Dear all,
Welcome.
UNHRC: India is re-elected for UNHRC membership for the upcoming period i.e. 2015-17. In polling conducted yesterday, India got support in Asia-Pacific category from most of the countries. Upon election, Indian envoy had stated that stress on making human rights procedures effective would be made. They would be sorted out through creativity. Besides India, Bangladesh, Qatar, Indonesia etc. had also been selected.
Modi: A Human rights organisation had filed a case against PM for his alleged involvement during 2002 Godhra riots. A proposal was made before US federal Court of South district Newyork by "American Justice Centre". Besides him, a case against Sonia Gandhi was also put up for safeguarding 1984 rioters.
Cleaning system: Parliamentary speaker had been engaged in cleaning of house with two hours of intensive round. The paper work had been told to be controlled so as to avoid wastage.
The room no. 187 had filed spread and 86 in damp condition along with 133 also roof leaking from inside. Paperless office would be made as regards Parliament Secretariat.
The room no. 187 had filed spread and 86 in damp condition along with 133 also roof leaking from inside. Paperless office would be made as regards Parliament Secretariat.
Coal block allocation: After Modi govt. getting majority in recent elections, it had started taking decisions. The Coal block allocation would be made through e-auction on internet.
During first phase, Central and State govt. would be allocated such coal blocks. The rejected allocation would be grouped into Steel, Cement, Electricity and would be auctioned. Such auction would be commercial in nature. The first phase would have 74 such blocks allocation auctioned within a period of three to four months. The revenue shall be shared along with States.
An Ordinance in this regard has been recommended before President. It is to note that Supreme Court had cancelled 214 out of 218 coal blocks allocated. With it, Coal nationalisation policy is not changed. CIL would be protected too. It has 200 such Coal blocks for extraction.
With regards,
During first phase, Central and State govt. would be allocated such coal blocks. The rejected allocation would be grouped into Steel, Cement, Electricity and would be auctioned. Such auction would be commercial in nature. The first phase would have 74 such blocks allocation auctioned within a period of three to four months. The revenue shall be shared along with States.
An Ordinance in this regard has been recommended before President. It is to note that Supreme Court had cancelled 214 out of 218 coal blocks allocated. With it, Coal nationalisation policy is not changed. CIL would be protected too. It has 200 such Coal blocks for extraction.
With regards,
M.K.Pachraiya
Original_app_mssg(1) MH370
Seven and a half months after the Boeing 777 went missing en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people on board there are new clues about the whereabouts of its wreckage, as cited by Independent UK.
In the past few months there has been speculation from the Australian public regarding debris washed up on the coasts of Australia, which some have assumed could be the remains of MH 370. Although each of those reports is “reviewed carefully”, as stated by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) it is likely that any wreckage would have drifted the other way. Australia has asked Indonesian officials to make public the possibility of evidence from the MH370 disaster appearing on its shoreline.
As cited in the report which was released yesterday by ATSB, “It is possible that some materials may have drifted to the coastline of Indonesia, and an alert has been issued in that country, requesting that the authorities be alerted to any possible debris from the aircraft.”
Meanwhile, officials announced that a second ship, The Discovery, provided by Dutch contractor Fugro, arrived in the remote area of the Southern Indian ocean yesterday, and is preparing to join the operation in the search zone identified using satellite data about 1,100 miles west of Australia, as cited by the Independent UK.
Independent UK further added that Malaysian Defense Minister Hishammuddin Hussein has expressed positivity regarding the missing airplane stating, “We must continue to hope because sometimes hope is all we have. We will find MH370.”
According to Associated Press, “despite a massive air and sea search, not a single piece of debris from the plane has been found.”
In an interview with German magazine Spiegel, the chief executive of Emirates Sir Tim Clark said: 'MH370 remains one of the great aviation mysteries. Personally, I have the concern that we will treat it as such and move on. At the most, it might then make an appearance on National Geographic as one of aviation's great mysteries. We mustn't allow this to happen. We must know what caused that airplane to disappear,' as cited by Associated Press.
He added: “MH370 was, in my opinion, under control, probably until the very end.”
