Sunday, May 2, 2010

CIVIL SERVICES APTITUDE TEST: 10 INITIAL STEPS TO BE TAKEN:-


By Dr. Bijay Ketan Upadhyaya,I.A.S.
Rank 5, CSE 2008.

1. Whatever the test will be, one thing is for sure … The importance of Current Events will not decrease. In my opinion, its significance will increase. So it makes sense to go through 2 National Dailies everyday for 2-3 hours & jot down important news items. You can go through …
• The Hindu
• The Times of India
• The Economic Times (If possible)

2. You should make your mathematics, reasoning & mental ability side strong .For this you can begin with :-
• Quick math for Bank PO Exam by M Tyra
• Quantitative Aptitude & Reasoning by R S Agarwal
• Simple Aptitude & Mental ability books for Bank PO & NOT for CAT of IIMs will be helpful. CSAT will be a much simplified version of CAT.

3. Prepare one optional very well & General Studies. These two things you must be very strong. As the pattern of Prelims & Mains is not clear at this point.

4. Common books to be read in the initial days which will be important always :-
• Modern India by Bipan Chandra NCERT
• India Year Book
• Manorama Year Book
• NCERT 11th & 12th standard books on History, Geography & Economics
• General Science book of CBSE or NCERT 9th & 10th standard
• TMH General Studies Guide (Especially General Knowledge & General Mental Ability area will be helpful.)
• Our Constitution by Subhash Kashyap
• Our Parliament by Subhash Kashyap ( Optional )

5. Listen to All India Radio bulletins from 2 PM to 2.30 PM & 9 PM to 9.30 PM very well. Also listen to ND TV news bulletins & programmes like Big Fight, We The People, BBC World so that your General Knowledge expands.

6. Lucent’s General Knowledge will also help in this aspect.

7. Any Guide book on RBI Grade B will also shed light on the situation based question & questions testing your decision making ability.

8. Solve the Verbal & Non-Verbal Reasoning questions that come out in magazines like General Knowledge Today, Pratiyogita Darpan etc.

9. Read some basic economic book like :-
• Indian Economy : Problems & Prospects by Uma Kapila OR
• Indian Economy by Dutta, Sundharam ( Tougher & better )

10. Develop the skill to solve mathematical & reasoning problems faster. It comes with practice. So the sooner you start practicing, the better your chances of clearing CSAT in 2011 will be …

ALL WILL BE WELL … & DON’T WORRY TOO MUCH …

HOW TO GET 140 MARKS IN ESSAY IN CSE

Hi, I have got 140 in Essay in 2006 Mains & also 140 in 2008 Mains. Many candidates are confused about How to PREPARE ESSAY … So writing this piece …

Essay preparation for Civil Services Exam can be of two types:-

1. LONG-TERM PREPARATION
2. SHORT-TERM PREPARATION

I will first write about long-term preparation. It can be done by those aspirants who have 1 yr or 2 yr or 3 years in their hands i.e. before Mains exam …

1. LONG-TERM PREPARATION
(The Path Less Trodden):-

• These things should be done when you are doing your GRADUATION these days or u have enough time say 10 months at least to go for Extra-Curricular reading :-

• For long-term preparation be regular with any two national newspapers. I would recommend THE HINDU & THE TIMES OF INDIA. The Hindu gives you simple & effective writing style while TOI gives u stylish English & increases your vocabulary. Both are needed to write a good Essay.

• Read 2-3 hours everyday. Specially focus on the Editorials & other Analytical & Critical articles. Say in Hindu focus on Magazine, Book Review, Literary Review, Business Review, Open Page, 2 page OP-ED Page etc & in The Times of India focus on its Editorial Page. Whenever you encounter a DIFFICULT PHRASE, EDIOM, PART OF SPEECH etc just see the Oxford Advanced Learners Dictionary or Chambers Dictionary & in a Diary note down that word, its meaning, its usage in sentence etc. This MUST be done within 1-2 minutes. Don’t keep it pending.

• Or else one word is lost from your vocabulary. By doing this your VOCABULARY will increase & you will know HOW TO USE THAT WORD IN A DIFFERENT CONTEXT. This is a gradual & continuous process and it will take 12-18 months to make your vocabulary very strong & have command over the language & expressive power.

• In addition to newspapers read as many articles from GOOD MAGAZINES as possible. The following magazines can be referred to.
a. FRONTLINE ( Must )
b. THE ECONOMIC & POLITICAL WEEKLY ( Must )
c. MAINSTREAM (Optional)
d. WORLD FOCUS (Optional)
e. THE ECONOMIST (Optional)
f. TIME or LIFE ( If you have access to a good library)

• I am not saying that you should try to finish all these magazines in one month. But try to read as many HIGH QUALITY ARTICLES as possible. This will increase the RANGE & VARIETY of your thinking & will make you knowledgeable about the happenings around the world & different streams of thought. (For Example: - What is “Stream of Consciousness”? What is “Theatre of Absurd”? What is “Objective Correlative” in T S Eliot’s poems? What is The Revival Movement? Etc)

• Jot down POWERFUL & EFFECTIVE sentences that you come across in a Diary. Any Quotations or Important Sentences said by Intellectuals like Amartya Sen, Manmohan Singh, Noam Chomsky, Edward Said, Bertrand Russell, Arundhati Roy etc should be noted down.

• Revise your Diary in free time many times so that you can remember these quotations, important words, sentences etc & use them at relevant places in your Essay in Mains Exam.

• Apart from these things read a lot of NOVELS, POEMS, PLAYS, SHORT STORIES etc

• I am giving a list of some of the books that I read. You can pick up some of them …

1. R K NARAYAN’S NOVELS (SWAMI & FRIENDS,THE ENGLISH TEACHER,THE GUIDE,THE DARK ROOM,THE BACHELOR OF ARTS,WAITING FOR MAHATMA,THE PAINTER OF SIGNS etc)
2. WAITING FOR GODOT ----- by SAMUEL BECKETT
3. T S ELIOT ----- SELECTED POEMS
4. THE GOLDEN TREASURY
5. WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE ( MACBETH,KING LEAR,TEMPEST … ETC)
6. ENGLISH AUGUST ------ by UPAMANYU CHATTERJEE
7. GEORGE ORWELL ----- THE ANIMAL FARM,1984
8. BERTRAND RUSSELL ----- SCEPTICAL ESSAYS, PHILOSOPHICAL ESSAYS, HIS AUTOBIOGRAPHY
9. THE DISCOVERY OF INDIA --- JAWAHARLAL NEHRU
10. THE GOD OF SMALL THINGS ---- ARUNDHATI ROY
11. MIDNIGHT’S CHILDREN ---- SALMAN RUSHDIE
12. PLAYS OF HAROLD PINTER or at least know about his works.
13. ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF SOLITUDE ---- by GABRIEL GARCIA MARQUEZ
14. NOVELS OF CHARLES DICKENS like GREAT EXPECTATIONS, A TALE OF TWO CITIES, HARD TIMES etc
15. Search TOP 100 NOVELS OF ALL TIME in Google & read some 5-10 novels of any author “WHOM YOU LIKE” …


The basic idea is to make yourself “well-read” & with a COMMAND over ENGLISH … For this READ SOME GOOD QUALITY novels or poems mentioned above or after searching Google (For ex. Best 100 Poems of Twentieth Century, Best 100 Plays of All Time etc. )




• Now I will turn to SHORT-TERM PREPARATION which everybody wants:-

2. SHORT-TERM PREPARATION
(For The Mango People):-

• For this you need 4-6 months in hand. Plz read:-

1. The Hindu articles & analysis (At least read some 500-1000 Articles from Hindu & in one FILE keep the best 100-150 Articles & Revise them.)
2. The Times of India Editorials (Sunday Edition. The SUNDAY TIMES & “NOT” the DELHI TIMES!!! )
3. The Oxford Book of Essays edited by John Gross( Read some good Essays) (Selective reading)
4. The Penguin Book of Essays(Read some good Essays) (Selective reading)
5. The Book of Essays by Spectrum & quotations given at the back. Remember 200-300 good Quotations which you can use in any Essay & use them liberally.
6. Oxford Book of Twentieth Century Quotations
7. Oxford or Rupa Book of Quotations
8. Competition Success Review Book of Essays (2 Vols for Juniors & 2 Vols for Seniors). CSR publishes GOOD Essays in Essay Competitions. So you can pick points from them …
9. Read sometimes The Economic Times Editorials (Left hand side only. The 3rd editorial on the left lower corner helps in Essay. Also “The Debate” (for, against & neutral) that comes in Tuesday )
10. Make 2-3 diaries full by QUOTATIONS, DIFFICULT WORDS & their meaning, Who said what etc.

