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Army provides books to School

Excelsior Correspondent

JAMMU, July 26: Rashtriya Rifles Battalion, based at Jhangar, under Uniform Force provided library books and shelves to Govt Higher Secondary School, Kalsian, today.
Almirahs with glass windows, steel almirahs, dictionaries, books on general knowledge, epic, encyclopaedia, yoga, world history, English speaking and various other books were handed over to the students of Govt Higher Secondary School, Kalsian in presence of the School authorities.
The project is yet another dedicated effort to provide valuable assistance to border area schools in providing much needed quality education to students.
The students and teachers of the School were overwhelmed by the gesture of the Rashtriya Rifles Battalion.

Amitabh Bachchan begins shooting for KBC 8

MUMBAI, July 26:
Megastar Amitabh Bachchan has shot for the first episode of his game show ‘Kaun Bange Crorepati 8’.
The 71-year-old actor, who entered the small screen with the show in 2000, began shooting yesterday for the eighth season.
“The new season of KBC starts and the first day has been shot and canned… The crew and the atmosphere familiar, but never too familiar to destroy the work on hand,” he wrote in his blog.
“It may be 14 years since our association with it… But each moment needs the kind of concentration and effort that shall make it endurable and loved,” he added.
The theme of ‘KBC 8’ is community bonding and respect, with the promos sending message of peace, harmony and religious tolerance and the tagline of the show saying ‘Yahan Sirf Paise Nahi, Dil Bhi Jeete Jaate Hain’ (You not only win money here, but win hearts too).
Bachchan said the stories of the contestants touched his heart. “First day of KBC recording and it attracts you from word ‘go’ !! Lovely contestants, moving stories, and the joy of meeting them,” he wrote on his Twitter page.
Bachchan is currently seen on television in his maiden fiction show, ‘Yudh’. (PTI)

RM College organizes Orientation Programme

Excelsior Correspondent

JAMMU, July 26: RM College of Education organized 10-day Orientation Programme for the teachers of Gandhi Nagar and Jeevan Nagar branches of Shiksha Niketan in the premises of Jeevan Nagar School, which concluded here today.
The Programme had started on July 17, 2014.
The Orientation Course gave emphasis on teaching skills, English speaking and personality development.
In the concluding function today, renowned educationist, I D Soni was the chief guest, while Principals and In-charge of the both the branches were also present on the occasion.
The chief guest, other dignitaries and a team of experts gave lectures on the occasion.
Power Point presentations were used for making the Programme more effective.
A total of 250 teachers from different wings of both the branches attended the Programme.
The experts were awarded gifts as a token of gratitude from the Schools.

Arms-ammunition recovered by security forces from Ramban area on Saturday.

Arms-ammunition recovered by security forces from Ramban area on Saturday.
Arms-ammunition recovered by security forces from Ramban area on Saturday.

Arms-ammunition recovered by security forces from Ramban area on Saturday.

Ambaran neglected

Sir,
This has reference to the article ‘Ambaran-A heritage in a shambles’ DE July 20′.
It is quite dismaying that no attention is being paid to this heritage site. One had expected that this site may receive great attention after Dalai Lama visited some years back but  no such thing happened so far. The site is in the same position as was before Dalai Lama’s visit. Had it been developed, it would have emerged as one of the important Buddhist sites in the world. At the same time Akhnoor too would have emerged as a tourist cum pilgrimage centre. It would be great loss to the State if this heritage site remains in perennial neglect.
It is incumbent upon the people of Akhnoor to pursue the matter vigorously with the concerned authorities to see this place developed as an important Buddhist site. Once that happens Akhnoor will  emerge an attractive tourist spot and its socio-economic outlook will change for better.
Yours etc…
Nitin Sharma
Rajouri

Neglected heritage

Sir,
This is with reference to a news item “Despite the heritage status, GGM Science College fails to develop” DE July 22.
It is very disheartening to know that despite heritage status no initiative are being taken to repair old and weathered building of GGM Science College that is catering the educational needs of the poor students of our State. Cracked walls, broken window panes, untidy classrooms and damaged plaster is all you see there and it is because of callous attitude of successive State Governments.
I request the concerned authorities to restore the glory of a century old prestigious institution founded by Maharaja Pratap Singh.
Yours etc….
Tariq Mir
Mendhar, Poonch
Alumnus of GGM
Science College

