current
Affairs: November 2010
NATIONAL AFFAIRS
Nitish wave sweeps Bihar
Voters in Bihar delivered a memorable and truly
massive mandate to the NDA, led by Nitish Kumar of the Janata Dal (United).
The NDA together cornered as many as 206 (JDU 115 and BJP 91) of the 243
seats in the Assembly, a landslide that had eluded even Lalu Yadav at his
peak.
Even more spectacular was the strike rate of the BJP, which contested 102
seats and won 91 of them, winning virtually 9 of the 10 seats the party
contested. The BJP appears to have done equally well in urban as well as
rural constituencies, riding piggyback on the public image of Nitish Kumar.
The share of votes polled by different parties, however, tell a slightly
different story. While the NDA got 40 per cent of the votes polled, up 2
per cent from the 38 per cent of the votes polled in the general election
in 2009 and from 36 per cent polled by them in the last Assembly election
in 2005.
Drastic improvement in Law and Order situation, speedy trials to
convict 50,000 criminals, some from his own party, empowered women,
reservation of half of the seats in local bodies and primary school
teachers category for women were some of the major reasons for Nitish Kumar
retaining power in Bihar.
Absence of local leaders and lack of ground work, and sudden decision to
contest all 243 seats dissipated the focus and let to the dismal
performance of Congress party.
On November 26, 2010, Nitish Kumar was sworn in as the Bihar Chief Minister
for the second consecutive term and the third time at a simple ceremony at
the sprawling Gandhi Maidan, Patna. Senior BJP leader Sushil Kumar Modi was
sworn in as a Cabinet Minister and designated as Deputy Chief Minister.
NRIs to get voting rights
It’s celebration time for nearly 11 million Non-Resident Indians (NRIs)
across the globe. They will now be able to exercise their franchise in the
elections in the country of their origin. Both Houses of Parliament had
passed the Representation of People (Amendment) Bill in the Winter Session
of Parliament to grant voting rights to NRIs.
Citizens of India who have not acquired the citizenship of any other
country and were living abroad owing to employment, education, or
otherwise, are now eligible to register their names in the electoral rolls
in the constituency of the address shown in their passport and to vote when
and if they are physically present when polls are held.
Until now, an NRI’s name got deleted from the voters’ list if he or she
stayed outside the country for more than six months at a stretch.
India’s first eco-sensitive zone on a major river
The Union government has decided to declare the natural course of the Ganga
in 135 km stretch from Gaumukh to Uttarkashi in Uttarakhand as India’s
first “eco-sensitive” zone on a major river. This means that part of the
river cannot be disturbed for any projects. Following this decision, Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh approved a proposal of scrapping three big hydel
projects— Loharinag Pala, Bhairon Ghati and Pala- Maneri—and providing
2,000 MW of free power to Uttarakhand as compensation for the same.
The decision is direct fallout of Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh’s
assurance to religious gurus, including senior BJP leaders, and environment
experts that river Ganga will be allowed to run its natural flow in the
135-km stretch. The minister had support of non-official members of the
authority, who had been advocating that no dams—small or big—be allowed on
the river.
Mahadayi Water Disputes Tribunal
The Union government has constituted the Mahadayi Water Disputes Tribunal
with a sitting Supreme Court judge, Justice J.M. Panchal as its Chairman.
Justice Viney Mittal of the Punjab and Haryana High Court and a former
judge of Andhra Pradesh High Court, Justice P.S. Narayana, have been
appointed as members.
The Tribunal has been constituted on a request sent by Goa in July 2002,
for adjudication of the water disputes with Karnataka relating to Mahadayi
River. Maharashtra also stands to benefit from its adjudication. The need
for setting up the three-member tribunal was being felt since the Union Ministry
of Water Resources had tried to resolve the dispute, but was not
successful.
Visit of President Patil to Abu Dhabi
Indian President Pratibha Patil made a goodwill visit to Abu Bhabi and
Dubai in November 2010.
India’s economic aspirations and strong growth make it an ideal destination
for foreign investment, President Pratibha Patil told members of the Abu
Dhabi Chamber of Commerce.
All religions of the world unite was the President’s second message in Abu
Dhabi.
