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Thursday, October 08, 2015

India, Germany strengthen education ties


Minister for Human Resource Development Smriti Zubin Irani and Dr. Johanna Wanka, German Minister of Education and Research held bilateral discussions on the range of issues related to enhancement and deepening of traditional ties.
The two ministers exchanged views on collaboration in science and technology, skills development, the Global Initiative for Academic Networks (GIAN) as well as cooperation in the field of promotion of languages of each country in the other. The leaders expressed satisfaction at the progress made in the bilateral relations.
During the meet, India and Germany signed two Joint Declarations of Intent (JDIs) and an MoU for enhancing cooperation in education. The two JDIs and the MoU were signed in the presence of Smriti Irani and Dr. Johanna Wanka.
The first JDI seeks to implement a new programme titled “lndo-German Partnerships (IGP) in Higher Education” over four years from 2016-2020 to encourage and support cooperation between higher education institutions in each country. The University Grants Commission (UGC) and the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD), Germany, the respective implementing agencies for the JDI also signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for operationalisation of the cooperation between the two countries in the field of the Higher Education.
The MoU will develop a joint partnership programme aimed at enhancing long-term partnerships between German and Indian institutions of higher education. New and innovative areas of cooperation would be opened, enabling participating institutions to develop teaching and research profiles and contribute to their internationalisation strategies. Each side will contribute 3.5 million Euros for the initial programme period of four years. The IGP will fund a number of projects, which would be identified based on a competitive selection process. By concentrating on top-level strategic partnerships, the programme aims to improve the overall quality of teaching and research and to strengthen inter-disciplinarily within the participating institutions.

Source: Elets News Network (ENN) Posted on October 7, 2015

These migrants need attention, too

When species shift northward or higher, not all in an ecosystem may move, disrupting the interconnectedness that has evolved over decades

Our fish are moving north.
Until about the mid-1980s, important fish species such as mackerel and oil sardines used to be present no further north than the Malabar upwelling zone off the Kerala coast. Because of global warming, sea surface temperatures along India’s west coast rose by 0.6 degrees Celsius over 1967-2007, according to the Kerala State Action Plan on Climate Change. Consequently, these fish species began to find the ocean waters further north also rather salubrious. In the last thirty years, the northern boundary of their range — the geographical area over which any given species is to be found — has extended a staggering 650 kilometres. Having moved beyond Karnataka and Maharashtra, they can now be found in waters off Gujarat. Off India’s eastern coast too, the mackerel’s range has shifted north, from the Andhra coast earlier to waters off parts of West Bengal presently.
This shift in the range of species is also taking place in India’s rivers. Along the Ganga for instance, four species of warm water fish can now be found swimming further north, up to Haridwar, as the average minimum temperatures of river waters in this stretch had warmed by 1.5 degrees Celsius by 2009 over the 1970-1986 average.
Shifts or extensions in species’ range because of global warming are occurring with innumerable species in every region, terrain and ecosystem in India. Rising temperatures are the most obvious cause, but changing rainfall patterns is also a factor. And in some cases, a species itself may not need to move but is forced to shift because its food/prey may have. This phenomenon is not unique to India. Meta-surveys of published papers covering hundreds of marine and land-based species the world over have found that, as the globe warms, three-quarters of all marine species studied have shifted their ranges poleward, as have half of all land-based species. Many are also creeping up mountain slopes.
Moving treelines

