Page7.Qxd (Page 1)
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Jingoism Will Not Be Able to Surmount the Deep Discontent, Says Manish Tewari
Interview Jingoism will not be able to surmount the deep discontent, says Manish Tewari SMITA GUPTA Former Union Minister Manish Tewari. FIle photo: K. Murali Kumar The Balakot bombings that followed the terror strike in Pulwama have given an edge to the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP)’s election plank of muscular nationalism and has, for the moment, at least, taken the spotlight off the failures of the Narendra Modi government. In this interview, former Information and Broadcasting Minister Manish Tewari — who is also a Distinguished Senior Fellow at The Atlantic Council’s South Asia Centre — talks to Smita Gupta, Senior Fellow, The Hindu Centre for Politics and Public Policy, New Delhi,about the impact of the BJP’s nationalism card in the upcoming general elections, the role of the media in amplifying the BJP’s message, why the Congress has been circumspect on the subject and whether it is appropriate to use national security as an election issue. He also points out that while the Balakot bombings appeased public opinion to some extent, it has also created a new strategic dynamic on the sub-continent that will make it tougher for future governments to deal with incidents of terror. Excerpts: ill the Pulwama attack, the opposition’s narrative of unemployment being at a 45-year high, rural distress, the negative impact of T demonetisation, etc appeared to be gaining ground in the public discourse. But after the Balakot air strikes, that narrative appears to have changed. Pakistan, war, terrorism appear to be the preferred subjects. Does this not give the advantage back to the BJP? There are two parallel discourses: there is a discourse in the ether which is about Pakistan, Kashmir and war hanging low over the subcontinent. -
Events; Appointments; Etc - August 2013
Events; Appointments; Etc - August 2013 BACK APPOINTED; ELECTED; Etc. Hassan Rowhani: He has been elected as the President of Iran. Raghuram Rajan: Chief Economic Adviser to UPA government, he has been appointed as the Governor of Reserve Bank Of India (RBI). Dilip Trivedi: Senior IPS officer, he has been appointed as the Chief of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF). DISTINGUISHED VISITORS G.L. Peiris: External Affairs Minister of Sri Lanka. He came to invite Prime Minister Manmohan Singh for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meet in Colombo in November. Prime Minister Singh, during his talk with Mr Peiris, asked Sri Lanka to stand by its commitment not to dilute the 13th Amendment on devolution of powers to the provinces and sought an early repatriation of Indian fishermen presently in the custody of the Lankan authorities. Mohammad Karim Khalili: Vice President o Afghanistan. During his three-day visit security issues and trade and other bilateral issues were discussed. Nuri al-Maliki: Prime Minister of Iraq. The visit was the first high-level bilateral trip in 38 years. Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had visited Iraq in 1975. Maliki’s trip saw India and Iraq sign an agreement on energy cooperation. Tshering Tobgay: Prime Minister of Bhutan. This was his first overseas visit after assuming office in July 2013. He briefed New Delhi on the talks between his country and China over their boundary dispute, which has strategic implications for India’s security. DIED Pandit Raghunath Panigrahi: Eminent Indian classical singer and music director from Odisha, better known as a noted vocalist of Jayadeva’s ‘Gita Govind’, he died on 25 August 2013. -
Standing Committee on External Affairs (2012-2013)