At an interaction with students of Indian schools from the UAE at the Abu
Dhabi Indian School, the President advised them to build friendships and
develop the ability to work constructively as a team. She opined that
education was not merely necessary to secure a job but an investment into the
future and a way to imbibe the concepts of peace, harmony and tolerance.
Inaugurating the Indian Islamic Centre, the President said that it was a
tribute to the collective efforts of the Indian Diaspora and would serve as
a cultural bridge between India and the UAE.
The President arrived in Dubai to a grand reception given by the Indian
community. She also launched a long-awaited 24-hour helpline for distressed
Indian workers facing problems with their employers or contracts.
President Patil’s visit to Syria
Indian President Pratibha Devisingh Patil arrived on November 26, 2001, on
a four-day state visit to the Syrian Arab Republic. Her visit assumed
special significance since this was the first ever visit of by an Indian
President to Syria.
Several Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs), including those on cultural
exchange, were signed during the visit. Her talks with President al-Assad
gave a new momentum to the bilateral relations in all fields, particularly
on expanding economic and commercial cooperation. The President’s visit was
aimed to bolster a political dialogue between the two countries and
discussions were held on bilateral, regional and international issues,
including West Asia peace process.
President Patil will also meet Syrian businessmen and industrialists to
find new prospects for bolstering and developing economic and commercial
relations between the two countries. Syria is an important country for
India’s energy security needs.
Syria has already backed India’s demand for a permanent membership of the
United Nations Security Council and has always tried to act as a moderator
for toning down Pakistani rhetoric in the meetings of Organisation of
Islamic Countries.
Visit of President Obama of USA
US President Barack Obama reached India for a three-day official visit on
November 6, 2010. He arrived in Mumbai where he paid homage to the 26/11
Mumbai terror attack victims. Later, addressing the Indian and American
entrepreneurs he said several landmark deals worth US $ 10 billion have
been signed between Indian and American companies shortly before his
arrival. These deals, he said, will help in creating more than 50,000 jobs
back home in USA.
Among the biggest deals announced included Reliance Power’s purchase of
2,400 MW plants from GE and Spicejet’s deal to buy thirty three Boeing 737
aircraft.
President Obama landed in Delhi on November 7, 2010.
On November 8, President Obama addressed the Indian Parliament. The US
President’s speech, which was interspersed with several India-specific
references and continuously underlined the fast-improving partnership
between New Delhi and Washington, was attended by a packed House, which
included Vice-President Hamid Ansari, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Lok
Sabha Speaker Meira Kumar, UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi, Cabinet ministers
and members of the two Houses of Parliament.
If Obama’s support to India for a permanent seat on the UN Security Council
was aimed to please the hosts, the visiting President was equally
forthright when he reminded India that this membership also comes with
greater responsibilities which require it to spell out its position on
issues like human rights violations.
Obama, who was given a standing ovation at the end of his mesmerising
speech, also pleased his hosts with a specific mention to the terrorist
organisations being harboured by Pakistan.
While speaking on Iran’s nuclear programme, he said the US and India “can
pursue” the goal of securing the world’s vulnerable nuclear material. “We
can make it clear that even as every nation has the right to peaceful
nuclear energy, every nation must also meet its international obligation,
and that includes the Islamic Republic of Iran,” he said.
India and the United States pledged to defeat all terrorist networks,
including the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), and strengthen
international cooperative activities that will reduce the risk of
terrorists acquiring nuclear weapons or material.
Condemning terrorism in all its forms, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and US
President Barack Obama, in a joint statement, issued at the end of the
American leader’s official engagements in India, called on Pakistan to
bring to justice the perpetrators of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks.
They reiterated that success in Afghanistan and regional and global
security required elimination of safe havens and infrastructure for
terrorism and violent extremism in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The two
leaders also emphasised the importance of close cooperation in combating
terrorist financing and in protecting the international financial system.
Deciding to strengthen and expand the Indo-US global strategic partnership,
the Indian PM and Obama called for an efficient, credible and legitimate
United Nations to ensure a just and sustainable international order. Singh
welcomed President Obama’s affirmation that in the years ahead, Washington
looked forward to a reformed UN Security Council that included India as a
permanent member.
