Economic and Social Council Distr.: LIMITED 15 March 2013

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Economic and Social Council Distr.: LIMITED 15 March 2013 United Nations E/CN.7/2013/INF/2 Economic and Social Council Distr.: LIMITED 15 March 2013 Original: ENGLISH/FRENCH/SPANISH Commission on Narcotic Drugs Fifty-sixth session Vienna, 11-15 March 2013 LIST OF PARTICIPANTS MEMBERS OF THE COMMISSION ON NARCOTIC DRUGS AFGHANISTAN Zarar Ahmad MUQBEL OSMANI, Minister of Counter Narcotics of Afghanistan Baaz Mohammad AHMADI, Deputy Minister of Counter Narcotics, Ministry of Interior Ayoob M. ERFANI, Ambassador designate, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna Abdul Qayyum SAMER, Director General of Regional and International Cooperation Department, Ministry of Counter Narcotics Abdul Shukoor HAIDARY, Head of Drug Regulations Committee (DRC), Ministry of Counter Narcotics Daoud HACHEMI, First Secretary, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna Sayed Amanuddin SAYEDI, Assistant to the Deputy Minister of Interior for Counter Narcotics ALGERIA Mohamed BENHOCINE, Ambassadeur, Représentant permanent, Mission permanente auprès des Nations Unies, Vienne Mohamed ZOUGGAR, Directeur Général de l'Office National de Lutte contre la Drogue et la Toxicomanie Hafed HAMOU, Directeur Général de la Pharmacie et des Equipements de Santé, Ministère de la Santé, de la Population et de la Réforme Hospitalière Farid ROUANE, Chef de Service Central des Investigations Criminelles, Commandement de la Gendarmerie Nationale Samir CHENAF, Commissaire Principal, Sous Directeur des Affaires Criminelles à la Direction Générale de la Sûreté Nationale Zohra ZERARA, Conseiller à la Direction Générale des Affaires Politiques et de Sécurité internationale, Ministère des Affaires Etrangères E/CN.7/2013/INF/2 Azzedine MERAZKA, Chargé des Activités du Service Central de Lutte contre le Trafic Illicite des Stupéfiants Mohamed A. CHERBAL, Attaché, Mission permanente auprès des Nations Unies, Vienne AUSTRALIA Jan BENNETT, Principal Advisor, Department of Health and Ageing David STUART, Ambassador, Permanent Representative, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna Colleen KRESTENSEN, Assistant Secretary, Drug Strategy Branch, Department of Health and Ageing Darius EVERETT, Director, Illicit Drugs and International Policy Section, Department of Health and Ageing Darren JONES, Director, Drug Import/Export Licensing and Compliance, Department of Health and Ageing Steve ALLSOP, Professor, Director, National Drug Research Institute Peter PATMORE, Chair, Poppy Advisory and Control Board, Department of Justice, Tasmania Dean CHURCH, Counsellor, Australian Customs and Border Protection, Australian Embassy, Brussels Jennifer HURST, Manager, Crime Operations, Crime Programs, Australian Federal Police David MCGRATH, Director, Mental Health and Drug and Alcohol Programs, New South Wales Health Vafa GHAZAVI, Second Secretary, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna AUSTRIA Christine STIX-HACKL, Ambassador, Permanent Representative, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna Gerhard ZETTL, Head of Department, International Cooperation in Justice and Home Affairs, Federal Ministry of European and International Affairs Franz PIETSCH, Head of Department, Tobacco, Alcohol, non-substance related addictions and International Affairs of Addictions, Federal Ministry of Health Raphael BAYER, Deputy Head of Department, Narcotic and Psychotropic Substances, New Psychoactive Substances, Precursors, Federal Ministry of Health, Magdalena BROTTRAGER, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna Martin BUSCH, Senior Expert, Gesundheit Österreich GmbH (Health Austria) Alexander GRABENHOFER-EGGERT, Senior Expert, Gesundheit Österreich GmbH (Health Austria) Martin KRÄMER, Counsellor, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna Christian MADER, Expert, Drug Related Crime, Federal Ministry of the Interior Elisabeth LEMMERER, Expert, International