Plea to JU authorities

Sir,
I  would like to bring to your kind notice the policy of 2nd preference in admission in PG Courses of Jammu University.As per this policy if a candidate who has done MA/M.Sc/M.Com etc from the Jammu University and seeks admission in another PG Course he is given second preference even If he has got high merit marks which is against the principal of equity and justice.
If a new candidate gets 15 marks in Jammu University Entrance Test (JUET) and the Candidate who has already done a PG course  gets 35 marks the seat will be given to the fresher. This policy is against the merit system .
If this policy continues, the candidate who has done PG will  never be able to seek admission in Jammu University in another course.
Yours etc…
Guneet Sharma
On e-mail

Too wise

Ved Pratap Vaidaik is approaching seventy years of age.  He holds a doctorate from the Jawahar Lal Nehru University.  A journalist of repute, he is the founder editor of ‘Bhasha’ – a Hindi news agency.  He chairs the Bharatiya Bhasha Sammelan and has several award-winning research publications to his credit.  Dr. Vaidik proudly displays on his website his photographs with Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, Pakistan’s Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and other dignitaries from both the sides of the border.  According to a recent interview he gave to a national paper, it was he who had predicted several years ago that Modi would one day be India’s prime minister.  Not best known for any false humility, he tells whosoever cares to listen, of his closeness to the powers that be, including PM Modi himself.  Why then such a highly educated, accomplished and well-connected man – himself a celebrity – had to meet Hafiz Saeed, a proclaimed offender and India’s enemy number one?    Was it the professional curiosity of a veteran journalist, plain simple dare-devilry or the lust for glory that drove Dr. Vaidik to this act of dubious distinction?
‘All three of them,’ Kaga Bhushundi ji said laconically.
‘I don’t follow you.’ I said.

Kaga Bhushundi SpeakEth
Suman K Sharma
‘Look, son.  One, Vaidik ji is an eminent journalist. What do journalists live for but telling tales?  Here was a big tale waiting for him and he jumped for it.  Two, no one can deny that it required some pluck to enter into the terrorist’s lair and engage him in polite conversation.  And three, yes, he did seek glory or why else would he be talking himself hoarse about this meeting? That said, I do feel that in meeting Hafiz Saeed,  Vaidik ji acted rather too wise.’
‘Why do say that, Kagaji?’
‘Let me tell you the story of Narad Muni.  The venerable sage was on one of his countless jaunts when he came across a prosperous town.  There he was invited to the royal palace and the king, anxious for the marriage of his only daughter, beseeched him to read the princess’ palm.  Narad ji agreed, though he did not care much for human affairs.  But when they brought the nubile rajkumari in his presence, he was dumbstruck by her beauty and graces.  The sage felt this was the woman he could sacrifice all his vows of celibacy and mendicancy for.  There was a problem though, he realized painfully.  The would-be bride was fresh like the first bloom of the spring, while he was an age-old autumn tree.  With what face could he ask the king for the damsel’s hand?  Making a hasty retreat from the palace, Narad Muni went straight to Bhagwan Vishnu….’
‘I know the rest of the story, Kagaji.  Narad Muni asks Lord Vishnu for a winsome face and then goes on to prove himself too wise for his own good.  For, unknown to him, the new face that he proudly carries to win the princess’ hand is not that of a Prince Charming, but a monkey’s. At the royal wedding everybody has a hearty laugh at the expense of poor old Narad.  It’s  a funny tale in an otherwise utterly moralistic drama of Ramayana; but how do you connect it with Dr. Vaidik’s meeting with Hafiz Saeed?’
‘Son, there is a moral in the funny tale too; we will come to it presently.  As to your query, Vaidik ji had gone on a three-day yatra to Pakistan in a group of bhadra-lok for promoting peace and understanding between the two countries.  On completion of the visit as planned, others came back home, but Vaidik ji extended his stay.  Then strings were pulled here and there and he found himself sitting face to face with Hafiz Saeed, sharing pleasantries with him and refusing to touch the eatables placed before him out of empathy for his fasting host.  So far, so good.  The problem arose when the two men started talking shop.  Hafiz Saeed put on an act of an innocent man who was being wrongly maligned by India.  And Vaidaik ji on his part tried to apply Narad Muni-like charm on the hard-boiled terrorist, perhaps to win him off his dreadful ways.  Giving free rein to his tongue (known as he is for his oratory), he said things about Kashmir and sharing of water with Pakistan, which he was not supposed to say.’
‘But, Kagaji, Dr. Vaidik is not the sort of a person who would shoot shoot off his mouth without some indication from the  right quarters.’
‘There lies the moral of the tale.  Vaidik ji presumed that he had the authority to talk whatever came to his mind.  Presuming too much, he turned presumptuous and ended up being a laughing stock before the whole world.   “Arrogance,” as someone said, “on the part of the meritorious is even more offensive to us than the arrogance of those without merit: for merit itself is offensive.”‘