Singh and Obama also expressed a commitment to strengthen international
cooperative activities that would reduce the risk of terrorists acquiring
nuclear weapons or material without reducing the rights of nations that
played by the rules to harness the power of nuclear energy to advance their
energy security. This sentence in the joint statement is obviously aimed at
justifying the Indo-US civil nuclear deal under which India will develop
nuclear energy with the assistance of major world powers to meet its
growing electricity needs. Both sides expressed deep concern about the
threat of biological terrorism and pledged to promote international efforts
to ensure the safety and security of biological agents and toxins.
On the civil nuclear deal, they reiterated their commitment to build strong
bilateral cooperation through the participation of American energy
companies in India on the basis of mutually acceptable technical and
commercial terms and conditions that enabled a viable tariff regime for the
electricity generated.
The two leaders also decided to take mutual steps to expand US-India
cooperation in civil space, defence and other high-technology sectors
commensurate with India’s non-proliferation record and commitment to abide
by multilateral export control standards.
Key health and Education pacts singed: A promise to help India battle old
and emerging infections and another of forging collaborations in higher
education were the high points of US President Barack Obama’s India visit,
which saw two key pacts being inked in the sectors.
On the health front, President Obama and Prime Minsiter Manmohan Singh
announced the setting up of the Global Disease Detection India Centre to
come up under the MoU between the National Centre for Disease Control
(NCDC), Delhi, and the Centre for Disease Control (CDC), Atlanta.
On the education front, the two sides committed themselves to a higher
education summit in New Delhi in 2011 to develop “collaborations” in the
area.
Building lab capacity at home for diagnoses of emerging infectious diseases
using well characterised reference materials and advanced technology
transfer that meets CDC and global standards will be the other major
takeaways from health MoU.
India and the US also launched a joint initiative for an ‘Evergreen
Revolution’ in agriculture to promote food security across the world. As
part of the food security initiative, India’s expertise in agriculture
sector will be shared with farmers in Africa. An agreement was also reached
between the two nations for cooperation on forecast of monsoon, the most
crucial weather feature for a good crop.
Obama said, “like the earlier collaboration between two countries in
agriculture that ushered in ‘Green Revolution’ in India, he expected the
‘Evergreen Revolution’ to enhance food security for the world”.
Loan scam
On November 24, 2010, the CBI arrested R.R. Nair, Chief Executive Officer
(CEO) of LIC Housing Finance, and four other senior officers of public
sector banks and financial institutions, including the LIC, the Bank of
India, the Central Bank of India and Punjab National Bank, on bribery
charges to facilitate corporate loans.
The arrests and the subsequent talk of a housing scam spooked stock markets
that fell in the last hour of trading by 232 points with financials and
real estate stocks, which were directly related to CBI’s action, bearing
the maximum brunt.
The CBI said it had busted a racket wherein the private financial services
company, its CMD and other associates were allegedly bribing senior
officials of public sector banks and financial institutions for
facilitating large-scale corporate loans. They were also gathering
confidential business information from financial institutions.
Officials of various public sector banks and financial institutions, namely
the Bank of India, the Central Bank of India, Punjab National Bank, LIC and
LIC Housing Finance Limited were receiving illegal gratification from the
private financial services company that acted as mediator for corporate
loans and other facilities from financial institutions.
Post independence, India lost $462 bn in illicit financial flows
Post independence, India lost a staggering $462 billion in illicit
financial flows due to tax evasion, crime and corruption, a research and
advocacy group has said in a report. The report, released by
Washington-based Global Financial Integrity (GFI), found that the faster
rates of economic growth since economic reform started in 1991 led to a
deterioration of income distribution which led to more illicit flows from
India.
According to the primary findings of the report titled “The Drivers and
Dynamics of Illicit Financial Flows from India: 1948-2008”, India lost a
total of $213 billion in illicit financial flows (or illegal capital
flight).
These illicit financial flows were generally the product of: tax evasion,
corruption, bribery and kickbacks, and criminal activities.
From 1948 through 2008 the Indian private sector shifted away from deposits
into developed country banks and moved more of its money into offshore
financial centres (OFCs). The share of OFC deposits increased from 36.4 per
cent in 1995 to 54.2 per cent in 2009, the report said.
