Wednesday 11 November 2009

Parole is another example of abuse of discretionary powe

Parole is another example of abuse of discretionary power.
Sharma gets instant parole (only ~10% applicants get it) - perhaps reward for his father purchasing MLAs for Congress in Haryana.

And off course Sonia Maino / Raul Vinci / MM Singh keep Afzal alive.

Jai Ho Sonia Maiyya
Jai Ho Raul Bhaiyya


referencehttp://timesofindia.indiatimes.com-

Monday 5 October 2009

Scary !! 27% Indian executives admit to hitting people to relieve stress.

Scary !! 27% Indian executives admit to hitting people to relieve stress.


refrense-http://www.livemint.com/2009/10/01213118/Slapping-out-of-stress.html

ay morning is among the most joyous moments of the working week, is it not? You know, as soon as you leap out of bed on Friday morning, that the great office worker’s panacea, the weekend, is just a working day away.
So it must seem the most improbable day to discuss the troublesome issue of stress in the Indian workplace. But an interesting new research report came out earlier this fortnight and I decided immediately that we must chat about this on Cubiclenama.
The report, brought out by staffing company TeamLease Services, is calledStress at Workplace and is part of a larger India’s New World of Work series. In this study, researchers rang up 400 office-goers in various cities all over India and then asked them various questions about stress in office.
Is stress a good thing in your office? What causes this stress? Given this information, how does this stress manifest itself in you? Very good. And how do you cope with this stress? Oh, I am sorry to hear that. Can you give the phone to daddy or mummy please?
And so on.
Now I am quite a sceptic when it comes to most of these workplace surveys. I reserve particular spite for those “best people to work for” surveys: “Most Admired Medium-Small IT Product Design Employer In India 2009—Jury Special Award for Company Sponsoring The Jury Special Award” and all that.
Many years ago, I was asked to administer one of these surveys, for internal uses in a factory. Our first attempt was a disaster because we forgot to tell everyone which ends of the scale, 1 to 5, was best and worst. So we had to redo the whole survey again with new forms.
And voila! we got exactly the same results again.
My lasting memory is of the final survey presentation to the management committee where we spent 4 hours debating whether a 3 on 5 is “average”, “medium” or some such term indicating mediocrity. (We had a lot of 3 on 5 scores.)
Finally, the CEO recalibrated the scale. Henceforth 1 was “Terrible”, 3 became “Very Good” and 5 became “Beyond World Class”. We celebrated with an off-site to a water park.
But the Stress@Work survey was nothing like that, of course. There were no company names involved and so you could say that it was bias-free.
So what do the results say?
Apparently, 61% of all respondents across the country felt that stress at the workplace was a healthy phenomenon. Amazingly enough, it was exactly this 61% who admitted to needing therapy of some kind. OK, kidding.
Seriously speaking, Bangaloreans, it appears, are suckers for punishment. A whopping 75% of Bangalore respondents thought that stress was a good thing, the highest for any of the cities surveyed. (In terms of functional areas, Sales and Marketing had the highest proportion, 65%, who said stress was a healthy thing. The department that dislikes stress most, it turns out, is HR and Admin.)
Some of the top generators of stress included that perennial spoilsport—“Amount of work to performed”, “Managing others’ work”, “Keeping up with technology” and finally “Attitude of spouse/partner”.
The last of which explains this phenomenon: Over 75% did not think that taking work home caused any kind of stress. Shudder. But the standout statistic for me was from the section on how people reacted to this stress: Around 27% respondents admitted to having HIT SOMEONE when under stress. Nothing like some good old palm meets face to get over stress.
And how do people cope with this stress? Do they go on holidays? Find new jobs? Not at all. In fact those two options were among the least popular. The most popular one, with 75% response, was “Recognizing one’s limitations at work and rectifying them”.
Ladies and gentlemen, it appears we are a nation of stress-loving, self-blaming, occasionally slapping workaholics who think little of carrying briefcases full of work home.
In parting, I’d like to leave you with this unique method of stress management I was once taught by a much senior colleague years ago on my first job. One day, I spotted him hunched over his computer typing out a long, detailed resignation letter. Later that evening, I asked if he was going to quit. He said that he was not and then explained his way of handling pressure.
Every time office pressure got to him, he’d spend an hour, write a resignation letter, vent his pains, and then save it somewhere secret on his computer. Without showing a soul.
Later, when things got better, he’d go back and read his old cache of resignation letters and have a jolly good laugh. And he’d go back to work feeling better. At the time I thought it was a weird idea. But now I am older, wiser and carry a 16GB pen drive with me at all times.
How do you cope with stress? With slapping? Send us pictures.
Cubiclenama takes a fortnightly look at the pleasures and perils of corporate life. Your comments are welcome at cubiclenama@livemint.com
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Thursday 10 September 2009