• Try to write in simple, effective & in an expressive manner. Every sentence of your essay must have a FORCE which should shake the examiner …If you have mastery over FLOWERY language, then go for it. Or else write in a simple, straightforward & concise manner.
• I write in a flowery language with LOTS OF QUOTATIONS & difficult words.

Hope this detailed guideline on Essay helps …

CHANGING FACE


The UPSC has made the Preliminary exam application-oriented, in tune with the new challenges before bureaucrats and their changing roles.


C.V. SUBRAHMANYAM

District Collector J. Syamalarao interacts with trainee IAS officers in Visakhapatnam on January 26.

THERE is a lot of debate within the discipline of public administration whether the bureaucracy should be heavy or thin. According to the neoliberal school of thought, the state should withdraw itself from the responsibility of development and leave it to private forces. Welfare state advocates feel that the state should be actively involved in developing the country. However, both schools cannot deny the importance of the bureaucracy in executing legislative decisions. Civil servants, being the most important policymakers of the country, are given many privileges and accorded a high status in the Constitution.
They are selected through an exhaustive system of examinations so that the best brains are chosen to run the country efficiently. The examination is an annual affair conducted by the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC). There has also been a lot of debate on the process of selecting the administrators of the country, with many commissions having recommended various methods.
Until now, the method has involved three stages. First, graduates from any discipline take a Preliminary examination. From this, candidates are selected for the Main examination. Those who qualify in the Main examination then appear for a personality test or an interview. The Main examination has a set of eight papers. This includes two papers each in two different optional subjects, two papers in General Studies, one paper of English, and one paper in a regional language.
Depending on the number of positions every year (determined by the government), the UPSC chooses candidates and allots them the services according to their rank. The most preferred is the Indian Administrative Service (IAS), followed by the Indian Police Service (IPS) and the Indian Foreign Service (IFS). A decade ago, the IFS was considered the most elite of the services. But analysts feel that the number of candidates from rural areas and Other Backward Classes and the Scheduled Castes have now increased and they prefer the IAS over the IFS.
The UPSC is all set to replace the Preliminary examination with a common Civil Services Aptitude Test (CSAT) next year. The present Preliminary examination is based on two objective-type papers, of which the candidates can choose one optional subject, while the other paper, General Studies, is common for all. The CSAT, on the other hand, will have two objective-type papers, common to all the candidates. The UPSC plans to include questions that test decision-making abilities, and knowledge of current affairs and public administration.
This could have a big impact on the roughly four lakh candidates who take the exam every year. While the new candidates will be in a better position to do well, the students who have already put in a lot of effort with many years of preparation could find their efforts wasted. However, institutes that have years of experience in training people for the exam seem to have a different view. V.P. Gupta of Rau’s IAS Study Circle said: “Only the Preliminary exam will change. The maximum effort by a candidate is done for the Main examination. That still remains the same.” UPSC Chairman D.P. Agrawal, while speaking to the media, had confirmed that there was no plan to change the structure of the Main examination.
But why are these changes being instituted? For years, there have been many complaints against the UPSC that the scaling system of evaluation was not foolproof. The scaling system helps place aspirants from backgrounds as different as Mathematics and English on an equal footing. Candidates who have a Mathematics background would naturally score more than those with an English Literature background. Apart from this, there was a feeling among candidates that the UPSC needed to be more transparent as it did not come out with cut-off marks.
The government constituted many committees to study the present pattern and recommend changes. The changes now proposed are based on recommendations made by the committee led by Y.K. Alagh, former Chairman, University Grants Commission. Coaching institutes across Delhi are all geared up to take up the challenge. “Why should we be averse to changes? In fact such changes will produce better bureaucrats. We can diversify our teaching methods as and when required. Even now we are adopting various creative methods to train students. This will also help us rebuild ourselves in a different fashion,” said A.R. Khan of the Khan Study Group.

P.V. SIVAKUMAR

IPS probationers at the national police academy in Hyderabad. A file photograph.

With several opportunities available for middle-class India since 1991, one would have expected fewer candidates to appear for the UPSC exam. But data show that the number of candidates has increased despite the availability of high-paying jobs in multinational companies. “This is because more and more people are getting a good education and aspire for the Civil Services and also because the services, contrary to popular perception, has become more dynamic in nature,” said Gupta.
So what does dynamic mean? The role of the bureaucrat from the 1990s has changed from that of a regulator to a facilitator. Over the past two decades, the government, while cutting institutional subsidies at one level, has flooded governance with various social schemes like the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme, the National Rural Health Mission, the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan and so on. With such schemes falling under the district administration, the role of bureaucrats on the ground has increased multifold. Experts say that the role of facilitators does not mean less work for the bureaucrats. “The process of decentralisation in governance and the specialisation of tasks leading to the separation of departments have made their duties more demanding,” said Gupta.
The Right to Information Act has increased the need for more officers dealing with information. The grave internal security situation demands more police officers. Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram said late last year that India needed many more IPS officers. Similarly, in every government, there is an inclusion of new Ministries, from Disinvestment to Corporate Affairs. Such new departments need more and more bureaucrats as the government expands on a massive scale in its role as a facilitator.
It is for this reason that the number of UPSC vacancies has been steadily increasing. While it was around 850 positions last year, the number has gone up to 953 this year. And UPSC sources say that the number is most likely to go up every year.
The coaching business has boomed in major cities across the country. “We tell our students that the average attention span of any human being is not above 12 minutes and then train our students to read effectively to assimilate better. This infuses confidence in them,” said Gupta.
“Learning about learning is actual learning. We must enjoy the journey of preparing for the exam,” he said. If one sticks by this, perhaps, the civil services examination might not appear to be that difficult. And even if candidates do not qualify eventually, the extensive preparation will have widened their knowledge, which will help them face other challenges.

Study Notes) Current Affairs: International Issues: 14 - 19 March 2010 by Dialogue India