The total present value of India’s illicit assets held abroad accounts for
approximately 72 per cent of India’s underground economy. This means that
almost three-quarters of the illicit assets comprising India’s underground
economy—which has been estimated to account for 50 per cent of India’s GDP
(approximately $640 billion at the end of 2008)—ends up outside of the
country.
Telecom spectrum scam
On November 16, 2010, the CAG indicted former telecom minister A.
Raja for ignoring the advice of Prime Minister, Finance and Law ministries
to allocate 2G spectrum to new players in 2008 causing a whopping revenue
loss of over Rs 1.76 lakh crore.
In the report, tabled in both houses of Parliament, the CAG noted that the
ministry of communication and IT “decided to go ahead with arbitrarily
deciding that the cut-off date for issuance of Letters of Intent would be
advanced to September 25, 2007, and applications received would be decided
on FCFS (first-come-first-served) basis.”
In November 2007, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had written to the telecom
ministry suggesting introduction of “transparent methodology” of auction,
“revision of entry fee” in the “backdrop of inadequate spectrum and large
number of applications received for fresh licences.”
The CAG highlighted that the Law Ministry had suggested
setting up of an Empowered Group of Ministers to discuss the large number
of applications and spectrum pricing, but the telecom ministry rejected it
saying “the need for forming and EGoM arises when a new policy is being
framed and on this particular issue no new policy for grant of UASL
(unified access service licences) was being framed.”
The auditor, however, said the “contention of the DoT is untenable as the
rejection of the advice” of the Law Minister to have detailed deliberations
on the issues in the EGoM on the ground that changes in policy might lead
to litigation “goes against the well-established and time-tested procedures
of functioning of the government and the collective responsibility of the
Union Cabinet.”
The report said the presumptive loss caused to the
exchequer through spectrum allocation to 122 licencees and 35 dual
technology licences in 2007-08 was Rs 1,76,645 crore. It pegged the figures
on the basis of 3G auction held earlier this year in which the government
mopped up over Rs 67,000 crore.
In the 77-page report, the CAG said the figure of the presumptive loss has
been determined on the basis of various indicators like 3G auction and a
price offered by an operator in 2007, besides scarcity value, nature of
competition, business plans envisaged, number of operators and growth of
sector.
The auditor pointed out that spectrum was allotted by
DoT to the existing operators beyond the contracted limits (6.2 Mhz)
without imposing any upfront charge for such allotment.
On the values determined through various indicators, the
presumptive value of 2G spectrum on account of grant of 157 licences in
different circles during 2007-08 would be in the range of approximately Rs
58,000 crore to Rs 1,52,038 crore.
The value of spectrum held by 13 operators for 51
circles based on the 2001 rates works out to be Rs 2,561 crore, while its
value based on above indicators like 3G auction would be Rs 12,000 to Rs
37,000 crore.
The CAG said that 85 out of 122 new licences issued to 13 companies in 2008
were granted to ineligible companies as all of them (85) did not have
stipulated paid-up capital at the time of application. Further 45 out of 85
licencees were issued to companies which failed to satisfy conditions of
main object clause in the memorandum of Association (MoA), the government
auditor said.
The CAG said the process of giving dual technology licences to leading
telecom firms including Reliance Communications and Tata Teleservices
“lacked transparency and fairness”, and equal opportunity was denied to
other similarly placed operators who could apply for use of dual technology
only after formal announcement of the policy.
Noting that this approval (dual technology use) had violated Cabinet
decision of 2003 to allow additional spectrum at 2001 prices, the auditor
said, “Deviation from a Cabinet decision should normally be with the
approval of Cabinet.Tatas have launched first indigenously manufactured
helicopter cabin from the aero-space special economic zone near Hyderabad.
The TAS project for the cabin was conceived in collaboration with US-based
Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation, a subsidiary of United Technologies Corp.,
USA.
On November 1, 2010, the Reserve Bank of India raised the repo and reverse
repo rates by 25 basis points (100 basis points equals one per cent),
reflecting the continued government and RBI concerns over inflationary
pressures. Repo rate is the rate at which RBI lends to banks and that now
stands at 6.25%. Reverse repo is the rate at which RBI borrows from banks
and that now stands at 5.25%.
Paris-based BNP Paribas has become the world’s biggest bank, with assets
rising 34 per cent in last three years, reaching $3.23 trillion.
