Sunday, April 27, 2014

CJI: Sex assault complaints by interns career's sad moment


The retiring Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of India, Mr. Sathasivam has stated that the complaints of sexual harassment against the powerful and popular retired judges by the interns (young female law graduates) was the saddest moment in his career. 

It is increasingly getting revealed that the elders in their evening of their lives fall a victim to their sexual urges so carelessly and fearlessly. The targets preferred by them are bound to bounce sooner or later, they rarely understand, it seems. How many such incidents go unnoticed and unreported, nobody can vouch. Consensual sex at any age hardly gets exposed in a human society.

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Saturday, April 26, 2014

Tragedy strikes a common man unguarded and unsolicited


A small migrant worker Triloki from Gorakpur in Uttar Pradesh, making and selling 'samosa' as a small vendor in Chennai has lost his family -his wife Anita (25), his brother Raj, his kids (daughter 7-years and son 5-years old) when LPG cylinder exploded in a single-room house when he was away to his home town and the family was to join him there in two-three days's time.

Why such a wholesale tragedy to a small man? Bhagwan Buddha only can tell the reason for such happenings on this planet.

(TOI April 25, 2014)
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Friday, April 25, 2014

Justice flawed, injustice imposed


   25 years in prison, US man cleared of murder

Jonathan Fleming, 51, walked out of Brooklyn Supreme Court a free man after the Kings County District attorney's office dropped all charges against him "in the interest of justice".

Fleming had always maintained his innocence in the 1989 shooting death of his friend Darryl Rush in Brooklyn. His attorneys said prosecutors rushed to convict him, ignoring evidence including phone bills, photographs, hotel receipts and other evidence that placed him in Florida at the time of the crime. Fleming was convicted in 1990 and sentenced to 25 years-to-life in prison.

Are we to blame a rotten system or the actors manning that system?

What a great news about the 20th-21st century's judicial system in the most developed democracy on this planet! 
(TOI Thursday, April 10,2014)
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Sunday, April 20, 2014



Daily Telegraph ( Thina Thandhi) a Tamil newspaper dt. April 20, 2014 has reported that a mother elephant lost her balance and fell down on its way to a water pond and injured itself so badly that it died instantaneously. It happened near Thottakombai in Barhur forest area in Erode district of Tamil Nadu state. Soon a group of elephants surrounded the dead body and spent a night but the next day the forest staff saw  the baby elephant standing near the body and weeping like a human child. With lot of efforts they kept the baby at a distance and buried the body after the rituals. The onlookers were surprised at the scene where the baby elephant remained on the spot of burial on guard with tears falling from its eyes and remembering her mother for hours together.

Animals too behave like human beings and remember their mothers so intensely and emotionally. Hats off to the Mother Nature which has created such lives on this planet for ages and  ' Yugas '.

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Tuesday, April 15, 2014

‘Kennecott Utah Copper’s Bingham Canyon mine’ (Rio Tinto)

Kennecott Utah Copper’s Bingham Canyon Mine Visitors Center provides educational, hands-on up-close experiences to help us better understand how Kennecott produces metals and minerals that are essential to creating the products we use in our everyday life.



The Visitor Center established in 1992 has hosted more than 2.6 million visitors and the fees collected in the center goes as donations to local charities benefitting disabled children and the elderly.
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Saturday, April 12, 2014

Defending the indefensible

Arun Jaitley, the Leader of the Opposition in Rajya Sabha, has very categorically and confidently analyzed (in the Hindu dated Tuesday, August 28, 2012) the role of the Indian Prime Minister without mentioning his name even once. It is perhaps in reply the stand taken by P.M in the Parliament House addressing the media. His first sentence in the article says that the parliamentary stalemate continues on one of the greatest corruption scandals in Indian history. This fact is of course subject to legal and Parliamentary scrutiny over a period of time. His observation is that despite the need for the definite role of private sector in mineral-based industries in the country, allocation of natural resources should not be based on discretionary decisions enabling corrupt and collateral motives. The objective criteria should be introduced for this purpose.