Very Sad - lack of refugee policy for Hindus escaping persecution and rape in Pakistan

Very Sad - lack of refugee policy for Hindus escaping persecution and rape in Pakistan
Reference-http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Fearing-Taliban-Pak-Hindus-take-Thar-Express-to-India/articleshow/4992774.cms?
JAISALMER: In the past four years, some 5,000 Hindus may have crossed over from Pakistan, never to return. It has not been easy abandoning their homes, sometimes even their families, but they say they had no choice: they had to flee the Taliban. 

It started as a trickle in 2006, the year the Thar Express was flagged off. The weekly train starts from Karachi, enters India at Munabao, a border town in Barmer, and runs up to Jodhpur. In the first year, 392 Hindus crossed over. 

This grew to 880 in 2007. The next year, the number was 1,240, and this year, till August, over 1,000 have crossed over. They just keep extending their visas and hope to become Indian citizens. 

Incidentally, these are official figures. Sources say there are many more who cross over and melt in the local milieu. And officials have a soft corner for these people, most of whom have harrowing stories to tell. 

Ranaram, who used to live in the Rahimyar district of Pakistan's Punjab, says he fell prey to the Taliban. His wife was kidnapped, raped and forcibly converted to Islam. His two daughters were also forcibly converted. Ranaram, too, had to accept Islam for fear of his life. He thought it best to flee with his two daughters; his wife was untraceable. 

Dungaram, another migrant, says atrocities against Hindus in Pakistan have increased in the past two years after the ouster of Musharraf. "We won't get permanent jobs unless we convert to Islam." 

Hindu Singh Sodha, president of Seemant Lok Sangathan, a group working for the refugees in Barmer and Jaisalmer, says there's unfortunately no proper refugee policy in India even though people from Pakistan reach here in large numbers. 

He said in 2004-05, over 135 families were given Indian citizenship but the rest are still living illegally in the country and are often tortured by police because they don't have proper citizenship certificates. "In December 2008, over 200 Hindus were converted to Islam in Mirpur Khas town of Pakistan. But there are several others who want to stick to their religion but there's no safety for them in Pakistan." 

Immigration officer at Munabao railway station, Hetudan Charan, says the arrival of Hindu migrants had suddenly increased as over 15 to 16 families were reaching India every week. "None of them admit they are to settle here but seeing their baggage, we easily understand,'' he said. 

Ravi Kumar, who was Barmer collector till his transfer two days back, said the government in 2007 had given permanent citizenship to a few Pakistani immigrants.

Very Sad - lack of refugee policy for Hindus escaping persecution and rape in Pakistan

Very Sad - lack of refugee policy for Hindus escaping persecution and rape in Pakistan


Reference - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Fearing-Taliban-Pak-Hindus-take-Thar-Express-to-India/articleshow/4992774.cms?

Fearing Taliban, Pak Hindus take Thar Express to India


JAISALMER: In the past four years, some 5,000 Hindus may have crossed over from Pakistan, never to return. It has not been easy abandoning their homes, sometimes even their families, but they say they had no choice: they had to flee the Taliban. 

It started as a trickle in 2006, the year the Thar Express was flagged off. The weekly train starts from Karachi, enters India at Munabao, a border town in Barmer, and runs up to Jodhpur. In the first year, 392 Hindus crossed over. 