International (Political & Economy)
Content:
  1. What is the issue between Google and China?
  2. Drug menace: Hillary heads for Mexico
  3. Zoffany's The Last Supper to be restored
  4. Agenda for road safety
  5. Eastern Europe, Central Asia warned of energy crunch
  6. U.N. recognises Russia-led bloc
  7. Marital trouble for Bullock, Winslet
  8. Narrow lead for Maliki
  9. U.S., Pakistan to hold dialogue
  10. Zuma wins trust vote
  11. Accord to cancel Afghan debt
  12. Head of Irish Church apologises for coverup
  13. Left-green revival in France
  14. Ban goes ahead with Sri Lanka panel
  15. Washington-Tel Aviv row escalates
  16. 15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to CITES, in Doha
  17. Shortest man dead
  18. india-born MP found dead
  19. Youngest solo across the Atlantic
  20. Saudi Arabia not to influence China on Iran
  21. Panic over fake news in Georgia
  22. A fraud of an election
  23. Surging global weapons transfers raise concerns
  24. Panel to study cause of conflict in Sri Lanka
Brief Description:
What is the issue between Google and China?
  • Google has been operating google.cn, a search engine meant for Chinese speaking people since 2006.
  • China requires Internet operators to block words and images the ruling Communist Party deems unacceptable.
  • China demands that Google should respect its censorship laws. But Google accuses China of hacking its sites with an intent to bully the search engine giant.
  • Google in January said it may exit China pending talks with the government on a plan to stop censoring search results in its Google.cn site, after claiming it was targeted by cyber attacks from within the country.
  • The height of this tiff is that China demands that Google should respect its censorship laws even if it exits China.
Drug menace: Hillary heads for Mexico
  • At a time of heightened concern over drugs-related bloodshed in Mexico — some of it affecting American citizens — Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has announced plans to hold discussions with authorities there next week.
  • The talks come close on the heels of the killings in Ciudad Juarez, by suspected drug gangs, of three persons associated with the U.S. consulate there. Last weekend, an employee of the consulate, her husband and the husband of a Mexican employee were gunned down.
Zoffany's The Last Supper to be restored
  • A 10x12 feet canvas depicting The Last Supper that took German neoclassical painter Johann Zoffany six weeks to paint, will take a team of six conservators five months to tend to the 47 tears and holes it has suffered in the 223 years since its creation.
  • Started in February, the project will cost about Rs.15 lakhs.
  • The painting, acknowledged to be among the finest representations of the Biblical scene in India, was presented to the St. John's parish on June 24, 1787, for the consecration of the first church built by the British.
Agenda for road safety
  • The resolution passed by the United Nations General Assembly urging all nations to launch a decade of action on road safety from 2011 resonates with India's vulnerable road users.
  • The Global Status Report on Road Safety, published by the World Health Organisation in 2009, reveals that the country leads a group of 10 countries with an appalling record.
Eastern Europe, Central Asia warned of energy crunch
  • Eastern Europe and Central Asia may face an energy crunch by 2030 due to rising consumption unless massive investments are made to unlock capacity, the World Bank has warned in a report released.
U.N. recognises Russia-led bloc
  • A Russia-led defence bloc of ex-Soviet states signed a cooperation pact with the United Nations that is likely to pave the way for the alliance's greater involvement in Afghanistan.
  • U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon signed the document in Moscow along with General Nikolai Bordyuzha, head of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO). The CSTO includes Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.
  • The agreement amounts to a recognition of the CSTO as a full-fledged international security organisation. Two years ago the U.N. signed a similar pact with NATO. The Atlantic Alliance has consistently refused to sign a cooperation agreement with CSTO, which is often described as a counterbalance to NATO in Central Asia.
Marital trouble for Bullock, Winslet
  • Just days after celebrating her first Oscar win, Sandra Bullock's marriage to Jesse James seems to be nearing an end as she has moved out of the family home after reports of infidelity on his part.
  • It looks like Ms. Bullock will join the long line of Oscar-winning women actors whose marriage ended soon after they won the coveted award, including Kate Winslet, Halle Berry, Angelina Jolie, Hillary Swank and Kim Bassinger.
Narrow lead for Maliki
  • Iraq Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's coalition is facing a stiff electoral challenge from Iyad Allawi's Iraqiya bloc as counting for the Iraq's tightly fought parliamentary elections enters its final phase.
  • Trailing behind the Iraqiya bloc on Tuesday by 9,000 votes, Mr. Maliki's State of Law (SOL) formation has recovered to establish a narrow lead. With nearly 85 per cent of the votes counted, the State of Law had recorded 2,260,483 voted against Iraqiya's 2,220,443.
  • Mr. Allawi, riding on strong nationalist agenda has managed to draw the Sunni and secular votes, analysts say. However, Mr. Maliki backed by the Shia vote bank may in the end triumph if his coalition is joined by another Shia formation, the Iraqi National Alliance (INA), which is running third in the contest.
  • Observers, however, caution that in the numbers game that lies ahead, the Kurdish vote coalesced under the Kurdistania Alliance could also be significant.
  • In the last elections, the Kurds had sided with the Shia formations, and the Shia-Kurdish alliance had decisively outflanked the Sunnis and their allies.
  • Some analysts are of the view that if the present trend continues, Mr. Maliki's SOL and the Iraqiya bloc could each end up with 85 to 90 seats in the 325-member Parliament.
  • The INA could manage around 67 seats, while the Kurdistania alliance could notch up around 38.
U.S., Pakistan to hold dialogue
  • The United States and Pakistan will hold their first strategic dialogue at the ministerial level in Washington DC on March 24, it was announced here. The talks will be co-chaired by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Pakistani Foreign Minister Makhdoom Shah Mahmood Qureshi.
  • Additionally, deputy spokesman at the State Department Mark Toner, said: “Obviously, we're talking about … Afghanistan, the situation there, the spill-over into the FATA [Federally Administered Tribal Areas] and how to really better engage. And in fact, we've seen some successes on that front in recent weeks on terrorism.”
Zuma wins trust vote
  • South Africa's ruling party says it used its overwhelming majority in Parliament to throw out a no-confidence vote in President Jacob Zuma.
  • The African National Congress says the motion was baseless. Supporters of the motion say Mr. Zuma, who has three wives, recently acknowledged fathering an illegitimate child and his behaviour set a poor example, particularly in the fight against HIV/Aids.
Accord to cancel Afghan debt
  • The United States and other countries belonging to the Paris Club of creditors agreed to cancel Afghanistan's debt.
  • While the U.S. said lifting the debt burden inherited by the Afghan government marked a crucial step in Afghanistan's road to economic sustainability, the Paris Club added that Afghanistan had committed to allocating resources freed by the debt relief to priority areas identified in the country's poverty reduction strategy and to achieve Millennium Development Goals.
  • With the accord signed, Afghanistan, a member of the enhanced Heavily-Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative, would see the implementation of “completion point treatment,” said the State Department. This implies the cancellation of an estimated $1.6 billion in debt from the Paris Club, as well as the IMF, World Bank and other creditors. As per the debt relief plan, this process will ultimately result in a “96 per cent reduction of the debt inherited by Afghanistan's government,” which was estimated at $11.6 billion in 2006.
  • The breakthrough for Afghanistan comes after years of careful debt and macroeconomic management — since 2002 technical advisors have been working with the Afghan Ministry of Finance to streamline the budget process, improve the payment system for government employees, restructure Afghanistan's debt, and establish a Debt Management Unit within the Ministry of Finance, according to official reports.
  • The Paris Club was formed in 1956 as an informal group of industrialised countries.
Head of Irish Church apologises for coverup
  • Head of Irish Catholic Church Cardinal Sean Brady was under growing pressure to resign after he was forced to apologise for his role in the child abuse scandal that has hit the church.
  • His apology came after victims' groups said he had “unclean hands” following revelations that as a priest in 1975 he tried to hush up cases of sexual abuse involving another priest, Brendan Smyth, who then went on to commit more offences and was finally convicted many years later.
  • Cardinal Brady acknowledged that he was present at a meeting where two victims — aged 10 and 14 — were asked to sign oaths of secrecy while the offending priest was sent to another parish.
  • The Church has failed to explain why the police were not informed.
Left-green revival in France