Way back when the natural resources were nationalized and allotted to the public sector companies, the first-come first serve principle was followed. Little by little the private sector entered the field and the same principle continued to be applied. In the absence of a ceiling on the acquisition of natural resources looking to the need and capacity of the applicant the resources were allocate don the same principle. But when there was a beeline with all sorts of applicants in the queue the discretion became the order of the day. But all said and done, perfect machinery or a perfect agency or authority is a hard seed to be found these days. Hence even Mr. Clean status has not spared the individual from the blame and criticism anymore. Greed has entered the mind of every corporate house or a new industrial entrepreneur and not prevented them from aspiring for more and more. Speculation and scope for encashment of the grant or license / lease has goaded many a person to stand in the queue for favors on a price or a lesser price.



The P.M says that any allegations of impropriety on the so-called ‘coal-gate’ are without basis and unsupported by the facts. He further goes to say that the observations of the CAG are clearly disputable. He further asserts that the premise of CAG that competitive bidding could have been introduced in 2006 by amending the existing administrative instructions is flawed. Good, if this is flawed, then the PM and his PMO should scrap all the disciplinary proceedings either cleared off or being cleared at their end on the basis of investigations made by several agencies or departments should be filed at once and exonerate those unfortunate ones pleading not guilty by several representations which of course fell on their deaf ears so far. Otherwise they should also undergo similar proceedings before they are declared innocent and transparent in their decisions. Democratic system never allows two different yardsticks to different sets of people – one: influential and the other: non-influential.



The PM pleads that the price of coal based on bidding would push up the cost of power as argued by Ministry of Power. Who has got the control over pricing of different building raw materials even now although many cement plants got acres of bauxite mines for a small royalty payment to the state exchequer? What about diesel, petrol or kerosene price? Do we have any control? Don’t we see increased number of vehicles plying on the roads? Poor farmers are not getting enough prices for the crops they raise. Days are not far off before we totally stop producing food grains and start looking for imports to feed our citizens and the cattle heads. People are not there to work on the fields, factories and other establishments.



Production of coal is no doubt in short supply but there are other ways by which one could have solved the problem of gap in demand and supply but the way in which the coal blocks have been allotted is no proper solution at all. CAG is an auditor appointed by the President of India like any other constitutional authority and he is equally responsible to uphold the traditions of good governance like judiciary fully competent enough to pinpoint the loopholes in our thinking and policy-decisions. If one wing of administration doesn’t agree then there should be a way for explanation before the Parliament and the public in general. It is always the duty of the auditor to raise unpleasant questions and seek answers and any public functionary is likely to get irritated on its working. When there is scope for bungling and misuse of authority in any office or organization, he has to point out the alternative ways of handling things in such a way that the public money is not wasted or drained into others’ pockets by inappropriate means.



Jaitley is also right when he questions the PM on the point of federal polity and democratic compulsions. If PM comes out with a policy option that would not only take care of the states’ royalty incomes but also the local developmental requirements, bidding process would have received the approval of states as well as other opposition parties. That would have been a better position today and earned the opprobrium from all quarters. As Jaitley notes there has been some amount of reluctance on the part of PMO to push thro, the bidding process from the beginning. Initially on September 11, 2004 the PMO circulated a note highlighting the drawbacks in the decision of competitive bidding despite an initial policy decision taken already in June 2004.
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Wednesday, April 9, 2014

26 killed in two weeks, more than 13,000 Buildings Destroyed

Neha Madaan & Nikhil Deshmukh report from Pune / Kolhapur that the unseasonal rains have damaged crops over 13.7 lakh hectares in the first half of March, 2014 and claimed 26 lives, as estimated by the state departments of agriculture and relief and rehabilitation. Of the 28 districts in Maharashtra where farmlands have been ravaged in the rain, Nagpur's loss is the highest, with crop destruction over 1.38 lakh hectares.



The State agriculture department has reported these crop losses from 14,837 villages of 221 blocks or talukas in the 28 affected districts. Of the total 13.7 lakh hectares of crops destroyed, 12.71 lakh hectares were of field crops and 98,473 hectares of fruit crops.



Apart from wheat and red gram, onion, maize, vegetables, rabi jowar crops too have been damaged. Other kharif crops that have been destroyed include pulses and minor crops. Among fruit crops, oranges have been affected the most in this list, followed by grapes, pomegranate, banana, papaya and other fruit crops such as strawberry, guava, mangoes among others.



Natural disasters have become the order of the day for quite some time now. It is for the administration to anticipate in advance such calamities and provide for contingent plan to mitigate the farmers’ woes and problems without any delay.
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