and Multilateral Affairs, Federal Ministry of Interior Wolfgang PFNEISZL, Expert, Department for Narcotic and Psychotropic Substances, New Psychoactive Substances, Precursors, Federal Ministry of Health Margareta PLODER, Head of Unit, Multilateral Cooperation Drugs and Crime Prevention, Federal Ministry for European and International Affairs Claudia RAFLING, Deputy Head of Department, Tobacco, Alcohol, non-substance related additions and International Affairs of Additions, Ministry of Health Gabriel RUEDISSER, Legislation in Criminal Drug Law and Multilateral Cooperation in Criminal Law, Federal Ministry of Justice Johanna SCHOPPER, Head of Department, Narcotic and Psychotropic Substances, New Psychoactive Substances, Precursors, Federal Ministry of Health Helmut SCHROLLER-ROZSAHEGYI, Expert, Department for Narcotic and Psychotropic Substances, Federal Ministry of Health Werner SCHWEIGHOFER, Deputy Head of Unit, Drug Related Crime, Federal Ministry of the Interior 2 E/CN.7/2013/INF/2 Gerhard STADLER, Head of Unit, Drug Related Crime, Federal Ministry of Interior Alfred UHL, Evaluation, Research and Documentation Unit, Anton-Proksch-Institute Marion WEIGL, Head of Reitox Focal Point, Gesundheit Österreich GmbH (Health Austria) Andreas WEINSEISS, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna Fritz ZEDER, Head of Department, Legislation in Criminal Drug Law and Multilateral Cooperation in Criminal Law, Federal Ministry of Justice Clemens KREITH, Federal Ministry for European and International Affair BELARUS Evgeny LAZAREV, Deputy Head, Department for Multilateral Diplomacy, Head, Global Policies and Humanitarian Cooperation Division, Ministry of Foreign Affairs Ekaterina ERMILINA, Counsellor, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna BELGIUM Frank RECKER, Ambassadeur, Représentant permanent, Mission permanente auprès des Nations Unies, Vienne Hendrik ROGGEN, Premier Secrétaire, Mission permanente auprès des Nations Unies, Vienne Claude GILLARD, Conseiller juridique, Direction générale de la Législation, SPF Justice Charles DENONNE, Attaché Relations Internationales, SPF Santé publique, sécurité de la chaîne alimentaire et environnement Philippe DE BUCK, Conseiller, Agence fédéral médicaments et produits de santé (AFMPS) BOLIVIA (PLURINATIONAL STATE OF) Evo MORALES AYMA, Presidente Constitucional del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia Juan Ramón QUINTANA TABORGA, Ministro de la Presidencia Juan Carlos ALURRALDE, Embajador, Viceministro de Relaciones Exteriores Felipe L. CÁCERES GARCÍA, Viceministro de Defensa Social y Sustancias Controladas Sacha LLORENTY, Embajador, Representante Permanente, Misión Permanente ante las Naciones Unidas, Nueva York Ricardo MARTÍNEZ COVARRUBIAS, Encargado de Negocios i.a., Representante Permanente Alterno, Misión Permanente ante las Naciones Unidas, Viena, Sabino MENDOZA, Coordinador General de la Secretaría de Coordinación del Consejo Nacional de Lucha contra el Tráfico Ilícito de Drogas - CONALTID Gustavo ESPINOZA, Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores Elizabeth FERREL ALVAREZ, Consejera, Misión Permanente ante las Naciones Unidas, Viena Freddy MONASTERIOS, Director de Defensa Social José Iván MALDONADO, Ministerio de la Presidencia Leo Yvar ALCÓN DURÁN, Ministerio de la Presidencia Marco RIVERO PORTUGAL, Ministerio de la Presidencia Patricia HERMOSA, Ministerio de la Presidencia BRAZIL Evandro DIDONET, Ambassador, Permanent Representative, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna Vivian LOSS SANMARTIN, Minister Counselor, Alternate Permanent Representative, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna 3 E/CN.7/2013/INF/2 Catia BETANIA CHAGAS, National Secretary on Drug Policies, Interim, Ministry of Justice Vladimir DE ANDRADE STEMPLIUK, Director for International Affairs and Strategic Projects of SENDAD, Ministry of Justice Roberto BIASOLI, Head of Institutional Coordination, Legal Cooperation and Asset Recovery Department, Ministry