  • The first round of the elections for the 26 French regional assemblies, which took place on March 14, has resulted in a thumping win for the Socialist Party (PS), led by Martine Aubry, over the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP), President Nicolas Sarkozy's conservative party.
  • The UMP trails in almost all 22 regions of metropolitan France, namely the mainland plus Corsica. Interior Ministry figures show the PS as having gained 29.5 per cent of the vote, well ahead of the UMP's 26.2 per cent and the environmentalist Europe Ecologie's 12.5 per cent.
  • The campaign was marred by acrimony and racist and sexist diatribes as Mr. Sarkozy's colleagues followed his lead (in previous elections) with tough positions on crime, immigration, and the national identity. Yet that strategy has been rejected by habitual conservative voters. It has even failed to attract support from Jean-Marie Le Pen's hard-right anti-immigrant National Front (FN), which tallied 11.55 per cent. The second round takes place on March 21; despite some confusion over the announcements, the PS and Europe Ecologie have announced that their party lists will be combined in all but three regions.
Ban goes ahead with Sri Lanka panel
  • United Nation's Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is going ahead with his proposal for a panel of experts on Sri Lanka despite objections from Colombo that the panel would infringe on the country's sovereignty.
  • The U.N. News Centre website quoted Mr. Ban as saying the panel was in line with a joint statement he issued with Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa during his visit to the country in May 2009, days after the military defeat of the LTTE.
Washington-Tel Aviv row escalates
  • Israelis and Palestinians have drifted further away from indirect talks after the special envoy of the United States to West Asia, George Mitchell decided to postpone his visit to the area and violence gripped parts of volatile East Jerusalem.
  • The postponement is yet another step marking the sudden downslide in diplomatic interaction between the Americans and the Israelis. The deterioration began during last week's visit to Israel and the West Bank by U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden. During the course of his visit, Israel announced its decision construct 1,600 homes in East Jerusalem, illegally occupied by Israel during the 1967 war.
  • European Union foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, also said in Cairo that the Israeli decision had “endangered and undermined the tentative agreement to begin proximity talks”.
  • Notwithstanding the diplomatic row, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has not budged from his position of constructing new homes in occupied territory. In an address to Parliament on Monday, Mr. Netanyahu said that construction “will continue in Jerusalem as this has been the case for the past 42 years”.
  • Meanwhile, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), a powerful U.S. based Israeli lobbying group, has gone on the offensive and asked the American administration “to take immediate steps to defuse the tension with the Jewish state”.
  • Amid escalation of the war of words, clashes have broken out in East Jerusalem over Israel's decision to restore the Hurva synagogue in the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem's walled Old City.
  • The Palestinians have said the restoration endangered the revered Al-Aqsa mosque situated around 400 metres away.
15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to CITES, in Doha
  • Efforts to control  n trade have failed
  • Governments across the world have “failed miserably and… are continuing to fail” to halt the growth of illegal poaching and trade in tiger body parts, says Willem Wijnstekers, Secretary-General, Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).
  • At the Doha meet, representatives of nearly 150 nations will vote on over 40 proposals on restricting trade in endangered species.
  • Pointing out that 2010 was the Chinese Year of the Tiger and the International Year of Biodiversity, Mr. Wijnstekers said the trend must be reversed this year.
  • The World Bank, which leads the Global Tiger Initiative, has reportedly found that the trade is spurred by privately-run tiger farms in Asian countries such as China. Further, scientific studies in India have demonstrated that most wild tiger populations will not be able to withstand even small increases in poaching over time. While China banned trade in tiger bones and products in 1993, illicit sales continue. In a 2007 report titled Taming the Tiger Trade, the WWF said any easing of the Chinese ban would be a death sentence for the endangered cats. The report warned that Chinese business owners who stand to profit from tiger trade were pressuring the Chinese government to lift the ban.
Shortest man dead
  • The world's shortest man has died in Italy.
  • Guinness World Records said in a press release that he was born in 1988 with a form of primordial dwarfism. He was officially measured in March 2008.
india-born MP found dead
  • Mystery surrounds the “accidental'' death of an India-born Labour MP whose body was found in his home in Middlesbrough, north-east england.
  • Police said Ashok Kumar (53), MP for Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland, suffered a “sudden accidental” death but declined to comment on a possible cause saying it was too early to say whether there was anything suspicious about it.
Youngest solo across the Atlantic
  • Katie Spotz completed her mission becoming the youngest person to row an entire ocean solo, and the first American to row a boat without help from mainland to mainland. After 70 days five hours 22 minutes in the Atlantic, Ms. Spotz (22), arrived on Sunday in Georgetown, Guyana, in South America.
Saudi Arabia not to influence China on Iran
  • American efforts to build momentum for a fresh round of sanctions against Iran have hit a snag following the visit to Riyadh by U.S. Defence Secretary Robert Gates.
  • China has so far been firm in proposing that instead of sanctions, negotiations should be way forward in addressing concerns regarding Iran's nuclear programme.
Panic over fake news in Georgia
  • Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili has been assassinated, Russian tanks are advancing on Tbilisi, and opposition leaders have seized power in the country, a Georgian television station reported causing panic and then angry protests when people realised it was a fake report.
  • In a brief announcement before airing the report, the Imedi Television said it was a “simulation” of what might happen if Georgian society is not consolidated against Russia's aggressive plans. However, many viewers missed the warning and watched in horror the 30-minute hoax report broadcast in the 8 p.m. prime time news bulletin.
A fraud of an election
  • The Political Parties Registration Law, enacted by the military junta in Myanmar ahead of general elections to be held later this year, is aimed at keeping the popular leader and Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi out of the electoral process.
  • Only portions of the law have been released and they are outrageous. There cannot be a greater fraud on the electoral process, the sole aim of which is to keep the military junta in power.
  • The international community, led by the United Nations, was hoping against hope that the military rulers would see some reason and make the forthcoming elections an inclusive process.
Surging global weapons transfers raise concerns
  • Surging global weapons transfers are raising concerns about arms races in tension-fraught areas of the globe, a leading peace research group warned.
  • New data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute showed that transfers of major conventional weapons rose by 22 per cent in 2005-2009, compared to the previous five-year period.
  • The U.S. remains the biggest arms supplier, accounting for 30 per cent of weapons exports, while China and India are the biggest importers of conventional weapons, SIPRI said.
  • It added that Singapore and Algeria had both made the top-10 list of major weapons importers for the first time.
Panel to study cause of conflict in Sri Lanka
  • Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa has decided to appoint a “committee” to study the root cause of the ethnic conflict, lessons learnt since sections of Tamils took to militancy to gain their rights in the mid-seventies and challenges faced since the military defeat of the LTTE in May last year, said Minister of Disaster Management and Human Rights Mahinda Samarasinghe here on Friday.
  • Asked if the committee would cover the circumstances leading to the deployment of the IPKF and the 1989 Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) second insurgency, the Minister said: “Yes, it would be a comprehensive study covering all aspects.”
  • The announcement on the committee coincided with the controversy over the decision of U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to appoint a panel of experts to advise him on Sri Lanka and the vociferous objections raised by Colombo to the proposal. In the course of a telephone conversation with Mr. Ban, Mr. Rajapaksa termed the move uncalled for and unwarranted.
  • Mr. Samarasinghe pointed out that the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) comprising 124 member states had condemned Mr. Ban's move.
  • Since the defeat of the LTTE, the government has been countering demands for a commission to investigate alleged human rights violations in the 34-month long Eelam War IV and repeatedly pointed to the resolution by the Human Rights Commission lauding Sri Lanka on the issue.
Courtesy:- Dialogue India and Career Plus