Poverty in India

G. Srinivasan
Material progress and social progress are two diametrically different propositions altogether that the success in one does not reflect analogous and distinct improvements in the other unless conscious efforts are put in place to lift all sections of society to a decent standard of living. While the gross domestic product (GDP) growth captures material progress, the social progress is being captured in a new concept called human index development. To some extent most of the advanced countries had struck balance between the two, even as emerging economies including India and China and a host of developing countries and the least developed countries (LDCs) continue to wage a uphill battle to fulfill the aspirations of legions of their people. Invariably these people struggle to make both ends meet when they are at the mercy of market and mercantilist forces that rule the roost in their economies. The latest report of the Washington-based International Food Policy Research institute (IFPRI) put India in a dismal slot of 63rd out of 78 countries at the Global Human Index (GHI)alongside many African and sub-Saharan countries.
This is further borne out by another report of the United Nations on Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) released in India on July 16. The MDGs were a pledge made at the turn of the century to uphold the principles of human dignity, equality and equity and free the world from extreme poverty. They included eight MDGs, with a host of sub-targets covering a range of poverty, hunger, health, gender equality, education and environmental indicators with a due date of 2015. The report frankly admits that though Southern Asian region including India has made great progress on the MDGs, the region requires greater efforts to achieve most targets by the end of 2015.
Stating that the overwhelming majority of people living on less than $1.25 a day belong to Southern Asia and sub-Saharan Africa , the UN said in 2010, one-third of the world’s 1.2 billion extreme poor lived in India alone. China, despite much progress in poverty reduction and stupendous economic achievement, ranked second and was home to about 13 per cent of the global extreme poor. Again, it pointed out that between 1990 and 2012, almost 2 billion people gained access to an improved sanitation facility. Yet in 2012, 2.5 billion people did not use an improved sanitation facility and one billion people still resorted to open defecation. What is shocking is that close to 60 per cent of the one billion people practicing open defecation live in India posing s a huge risk to communities that are often poor and vulnerable already. This is particularly a painful reminder in light of recent research establishing a decisive causal link between poor sanitation and hygiene and malnutrition.
Yet another grim pointer is that renewable water resources in Southern Asia have withdrawal rates around 50 per cent. This is close to the threshold of 60 per cent at which physical water scarcity becomes a concern, both in the lives of people and for the environment; ecosystems become strained and not all users get the desired amount of water at all times.  This should goad the authorities in India to focus on water conservation, ground water recharging and other important measures on a war-footing if a water famine or water war is to be thwarted or averted before long. In fact, the Minister of Minority Affairs Dr. Najma Heptulla while participating in the launch function of the report conceded that the four references to India pertain to poverty, infant-deaths, maternal deaths and sanitation and none of these references are “flattering”.
In a written response to a query in the Lok Sabha on July 18, the Minister of Health and Family Welfare Dr. Harsh Vardhan said infant mortality rate in India is 42 per 1000 live births and maternal mortality rate is 178 per one lakh lives, citing figures from Sample Registration System report 2012 of Registrar General of India. He said as per extant WHO/UNICEF Global report, 47 countries have higher IMR than India and 52 countries have higher MMR than India. He, however, maintained that in 2012, under five mortality rate in India is 52 and it may reach 42 per thousand live births in 2015. He further said maternal mortality rate is likely to reach 141 from 560 in 1990 if 5.7 per cent compound rate of annual decline continues.  But the task on hand is not facile in the absence of due pre and post-natal care for both the mother and the child in many a primary health care centres in the villages in rural India.
Again, he stated in another query in the Lok Sabha on July 18, citing the National Family Health Survey (NHFS)-3 conducted in 2005-06, that 42.5 per cent children below five are underweight and 48 per cent are stunted. Considering the grim admission in the UN report that child nutrition continues to haunt the globe with one out of every four children suffering from some for m of chronic malnutrition, the authorities should focus their attention on improving the quality intake of children under five through targeted subsidies to the really needy in both rural and urban habitations so that posterity does not pose challenges to the country’s  development in terms of a successful human index progress, social analysts say wryly
The Secretary-General UN, Mr. Ban Ki-Moon perceptively noted in his foreword to the report “we need bolder and focused attention where significant gaps and disparities exist” The Modi Government has the tasks cut out in terms of translating most of its inclusive vision of development of India into feasible reality by making concerted efforts towards improving the nation’s human development index more than anything else. The country wasted precious years of the past in what the Finance Minister Mr. Arun Jaitley elegantly captured in his reply to the General budget discussion in the Lok Sabha that “unquantified amount on unidentified” people by way of subsidies was spent.
It is time the nation got its priorities back on track so that social security of the people is ensured and not the mere spectacle of glitzy malls, glamorous programmes that give a false and insecure sense of development beneath which lurks bottled up resentment and restiveness of millions.  The report rightly noted that the MDGs have been a mirror that permits the world to look itself in human development terms and pass the verdict on the steps that have been taken and “need to be taken to ensure that no one is left behind and that everyone’s basic needs are met”. If the Indian authorities imbibe this spirit, our complete and robust development in the true sense of the term can be secured for the future generation of Indians. (IPA)