In fact, as the Indian Himalayas have warmed by 1.5 degrees Celsius on average in the past few decades, a number of species now find lower altitudes too warm for comfort. The case of Himachali apples, which no longer thrive in the lower Kullu Valley, is the most well-known, but scarcely the only one. The treeline in Uttarakhand has itself moved higher by over a thousand feet since the 1970s. In the eastern Himalayas, innumerable species — of reptiles, butterflies, birds, deer, bees — have all had to shift higher. One study alone from Sikkim listed twenty-five such species.
Species in India also suffer other effects of global warming: heat stress, ocean acidification, greater pest attacks, and droughts. But no phenomenon captures the chaos it is causing in the natural world more than the changing timing of annual lifecycle events – or phenology – of plants and animals. Changes studied elsewhere include the timing of first flowering, bud emergence, birds nesting, the timings of frogs breeding, etc.
Scientists at the G.B. Pant Institute in Almora examined long-term records of the flowering dates of rhododendrons since 1893; they are now flowering earlier by over forty days. They also found a clear correlation of this phenomenon with rising temperatures. Numerous species across the Himalayan range have been similarly affected. One has heard of similar changed timings of flowering or of budburst happening with mangoes in my village in coastal Karnataka, figs in Manipal, chironji (Buchanania lanzan) in Orissa, coffee in Kerala. And as the ocean waters off Chennai have warmed, two fish species have shifted their annual spawning to the period between October and March. The other months have become too warm.
Shifts in range or in the timing of lifecycle events are climate change adaptations by species. But it would be optimistic to assume they can all cope. When timings change in plants, it creates problems for other species dependent on them for food. When species shift, northward or higher, not all species in an ecosystem may move, and the interconnectedness that has evolved over decades gets disrupted. And in their sometimes desperate effort to shift, species may be hindered by urban growth. Or by natural barriers: what happens as sea waters warm, one expert asked, to the famous Bombay duck (bombil), whose northern boundary is landlocked Gujarat? Extinctions of mountain-restricted frogs and toad species due to global warming have occurred in Europe as they had nowhere higher to climb. A number of studies in India have voiced concern about extinctions here too in the not too distant future affecting endemic species and alpine plants at the top of mountain ecosystems, forest species of pine and sal in central India, the Nilgiri tahr in the montane forests down South among others.
To briefly conclude, the crisis of global warming is rendered qualitatively different and gains even greater urgency if one considers its impacts on other species. With so much havoc already occurring across ecosystems at current levels — 0.9 degrees Celsius — of average warming, one shudders to think what further warming might imply for an untold number of species in India.
And in turn for us humans — the livelihoods of millions of people depend on the location and well-being of other species. How marginal farmers, fisherpeople and other communities in different parts of India are being affected by impact on other species merits much more detailed investigation. As the world heads towards the crucial COP21 negotiations in Paris in December, one can only hope that political elites are keeping an ear out for what other species are trying to tell us about global warming as they struggle to cope. Life is an interconnected web, and we ignore what they tell us at our peril.
(Nagraj Adve is a member of the India Climate Justice collective. He works and writes on issues related to global warming. nagraj.adve@gmail.com )

Revolutionary therapies

The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2015 has been awarded to three scientists for the “revolutionary treatments” they developed for devastating diseases that predominantly affect people in the developing countries. The discovery of the drug ivermectin, a derivative of avermectin, by William Campbell of Drew University in Madison, New Jersey, and by Satoshi Ômura of Kitasato University in Tokyo, nearly eradicated river blindness and radically reduced the incidence of lymphatic filariasis. The discovery of artemisinin by Tu Youyou of the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences in Beijing in the early-1970s was a decisive step in the battle against severe cases of malaria. Unlike the quest by the two Laureates for a remedy for roundworm infestation, Dr. Tu’s hunt for a potent anti-malarial drug turned out to be as dramatic as the drug itself. “In keeping with Mao Zedong’s urgings to explore and further improve the great treasure house” of Chinese medicine, she pored through ancient texts for leads. The secret operation, named Project 523 and announced on May 23, 1967, investigated more than 2,000 preparations before an extract fromArtemisia annua (sweet wormwood) showed promise. Deftly combining traditional knowledge with modern science, she redesigned the extraction process, and purified the extract to make it both potent and safe. She was involved in isolating the active ingredient, conducting clinical trials and publishing the results. In 1973, she modified artemisinin to generate a powerful drug.
The miracle drug has prevented millions of malarial deaths. Yet, in 2013 there were 198 million cases of malaria and an estimated 584,000 deaths worldwide, over 90 per cent of them in Africa. As in the case of many other wonder drugs, resistance to artemisinin is fast emerging. As of February 2015, artemisinin resistance has been confirmed in five countries of the Greater Mekong subregion — Cambodia, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam. What is alarming is that artemisinin-resistant Plasmodium falciparum has been found to occur across much of Upper Myanmar “including regions close to the Indian border in the Northwest”. In fact, the zone where resistance to artemisinin exists has come to within 25 km of the Indian border. Since the Myanmar-India boundary was a “path followed by resistance to chloroquine” to spread from South East Asia to the Indian subcontinent, a recurrence in the case of artemisinin-resistant malaria has to be averted at any cost. Already over 40,000 people in India die each year, and according to the World Malaria Report 2011, over 70 per cent of India’s population is at risk of malaria infection. The tasks and the challenges thus remain.
Source: The Hindu, 8-10-2015

JNU proposes short-term courses on Yoga, Indian culture

Against the backdrop of a raging controversy over saffronisation of education, JNU has proposed to introduce short-term courses on “Indian Culture” and “Yoga” to propagate the spiritual and mythological aspects of the country and establish Indian values in the world.
The varsity has a proposal ready in this regard and a draft of three such courses has been circulated among various schools and departments of JNU for their feedback. The matter will be placed before the JNU academic council (AC) on October 30.
The HRD ministry officials, however, feigned ignorance over such development. According to the draft, the course on Indian culture aims to expound the importance of the country’s culture as well as explore the etymological, social, spiritual, cultural and mythological aspects.
The course will contain the texts, thoughts and traditions of different cultures and include things like religious systems in Indian culture among others. Besides, it will have portions from Vedas and selections from “epics and Jatakas” and suggestions on readings of Hindu epics like the Ramayana. “Indian values play a huge role in promoting peace and brotherhood.
The course will include a basic study of Indian culture to establish Indian rituals and values in the world and derive ways from these sources to make human life better,” a senior varsity official said on the condition of anonymity.
Similarly, a course in Yoga will also be offered with its focus not only on meditation and spirituality but also for good health. “These courses will be offered part-time and whether or not they will be credit courses is yet to be decided. Details about the school offering them and the duration will also be worked out post the AC approval,” the official said.
Source: Hindustan Times, 8-10-2015
India minus Kerala one of the worst places to die: UK report
LONDON
PTI