(Study Notes) Current Affairs: International Issues: 20 - 30 March 2010 by Dialogue India

International (Political & Economy)
Content:
  1. U.S.,Russia conclude START pact
  2. 38 killed in suicide bombings at two Moscow Metro stations
  3. China jails Rio Tinto executives
  4. NLD to stay away from polls
  5. Bid to break Thailand impasse
  6. Call for nuclear free West Asia
  7. First gay wedding in U.K. Parliament
  8. Obama lauds student funding reform
  9. U.S. Pacific Command focussed on LeT
  10. Finalists announced for ‘Lost Booker Prize'
  11. U.S.-Pakistan strategic dialogue: America’s Pakistan strategy
  12. Rate of deforestation has slowed: U.N. report
  13. China surges ahead of U.S. in clean energy race
  14. Pakistan's nuclear reactor likely in operation
  15. Healthcare bill hits ‘technical snag'
  16. Last push on Greece
  17. Russian oil major pulls out of Iran
  18. Blasphemy laws haunt majority community in Pakistan
  19. Irish bishop resigns
  20. Senate panel introduces financial reforms bill
  21. Biggest cities merging into mega-regions, says U.N. report
  22. 227 million escaped world's slums: U.N.
  23. Life term for Nazi hit man
Brief Description:
U.S.,Russia conclude START pact
  • The United States and Russia have agreed the most “comprehensive arms control agreement in nearly two decades.
  • Conceding that his aspiration for a nuclear-free world would not be reached “in the near future”, that a fundamental part of that effort however was the negotiation of a new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) with Russia.
  • The new 10-year pact would replace the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty of 1991, or START, which expired in December, and further extend cuts negotiated in 2002 by Mr. Bush in the Treaty of Moscow.
          the details of the new START Treaty-
  • These include reduction by about one third the nuclear weapons that the two countries would deploy, “significant” reductions in missiles and launchers and putting in place “a strong and effective verification regime.”
  • However the agreement also ensures the maintenance of the “flexibility” that the U.S. and Russia need to “protect and advance our national security, and to guarantee our unwavering commitment to the security of our Allies.
  • within seven years each side would have to cut its deployed strategic warheads to 1,550 from the 2,200 now allowed. Each side would cut the total number of launchers to 800 from 1,600 now permitted. The number of nuclear-armed missiles and heavy bombers would be capped at 700 each.
  • Richard Burt, a former chief START negotiator who now heads a disarmament advocacy group called Global Zero, said that the two Presidents “took a major step toward achieving their goal of global zero.”
Nuclear Arm Reduction Agreement
38 killed in suicide bombings at two Moscow Metro stations
  • Thirty-eight people were killed and 65 injured in suicide bombings at two Metro stations.
  • The bombings occurred during the morning rush hours on Moscow Metro's oldest Red Line.at the Park Kultury station, just three stations away from Lubyanka, killing 12 people.
  • Head of Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) Alexander Bortnikov said available evidence pointed to terrorists operating in North Caucasus, which includes the restive Chechnya.
China jails Rio Tinto executives
  • An Australian executive at mining giant Rio Tinto has been sentenced to 10 years in prison by a Shanghai court, on charges of bribery and stealing commercial secrets.
  • stern Hu, who headed the British-Australian mining firm's sales in China, had last week pleaded guilty to accepting two bribes worth $935,000, according to prosecutors.
NLD to stay away from polls
  • Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) decided “not to participate” in the general election promised by Myanmar's military rulers. The party did not, however, call for a total boycott.
  • With Ms. Suu Kyi still under house arrest, the NLD will “not apply for re-registration” under the junta's new decrees for the polls set for an unspecified date this year.
  • These decrees have already sparked adverse reactions in several international circles. And, the NLD, which won a landslide in Myanmar's last general election 20 years ago, was not allowed by the military authorities to form a civilian government then.
  • Briefing The Hindu over the telephone from Yangon on Monday, octogenarian leader Tin Oo, who chaired the NLD meeting, said the party would continue to uphold the “democratic spirit [through] strategic non-violence”.
Bid to break Thailand impasse
  • Thailand's Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva called in protest leaders for “preliminary talks” to defuse a prolonged political crisis over his continuance in office. Nationally televised, the talks were held in Bangkok.
  • The meeting took place after the protesters agreed to withdraw from the vicinity of an infantry regiment. They had moved there early on Sunday from their main protest site in Bangkok to pressure the government which, in their view, was a “proxy” of the military bloc.
Call for nuclear free West Asia
  • Arab leaders called for a West Asia free of nuclear weapons during a session at the Arab League summit in Libya, said diplomats. Many countries view Israel and Iran's nuclear programmes with alarm, and have repeatedly called for an agreement to ban nuclear weapons from the region.
  • In their closing statements, leaders stressed that the development of nuclear weapons threatened peace and security, diplomats who attended the closed-door session told the German Press Agency dpa.
  • They called for a review of the 1970 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) to create a definitive plan for eliminating nuclear weapons development.
First gay wedding in U.K. Parliament
  • The Palace of Westminster, which houses the British Parliament, was on Saturday the venue of an unprecedented event: its first gay wedding.
  • The groom was Europe Minister Christ Bryant who married his partner Jared Cranney, a company secretary, in a ceremony attended among others by the Commons Speaker John Bercow.
  • Until now, gay MPs were not allowed to hold weddings within Parliament building but Mr. Bercow obtained a special licence from the Westminster City council to break that tradition paving the way for gay members of the general public also to hold similar ceremonies there.
Obama lauds student funding reform
  • U.S. President Barack Obama said “bold reforms to the higher education system passed by Congress this week... [will save] taxpayers $68 billion over the next decade by ending the subsidies given to banks and middlemen who handle student loans.”
  • Mr. Obama said the money saved through these reforms would expand and strengthen the federal Pell Grant programme; it would also cap college graduates' annual student loan repayments at 10 per cent of their income, revitalise community colleges, and increase support for Minority Serving Institutions.
U.S. Pacific Command focussed on LeT
  • Highlighting his recent travels to India, Thailand and Indonesia, Admiral Robert Willard, Commander of the United States Pacific Command noted that he was “focused in and around India, specifically with regard to Lashkar-e-Taiba, the terrorist group that attacked into Mumbai some months ago.”
Finalists announced for ‘Lost Booker Prize'
  • Six writers have a second shot at literary glory, 40 years after they missed out on Britain's top book prize.
  • Finalists were announced for the “lost” Booker Prize, created to correct a quirk that saw books from 1970 excluded from contention for the prestigious award.
  • The Booker was originally awarded for books published the previous year.But in 1971, it became a prize for the best novel published that year.
  • The six are Patrick White's The Vivisector, J.G. Farrell's Troubles, Mary Renault's Fire From Heaven, Nina Bawden's The Birds on the Trees, Shirley Hazzard's The Bay of Noon and Muriel Spark's The Driver's Seat.
  • Of the finalists, only Hazzard and Bawden are still alive, but all the books are still in print.
  • Farrell won the Booker in 1973 for The Siege of Krishnapur, while Spark and Bawden have been finalists. The winner will be decided by public vote on the Booker website and announced on May 19.
  • The Booker Prize was first handed out in 1969, and is open to writers from Britain, Ireland and the Commonwealth.
  • The Lost Booker is the third special prize to be created by the organisation.                  
  • U.S.-Pakistan strategic dialogue: America’s Pakistan strategy
  • There is no reason for India to be alarmed over the newly launched U.S.-Pakistan strategic dialogue.
  • The well-publicised wish list the Pakistanis, The demands included American mediation over the Kashmir dispute with India as well as a civil nuclear energy agreement to allow the country to access global nuclear technology and fuel.
  • In the context of the high decibel campaign (within Pakistan) of water theft by India, U.S. intervention was solicited to help effect a better water-sharing arrangement.
  • Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who led the U.S. side in the strategic dialogue, promised help in increasing the efficiency of Pakistani energy and water utilisation; but she was clear and forthright in emphasising the importance of bilateral dialogue between India and Pakistan in the quest for solutions to outstanding issues.
  • As for nuclear energy, Pakistan was told that a deal of the kind India got in 2005 is not on the table.
Rate of deforestation has slowed: U.N. report
  • Ambitious planting programmes in Asia and the United States have helped slow the global rate of deforestation but farmers are still cutting trees to clear land at an alarmingly high rate, a U.N. survey released shows.
  • Planting programmes, notably in China, India and Vietnam, helped dramatically slow the rate of forest loss, from 8.3 million hectares a year in the 1990s, to 5.2 million hectares per year from 2000 to 2010, said forestry experts presenting the study at the Rome headquarters of the U.N. agency.
China surges ahead of U.S. in clean energy race
  • China spent almost twice as much as the United States on clean energy investments last year, and is now set to take the lead as the world's premier green energy power, according to a report.
  • In 2009, China invested $34.6 billion on expanding its renewable energy capacity, out of $162 billion invested globally, said a study released by the Pew Charitable Trusts, which measured the growth of clean energy investments in the world's major economies.
Pakistan's nuclear reactor likely in operation
  • Pakistan may be operating a second nuclear reactor under the country's nuclear weapons programme, according to an expert at the Washington-based Institute for Science and International Security.
  • According to Mr. Brannan's report, in February 2010 Zia Mian of the International Panel on Fissile Materials said that Pakistan had completed construction of the second Khushab reactor.
  • Mr. Brannan said that Pakistan had started constructing the Khushab-II reactor back in 2002 and in 2007 construction activity for a third reactor was noticed in satellite images. “We have been following the construction of the second reactor in particular,” Mr. Brannan said, adding that “they had been expecting it to begin operation around this time.”
Healthcare bill hits ‘technical snag'
  • The healthcare reform bill that President Obama signed into law on  has hit a “technical snag,” owing to Republican-sponsored amendments.
  • According to reports, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said the changes made to the original bill, now an Act, would have to go back to the House of Representatives for final Congressional approval.
Last push on Greece
  • The leaders of France and Spain headed a last-ditch diplomatic push on Thursday to get German Chancellor Angela Merkel to back a financial safety net for Greece as a European Union summit opened in Brussels.
  • Ms. Merkel has emerged as the make-or-break player in the EU's debate on whether and how to offer Greece support, clashing head-on with France, Spain and the European Commission. The row has eclipsed the summit's official agenda of economic reform.
Russian oil major pulls out of Iran
  • Russia's largest private oil major said it was suspending an oil project in Iran because of U.S. pressure.
  • The LUKoil company issued a statement on Wednesday saying it had stopped further work on the Anaran project “because of the economic sanctions imposed by the U.S. government.” It blamed the sanctions for a loss of some $63 million last year and said it feared more losses if it continued to carry on the project.
  • The Anaran field, with estimated oil reserves of 2 billion barrels, was operated by a consortium of Norwegian StatoilHydro (75 per cent) and LUKoil Overseas (25 per cent). LUKoil Overseas head Stanislav Kuzyev has clarified that his company retains its rights in the project and would be ready to return “under more favourable economic situation.”
Blasphemy laws haunt majority community in Pakistan
  • The blasphemy laws have come to haunt the majority community in Pakistan with rival sects of Islam increasingly using Sections 295-B and C of the Pakistan Penal Code against each other.
  • While minority groups continue to face action under this legacy of the Zia-ul-Haq regime, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) in its report released numerous cases of Muslims being booked under the blasphemy laws.
Irish bishop resigns
  • Pope Benedict XVI accepted the resignation on Wednesday of Bishop John Magee, a former papal aide who stands accused of endangering children by failing to follow the Irish church's own rules on reporting suspected paedophile priests to police.
  • Bishop Magee (73) apologised to victims of any paedophile priests who were kept in parish posts since he took charge of the southwest Irish diocese of Cloyne in 1987.
Senate panel introduces financial reforms bill
  • Sweeping financial reforms were introduced by the U.S. Senate Banking Committee paving the way for the reform bill to be taken up on the floor of the Senate later this year.
  • The committee, chaired by Democrat Christopher Dodd of Connecticut, passed the reforms by a vote of 13-10, strictly along party lines.
  • After the introduction of the bill, President Barack Obama was quoted as saying, “We are now one step closer to passing real financial reform that will bring oversight and accountability to our financial system and help ensure that the American taxpayer never again pays the price for the irresponsibility of our largest banks and financial institutions.”
Biggest cities merging into mega-regions, says U.N. report
  • The world's mega—cities are merging to form vast “mega—regions” which may stretch hundreds of miles across countries and be home to more than 100 million people, a major UN report says.
  • The phenomenon of the “endless city” could be one of the most significant developments — and problems — in the way people live and economies grow in the next 50 years, says U.N.-Habitat, the agency for human settlements, which identifies the trend of developing mega-regions in its twice-yearly State of World Cities report.
  • The largest of these, says the report, which was launched on Monday at the World Urban Forum in Rio de Janeiro, is the Hong Kong-Shenhzen-Guangzhou region in China, home to about 120 million people. Other mega-regions have formed in Japan and Brazil and are developing in India, west Africa and elsewhere.
227 million escaped world's slums: U.N.
  • China and India, the world's most populous countries, have together lifted 125 million people out of slums in the last decade, while a further 112 million escaped poor conditions in the rest of the world, according to a new report from U.N.-Habitat, the U.N. agency for human settlements.
  • But increasing urbanisation has led to many more new slum-dwellers, meaning the total number now living in crowded, substandard housing — often without safe drinking water and sanitation — has increased by nearly 55 million people since 2000. The worldwide number of slum-dwellers now stands at 827 million and is on course to grow to 889 million by 2020.
  • Two-thirds of the world's slum-dwellers now live in Africa, the report found, the only continent to have made little progress in reducing slum numbers in the last decade.
Life term for Nazi hit man
  • A German court convicted an 88-year-old of murdering three Dutch civilians as part of a Nazi hit squad during World War II, capping six decades of efforts to bring the former Waffen SS man to justice.
  • Heinrich Boere, number six on the Simon Wiesenthal Center's list of most-wanted Nazis, was given the maximum sentence of life in prison for the 1944 killings.
Courtesy:- Dialogue India and Career Plus

