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Saturday, March 19, 2016

Teaching/Faculty Positions at Central University of Gujarat, Gandhinagar [LD:12/04/2016]

TEACHING/FACULTY POSITIONS AT 

CENTRAL UNIVERSITY OF GUJARAT

Sector - 29, Gandhinagar - 382 030 (INDIA). 

Employment Notification No. 18/2016, Dated 26th February, 2016


CUG called for the direct recruitment to faculty positions in various Schools/ Centres of Studies on regular basis through open competition on all India basis.

LAST DATE: The Last date/crucial date for submission of applications complete in all respects is 12th April 2016. 
DOWNLOAD Notification.

Source: http://www.cug.ac.in/career/career.php (14.03.2016)

Surat railway station cleanest: survey

The survey was conducted in January-February this year and passengers were asked questions on 40 cleanliness parameters.

Surat has the cleanest railway station in the country, followed by Rajkot and Bilaspur (Chhattisgarh), according to an Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation (IRCTC) survey, released on Thursday.
However, the railway station in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s constituency Varanasi is ranked poorly in terms of cleanliness; it stood at 65 among the 75 A-1 railway stations (those earning revenue more than Rs. 50 crore) surveyed. The survey that was conducted based on feedback from around 1.34 lakh passengers is a part of Mr. Modi’s pet project ‘Swacch Bharat Abhiyaan’.
“The idea is to make the entire rail network clean, including stations, tracks and other railway premises. We decided to do a survey to bring out the present situation…This is a beginning to bring all the stations at par. We will also launch major [passenger] awareness programme,” Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu said while releasing the Preliminary Report on Assessment of Cleanliness Standards of Major Railway Stations.
The survey was conducted at 407 railway stations, which included 75 A-1 stations and 332 A category stations. Around 40 per cent of all the stations surveyed fared ‘average’ in terms of cleanliness.
Among the A-category stations (those with revenue between Rs. 6 crore and Rs. 50 crore), Beas (Punjab) followed by Gandhidham (Gujarat), Vasco Da Gama (Goa), Jamnagar (Gujarat), Kumbakonam (Tamil Nadu) and Nasik Road (Maharashtra) were among the cleanest railway stations.
The survey was conducted in January-February this year and passengers were asked questions on 40 cleanliness parameters.
IRCTC will soon submit the final report to the Railway Ministry that will include responses from railway staff and non-railway service providers.
Source: The Hindu, 19-03-2016

How to be free in the 21st century

The experience of liberal democracies elsewhere shines a light upon the outdatedness of the sedition law that India uses so loosely.