of Justice Roberto TYKANORI, Head of the Coordination on Mental Health, Ministry of Health Aldo ZAIDEN BENVINDO, Special Advisor of the Coordination on Mental Health, Ministry of Health Pollyanna Fausta PIMENTEL DE MEDEIROS, Coordination on Mental Health, Ministry of Health Valda DE FÁTIMA DA SILVA, International Affairs Advisor, Ministry of Health Renata DE MORAIS SOUZA, Coordination of Controlled Products of the National Health Surveillance Agency (ANVISA) Daniela MARQUES DE ANDRADE, Expert on Health Surveillance, ANVISA Cammilla HORTA GOMES, Expert on International Relations, ANVISA Tatiana ESNARRIAGA ARANTES BARBOSA, Second Secretary, Alternate Permanent Representative, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna Luisa BERTUOL TATSCH CAMEROON Jean Dieudonne NTSAMA, Inspecteur Général No. 1, Ministère des Relations Extérieures Alexandre Bassong BAHANAG, Chef de la Division des Affaires Juridiques et du Contentieux, Ministère de la Santé Publique IHONG III, Charge d’Etudes au Secrétariat Général des Services du Premier Ministre Pascal Magloire AWONO, Secrétaire Permanent du Comité National de Lutte contre la Drogue CANADA John BARRETT, Ambassador, Permanent Representative, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna Robert IANIRO, Senior Director General, Controlled Substances and Tobacco Directorate, Health Canada Peter CAHILL, First Secretary, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Vienna Johanne BEAULIEU, Director, Office of Controlled Substances, Controlled Substances and Tobacco Directorate, Heath Canada Trevor BHUPSINGH, Director General, Law Enforcement and Border Strategic Directorate, Public Safety Canada Luc CHICOINE, Cpl., National Pharmaceutical and Synthetic Drug Support Coordinator, Royal Canadian Mounted Police Paula KINGSTON, Senior Counsel, Youth Justice and Strategic Initiatives
Recommended publications
  • CRITICAL THEORY and AUTHORITARIAN POPULISM Critical Theory and Authoritarian Populism
    CDSMS EDITED BY JEREMIAH MORELOCK CRITICAL THEORY AND AUTHORITARIAN POPULISM Critical Theory and Authoritarian Populism edited by Jeremiah Morelock Critical, Digital and Social Media Studies Series Editor: Christian Fuchs The peer-reviewed book series edited by Christian Fuchs publishes books that critically study the role of the internet and digital and social media in society. Titles analyse how power structures, digital capitalism, ideology and social struggles shape and are shaped by digital and social media. They use and develop critical theory discussing the political relevance and implications of studied topics. The series is a theoretical forum for in- ternet and social media research for books using methods and theories that challenge digital positivism; it also seeks to explore digital media ethics grounded in critical social theories and philosophy. Editorial Board Thomas Allmer, Mark Andrejevic, Miriyam Aouragh, Charles Brown, Eran Fisher, Peter Goodwin, Jonathan Hardy, Kylie Jarrett, Anastasia Kavada, Maria Michalis, Stefania Milan, Vincent Mosco, Jack Qiu, Jernej Amon Prodnik, Marisol Sandoval, Se- bastian Sevignani, Pieter Verdegem Published Critical Theory of Communication: New Readings of Lukács, Adorno, Marcuse, Honneth and Habermas in the Age of the Internet Christian Fuchs https://doi.org/10.16997/book1 Knowledge in the Age of Digital Capitalism: An Introduction to Cognitive Materialism Mariano Zukerfeld https://doi.org/10.16997/book3 Politicizing Digital Space: Theory, the Internet, and Renewing Democracy Trevor Garrison Smith https://doi.org/10.16997/book5 Capital, State, Empire: The New American Way of Digital Warfare Scott Timcke https://doi.org/10.16997/book6 The Spectacle 2.0: Reading Debord in the Context of Digital Capitalism Edited by Marco Briziarelli and Emiliana Armano https://doi.org/10.16997/book11 The Big Data Agenda: Data Ethics and Critical Data Studies Annika Richterich https://doi.org/10.16997/book14 Social Capital Online: Alienation and Accumulation Kane X.