(Study Notes) Current Affairs: International Issues: 01 - 15 April 2010 by Dialogue India

International (Political & Economy)
Content:
  1. Iran's Jalili heads for China
  2. Iraq's post-election challenges
  3. Politics of hope in Mauritius
  4. ICC authorises inquiry into Kenyan clashes
  5. ASEAN rights meet discusses roadmap of programmes
  6. Overhaul of governance in Pakistan
  7. Pakistan National Assembly passes 18th Amendment Bill
  8. Belgium votes to ban veils
  9. Repent, extremists told
  10. U.S. H-1B visa counter opens
  11. U.N. rejects Pakistan's plea
  12. A decisive mandate in Sri Lanka
  13. Singapore to host Communic Asia
  14. New Russian gas pipeline to Europe
  15. Thailand stand-off intensifies
  16. Try to avoid Bangkok, Singaporeans told
  17. Russia supports new Kyrgyz regime
  18. Kyrgyzstan President flees
  19. Elian is still a star
  20. U.K. to go to the polls on May 6
  21. Latest Nuclear Posture Review (NPR).
  22. Quake rocks U.S., Mexico
  23. NATO admits to killing Afghan women
  24. China rejects criticism over dams
  25. Najib pledges uniform benefits under affirmative action
  26. Go after cleric, CIA toldWorld Bank's nod for controversial coal plant loan
Brief Description:
Iran's Jalili heads for China
  • Iran's top nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili is heading for China as the U.S. has mounted a high profile effort to impose sanctions against Tehran.
  • Mr. Jalili will meet high-ranking Chinese officials when he commences his visit to Beijing on Thursday.
  • Reiterating that Washington and Beijing were not on the same page on the question of sanctions, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said on Tuesday more diplomatic initiatives were required to address the Iranian issue.
  • “We will continue to work with all parties towards the solution of the
  • Iranian nuclear issue through diplomatic and peaceful means,” said Mr. Qin. “China has not changed its stance on the Iranian nuclear issue. We insist on safeguarding international nuclear non-proliferation regime, and we also take into account regional peace and stability.”
Iraq's post-election challenges
  • The Iraqi general election has ended in a narrow ‘victory' for the former Prime Minister, Ayad Allawi. His secular-nationalist Iraqiya List alliance has won 91 seats in the 325-member Council of Representatives, two more than incumbent Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's State of Law coalition.
  •  The Independent High Electoral Commission has deemed the election to be free and fair and the head of the United Nations Assistance Mission to Iraq, Ed Melkart, has found both the process and the outcome to be “credible.” Overall, on a turnout of 60 per cent, numbering 12 million voters, two other formations have done well and they hold the key to the new government.
  • These are the Kurdish Alliance, Kurdistania, which bagged 43 seats, and the Iraqi National Alliance, the resurgent Shia-majority bloc which took 70 seats, including 38 for the cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's Al-Ahrar Party. Whether Mr. Allawi succeeds in his efforts to put together the 163 seats needed for a majority will depend on how astutely he negotiates with the other leaders and, as importantly, on the fairness of the post-electoral rules.
  • The initial problems have to do with the conduct of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, whose first response to the result was to demand a recount.
  • A day before the results were announced, he persuaded Iraq's Supreme Court to rule that the government would be formed by the leader of the bloc that has the largest number when parliament convenes, which will probably be in June.
Politics of hope in Mauritius
  • When Prime Minister Navin Ramgoolam of Mauritius dissolved the island-state's 70-member National Assembly and called for new elections on May 5, there seemed to be an element of political drama to his announcement.
  • The drama, of course, was deliberate, but it had little to do with the election announcement itself: everybody in Mauritius knew that polls would be held soon, not the least because Dr. Ramgoolam is widely perceived as an effective leader. He has brought record foreign direct investment to his Indian Ocean country; he attracted more than 9,000 offshore entities, and he has engendered progress in information technology, health care, and telecommunications.
  • It was natural, therefore, that the 65-year-old prime minister – who is also the leader of the Mauritius Labour Party – would want consolidate his political position and focus on what he has increasingly said in recent weeks would be his new mantra for governance: “Unity, Equality, Modernity.”
ICC authorises inquiry into Kenyan clashes
  • The International Criminal Court (ICC) has given the green light to open formal criminal investigations of the political leaders who organised the violence that shook Kenya after its disputed election in 2007, the court announced.
  • Two of three court judges said the clashes, which left more than 1,100 people dead and drove hundreds of thousands from their homes, could amount to crimes against humanity. The judges' decision will now allow the prosecution to bring a case.
  • Kenyan groups and Western governments called for the international court in The Hague to step in after the country's political leaders refused to set up a special tribunal to prosecute those responsible for the killings, saying they would rely on Kenya's existing courts to handle the cases instead.
  • For the international court, which has 110 member nations, the Kenyan case adds a new layer to its caseload. Until now, the court, which was created by the Rome Treaty of 1998 and opened its doors for business in 2002, has dealt with violent conflicts involving governments and rebel groups. These cases had all been brought by governments, or in the case of the conflict in Sudan, by the U.N. Security Council.
  • But Kenya is the first case in which the prosecutor - spurred by Kofi Annan, who helped broker a peace deal to end the violence - decided to investigate on his own authority. He has stepped carefully, though, aware that critics of the court, including the United States, which is not a member, have been wary of actions by an aggressive, independent prosecutor.
ASEAN rights meet discusses roadmap of programmes
  • The ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights (AICHR) convened its first meeting from March 28 to April 1 at the ASEAN Secretariat in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta.
  • The meeting discussed, among others, the formulation of the rules of procedure which will lay down the operational guidelines for the conduct of AICHR's work in all aspects.
  • It also discussed the development of the five-year work plan to provide a comprehensive roadmap of programmes and activities to be undertaken by AICHR in the next five years. It is expected that the rules of procedure and the 5-year plan will be completed in time to be submitted to the 43rd ASEAN Ministerial Meeting (AMM) in July 2010 for adoption.
  • The Second Meeting of AICHR will be held from June 28 to July 2 in Vietnam. The ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
Overhaul of governance in Pakistan
  • With the Committee on Constitutional Reforms (CCR) presenting its draft to the presiding officers of the National Assembly and the Senate ,the country is now poised for a major overhaul of its governance structure.
  • Besides the repeal of the 17th Amendment by which the former President, Pervez Musharraf, had transferred decisive powers to the presidency, the draft has done away with the Concurrent List to give more provincial autonomy and makes out a case for putting in place institutional mechanisms for making key appointments.
Pakistan National Assembly passes 18th Amendment Bill
  • The National Assembly on Thursday passed the 18th Amendment Bill that seeks to bring back the 1973 Constitution by removing the distortions that had shorn it of its democratic components over the past 37 years.
  • The Bill — which proposes 102 amendments to the Constitution — was passed by a two-thirds majority after the House rejected the amendments moved by some members on the abolition of the concurrent list, renaming the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), and removal of the provision for intra-party elections.
  • Since the Bill had been drafted by the all-party Parliamentary Committee on Constitutional Reforms, its smooth passage was pre-determined, more so because of the across-the-political-spectrum consensus for repealing the 17th Amendment by which former President Pervez Musharraf had usurped all powers of Parliament.
Belgium votes to ban veils
  • Belgium has moved to the forefront of a campaign to restrict the wearing of the Muslim veil by women when a key vote left it on track to become the first European country to ban the burqa and niqab in public.
Repent, extremists told
  • Muslim scholars from around the world met in Medina (Riyadh) have denounced "terrorism" and appealed to "extremists" to repent.
  • The four-day Islamic conference, sponsored by Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayef bin Abdul-Aziz and organised by the Islamic University of Medina, drew some 500 participants, according to press reports.
U.S. H-1B visa counter opens
  • Starting April 1, H-1B visa petitions may be submitted subject to the fiscal year 2011 cap, the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).