State-owned Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) has
surpassed Reliance Industries to regain its position as India’s biggest
refiner. This was achieved after completion of expansion of its Panipat
refinery.
|
|
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
Tentative deal in Iraq keeps Maliki in power
Iraq’s political leaders reached a tentative deal on November 10, 2010, to
form a new government by giving a second term to Shiite Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki, thus breaking the eight-month political stalemate that had
plagued the country. The unexpected compromise, after a more than
seven-hour meeting, came after the largely Sunni-backed bloc of Iraqiya,
which won the most votes in March polls, begrudgingly agreed to back
Maliki.
But even as the deal was announced, some Sunni leaders expressed dissatisfaction,
a potentially troubling sign for the US as it moves toward the planned
withdrawal of all of its forces by the end of 2011. A feeling of exclusion
among Sunnis could prompt them to abandon the political process and renew
an insurgency that has quieted significantly in recent years, although
steady levels of violence continue.
US officials had been pushing a power-sharing agreement between Iraqiya
leader Ayad Allawi, a secular Shiite, and Maliki, whom they tacitly backed
for PM, as a way to break the Shiite leader’s monopoly on government
authority and give the Sunni Arab minority a powerful role in Iraq’s next
government.
Under the new agreement, it was agreed to appoint a speaker from Iraqiya,
then name the current Kurdish President, Jalal Talabani, as President of
Iraq. He, in turn, named Maliki as Prime Minister.
Junta’s proxy seeps Myanmar poll
Myanmar’s military-backed party captured 77 per cent of the Parliamentary
seats contested in the November 7, 2010 elections, following polling widely
decried as manipulated and unfair.
The results point to an overwhelming victory, but there has never been much
doubt about the outcome because the junta-proxy, the Union Solidarity and
Development Party (USDP), fielded candidates in nearly every district,
whereas the largest opposition party was able to contest only 164 of the
1,159 parliamentary seats.
The government said the elections, the country’s first in two decades, were
a major step towards democracy, but critics, including US President Barack
Obama, said they were neither free nor fair.
The polling also sparked violence and some fears of an outright civil war
among Myanmar’s ethnic minorities, who make up about 40 per cent of the
population. Some have been fighting the central government since Myanmar
gained independence from Britain in 1948.
The West denounced army-ruled Myanmar’s first election in 20 years while
State media in China, a key ally of the regime, struck a discordant note by
hailing the polls as a sign of progress.
Led by US President Barack Obama, numerous countries decried the vote as
neither free nor fair and called for the release of political prisoners,
including democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi, who was sidelined in the polls.
China has long helped economically dysfunctional Myanmar to keep afloat
through trade ties, arms sales, and by shielding it from UN sanctions over
rights abuses as a veto-wielding member of the UN Security Council.
Backgrounder: Elections are very rare events in Myanmar. In the last
half a century there was only one—in 1990, followed by the latest held on
November 7). A devout Buddhist politician, U Nu, set up an unstable
administration on the withdrawal of the British, survived the first two
elections, but voluntarily retired after the second. His successor asked
the army, soon after, to stand in for some time in the capacity of a
caretaker. Nu returned for a second try at governing the multiple
insurgency-ridden country, by decisively winning the 1960 election. Yet, in
less than two years, the army dethroned the elected government in a coup.
The first military dictator, General Ne Win, was toppled by a students-led
agitation in 1988, but another General took power and the military has
since then showed no intention of loosening its grip on the country. Currently,
Senior General Than Shwe is the top boss and nearing 80 in age.
The Generals did try to create a democratic façade for their rule at one
stage by organizing a general election in 1990, but did not know how to
tailor it to their desired narrow self-interest and watched their own
make-believe civilian political party crushed by the voters. That largely
fair election, witnessed by foreign journalists, gave only 10 of 492 seats
to the army’s party and 392 to Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy
(NLD).
The junta responded with iron fist. The result of the election was
annulled. Suu Kyi and her NLD were turned into targets for unceasing
persecution. Suu Kyi has been under house arrest for 15 of the 20 years
since then. She could not collect the Nobel Peace Prize she was awarded.
Nor could she participate in the November 7 election because the military
junta’s electoral laws were largely directed against her and her party.