STANDING COMMITTEE 18 ON EXTERNAL AFFAIRS (2012-2013) FIFTEENTH LOK SABHA MINISTRY OF OVERSEAS INDIAN AFFAIRS [Action Taken on the recommendations contained in the Thirteenth Report (15th Lok Sabha) on Demands for Grants of the Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs for the year 2012-13] EIGHTEENTH REPORT LOK SABHA SECRETARIAT NEW DELHI March, 2013/Phalguna, 1934 (Saka) EIGHTEENTH REPORT STANDING COMMITTEE ON EXTERNAL AFFAIRS (2012-2013) (FIFTEENTH LOK SABHA) MINISTRY OF OVERSEAS INDIAN AFFAIRS [Action Taken on the observations/recommendations contained in the Thirteenth Report (15th Lok Sabha) on Demands for Grants of the Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs for the year 2012-13] Presented to Lok Sabha on14th March, 2013 Laid in Rajya Sabha on 14th March,, 2013 LOK SABHA SECRETARIAT NEW DELHI March, 2013/Phalguna,1934 (Saka) COEA NO. 101_ Price : Rs. ................. © 2013 by Lok Sabha Secretariat Published under Rule 382 of the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha (Thirteenth Edition) and Printed by CONTENTS PAGE COMPOSITION OF THE COMMITTEE 2012-2013……………………… (iii) INTRODUCTION……………………………………………………………… (v) Chapter I Report…………………………………………………………. 1 Chapter II Recommendations/Observations which have been accepted by the Government………………………………... 17 Chapter III Recommendations/Observations which the Committee do not desire to pursue in view of the Government’s Replies...… 27 Chapter IV Recommendations/Observations in respect of which Replies of Government have not been accepted by the Committee and require reiteration…………………………..…………… 28 Chapter V Recommendations/Observations in respect of which Final Replies of the Government are still awaited……………… 31 APPENDICES I. Minutes of the sitting of the Committee 33 held on 12.03.2013……………………………………………… II. -
Resume of Work Done by Lok Sabha
RESUME OF WORK DONE BY LOK SABHA FIFTEENTH LOK SABHA EIGHTH SESSION, 2011 LOK SABHA SECRETARIAT, NEW DELHI November, 2011/Kartika, 1933 (Saka) RESUMÉ OF WORK DONE BY LOK SABHA FIFTEENTH LOK SABHA—EIGHTH SESSION 1 August, 2011 to 8 September, 2011 LOK SABHA SECRETARIAT NEW DELHI November, 2011/Kartika, 1933 (Saka) T.O. No. 3/15 LS Vol. VIII © 2011 BY LOK SABHA SECRETARIAT Published under Rule 382 of the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha (Fourteenth Edition) and Printed by the General Manager, Government of India Press, Minto Road, New Delhi. PREFACE This Publication contains a brief resume of work done in the Fifteenth Lok Sabha during the Eighth Session i.e. from the 1 August, 2011 to 8 September, 2011. NEW DELHI; T.K. VISWANATHAN, November, 2011 Secretary-General. Kartika, 1933 (Saka) CONTENTS PAGE(S) 1. DURATION OF SESSION . 1 2. BILLS (i) Government Bills . 2 (ii) Bills referred to Standing Committees . 6 (iii) Private Members' Bills . 11 3. CALLING A TTENTION . 19 4. COMMITTEES (i) Financial Committees . 20 (ii) Standing Committees . 21 (iii) Committees other than Financial and Standing Committees . 23 5. DIVISIONS . 26 6. FINANCIAL BUSINESS General Budget . 27 7. MEMBERS ELECTED IN BYE-ELECTION . 28 8. MOTIONS (i) Motions under Rules 191 and 342 . 29 (ii) Motions under Rule 388 . 31 9. OATH/AFFIRMATION . 32 10. OBITUARY AND OTHER REFERENCES . 33 11. PAPERS LAID ON THE TABLE . 37 12. PETITIONS . 38 (iii) (iv) PAGE(S) 13. QUESTIONS (i) Starred . 39 (ii) Short Notice . 39 (iii) Unstarred . 39 (iv) Half-an-Hour Discussion . -
Page5final.Qxd (Page 1)
DAILY EXCELSIOR, JAMMU WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 2021 (PAGE 5) After bird flu scare in HP, R’sthan, Advisor Farooq reviews infrastructural needs Two days Kargil Losar Festival inaugurated Excelsior Correspondent chief guest Mubarak Shah Nagvi Balti, Muhammad Yasin Ansari, of Fruit & Vegetable Mandi Complex Narwal said that 2020 was a tough year Skarma Junglay, Akbar Ali Khan UT Govt sounds alert in J&K Excelsior Correspondent officers and field functionaries to KARGIL, Jan 5: Acting for the whole humanity due to Shaheen, Raza Amjad Badgami, work with dedication, honesty and Chairman and Chief Executive challenges thrown by the Ghulam Nabi Skith, Abdul *No need to be panicky: Chief WLW JAMMU, Jan 5: Advisor to sincerity to create awareness Councillor (CEC), LAHDC, COVID-19 pandemic and hoped Rehman Misbahi, Ghulam Lieutenant Governor, Farooq regarding various technological Kargil Mubarak Shah Nagvi that the New Year brings happi- Murtaza Advocate, and Aga Syed Excelsior Correspondent any of the birds, is infected with common teals, purple