  • U.N. rejects Pakistan's plea
  • The U.N. rejected Pakistan's request to reopen the independent probe into the killing of Benazir Bhutto.
A decisive mandate in Sri Lanka
  • The results of post-conflict Sri Lanka's first parliamentary elections are on expected lines. President Mahinda Rajapaksa's ruling United Progressive Freedom Alliance, led by the Sri Lanka Freedom Party, has scored a decisive victory on the strength of a vote share that may exceed 60 per cent.
  • After President Rajapaksa's big victory in the January 26 presidential election, there was never really any doubt about the outcome of Thursday's general election. Perhaps this was one reason for the low turnout of voters.
  • This is way and ahead the best performance by a political party or coalition in a general election since 1977.
  •  Indeed, a two-thirds majority in the 225-seat House, always a difficult target in a system of proportional representation, seems to be within the UPFA's grasp, assuming there will be a repeat of the defections that followed the 2004 elections.
  • The United National Party, which has won only one parliamentary election in two decades, can take some comfort from the fact that its vote-base has not eroded significantly in this period.
  • But the kingmaker of elections past, the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, has suffered a rout, its opportunistic decision to back former Sri Lanka army commander, Sarath Fonseka, who is under detention and facing court martial proceedings, doing nothing to shore up its fortunes. The third force, the Democratic National Alliance, has failed to take off.
  • President Mahinda Rajapaksa-led ruling alliance in Sri Lanka, the United People's Freedom Alliance (UPFA), has recorded an emphatic victory in the parliamentary elections.
  • Of the results of 180 seats declared so far, the alliance has won in 120 constituencies.
Singapore to host Communic Asia
  • CommunicAsia2010, the most established information, communication and technology (ICT) event in Asia, will be held in Singapore from June 15 to 18 at the Singapore Expo.
  • The event brings comprehensive showcase of convergent technologies for the global infocomm, media and broadcasting industries and will feature new attractions for exhibitors and visitors from the region, says a release.
New Russian gas pipeline to Europe
  • Russia has launched the construction of a new gas pipeline to Europe that will strengthen its dominant positions in the European energy markets.
  • The $12-billion Nord Stream pipeline would carry up to 55 billion cubic metres (bcm) of gas a year from Siberian gas fields 900 km over land and 1,200 km under the Baltic Sea from Vyborg in Russia to Greifswald in Germany.
  • Russia supplies about 150 bcm of gas to Europe, meeting a quarter of its needs. The new pipeline will give Russia a stronger hold over Europe's energy supplies and reduce dependence on the transit countries, Ukraine and Belarus. Russia's Gazprom monopoly has teamed up with Germany's BASF, E.ON and Dutch Gasunie to build the pipeline.
  • Nord Stream will have two parallel gas pipeline legs.The first leg will carry 27.5 bcm starting from 2011, and the second link is expected to be completed in 2012.Construction was delayed as Russia had to seek permission from Sweden, Denmark, Germany and Finland, whose territorial waters the pipeline will cross.
Thailand stand-off intensifies
  • The stand-off between Thailand's anti-government protesters and security forces intensified in Bangkok.
  • Until nightfall, there was no sign of the protest tapering off, although troops and other security forces heightened their vigil to enforce Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva's emergency decree.
Try to avoid Bangkok, Singaporeans told
  • Expressing “concern” over the “ongoing developments in Thailand,” Singapore has issued a travel advisory.
  • Singaporeans are among the high-profile travellers to Thailand.
Russia supports new Kyrgyz regime
  • Russia has signalled support for the interim coalition government formed in Kyrgyzstan  in the wake of two days of large-scale riots that left 75 people dead.
Kyrgyzstan President flees
  • Kyrgyzstan's President Kurmanbek Bakiyev has reportedly left the country after two days of violent mass protests in which dozens of people have been killed.
  • Opposition leaders said Mr. Bakiyev left his office and was seen flying out of the country in an airplane from the Manas international airport.
Elian is still a star
  • Cuba has released photos of one-time exile cause celebre Elian Gonzalez wearing an olive-green military school uniform and attending a Young Communist Union congress.
  • The images were posted on Monday on Cuban government websites, then widely picked up by electronic, state-controlled media.
  • When he was five, Elian was found floating off the coast of Florida in an inner tube after his mother and others fleeing Cuba drowned trying to reach the U.S. Elian's father, who was separated from his mother, had remained in Cuba.
  • Elian formally joined the Young Communist Union in 2008, making headlines across Cuba.
U.K. to go to the polls on May 6
  • Britain will go to the polls on May 6, it was officially announced in what is set to be the most uncertain and closely fought general election for a generation with opinion surveys pointing to a hung Parliament, a rare outcome.
  • For the first time in more than 30 years, the Liberal Democrats — more used to hovering around the margins of mainstream British politics — are likely to get a chance to play the kingmaker and determine the shape of a future government.
Latest Nuclear Posture Review (NPR).
  • The United States administration on Tuesday pledged to not use nuclear weapons against any non-nuclear State that complied with the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), as per the latest Nuclear Posture Review (NPR).
  • Announcing some of the key results of the “first unclassified NPR in its totality” at the Pentagon, Secretary of Defence, Robert Gates said, “If a non-nuclear State is in compliance with the NPT and its obligations, the U.S. pledges not to use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against it.”
  • He added that if any State eligible for such an assurance were to use chemical or biological weapons against the U.S., its allies or partners, it would face the prospect of a “devastating conventional military response.”
Quake rocks U.S., Mexico
  • An earthquake measuring 7.2 on the Richter Scale rocked large tracts of the Western coast of Mexico and the United States 3:40 p.m. (local time) on Easter Sunday. The quake struck around 62 km from Mexicali, near the U.S.-Mexico border and was felt hundred of km away, throughout southern California.
  • The death toll, estimated to be two so far, has been relatively low and structural damage limited compared to recent earthquakes in Haiti and Chile. According to reports this was due to the quake having a shallow depth of 9.6 km.
NATO admits to killing Afghan women
  • NATO forces have admitted killing three women in a bungled raid on a village in Afghanistan earlier this year, after initially denying involvement.
  • The NATO International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement on Sunday that its troops were responsible for the women's deaths in a village near Gardez, the capital of eastern Paktya province, on February 12.
China rejects criticism over dams
  • China rejected criticism from its neighbours that its dams on the Mekong river were responsible for droughts in their countries, even as it came under increasing pressure to share more hydrological data.
  • Officials from Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, countries which make up the Mekong River Commission (MRC), have called for greater co-operation from China in managing the Mekong, and have expressed concern over eight dams China has planned along the river in its south-western Yunnan province.
Najib pledges uniform benefits under affirmative action
  • Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak has pledged a policy of affirmative action in favour of those in economic need, regardless of racial considerations, in the Muslim-majority state.
  • The basic objective was to ensure that the new policy “will lead to a more cohesive and socially harmonious society,” he said here.
Go after cleric, CIA told
  • The Central Intelligence Agency announced it had added radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, suspected to be residing in Yemen, to its target list. This makes Awlaki only the second U.S. citizen since 2001 whom CIA agents have authorisation to kill or capture.
  • According to reports, the decision to put Awlaki on the “kill list” was taken after U.S. intelligence officials confirmed that he had a key operational role in terrorist attacks.
World Bank's nod for controversial coal plant loan
  • The World Bank approved a controversial $3.75bn loan to build one of the world's largest coal plants in South Africa , defying international protests and sharp criticism from the Obama administration that the project would fuel climate change.
  • The proposed Medupi power station, operated by South Africa's state-owned Eskom company, was fiercely opposed by an international coalition of grassroots, church and environmental activists who said it would hurt the environment and do little to help end poverty.
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Sunday, April 11, 2010