Twenty years after that failed election, the army has staged another. This
is an attempt no doubt at easing the growing pressure of adverse world
opinion. As could be expected, the Generals were careful this time not to
make the mistakes of 1990. A new constitution was framed and adopted by a
referendum in which 99 per cent of the voters participated and over 92 per
cent of them cast “yes” votes. The constitution reserves for the army
one-fourth of the seats in each of the two Houses of Parliament and the
more important ministries. Also, no constitutional change will be possible without
a majority of more than three-fourths. A political party has been created
with leading roles in it for about a score of men who were military
officers till sometime back.
Prime Minister General Thein Sein resigned from the army to lead the
civilian-looking outfit named the Union Solidarity and Development Party
(USDP).
The electoral laws ruled out Aung San Suu Kyi’s participation. Neither
convicted persons nor individuals opposing the State organizations could
stand for any seat. Roughly 300,000 Buddhist monks representing the
religious order were disenfranchised. So were the people in some rebellious
ethnic minority areas. No one whose spouse or children are foreign citizens
can become the head of the Myanmarese State. Suu Kyi’s British husband is now
dead and her two sons are also British living in the UK.
Suu Kyi and the National League for Democracy found the dice so heavily
loaded against them that they only had one choice—boycotting the sham
election. Yet the junta wanted to be doubly sure; it ordered the
dissolution of NLD and a few other parties on the ground that they failed
to apply for permission to continue political activities.
There were no election observers from abroad and unlike in 1990, when 60
foreign journalists were granted visas a few days before the polling, no
news-person from outside was let in.
Democrats lose control of US House of Representatives
A disenchanted American electorate, in a snub to President Barack Obama,
handed a bruising defeat to his Democratic Party and put the Republican
Party back in control of the US House of Representatives in mid-term
elections on November 4, 2010.
The loss of Democratic control of the House will be an obstacle to Obama’s
ability to push through his agenda over the next two years. However, it is
by no means an indicator of the President’s own fate. In 1994, the
Republicans took control of Congress under Bill Clinton’s Presidency.
Clinton, a Democrat, went on to serve for a second term. Besides Clinton,
Harry Truman and Dwight Eisenhower both lost control of at least one house
of Congress in the mid-terms. No President in the past century has lost his
bid for a second term in office after losing the majority in the mid-term
elections.
However, Republicans are in no mood to work with the Democrats and the
party’s leaders have vowed to do everything possible to ensure that Obama
is only a one-term President.
Ireland becomes second Euro nation to seek aid
On November 22, 2010, Ireland became the second euro country to seek a
rescue as the cost of saving its banks threatened by a re-run of the Greek
debt crisis that destabilized the currency.
The aid, which Irish officials said as recently as November 15 they didn’t
need, marked the latest blow to an economy that more than doubled in the
decade ending in 2006. The bursting of the real-estate bubble in 2008
plunged the country into a recession and brought its banks close to
collapse. With Irish bond yields near a record high, policy makers are
trying to keep the crisis from spreading.
The package for Ireland will total as much as 60 percent of gross domestic
product, compared with 47 percent for Greece.
The bailout follows two years of budget cuts that failed to restore market
confidence as the cost of shoring up the financial industry soared.
UNDP Human Development Report
India is ranked 119 out of 169 countries on the Human Development Index
(HDI) of the UNDP’s 2010 Human Development Report.
This marks an improvement of just one rank between 2005 and 2010 though the
report, a special 20th anniversary edition, places India among top 10
performers globally in terms of HDI measured on income growth. The category
is led by China. India comes 10th after Botswana, South Korea, Hong Kong,
Malaysia and Mauritius.
China has improved eight notches (from 2005 to 2010) to secure the 89th
position. In South Asia, Nepal has gained five places to reach the 138th
rank. Maldives has risen four places to 107; Sri Lanka at 91 too has beaten
India in the rankings, though Pakistan has lost two ranks to fall to 125, while
Bangladesh is up one at 129.
Though high on GDP growth, India reports severe inequalities (the report
for the first time measures inequalities, gender gaps and multidimensional
poverty as markers of human development) while several low-income nations
have posted huge profits by investing in education and health. Nepal is the
only South Asian country, which despite low income, stands as the third
best performer in the top 10 movers the report highlights.
These movers are the 10 nations (out of 135 studied for development
indicators) that made the largest HDI improvements over the past 40 years.