    [Show full text]
  • Fanning the Flames: Fandoms and Consumer Culture in Contemporary Japan
    FANNING THE FLAMES Fans and Consumer Culture in Contemporary Japan Edited by William W. Kelly Fanning the Flames SUNY series in Japan in Transition Jerry Eades and Takeo Funabiki, editors Fanning the Flames Fans and Consumer Culture in Contemporary Japan EDITED BY WILLIAM W. K ELLY STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK PRESS Published by State University of New York Press, Albany © 2004 State University of New York All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission. No part of this book may be stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means including electronic, electrostatic, magnetic tape, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior permission in writing of the publisher. For information, address State University of New York Press, 90 State Street, Suite 700, Albany, NY 12207 Production by Kelli Williams Marketing by Michael Campochiaro Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Fanning the f lames : fans and consumer culture in contemporary Japan / edited by William W. Kelly. p. cm. — (SUNY series in Japan in transition) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-7914-6031-2 (alk. paper) — ISBN 0-7914-6032-0 (pbk. : alk.paper) 1. Popular culture—Japan—History—20th century. I. Kelly, William W. II. Series. DS822.5b. F36 2004 306'.0952'09049—dc22 2004041740 10987654321 Contents List of Illustrations vii Acknowledgments ix Introduction: Locating the Fans 1 William W. Kelly 1 B-Boys and B-Girls: Rap Fandom and Consumer Culture in Japan 17 Ian Condry 2 Letters from the Heart: Negotiating Fan–Star Relationships in Japanese Popular Music 41 Christine R.
    [Show full text]
  • MECHANISM for the REVIEW of IMPLEMENTATION Governmental
    Please fill the form typed (not handwritten) and send it back in WORD format. This form can be downloaded at http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/treaties/CAC/IRG.html MECHANISM FOR THE REVIEW OF IMPLEMENTATION Name of Country: Governmental Expert DATE: INDIA 1. Family name(s) 2. First name(s) 3. Present nationality(ies) 4. Gender KUMAR SANTOSH INDIAN MALE 5. PRESENT POSITION From To Exact title of your post : Month/Year Month/Year Additional Director of Income Tax (Investigation), Unit-6, New Delhi 11/16 Till Date Name of employer : Income Tax Department, Ministry of Finance, Government of India BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF YOUR DUTIES (max. 1500 characters) My present duties include supervision and monitoring of investigation into large scale/serious tax evasion cases which include cases involving undisclosed foreign assets /income and undisclosed domestic assets/income, inter alia, using multi-layered complex structures. The multi-layered complex structures include combination of various types of entities such as companies, trusts, foundations, etc. established in multiple foreign jurisdictions or numerous layers of domestic shell/paper companies. Investigation of such cases involves use of various investigation and intelligence techniques, following the money/ found trail, extensive use of legal instruments for exchange of information with relevant foreign jurisdictions such as Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAAs), Tax information Exchange Agreements (TIEAs), Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties (MLATs)/Mutual legal Assistance in Criminal Matters, etc. Further, taking into consideration the emerging methods of doing business, record keeping and hiding electronic data/information, examination of digital evidence and digital forensic examination have become an extremely important aspect of such investigations.
    [Show full text]
  • F.No. 22S/53/2020Fit A.II Government of India Ministry of Finance Department of Revenue Central Board of Direct Taxes \ >T" New Delhi, the
    F.No. 22S/53/2020fIT A.II Government of India Ministry of Finance Department of Revenue Central Board of Direct Taxes \ >t" New Delhi, the ... ~....... July, 2020 The Central Board of Direct taxes, in exercise of powers conferred under section 138( 1)(a) of Income-tax Act, 1961 (,Act' ), hereby directs that Principal Director General of Income-tax (Systems), New Delhi shall be the specified income-tax authority for furnishing and receiving of information to/from the following agencies/bodies through NATGRID Platform: 1. Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) 2. Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DR1) J. Enforcement Directorate (ED) 4. Central Board of Indirect Taxes & Customs (CBIC) 5. Cabinet Secretariat (CS) 6. Intelligence Bureau (IB) 7. Directorate General ofGST (Intelligence) (DGGI) 8. Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) 9. Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU-Ind) 10. National Investigation Agency (NIA) 2. The information to be furnished shall be: 1. PAN Details 2. TAN Details 3. Bank Account Details for PAN and FY 4. Return Summary information for PAN and FY (as per MOU) 5. TDS Summary Information for PAN and FY (as per MOU) 6. Any other information as mutually agreed While furnishing the information, the specified income-tax authority shall form an opinion that sharing of such infonnation is necessary for the purposes of enabling the above mentioned agencies/bodies to perform its functions under their respective laws. 3. To facilitate the process offurnishing and receiving information, Principal Director General of Income­ tax (Systems) would enter into a Memorandum of Understanding ('MoU') with NA TGRID which inter­ alia would include the mode of transfer of data, maintenance of confidentiality, mechanism for safe preservation of data, weeding out after usage etc.