This grew to 880 in 2007. The next year, the number was 1,240, and this year, till August, over 1,000 have crossed over. They just keep extending their visas and hope to become Indian citizens. 

Incidentally, these are official figures. Sources say there are many more who cross over and melt in the local milieu. And officials have a soft corner for these people, most of whom have harrowing stories to tell. 

Ranaram, who used to live in the Rahimyar district of Pakistan's Punjab, says he fell prey to the Taliban. His wife was kidnapped, raped and forcibly converted to Islam. His two daughters were also forcibly converted. Ranaram, too, had to accept Islam for fear of his life. He thought it best to flee with his two daughters; his wife was untraceable. 

Dungaram, another migrant, says atrocities against Hindus in Pakistan have increased in the past two years after the ouster of Musharraf. "We won't get permanent jobs unless we convert to Islam." 

Hindu Singh Sodha, president of Seemant Lok Sangathan, a group working for the refugees in Barmer and Jaisalmer, says there's unfortunately no proper refugee policy in India even though people from Pakistan reach here in large numbers. 

He said in 2004-05, over 135 families were given Indian citizenship but the rest are still living illegally in the country and are often tortured by police because they don't have proper citizenship certificates. "In December 2008, over 200 Hindus were converted to Islam in Mirpur Khas town of Pakistan. But there are several others who want to stick to their religion but there's no safety for them in Pakistan." 

Immigration officer at Munabao railway station, Hetudan Charan, says the arrival of Hindu migrants had suddenly increased as over 15 to 16 families were reaching India every week. "None of them admit they are to settle here but seeing their baggage, we easily understand,'' he said. 

Ravi Kumar, who was Barmer collector till his transfer two days back, said the government in 2007 had given permanent citizenship to a few Pakistani immigrants.

Sunday 24 May 2009

Sad !!

Sad !!