swamp Khan, today reviewed functioning interventions and farmers welfare Kazim. the dreaded avian influenza. hens, Indian moor hens, black- of Department of Horticulture schemes. He said that adoption of The paper read- JAMMU, Jan 5: After the Gupta said though the winged stilts, cormorants, egrets Planning and Marketing besides such measures will improve the ing and short story neighbouring state Himachal J&K Government has sounded and green shanks. During win- infrastructural needs of Vegetable living standards of farmers by get- recital sessions com- Pradesh besides Rajasthan, alert but there is no need to be ters, the wetland is visited by Mandi Complex Narwal at Kissan ting fair and better remunerative prised of two reported some cases of bird flu, panicky. -
Tibetan Migration to India
Tibetan migration to India Why, when, how and with what consequences ? Charlotte Pehrson BA Thesis Human Geography (SGE302) Departmentof Social and Economic Geography Lund University Autumn Term 2003 Supervisor: Franz-Michael Rundquist ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I am grateful to a number of individuals for helping me to complete this essay. Many thanks to Ulla Thoresen and Erik Törner for agreeing to be interviewed as well as for helping me finding relevant material and letting me test my ideas on them. I would also like to express my gratitude to Janusz Lipinski at IM in Lund for lending me material. Special thanks must be given to Louise Fournier at TIN in London for her kind assistance in providing me with material and for helping me to find my way among the bookshelves at the TIN office. Last but definitely not least, I would like to thank my supervisor Franz-Michael Rundquist. For contact with the author, please e-mail: [email protected] 2 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.......................................................................................................... 2 LIST OF MAPS AND FIGURES................................................................................................. 4 LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS....................................................................................................... 4 1. INTRODUCTION ..................................................................................................................... 6 1.2 PURPOSE ............................................................................................................................... -
Standing Committee on Finance (2019-20)
10 STANDING COMMITTEE ON FINANCE (2019-20) SEVENTEENTH LOK SABHA MINISTRY OF PLANNING DEMANDS FOR GRANTS (2020-21) TENTH REPORT LOK SABHA SECRETARIAT NEW DELHI March, 2020 / Phalguna, 1941 (Saka) TENTH REPORT STANDING COMMITTEE ON FINANCE (2019-20) (SEVENTEENTH LOK SABHA) MINISTRY OF PLANNING DEMANDS FOR GRANTS (2020-21) Presented to Lok Sabha on March, 2020 Laid in Rajya Sabha on March, 2020 LOK SABHA SECRETARIAT NEW DELHI March, 2020 / Phalguna, 1941 (Saka) CONTENTS Page Nos. COMPOSITION OF THE COMMITTEE....................... (iii) INTRODUCTION...................................................... (iv) PART - I Chapter-I Introductory 1 Chapter-II Analysis of Demands for Grants (2020-21) 3 Chapter-III Development Monitoring And Evaluation Office (DMEO) 11 Chapter-IV Atal Innovation Mission (AIM) & Self-Employment and Talent Utilisation (SETU) 16 Chapter-V Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 19 PART - II Observations / Recommendations of the Committee 22-26 ANNEXURE Minutes of the Sittings held on 03 March, 2020 and 06 March, 2020 COMPOSITION OF STANDING COMMITTEE ON FINANCE (2019-20) Shri Jayant Sinha - Chairperson MEMBERS LOK SABHA 2. Shri S.S. Ahluwalia 3. Shri Subhash Chandra Baheria 4. Shri Vallabhaneni Balashowry 5. Shri Shrirang Appa Barne 6. Dr. Subhash Ramrao Bhamre 7. Smt. Sunita Duggal 8. Shri Gaurav Gogoi 9. Shri Sudheer Gupta 10. Smt. Darshana Vikram Jardosh 11. Shri Manoj Kishorbhai Kotak 12. Shri Pinaki Misra 13. Shri P.V Midhun Reddy 14. Prof. Saugata Roy 15. Shri Gopal Chinayya Shetty 16. Dr. (Prof.) Kirit Premjibhai Solanki 17. Shri Manish Tewari 18. Shri P. Velusamy 19. Shri Parvesh Sahib Singh Verma 20. Shri Rajesh Verma 21 Shri Giridhari Yadav RAJYA SABHA 22. -