India has been ranked as one of the worst places in the world to die, but Kerala was praised for bucking up the trend by providing good end-oflife care, according to an 80-country “Quality of Death“ study.The `Economic Intelligence Unit' report found the UK to be the best place in the world to die, with developing countries like India towards the bottom of the index of 80 countries.
India and China are ranked 67th and 71st respectively, while Taiwan has the highest rank in Asia, at sixth position.
However, it praised Kerala's provision of palliative care for patients with serious illnesses.
“While India ranks at the bottom of the Index in overall score, and performs badly on many indicators, Kerala, if measured on the same points, would buck the trend. With only 3 per cent of India's population, the tiny state provides two-thirds of India's palliative care services,“ said the 'Quality of Death: Ranking end-oflife care across the world' report.
“Moreover, the state has a formal palliative care policy in place (it is the only Indian state with such a policy) and its government provides fund ing for community-based care programmes,“ it said.
Palliative care advocates from developing countries as well as across the world are studying Kerala's potent combination of government support and civic involvement in end-of-life care, the report said.
The Quality of Death Index, commissioned by the Lien Foundation, a Singaporean philanthropic organisation, is based on qualitative and quantitative indicators and took interviews of over 120 palliative care experts from around the world.

Source: Mumbai Mirror, 8-10-2015
Big victory for activist group as Lavasa told to return 191 acres to tribals


The state government's decision to take back 191 acres from Lavasa Corporation Ltd.has come a major victory for Medha Patkar's National Alliance for People's Movement (NAPM).
According to an order by a sub-divisional magistrate on September 8, the hill city has to return the land to 13 tribal families as it had been acquired with fraudulent means.
For the last five years, NAPM and the tribals have been fighting to get the land deal of Lavasa struck down.In 2011, ten tribal families had approached the authorities, demanding return of their land. While two of them got relief, the other complaints were rejected on technical grounds.
Undeterred, the protesters submitted more documents to buttress their claim, prompting the government rule in their favour .
Suniti SR, an activist with NAPM, said it was just the beginning. “Lavasa has contravened much legal process including environmental clearances.Water and land do not belong to Lavasa. We will now fight for those, after this landmark success.“ Vishwambhar Chaudhary, another activist who is opposed to the project, said they plan to approach the chief minister with a request to set up a commission to probe into the land deals done by the hill city. “It is now proved that land was acquired with forgery and bogus documents.“
Lavasa, owned by Ajit Gulab chand-led Hindustan Construction Co. Ltd, said that all land deals were legal, but they won't go in for an appeal. The PR agency, representing Lavasa, said: “In any case being unbuildable hilly areas, these lands are neither under development nor earmarked for any future development in the Lavasa's planning proposal Development plan. Loss of these lands therefore is not going to affect the Lavasa;s immediate or future development.“
The order passed by Sub-Divisional Magistrate Subhash Borkar says that the state now owns the land and it will be transferred to the tribals.

Source: Mumbai Mirror, 8-10-2015
Trio Wins Chemistry Nobel for DNA Repair Work
AFP


Sweden's Tomas Lindahl, Paul Modrich of the US and Aziz Sancar, a Turkish-American, won the 2015 Nobel Chemistry Prize on Wednesday for work on how cells repair damaged DNA.The three opened a dazzling frontier in medicine by unveiling how the body repairs DNA mutations that can cause sickness and contribute to ageing, the Nobel jury said. “Their systematic work has made a decisive contribution to the understanding of how the living cell functions as well as providing knowledge about the molecular causes of several heredi tary diseases and about mechanisms behind both cancer development and ageing,“ the panel said.
DNA is the chemical code for making and sustaining life. When cells divide, molecular machines seek to replicate the code perfectly , but random slipups in their work can cause the daughter cells to die or malfunction. DNA can also be damaged by strong sunlight and other environmental factors. But there is a swarm of proteins a molecular repair kit ­ designed to monitor the process. It proof-reads the code and repairs damage.
The three were lauded for mapping these processes, starting with Lindahl, who identified so-called repair enzymes ­ the basics in the toolbox. Sancar, born in Savur, Turkey, discovered the mechanisms used by cells to fix damage by ultraviolet radiation. Modrich laid bare a complex DNA-mending process called mismatch repair.
Source: Economic Times, 8-10-2010