Oman leads the pack having invested its energy earnings in health and
education. Except China, which is second on this list thanks to income
gains (recording 21 fold jump in per capita income since 1980), all other
nine countries are top movers due to health and education benefits. These
are Nepal, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Lao PDR, Tunisia, South Korea, Algeria
and Morocco. India is 16th in the category.
While India’s HDI value has increased from 0.320 in 1980 to 0.519 in 2010,
higher than South Asia’s average of 0.516, India still lags behind among
medium HD nations. South Asia, particularly India, post shocking percentage
losses in HDI values if inequalities are counted.
The best HDI ranker in the world, Norway, loses just 6.6 per cent to
inequality while China loses 23 per cent and Bangladesh 29.4 per cent.
Global giants join hands to save climate
On November 29, 2010, the first day of the Cancun Climate Summit, the
global consumer goods industry announced two major initiatives on climate
protection: to halt deforestation practices and phase out climate damaging
refrigerants that have high global warming potential.
In a statement issued from Paris, this was announced by the Consumer Goods
Forum, a CEO-level organisation of 400 global consumer goods manufacturers
and retailers with combined revenue in excess of $ 2.8 trillion. The
initiatives were announced by the board of directors, comprising 50 CEOs
and co-chaired by Muhtar Kent, CEO, The Coca-Cola Company and Lars
Olofsson, CEO of Carrefour.
On deforestation, the Consumer Goods Forum decided to mobilise their
collective resources to help achieve zero net deforestation by 2020.
On refrigeration, the Forum agreed to begin phasing out hydrofluorocarbon
(HFC) refrigerants as of 2015 and replace them with non-HFC refrigerants.
Deforestation is one of the principal drivers of climate change, accounting
for 17 per cent of greenhouse gases today. The consumer goods industry,
through its growing use of soya, palm oil, paper and board, creates many of
the economic incentives which drive deforestation.
Refrigeration plays a vital role in the retail and consumer goods industry
but is also a significant and growing source of greenhouse gases. HFCs are
powerful greenhouse gases that are thousands of times as potent as carbon
dioxide. While they currently have a relatively small aggregate impact on
global warming, HFC emissions are projected to represent 9-19 per cent of
projected greenhouse gas emissions in 2050. The US government has targeted
HFC reduction as a priority climate action under the Montreal Protocol, and
garnered support from 91 nations at 2010 Montreal Protocol conference in
Bangkok.
World mayors sign climate change pact
Mayors from around the world have signed a voluntary pact in Mexico City to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The pact was signed at a meeting meant as
a precursor to the UN-sponsored talks in Cancun.
Participants from some 135 cities and urban areas signed the pact
committing them to adopt a number of measures to stem climate change.
Meanwhile, a new study has found that fossil-fuel gases edged back less
than hoped in 2009, as falls in advanced economies were largely outweighed
by rises in China and India.
Annual emissions of carbon dioxide from the burning of oil, gas and coal
were 30.8 billion tonne, a retreat of only 1.3 per cent in 2009, compared
with 2008, a record year.
USA, Australia ink space surveillance pact
On November 8, 2010, Australia and the US signed a pact to increase space
surveillance over the Asia-Pacific region by expanding the reach of US
military satellites.
The two countries signed a ‘space situational awareness’ partnership at the
conclusion of the annual US-Australia security and military dialogue, under
which Washington would place more satellite tracking sensors in Western
Australia.
The network would give Americans a strategic surveillance capacity over the
southern hemisphere to track space and missile launches from China as well
as Korea.
The signing of a space pact comes as US and its allies in the Pacific
region have accused China of trying to militarise space by investing
heavily in space technology.
A space situational awareness partnership statement issued at the conclusion
of the security meet said that the US and Australia shared a deep concern
about the “congested and contested nature of outer space”.
G-20 Summit
The Seoul Action Plan, agreed at the end of the two-day Summit of the G-20
leaders, called for moving towards more market-determined exchange rates.
An undervalued Yuan or a weak Dollar also has ramifications for India and
several other countries in terms of their exports becoming uncompetitive.
The G-20 group includes India, the US, China, Germany, France, Brazil,
Russia and Japan.