WINDS OF CHANGE

There was a lot of speculation about the pattern of changes in the Civil Services Examination since long, but no one was aware, as to when and what kind of changes will be there? This speculation was ended by the UPSC Chairman, Prof. D.P. Agrawal himself, while participating in the UPSC Foundation Lecture Series on the “Governance and Public Services”. He said that UPSC is convinced of the need for important changes in the method of recruitment to the higher civil services. The Commission has recommended to the Government that a Civil Services Aptitude Test (CSAT) replace the exiting Civil Services (Preliminary) Examination, he added. Confirming this change for the first stage of Civil Services Examination, Minister of State for Personnel, Mr. Prithvi Raj Chauhan told the Lok Sabha on 10th March, 2010 that Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh has approved the proposal for introduction of CSAT in place of the existing Civil Services (Preliminary) Examination. He said that CSAT is expected to come into effect from 2011.


As per the new pattern, at the Preliminary Examination stage, there will be two objective type question papers common for all the candidates. Both these papers will have equal weightage. The emphasis will be on testing the aptitude of the candidate for the demanding life in civil service, as well as, on the ethical and moral dimensions of decision making. The upcoming scheme will have the advantages of : (a) testing candidate’s decision making skills and aptitude for civil services, and (b) providing a level playing field for all the aspirants, since all the candidates will have to attempt two objective-type papers, which will be common for all.


To decide the exact content and syllabus of CSAT, UPSC Chairman, Prof. D.P. Agrawal, has constituted a high power committee under Prof. S.K. Khanna, former Vice Chairman, University Grants Commission, to work out the details of the syllabus for two papers. The committee is expected to submit its report by the end of April, 2010, after which UPSC will formally announce the contents of the syllabi of the two objective-type papers of CSAT stage.


For the first time, the Civil Service Aptitute Test (CSAT) was advocated by Dr. Y.K. Alagh in his Civil Services Review Committee Report, 2001. He recommended major changes in the structure of examination system. He favoured testing the candidates in a common subject rather than on optional subjects. According the Alagh Committee Report the structure of CSAT contains the following contents -


(1) Basic Awareness (Nation and the World)
The general awareness of current affairs having a bearing on public life in India.

(2) Problem solving and analytical skills
Logical reasoning and decision making skills (Situations from civil service arena be taken to test reasoning and undertanding of problems related to the same).

(3) Elementaty Arithmetic
•Data analysis ability
•Data Interpretation / graphics / charts etc.
•Quantitative

The above mentioned syllabus of CSAT was a proposal to UPSC. The final shape of the syllabus will be decided after the Prof. S.K. Khanna Committee report.


As of now, the change will be effective only for the first stage of the Civil Services Examination. The nature and pattern of the second and third stages, viz. Civil Services Main Examination and Interview will remain the same. Most of the committees / commissions constituted by the Government/UPSC have advocated laying greater emphasis on the apptitude of the candidates than their knowledge of the subject, arguing that specialists or experts in any particular subject, may not necessarily be a good civil servant.


The Second Administrative Reforms Commission has also argued that the recruitment process, apart from being transparent, objective, fair and equitable, should also ensure that the right type of persons join the Civil Services.

Since the announcement of the change, there has been a lot of discussion, and also fear & anxiety amongst the civil services aspirants regarding the nature of CSAT. Ever since the announcement about CSAT. I have frequently been asked questions as to what would be its pattern? Whether it wiil be on the lines of CAT or MAT, or will there be a new format, altogether?


My advice to Civil Services aspirants is : Do not have any adverse apprehension about CSAT. The basic difference between CAT/MAT and CSAT is that the former is a test for admission to an educational course, that is preparatory to a future job. Whereas the latter is a recruitment test, where once successful, placement is guaranteed in a secure and stable government job, and that too an elite one.


I feel these changes would impart the present scheme of Civil Services Examination a fresh and new look, which was already over­due. At the same time, the recommendations of this committee would do away with some other anomalies as well, which were there in the existing system.


A final word! Whether or not this facelift of the pattern of the Civil Ser­vices Examination gives a new direction and purpose to our bureaucracy, it will definitely make the whole system of selection more objective, humane and transparent.