July is a volatile month

M.J.Akbar
Sir Jadunath Sarkar, the eminent historian, records that in 1679 Shivaji sent  a letter to the emperor Aurangzeb protesting against the imposition of jizya during a time of great hardship. The Maratha icon pointed out that Aurangzeb’s predecessors Akbar, Jahangir and Shahjehan also had the power to levy this discriminatory tax on non-Muslims “but did not give place to bigotry in their hearts, as they considered all men, high and low, created by God to be examples of the nature of diverse creeds and temperaments”. In a memorable admonishment, Shivaji reminded Aurangzeb that the Quran called  Allah “Rabb ul alamin, the Lord of all men, and not Rabb ul muslameen [only the Lord of Muslims]… To show bigotry for any man’s own creed and practices is equivalent to altering the words of the Holy Book…” Sir Jadunath dwells on this remarkable letter  in both Shivaji and His Times, as well as in his History of Aurangzeb [Volume 3]. Equal honour to  every faith is a pillar of Indian civilization; and it this common moral and cultural inheritance that provides the enduring inspiration for our Republic. Shivaji’s 17th century letter could serve as a preface to India’s  20th century Constitution.
It is not the job of a column to lecture, let alone pontificate, but there are occasions when a reminder is apposite, even if the scale of an MP’s provocation is minor compared to the far-reaching impact of an emperor’s prejudice.  The irrational, almost schoolboy-bully, anger of a few Maharashtra MPs who were  served disagreeable food in a government hostelry is an immature misdemeanour rather than government policy, but we must take it seriously, for the edifice of India’s democracy is built by the innumerable bricks of individual and collective rights.
It is perfectly true that a man’s religion is not written on his face, as an MP who sought to thrust a chapati down a Muslim server’s mouth at the Maharashtra Sadan in Delhi pointed out. But in which script does one write the language of human dignity, the language that Shivaji made his creed?  The question is particularly appropriate when the relevant MP claims to wear the mantle of Shivaji. We are talking of more than an affront to a particular religion; it was brash display of the arrogance  towards a much larger community of the poor. This was negation of the central message of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s election campaign, where he repeatedly stressed three core themes and reiterated them during his first major speech in the Lok Sabha: the foremost responsibility of a government is to work for the poor; development and jobs must go to every Indian, including minorities [“If one organ of the body remains weak, the body cannot be termed as healthy. We are committed to this…We don’t see this as appeasement”]; and that India can become a modern nation, with double-digit growth, only when we make development into a mass movement, in the manner that Gandhi made the freedom struggle into a mass movement. The volatile variations that now rising across public debate could throw the government off-message.
Some of the volatility is predictable if not explicable. The election results were an earthquake, and the after-shock tremors will trouble the earth for a while. There will be a fringe which claims justification for its views in the results. A few carpetbaggers will imagine that they can improve their chances of preferential treatment during the distribution of rewards by pandering to the fringe. But marginal facts should not be confused with a central reality. A government can only be run from an inclusive perspective. Home minister Raj Nath Singh did well to reassure Parliament, and the nation, that such behaviour was unfortunate, and by implication unacceptable.
There are practical dangers in veering off-message as well. Politicians might be surprised to discover that voters have become volatile as well. Voters want delivery on what they were promised at campaign time; they are not interested in the sudden spout of a new rhetoric. Voters are not doctrinaire; they want jobs and homes and electricity and water and  lower vegetable prices, and they want it sooner rather than later. They enjoy the luxury of electoral options, and have the ability to recognise a leader who they believe will deliver better than the competition. In state elections, candidates for Chief Minister will influence the outcome significantly. With power comes responsibility, of course; with responsibility comes a face and a name.
Narendra Modi has inspired a pervasive hope that the politics, language and governance of an arid past is behind us. No one expects results to be immediate, or transition to be easy; but the country senses an absence if he shifts to the background for even a week or a fortnight. The travails of July will soon be over. August needs a return of that fresh breeze.