In the face of a currency war between the US and China, global leaders,
including Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, agreed to refrain from
‘competitive devaluation’ and bring in exchange rate flexibility to ensure
that no country gets undue advantage.
These measures, the leaders said, would help mitigate the risk of excessive
volatility in capital flows facing some emerging market economies.
Cablegate Crisis in USA
The United States was catapulted into a worldwide diplomatic crisis on November
29, 2010, with the leaking to various international media of more than
250,000 classified cables from its embassies, many sent as recently as
February 2010. At the start of a series of daily extracts from the US
embassy cables Arab leaders are privately urging an air strike on Iran and
that US officials have been instructed to spy on the UN leadership.
The cables include comments on a shift in relations between China and North
Korea, high-level concerns over Pakistan’s growing instability, and details
of clandestine US efforts to combat al Qaeda in Yemen. The cables also
contain specific allegations of corruption, as well as harsh criticism by
US embassy staff of their host governments, from Caribbean islands to China
and Russia.
The State department’s legal adviser wrote to the founder of WikiLeaks,
Julian Assange, warning that the cables were obtained illegally and that
the publication would place at risk “the lives of countless innocent
individuals … ongoing military operations … and co-operation between
countries”.
The electronic archive of embassy dispatches from around the world was
allegedly downloaded by a US soldier and passed to WikiLeaks.
The US embassy cables are marked “Sipdis”—secret internet protocol
distribution. They were compiled as part of a programme under which
selected dispatches, considered moderately secret but suitable for sharing
with other agencies, were automatically loaded on to secure embassy
websites, and linked with the military’s Siprnet internet system.
More than 11,000 are marked secret, while around 9,000 of the cables are
marked noforn (no foreigners).
North Korea shells South Korean island
On November 23, 2010, North Korea fired scores of artillery shells at a
South Korean island, killing two soldiers, in one of the heaviest attacks
on its neighbour since the Korean War ended in 1953. South Korea was
conducting military drills in the area at the time but said it had not been
firing at the North.
The attack came as the reclusive North, and its ally China, were pressing
regional powers to return to negotiations on its nuclear weapons programme
and revelations that Pyongyang is fast developing another source of
material to make atomic bombs.
It also followed moves by leader Kim Jong-il to make his youngest, but
unproven, son his heir apparent, leading some analysts to question whether
the bombardment might in part have been an attempt to burnish the ruling
family’s image with the military.
At least 200 North Korean shells hit Yeonpyeong, which lies off the west
coast of the divided peninsula near a disputed maritime border. Most landed
on a military base there. Photographs from Yeongyeong island, just 120 west
of Seoul, showed columns of smoke rising from buildings.
South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, who has pursued a hard line with the
North since taking office nearly three years ago, said a response had to be
firm following the attack. But he made no suggestion the South would
retaliate further, suggesting Seoul was taking a measured response to
prevent things getting out of hand.
The two Koreas are still technically at war—the Korean War ended only with
a truce—and tension rose sharply early 2010 after Seoul accused the North
of torpedoing one of its navy vessels, killing 46 sailors.
The US strongly condemned the attack and called on North Korea to “halt its
belligerent action,” and urged nuclear-armed North Korea to “fully abide by
the terms of the Armistice Agreement” that ended the Korean War.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov condemned the shelling, warning of
‘colossal danger’ from Korean tensions and calling for an end to any
hostilities.
Business News
Institute of Microbial Technology (IMTECH), a
Chandigarh based biotechnology laboratory, has signed a $150-million
licensing agreement with Nostrum Pharmaceuticals, a US company, for
new-generation clot busters developed by it.
According to a scheme approved by the Ministry of New and Renewable
Energy (MNRE), the union government will provide financial incentive for
each electric vehicle sold in India during the remaining part of the 11th
Plan—2010-11 and 2011-12. The scheme envisages incentives of up to 20 per
cent on ex-factory prices of the vehicles, subject to a cap of Rs 4000
for low-speed electric two-wheelers, Rs 5000 for high-speed electric
two-wheelers, Rs 60,000 for seven-seater three-wheeler and Rs one lakh
for an electric car.
Axis Bank has acquired investment banking arm of Enam securities for Rs
2,067 crore. Asset Management Company and insurance broking arm of Enam
are not part of the deal.
|
|