Buddhism, Power and Political Order
BUDDHISM, POWER AND POLITICAL ORDER Weber’s claim that Buddhism is an otherworldly religion is only partially true. Early sources indicate that the Buddha was sometimes diverted from supra- mundane interests to dwell on a variety of politically related matters. The significance of Asoka Maurya as a paradigm for later traditions of Buddhist kingship is also well attested. However, there has been little scholarly effort to integrate findings on the extent to which Buddhism interacted with the polit- ical order in the classical and modern states of Theravada Asia into a wider, comparative study. This volume brings together the brightest minds in the study of Buddhism in Southeast Asia. Their contributions create a more coherent account of the relations between Buddhism and political order in the late pre-modern and modern period by questioning the contested relationship between monastic and secular power. In doing so, they expand the very nature of what is known as the ‘Theravada’. This book offers new insights for scholars of Buddhism, and it will stimulate new debates. Ian Harris is Professor of Buddhist Studies at the University of Cumbria, Lancaster, and was Senior Scholar at the Becket Institute, St Hugh’s College, University of Oxford, from 2001 to 2004. He is co-founder of the UK Association for Buddhist Studies and has written widely on aspects of Buddhist ethics. His most recent book is Cambodian Buddhism: History and Practice (2005), and he is currently responsible for a research project on Buddhism and Cambodian Communism at the Documentation Center of Cambodia [DC-Cam], Phnom Penh. ROUTLEDGE CRITICAL STUDIES IN BUDDHISM General Editors: Charles S. -
India's Fight Against Health Emergencies
MARCH 2020 ISSUE NO. 349 India’s Fight Against Health Emergencies: In Search of a Legal Architecture MANISH TEWARI ABSTRACT The ongoing pandemic of COVID-19 (caused by the novel coronavirus or SARS-CoV-2) has exposed glaring gaps in India’s domestic laws. Absent a rationally structured legislation to fall back on, the Union government in March advised states to invoke the Epidemic Diseases Act of 1897 to tackle the pandemic in their jurisdictions. The 123-year-old colonial law, however, does not even define what a disease is, let alone an epidemic or a pandemic. Indeed, a Public Health (Prevention, Control and Management of Epidemics, Bio-Terrorism and Disasters) Bill had been drafted in 2017, intended to replace the old Epidemic Diseases Act of 1897. The Bill has yet to be tabled in Parliament. This brief calls for the creation of a sound legal architecture to deal more effectively with outbreaks of infectious diseases, especially pandemics of the scale of COVID-19. Attribution: Manish Tewari, “India’s Fight against Health Emergencies: In Search of a Legal Architecture,” ORF Issue Brief No. 349, March 2020, Observer Research Foundation. Observer Research Foundation (ORF) is a public policy think tank that aims to influence the formulation of policies for building a strong and prosperous India. ORF pursues these goals by providing informed analyses and in-depth research, and organising events that serve as platforms for stimulating and productive discussions. ISBN 978-93-89622-82-9 © 2020 Observer Research Foundation. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, copied, archived, retained or transmitted through print, speech or electronic media without prior written approval from ORF. -
THE PACIFIC-ASIAN LOG January 2019 Introduction Copyright Notice Copyright 2001-2019 by Bruce Portzer