In little more than a month since a partisan and heavy-handed Delhi Police arrested Jawaharlal Nehru University Students Union President Kanhaiya Kumar and slapped him with the charge of sedition, reams of newsprint have been dedicated to challenging that odious legal provision of the Indian Penal Code, dating back to 1860, principally on the grounds that it is draconian and specifically that its abuse impairs a critical feature of liberal democracy:dissent
In the process the troubling history of Section 124-A of the IPC has been clearly traced, especially its remarkable survival from the pre-Independence era, when it served the colonial government as a weapon of mass suppression against all opposition, into modern India, where it has now become an untenable blot on the right to free speech guaranteed by Article 19 of the Constitution.
At the heart of this ongoing battle for India’s liberal soul is the argument that speech that is alleged to be seditious may be considered illegal only if it is an incitement to violence or public disorder, a view that has been clarified by a multitude of legal precedents including Kedar Nath Singh vs State Of Bihar(1962), Indra Das vs State Of Assam (2011), Arup Bhuyan vs State Of Assam (2011), and most recently the well-known case of Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2013).
Yet by no means is the tension between the right to freedom of speech and the ambitions of a government to quell criticism of its policies a new dilemma for democratic politics worldwide, and indeed the experience of liberal Western democracy shines a light upon what could be considered a reasonable position on this subject.
Consider first the experience of the U.K., where laws on seditious libel and criminal defamation were summarily abolished by Section 73 of the Coroners and Justice Act in 2009 nearly 40 years after the British Law Commission first recommended doing so, albeit after “after a century of disuse,” according to Professor John Spencer of Cambridge University.
Modern Britain’s struggle with the chilling effects of sedition on free speech dates back centuries to the times of the Star Chamber, and was poignantly illustrated in the 1792 trial of political theorist Thomas Paine, whose work was influential in igniting the American Revolution, specifically for his publication of the second part of the Rights of Man.
In that tome Mr. Paine effectively argued that popular political revolution was permissible when a government no longer safeguarded inalienable rights of its people, rights that stemmed from nature and not any government-written document, not even a Constitution.
Unsurprisingly when an estimated 50,000 copies of Mr. Paine’s manuscript started circulating in Britain it led to a massive furore within government, a trial in absentia, and finally conviction for seditious libel against the Crown. Fortunately for Mr. Paine he was at the time a resident of France and hence “unavailable for hanging,” and so he got away with never returning to his homeland.
In the early years sedition came with rather steep punishments, including perpetrators having their ears cut off for a first offense and put to death for recidivism. Later it became punishable up to life imprisonment and/or a fine, and in most cases “Not only was truth no defence, but intention was irrelevant.”
However in line with what Professor Spencer had indicated to The Hindu, on multiple occasions 21-st century debates in the House of Lords agreed that “the common law of sedition had rarely been used in England over the course of the past century,” and the last major case in the country where there was an attempt to try an individual for sedition involved the publication of Salman Rushdie’s book, The Satantic Verses.
Reports in the U.S. Library of Congress quote allegations made that Mr. Rushdie’s book was a “scurrilous attack on the Muslim religion,” and that it resulted in violence in the UK as well as a severance of diplomatic relations between the UK and Iran.
Taking matters further an individual was said to have attempted to obtain a summons against Mr. Rushdie and his publisher, alleging that both parties had committed the offense of seditious libel, a claim that was denied after judges found that there was not a seditious intent by either of the parties against any of the UK’s democratic institutions.
In the U.S., Congress enacted the Sedition Act of 1798 in anticipation of a possible war with France, according to Professor Geoffrey Stone of the University of Chicago, and the Act made it a crime for any person to make any statement that brought the President, Congress, or the government into contempt or disrepute.
Unlike the U.K.’s sedition law, truth was a defence, but still it was bitterly opposed by those who sought to criticise the government, and the government used it to prosecute numerous journalists and politicians who criticised its policies, Professor Stone said to The Hindu.
While the Act expired by its own force in 1801 amidst condemnation as a serious violation of the First Amendment guaranteeing the right to freedom of expression, a series of compulsions relating the wartime politics, from 1798 to the present led to reinstitution of seditious libel laws.
These included, Professor Stone notes, the government putting some presses out of business during the American Civil War; the government enacting the Espionage Act of 1917 and the Sedition Act of 1918 during World War I, which were used to prosecute around 2,000 individuals for criticising the war and the draft; and the federal government and most states enacting laws prohibiting anyone to advocate the violent overthrow of the government During the “Red Scare” of the 1950s.
Notwithstanding this regressive shift during the war years, the U.S. Supreme Court began to address the constitutionality of these laws for the first time during World War I. Although it found them to be constitutional at that time, the Court’s questioning set off a “fierce challenge,” to sedition as a legal concept, Professor Stone said, particularly by Supreme Court Justices Oliver Wendell Holmes and Louis Brandeis.
From that time until 1969 the U.S. Supreme Court struggled with sedition laws and ultimately came to the view in Brandenbug v. Ohio that the government could punish speech because it turned people against the government or might cause them to engage in unlawful conduct only if the speaker expressly incited unlawful conduct and only if the speech is likely to cause such conduct imminently.
Since that time no restrictions on seditious libel have been upheld in the U.S. and Professor Stone argues that this has largely been because the nation and its government have come to encompass the understanding that “It is more important to protect a vital freedom of speech than to suppress views we do not like. The suppression of criticism of the government, we have come to understand, is fundamentally incompatible with the aspirations of a true democracy.”
The Government of India frequently speaks of India becoming a superpower comparable to some democratic Western nations. Yet as this government goes about arrogating to itself the right to victimise those who challenge the legitimacy of its actions, or raise dissenting slogans against widespread inequities in the country, it may have pause for thought if it bothered to glance through the historical evolution of jurisprudential thought on sedition laws in these very same nations.
Source: The Hindu, 19-03-2016