Reference-http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/13/world/asia/13malnutrition.html?_r=1&emc=eta1
NEW DELHI — Small, sick, listless children have long been India’s scourge — “a national shame,” in the words of its prime minister,Manmohan Singh. But even after a decade of galloping economic growth, child malnutrition rates are worse here than in many sub-Saharan African countries, and they stand out as a paradox in a proud democracy.China, that other Asian economic powerhouse, sharply reduced child malnutrition, and now just 7 percent of its children under 5 are underweight, a critical gauge of malnutrition. In India, by contrast, despite robust growth and good government intentions, the comparable number is 42.5 percent. Malnutrition makes children more prone to illness and stunts physical and intellectual growth for a lifetime.
There are no simple explanations. Economists and public health experts say stubborn malnutrition rates point to a central failing in this democracy of the poorAmartya Sen, the Nobel prize-winning economist, lamented that hunger was not enough of a political priority here. India’s public expenditure on health remains low, and in some places, financing for child nutrition programs remains unspent.
Yet several democracies have all but eradicated hunger. And ignoring the needs of the poor altogether does spell political peril in India, helping to topple parties in the last elections.
Others point to the efficiency of an authoritarian state like China. India’s sluggish and sometimes corrupt bureaucracy has only haltingly put in place relatively simple solutions — iodizing salt, for instance, or making sure all children are immunized against preventable diseases — to say nothing of its progress on the harder tasks, like changing what and how parents feed their children.
But as China itself has grown more prosperous, it has had its own struggles with health care, as the government safety net has shredded with its adoption of a more market-driven economy.
While India runs the largest child feeding program in the world, experts agree it is inadequately designed, and has made barely a dent in the ranks of sick children in the past 10 years.
The $1.3 billion Integrated Child Development Services program, India’s primary effort to combat malnutrition, finances a network of soup kitchens in urban slums and villages.
But most experts agree that providing adequate nutrition to pregnant women and children under 2 years old is crucial — and the Indian program has not homed in on them adequately. Nor has it succeeded in sufficiently changing child feeding and hygiene practices. Many women here remain in ill health and are ill fed; they are prone to giving birth to low-weight babies and tend not to be aware of how best to feed them.
A tour of Jahangirpuri, a slum in this richest of Indian cities, put the challenge on stark display. Shortly after daybreak, in a rented room along a narrow alley, an all-female crew prepared giant vats of savory rice and lentil porridge.
Purnima Menon, a public health researcher with the International Food Policy Research Institute, was relieved to see it was not just starch; there were even flecks of carrots thrown in. The porridge was loaded onto bicycle carts and ferried to nurseries that vet and help at-risk children and their mothers throughout the neighborhood.
So far, so good. Except that at one nursery — known in Hindi as an anganwadi — the teacher was a no-show. At another, there were no children; instead, a few adults sauntered up with their lunch pails. At a third, the nursery worker, Brij Bala, said that 13 children and 13 lactating mothers had already come to claim their servings, and that now she would have to fill the bowls of whoever came along, neighborhood aunties and all. “They say, ‘Give us some more,’ so we have to,” Ms. Bala confessed. “Otherwise, they will curse us.”
None of the centers had a working scale to weigh children and to identify the vulnerable ones, a crucial part of the nutrition program.
Most important from Ms. Menon’s point of view, the nurseries were largely missing the needs of those most at risk: children under 2, for whom the feeding centers offered a dry ration of flour and ground lentils, containing none of the micronutrients a vulnerable infant needs.
In a memorandum prepared in February, the Ministry of Women and Child Development acknowledged that while the program had yielded some gains in the past 30 years, “its impact on physical growth and development has been rather slow.” The report recommended fortifying food with micronutrients and educating parents on how to better feed their babies.
World Food Program report last month noted that India remained home to more than a fourth of the world’s hungry, 230 million people in all. It also found anemia to be on the rise among rural women of childbearing age in eight states across India. Indian women are often the last to eat in their homes and often unlikely to eat well or rest during pregnancy. Ms. Menon’s institute, based in Washington, recently ranked India below two dozen sub-Saharan countries on its Global Hunger Index.
Childhood anemia, a barometer of poor nutrition in a lactating mother’s breast milk, is three times higher in India than in China, according to a 2007 research paper from the institute.
The latest Global Hunger Index described hunger in Madhya Pradesh, a destitute state in central India, as “extremely alarming,” ranking the state somewhere between Chad and Ethiopia.
More surprising, though, it found that “serious” rates of hunger persisted across Indian states that had posted enviable rates of economic growth in recent years, including Maharashtra and Gujarat.
Here in the capital, which has the highest per-capita income in the country, 42.2 percent of children under 5 are stunted, or too short for their age, and 26 percent are underweight. A few blocks from the Indian Parliament, tiny, ill-fed children turn somersaults for spare change at traffic signals.
Back in Jahangirpuri, a dead rat lay in the courtyard in front of Ms. Bala’s nursery. The narrow lanes were lined with scum from the drains. Malaria and respiratory illness, which can be crippling for weak, undernourished children, were rampant. Neighborhood shops carried small bags of potato chips and soda, evidence that its residents were far from destitute.
In another alley, Ms. Menon met a young mother named Jannu, a migrant from the northern town of Lucknow. Jannu said she found it difficult to produce enough milk for the baby in her arms, around 6 months old. His green, watery waste dripped down his mother’s arms. He often has diarrhea, Jannu said, casually rinsing her arm with a tumbler of water.
Ms. Menon could not help but notice how small Jannu was, like so many of Jahangirpuri’s mothers. At 5 feet 2 inches tall, Ms. Menon towered over them. Children who were roughly the same age as her own daughter were easily a foot shorter. Stunted children are so prevalent here, she observed, it makes malnutrition invisible.
“I see a system failing,” Ms. Menon said. “It is doing something, but it is not solving the problem.”
Hari Kumar contributed reporting.

Wednesday 18 February 2009

an Astronomical approach

read and is impressed with the scholarship of "Dating the era of Lord Ram" - an Astronomical approach