THE PACIFIC-ASIAN LOG January 2019 Introduction Copyright Notice Copyright 2001-2019 by Bruce Portzer. All rights reserved. This log may First issued in August 2001, The PAL lists all known medium wave not reproduced or redistributed in whole or in part in any form, except with broadcasting stations in southern and eastern Asia and the Pacific. It the expressed permission of the author. Contents may be used freely in covers an area extending as far west as Afghanistan and as far east as non-commercial publications and for personal use. Some of the material in Alaska, or roughly one half of the earth's surface! It now lists over 4000 this log was obtained from copyrighted sources and may require special stations in 60 countries, with frequencies, call signs, locations, power, clearance for anything other than personal use. networks, schedules, languages, formats, networks and other information. The log also includes longwave broadcasters, as well as medium wave beacons and weather stations in the region. Acknowledgements Since early 2005, there have been two versions of the Log: a downloadable pdf version and an interactive on-line version. My sources of information include DX publications, DX Clubs, E-bulletins, e- mail groups, web sites, and reports from individuals. Major online sources The pdf version is updated a few a year and is available at no cost. There include Arctic Radio Club, Australian Radio DX Club (ARDXC), British DX are two listings in the log, one sorted by frequency and the other by country. Club (BDXC), various Facebook pages, Global Tuners and KiwiSDR receivers, Hard Core DXing (HCDX), International Radio Club of America The on-line version is updated more often and allows the user to search by (IRCA), Medium Wave Circle (MWC), mediumwave.info (Ydun Ritz), New frequency, country, location, or station. -
The Changing Face of Religious Coexistence in Ladakh
SIT Graduate Institute/SIT Study Abroad SIT Digital Collections Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection SIT Study Abroad Fall 2015 More Religious and Less Moral: The hC anging Face of Religious Coexistence in Ladakh Henry Wilson-Smith SIT Graduate Institute - Study Abroad Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/isp_collection Part of the Buddhist Studies Commons, and the Islamic Studies Commons Recommended Citation Wilson-Smith, Henry, "More Religious and Less Moral: The hC anging Face of Religious Coexistence in Ladakh" (2015). Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection. 2225. https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/isp_collection/2225 This Unpublished Paper is brought to you for free and open access by the SIT Study Abroad at SIT Digital Collections. It has been accepted for inclusion in Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection by an authorized administrator of SIT Digital Collections. For more information, please contact [email protected]. More Religious and Less Moral: The Changing Face of Religious Coexistence in Ladakh Henry Wilson-Smith Academic Director: Onians, Isabelle Senior Faculty Advisor: Decleer, Hubert Independent Study Project Advisor: Bray, John Stanford University International Relations and AnthropoloGy Asia, India, Ladakh, Kargil, Chiktan and Kuksho Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for Nepal: Tibetan and Himalayan Peoples, SIT Study Abroad, Autumn 2015 0 1 Abstract Ladakh hosts a mixed population of Buddhists and Muslims that belies its popular image as a solely Buddhist replica of Tibet. Despite its unique history of reliGious integration, new pressures linked to Globalisation are pullinG the communities apart, with occasional and previously unheard-of communal conflict breakinG out in recent decades. -
Summaries of Foreign Researchers' Reports Ø ÷Ü Îÿøðñúö Øüý
Summaries of Foreign Researchers’ Reports 0?/?&70E()2?04A>/:&>4A>/?4"4 Compiled By The Office of the National Research Council of Thailand Quotation of any part of this document for reference or for reprinting is permitted on condition that the publisher’s name, the National Research Council of Thailand (NRCT), appears on the credit line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– [^^\ CQ2E(I(<-6$2-6>16 +DQ)+4L85IA!?0&V?M(L5K8J4 I0D4?/?04A>/L&0=!>' .>44?I:7?0&BR=I(<K8"4:8&4/&>4A>$ 24/&>4A>/?4 "4$5 +DQ:L5)A>2V$A5$A>/"4:/:!"4 (58+$8E$%A+ A""8A-+) 2%A?0 =00.?04A>/J84?"A Foreword The Office of the National Research Council of Thailand (NRCT) has permitted foreign researchers to conduct research in Thailand since B.E.