Defining minorities and their uses in India requires a change of thought

Has India always, or at least since 1947, had a ministry of minority affairs? At any rate, it is probably a necessity in the present government. Since the BJP came to form the government with a healthy mandate, there have been questions about the security of, and social and political equality for, the minorities and wholehearted commitment to these from our rulers and the forces they control.
To be fair, the questions have only arisen in the context of the Muslims and Christians of India. Those who favour and follow what is known as the Hindutva ideology, or at least the extremists of this tendency, stand accused of attempts to characterise Muslim Indians as not quite full-fledged citizens. I am trying to choose my words carefully.
The killing of an individual suspected of storing beef in his refrigerator, the murder of scholars who are in any way critical of the emerging ideology, the attack on Muslim actors who have made determinedly sensible and patriotic remarks, the battles on university campuses which characterise perfectly legitimate protest and obey the tenets of free speech as treason — these and other sinister developments might merit stronger language.
I am sure all the members of the present government don’t support in any sense this tendency. There is Najma Heptullah, the minister for minority affairs, who surely dissents from it. I think one of her outstanding tasks is to redefine the brief of her ministry. Indian Muslims should not be seen as the ‘minority community’. Here’s where arithmetic and political expression come into conflict. Yes, there are fewer Muslims in India than there are Hindus and that should give them the status, not of a minority but of a ‘smaller majority’. It may seem like a semantic quibble but from such quibbles, policies of empowerment of social justice should flow.
The real minorities of India, and I am sure Najmaji has very many definitions and categories of them, are, by religion, the Sikhs, Christians, Buddhists, Jews and Zoroastrians.
The Hindutvaterrati have attacked Christian missionaries in very vicious and even murderous ways, but seem to have left the rest of us minorities (I write as a Parsi of Zoroastrian descent) alone and even on occasion celebrated them.
I don’t suppose the ministry of minority affairs has any business with the question of banning ‘Sikh Jokes’, for which there is an individual case initiated in the courts. It doesn’t seem to have attracted the support of millions of Sikhs, who perhaps, as the late Khushwant Singh did, tolerate the jokes and see laughing at oneself as a sign of cultural maturity.
If Sikhs were the only minority to suffer such jokes, the objection would carry more weight. Just as Americans have jokes about Poles and the British have jokes about the Irish, Pakistanis have funny stories about Bangladeshis, Indians have jokes about Bengalis, Malayalis, Biharis and Parsis.
As a member of the Parsi community, I quite enjoy Parsi jokes, especially those perpetrated by one of us. A Parsi journalist, asked about why our numbers were dwindling, said, “Because half of us are gay and the other half are statues in Mumbai!”
And then there was the one about a gathering of Parsi gentlemen where one says to the other “my wife is pregnant,” to which the reply is “Oh dear, I’m so sorry, whom do you suspect?”
I don’t think any Parsi will go to court about these or indeed appeal to Heptullah to initiate a parliamentary bill banning them. In fact, I gather that Heptullah is quite supportive of this particular minority community and her ministry has sponsored an exhibition called The Everlasting Flame: Zoroastrianism in History and Imagination in the National Museum in New Delhi.
The exhibition opens today and is open till May 31. The reason I’ve already seen it is because it was curated by the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) of University of London and was shown in London in 2013. It is now on the first step of what its originators call an ‘International Tour’.
Accompanying the exhibition will be an extension, which wasn’t a part of the display at SOAS. It features, among other things, a recent Bollywood film called Ferrari ki Sawaari. The title doesn’t give away the film’s connection with the history of Zoroastrianism, but I’m sure its selectors have some critical criteria which relates this 2012 Bollywood comedy to the theme of The Everlasting Flame.
The film, directed, acted (with the exception of Zoroastrian Boman Irani) and produced by non-Parsis tells the story of a Parsi father determined to get his son to play cricket at Lord’s. The determination leads him to steal the Ferrari of Sachin Tendulkar and the car’s journey introduces a gaggle of comic characters in set-piece situations and some genuine drama.
The film was a critical and financial success and may delight its audiences, but the only connection that one can see to 3,000 years of Zoroastrian history is that Parsis have evolved from being the Achaemenid rulers of the known world and the Sassanian conquerors of Rome to being good fun for Bollywood audiences. We have our uses.
(Farrukh Dhondy is an author, screenplay writer and columnist based in London. The views expressed are personal)
Source: Hindustan Times,19-03-2016
Making Men Enlightened