    [Show full text]
  • Australia's Private Security Guard Force and Counterterrorism
    SPECIAL REPORT Safety in numbers Australia’s private security guard force and counterterrorism Anthony Bergin, Donald Williams and Christopher Dixon October 2018 About the authors Anthony Bergin is a senior analyst at ASPI and a senior research fellow at the National Security College, Australian National University. For 20 years Dr Bergin served as an academic at the Australian Defence Force Academy where he taught homeland security. From 1991 to 2003 he was the director of the Australian Defence Studies Centre. He served for four years as an adjunct reader in law at the ANU, where he taught international law. Dr Bergin has been a consultant to a wide range of public- and private-sector clients and has written extensively on national security issues in academic journals, books and reports. He is a regular media commentator and contributes to ASPI’s The Strategist and the Crawford School of Public Policy’s Policy Forum. Donald Williams holds qualifications in security management as well as risk, project and resource management. He is a certified Protection Professional and Registered Security Professional. He is a member of ASIS International, the Institute of Explosives Engineers and the International Association of Bomb Technicians and Investigators. He is the author of numerous papers, books and security standards. Christopher Dixon was a research intern at ASPI in 2017–18. He graduated with first-class honours from the RMIT Bachelor of Arts (International Studies) (Honours) program. His research interests include Australian defence and national security policy. About ASPI ASPI’s aim is to promote Australia’s security by contributing fresh ideas to strategic decision‑making, and by helping to inform public discussion of strategic and defence issues.
    [Show full text]
  • “The Social Cut of Black and Yellow Female Hip Hop” Erick Raven
    “The Social Cut of Black and Yellow Female Hip Hop” Erick Raven University of Texas at Arlington May 2020 Abstract Korean female hip hop artists are expanding the definition of femininity in South Korea through hip hop. In doing so, they are following a tradition first established by Black female musical performers in a new context. Korean artists are conceiving and expressing, through rap and dance, alternative versions of a “Korean woman,” thus challenging and attempting to add to the dominant conceptions of “woman.” This Thesis seeks to point out the ways female Korean hip hop artists are engaging dominant discourse regarding skin tone, body type, and expression of female sexuality, and creating spaces for the development of new discourses about gender in South Korean society. Contents Introduction – Into the Cut ................................................ 1 Chapter I – Yoon Mi-rae and Negotiating the West and East of Colorism ............................................................. 12 Chapter II – The Performing Black and Yellow Female Body ................................................................................ 31 Chapter III – Performing Sexuality ................................. 47 Chapter IV – Dis-Orientation .......................................... 59 Conclusion .................................................................... 67 Works Cited .................................................................... 70 Introduction – Into the Cut Identities are performed discourse; they are formed when those who identify as a particular personality perform and establish a discourse in a particular social context. As George Lipsitz states, “improvisation is a site of encounter” (61). In South Korea, female Korean hip hop is the site of a social cut in dominant culture and has become a space of improvisation where new, counter-hegemonic identities are constructed and performed. In this Thesis, I argue that Korean female hip hop artists are enacting a social rupture by performing improvised identities.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 18Iaspm.Wordpress.Com
    18iaspm.wordpress.com 1 2 18th Biennial IASPM Conference Contents Dear IASPM Delegates, It is with great pleasure that UNICAMP (Universidade Estadual de Campinas) will host this important academic event aimed at the study of popular music. With the subject: Back to the Future: Popular Music in Time, the Conference will gather more than 200 researchers from countries of all continents who will present and discuss works aimed at the study of sonority, styles, performances, contents, production contexts and popular music consumption. IASPM periodically carries out, since 1981 – year which was founded – regular meetings and the publication of the works contributing to the creation of a new academic field targeted to the study of this medium narrative modality of syncretic and multidimensional nature, which has been consolidated along the last 150 years as component element of the contemporary culture. We hope that this Conference will represent another step in the consolidation of this field which has already achieved worldwide coverage. For the Music Department of the Arts Institute of UNICAMP, to carry out the 18th Conference brings special importance as it created the first Graduation Course in Popular Music of Brazil, in 1989, making this University a reference institution in these studies. UNICAMP is located in the District of Barão Geraldo, in the city of Campinas – SP. This region showed great development at the end of XIX century and beginning of XX century due to the coffee farming expansion. Nowadays it presents itself as an industrial high-tech center. Its cultural life is intense, being music one of the most relevant activities.
