORTH PACIFIC RUSSIAN INSPECTION: LAVROV, SHOIGU VISIT ARMENIA ROSNEFT PLANS TO SELL SOME DEPOSITS 17 AND AZERBAIJAN 31 AMID COSTLY VOSTOK OIL PROJECT 2 www.warsawinstitute.org SOURCE: KREMLIN.RU 2 November 2020 MOLDOVA PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION: RUSSIA HELPS DODON Pro-Western opposition leader Maia Sandu secured a surprise lead against Moldova’s current president Igor Dodon. -
Download Excerpt (Pdf-Format)
Introduction An arranged marriage After 1830, it seems to have been an unwritten rule that anyone appointed governor of Russian America had to bring a wife with him. The Board of Directors of the Russian American Company wanted no mistresses in the governor’s house at Sitka. It was a matter of upholding the dignity and morals of the colonial administration – the representative of Russian empire and Christian civilisation in these remote parts of the world. Governors of the colonies in Alaska were normally appointed for a period of fi ve years, and the Board could very well imagine the privations and temptations con- nected with being a lonesome man at this northern outpost of civilisation, without a spouse of European upbringing and Christian belief to stand by his side. When the fi rst Russian missionaries arrived in Alaska in 1794 to preach the gospel to the heathens, they were appalled to fi nd their compatriots – fur hunters and merchants – living in unconjugal, or even polygamous relationships with native women.1 One of the early governors left behind a native mistress and their three illegitimate children on returning home after his term in Alaska.2 Arriving at Sitka in 1830, Baron Ferdinand Wrangel was the fi rst governor to bring his wife with him from Russia. “Her coming was an event of some import, for the young baroness transformed life in the rough frontier capital. The old ‘castle’ which was the Chief Manager’s residence now featured formal dinners and balls. The casual relationships of company employees with the local women gave way to permanent wedlock, and the old roistering social life of the town acquired a higher tone”.3 All later Russian governors of Alaska were to follow the Wrangels’ example. -
(Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae): Preliminary Faunistic Analysis Margarita G
ioprospe , B cti ity ng rs a e n iv d d D o i e v B e f l Journal of Biodiversity, Bioprospecting o o l p a m Ponomarenko, J Biodivers Biopros Dev 2014, 2:1 n r e n u t o J DOI: 10.4172/ijbbd.1000135 ISSN: 2376-0214 and Development Research Article Open Access Gelechiid Moths from the Islands of Peter the Great Gulf (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae): Preliminary Faunistic Analysis Margarita G. Ponomarenko* Institute of Biology and Soil Science, Far Eastern Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Far Eastern Federal University, Vladivostok, Russia *Corresponding author: Margarita G. Ponomarenko, Leading scientific researcher, Laboratory of Entomology, Institute of Biology and Soil Science, Far Eastern Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Vladivostok-22, Russia, Tel: +7 (423)2311133; E-mail: [email protected] Received date: Jul 08, 2014, Accepted date: Nov 06, 2014, Publication date: Nov 10, 2014 Copyright: © 2014 Ponomarenko MG. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Abstract The comparative faunistic analysis of species diversity of family Gelechiidae in Islands of Peter the Great Gulf and in neighboring continental territories is made. The island fauna turned out depleted because of small size of islands, limited landscape diversity and impossibility of active moth migration due to their weak flying abilities. However the concentration of species diversity in islands is almost two orders of magnitude larger than that in continental part.