Original_app_mssg(1) MH370
Seven and a half months after the Boeing 777 went missing en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people on board there are new clues about the whereabouts of its wreckage, as cited by Independent UK.
In the past few months there has been speculation from the Australian public regarding debris washed up on the coasts of Australia, which some have assumed could be the remains of MH 370. Although each of those reports is “reviewed carefully”, as stated by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) it is likely that any wreckage would have drifted the other way. Australia has asked Indonesian officials to make public the possibility of evidence from the MH370 disaster appearing on its shoreline.
As cited in the report which was released yesterday by ATSB, “It is possible that some materials may have drifted to the coastline of Indonesia, and an alert has been issued in that country, requesting that the authorities be alerted to any possible debris from the aircraft.”
Meanwhile, officials announced that a second ship, The Discovery, provided by Dutch contractor Fugro, arrived in the remote area of the Southern Indian ocean yesterday, and is preparing to join the operation in the search zone identified using satellite data about 1,100 miles west of Australia, as cited by the Independent UK.
Independent UK further added that Malaysian Defense Minister Hishammuddin Hussein has expressed positivity regarding the missing airplane stating, “We must continue to hope because sometimes hope is all we have. We will find MH370.”
According to Associated Press, “despite a massive air and sea search, not a single piece of debris from the plane has been found.”
In an interview with German magazine Spiegel, the chief executive of Emirates Sir Tim Clark said: 'MH370 remains one of the great aviation mysteries. Personally, I have the concern that we will treat it as such and move on. At the most, it might then make an appearance on National Geographic as one of aviation's great mysteries. We mustn't allow this to happen. We must know what caused that airplane to disappear,' as cited by Associated Press.
He added: “MH370 was, in my opinion, under control, probably until the very end.”
Original_app_mssg(2) Maoist
Maoists have a presence in as many as 15 states across India, including a new "southern theatre" in the tri-junction of Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu, while their front organisations exist in 21 states, according to the Centre's assessment under the policy unveiled last week to tackle Left-wing extremism.
The new tri-junction, particularly the Sathyamangalam forests where sandalwood smuggler Veerappan once held sway, is government priority as it feels the Maoist situation in Kerala has the potential of turning more serious if immediate preventive steps are not taken, a senior official said. The government is also concerned about the spread of Maoist front organisations, which it believes should be viewed as "part and parcel" of the strategic infrastructure of the CPI (Maoist) to enlarge its mass base.
However, the BJP-led NDA government, which took over in May, is clear that Maoists will not succeed in their aim of overthrowing a democratically elected government, given the sheer national power of the Indian state and its democratic ethos, and because the CPI (Maoist)'s worldview is in sharp contrast to the reconciliatory nature of the Indian society and the aspirational matrix of Indian youth.
An official said the proposition of a Red Corridor from Pashupati (in Nepal) to Tirupati (in Andhra Pradesh) was a "distant mirage". The new policy proposes some innovative ideas to tackle Maoists, including asking for services of former senior officials of Border Roads Organisation (BRO) who have worked on construction of roads in terror-ravaged Afghanistan to build roads in the worst-affected Maoist areas.
Asking for control of the Integrated Action Plan (IAP), the new policy says the scheme should be implemented in the worst-affected blocks and not districts as earlier and 10 per cent of IAP funds should be permitted to be utilised for hiring professionals such as teachers, doctors and engineers. It has also proposed inclusion of the local Central Armed Police Force (CAPF) commandant in the existing committee of district magistrate, superintendent of police and district forest officer for deciding development projects under IAP. The new policy also proposes a relook at findings of a 2008 expert group constituted by the Planning Commission under D Bandopadhyaya which had studied co-relation between indicators of backwardness and the spread of Left-wing extremism.
The assessment under the new policy says that in spite of a decline in Maoist violence since 2011 and contraction in the areas under Maoist domination, the core military strength of Maoists remains intact in 23 worst-affected districts in six states. It claims that infrastructure development and the implementation of development schemes in affected areas was not satisfactory under the previous government.
"In light of these facts and circumstances, there is a need to re-examine and fine-tune various policy measures to combat Maoists," the new policy document has proposed, an official said.

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