    [Show full text]
  • Diplomatic List – Fall 2018
    United States Department of State Diplomatic List Fall 2018 Preface This publication contains the names of the members of the diplomatic staffs of all bilateral missions and delegations (herein after “missions”) and their spouses. Members of the diplomatic staff are the members of the staff of the mission having diplomatic rank. These persons, with the exception of those identified by asterisks, enjoy full immunity under provisions of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations. Pertinent provisions of the Convention include the following: Article 29 The person of a diplomatic agent shall be inviolable. He shall not be liable to any form of arrest or detention. The receiving State shall treat him with due respect and shall take all appropriate steps to prevent any attack on his person, freedom, or dignity. Article 31 A diplomatic agent shall enjoy immunity from the criminal jurisdiction of the receiving State. He shall also enjoy immunity from its civil and administrative jurisdiction, except in the case of: (a) a real action relating to private immovable property situated in the territory of the receiving State, unless he holds it on behalf of the sending State for the purposes of the mission; (b) an action relating to succession in which the diplomatic agent is involved as an executor, administrator, heir or legatee as a private person and not on behalf of the sending State; (c) an action relating to any professional or commercial activity exercised by the diplomatic agent in the receiving State outside of his official functions. -- A diplomatic agent’s family members are entitled to the same immunities unless they are United States Nationals.
    [Show full text]
  • India: Communication Between Police Offices Across the Country, Including
    Responses to Information Requests - Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada Page 1 of 6 Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada Home > Research Program > Responses to Information Requests Responses to Information Requests Responses to Information Requests (RIR) respond to focused Requests for Information that are submitted to the Research Directorate in the course of the refugee protection determination process. The database contains a seven- year archive of English and French RIRs. Earlier RIRs may be found on the UNHCR's Refworld website. Please note that some RIRs have attachments which are not electronically accessible. To obtain a PDF copy of an RIR attachment, please email the Knowledge and Information Management Unit. 10 May 2016 IND105494.E India: Communication between police offices across the country, including the use of POLNET; whether police across India can locate an individual, particularly as a result of registration requirements for employment, housing and education, security checks, and surveillance technology (2013-May 2016) Research Directorate, Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, Ottawa 1. Communication Between Police Offices In correspondence with the Research Directorate, a lawyer with the Delhi High Court stated that police departments typically communicate with one another through the use of wireless messaging, such as text messaging and email, and in "urgent cases, phone or fax is used" (Lawyer 10 Apr. 2016). In correspondence with the Research Directorate, an assistant professor with the Centre for Criminology and Sociolegal Studies at the University of Toronto, who has conducted research on policing in India, stated that communication methods such as fax, phone, email and databases "may be used to varying degrees by various departments," however, to her knowledge, "there is little inter-state police communication except for cases of major crimes like smuggling, terrorism, and some high profile organised crime" (Assistant Professor 14 Apr.
    [Show full text]
  • Immortal Song Seventeen Eng Sub 2018
    Immortal song seventeen eng sub 2018 Continue Contest South Korean television music program Immortal Songs: Singing LegendGenreMusicPresented Shin Dong-YupCountry OriginsSut Korea Origin (s) Korean No. episodes426 (as of October 19, 2019) ManufacturingInsyant Manufacturer (s)Kwon Yong Taek KBSProduction location (s) South KoreaRunning time110 minutesProduction company (s) KBS EntertainmentReleaseOriginal networkKBSOriginal release4, 2011 - March 31, 2012 (as Immortal Songs 2), April 7, 2012 (2012-04-07) -PresentChronologyPreced byImmortal Songs (2007-2009)External LinksWebsite Immortal Songs: Singing Legends (Korean: 불후의 명곡: 전설을 노래하다; RR: Bulhu-ui Myeong-gok: Jeonseoreul Noraehada), also known as Immortal Song 2 (Korean: 불후의 명곡 2), is a South Korean television music competition program presented by Shin Dong-yup. This is the revival of Immortal Songs (2007-2009), and in each episode there are singers who perform their reimagined versions of the songs. Synopsis Originally aired as Immortal Songs 2 as part of KBS Saturday Freedom, each episode had six idol singers who performed the singer's songs of the episode. After restructuring in 2012, the show returned on April 7 as an independent program and renamed Immortal Songs: Singing the Legend. Each episode now includes seven singers or bands from different walks of life and annual experiences ranging from members of popular idol K-pop bands to legendary solo artists. As before, each of them performs their own reimagined versions of the famous songs of the legendary singer of the episode. The new format features special episodes that revolve around specific topics, such as festivities or festivities. Invited singers sit in the waiting room with three hosts, where they meet the audience.
    [Show full text]
  • S No Officer Name
    List Of IRS (C&CE) Officers On Deputation as on 01.12.2020 OFFICER NAME DATE OF JOINING/ DATE OF S_NO ORGANIZATION NAME (SHRI/SMT/DR) DEPUTATION ORDER 1 Shashank Priya Ministry of Commerce & Industry 29.07.2019 2 K. N. Raghavan Rubber Board, Department of Commerce 08.04.2019 J. R. Panigrahi 3 Ministry of Textiles 11.07.2019 4 Alok Shukla WTO 08.06.2018 5 Pawan Kumar Sinha International Anti Corruption Academy, Laxenburg, Austira 27.03.2018 6 Alok Raj Cabinet Secretariat 25.10.2000 7 Gaigongdin Panmei North Eastern Council, DoNER 01.10.2018 8 Sanjiv Srivastava CESTAT 07.05.2018 9 Manoj K. Arora Ministry of Women and Child Development 25.07.2014 10 Amand Shah NAA 03.10.2018 11 L. Satya Srinivas Ministry of Home Affairs 04.12.2019 12 P. Venkata Subba Rao CESTAT 19.04.2018 13 Rajesh Nandan Srivastava NCB 30.10.2018 14 Naveen Kumar Jain Military Egineering Service and Border Roads Organization , Ministry of Defence 08.10.2018 15 Manish Kumar Sinha Department of Revenue 25.06.2018 16 Ganesh Dutt Lohani Department of Revenue 08.06.2018 17 Sanjay Srinet Directorate of Enforcement 20.01.2015 18 Rajeev Yadav United Nations 25.05.2018 19 Ravi Pratap Singh CEIB 10.09.2018 20 Jitendra Kumar Department of Revenue 16.04.2019 21 Ambika Sharanjit Kaur Government of Punjab 11.05.2018 22 K. V. V. G. Diwakar MINISTRY OF RAILWAY 06.11.2019 23 Unmesh Sharad Wagh Ministry of Shipping 11.02.2020 24 M. Subramanyam Department of Space 16.03.2020 25 Charan Preet Singh Bakshi Ministry of Minority Affairs 20.04.2020 26 Satyajit Mohanty National Security Council Secretariat
    [Show full text]
  • Ministry of Finance Department of Economic Affairs (Financial Markets Division) Update on Review Meetings Held on Payment Crisis
    Ministry of Finance Department of Economic Affairs (Financial Markets Division) Update on review meetings held on payment crisis in NSEL Review Meetings by Government of India on payment crisis at NSEL The Government of India, through regular review meetings, has been monitoring the action taken by investigating and enforcement agencies and regulatory authorities for violations of law, criminal offences and default in payments to investors arising from the payment crisis at National Spot Exchange Ltd. (NSEL). Investigations and other enforcement measures are being taken by the Economic Offences Wing (EOW), Mumbai Police, Enforcement Directorate (ED), Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), Financial Intelligence Unit–India (FIU-IND), Income Tax Department (ITD / CBDT), Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) and Central Bureau of Investigations (CBI). These organizations are represented in the review meeting held under the Chairmanship of Secretary, Department of Economic Affairs (DEA). So far, twenty two such review meetings have taken place. The last such review meeting was held on 04.04.2019 under the Chairmanship of Shri Subhash Chandra Garg, Finance Secretary & Secretary (Economic Affairs). Minutes of the Review Meetings It is hereby clarified under Section 4 (1)(b) of the RTI Act that meetings of this committee are not open to the public. The minutes of such meetings cannot be made available to the public for the reasons mentioned below; a. Most of the information/action recorded in the minutes is protected under Sec.8 of the RTI Act for the reason that the matter is under investigation by various agencies like CBI, FIU-India, Enforcement Directorate, SEBI, EOW Mumbai Police, CBDT, MCA and SFIO and also under litigation in various courts of law.
    [Show full text]