According to Swami Vivekananda, all of us are `heirs of immortal bliss', by nature divine.But we forget our divinity and essential goodness and begin to think we are sinners. Swamiji says, understand that “you are not matter, you are not bodies; matter is your servant, not you the servant of matter“. He advocated right education to attain enlightenment.Such education could enable us to respect others: our neighbours, fellow citizens, immediate surroundings and environment. An enlightened person has 10 characteristics. These are: “Contentment, forbearance, gentleness, respect for others' property , purity, self-control, knowledge, philosophic wisdom, veracity and patience.“
The aim of an enlightened being is to live according to his svadharma and learn to control his appetites. He takes from society as little as is essential for his being in the world and gives to it as much as he can.Sacrifice and service are his ideals. He synthesises the opposites: materialism and idealism; sensual and spiritual; abhyudaya and nihsreyas; preya and sreya. He does not live for himself alone; he lives for the welfare of his fellow beings.
In a letter to the Maharaja of Mysore, Vivekananda explaining the notion of enlightenment, “My noble prince, this life is short, the vanities of the world are transient, but they live who live for others, the rest are more dead than alive!“ He wrote this because he believed that not exclusion but inclusion is the right policy . According to him, “all expansion is life, and all contraction is death“.
BATTLEGROUND WEST BENGAL - Netas bid for votes of hungry tea garden workers

From dawn till late in the day, Mongra Oraon draws 50 buckets of water from a well to irrigate a small patch of the sprawling Bundapani Tea Estate in Birpara in the Dooars. The garden has been shut for years, but Mongra diligently carries on the back-breaking work to keep the crop healthy.“If we don't water the bushes, red spiders will af fect leaf production. We'l lose our only source of sustenance. We can en dure hard labour in scorching heat but not hunger,“ the sweatdrenched labourer says. The garden is among seven in the Dooars either closed or abandoned, affecting the livelihood of nearly 1 lakh workers. Some, including Bundapani, were taken over by the state three years ago, but they are yet to reopen.
Matters are much worse for another set of 1 lakh workers in 11 gardens that are neither closed, nor operational. They function only during the plucking season and remain shut rest of the year.There is no government dole for these workers as the gardens are not officially shut.
Observers say the once-thriving tea industry is deliberately being driven into crisis by short-term profit motives. “Few gardens have their owners here. Most are operated by traders who've leased the gardens for a few years,“ says Manab Dasgupta, former head of economics department at North Bengal University .
Overuse of a deadly cocktail of fertilisers and pesticide will soon run the gardens to seed, and they'll ultimately D be abandoned, he says. Most of the 4.5 lakh workers who work in the gardens in Dooars and Terai are illiterate and dependent on semi-literate union leaders for everything from workdays to wage negotiation to any bonus. “With the worker count in each garden a few thousand, managements speak to union leaders. There used to be four-five major unions earlier, several new ones have sprung up now.It is through these unions that new owners control the gardens' functioning,“ said a tea industry official. Closure of the gardens has driven workers to near starvation -there have been nearly 200 deaths in the Dooars since September 2015 though government puts the toll at 78. Many have been driven to work as daily labour in Bhutan, breaking boulders on the river bed for Rs 45-50 a day . The lack of livelihood has meant Union leaders have a vice-like grip on their lives.
While traders use these dubi ous union leaders all year, politicians bank on them during elections. The 4.5 lakh workforce in Dooars and Terai mostly vote en bloc, 80% are tribal. For netas, getting the Akhil Bharatiya Adivasi Vikas Parishad (ABAVP) on one's side is crucial for parties.
The GJM (Gorkha Jamukhti Morcha) controls a big chunk of the Nepali vote (10% of the workers) in the gardens. It is backing the CPM-Congress combine; ABAVP is leaning towards Trinamool.
That should have ensured victory for Mamata Banerjee's party in Nagrakata and Malbazar where over 70% of voters are tribal. But the equation changed this year with a split in ABAVP. John Barla, an influential tribal leader and former ABAVP president, who floated Progressive Tea Workers Union, is now a BJP candidate in Nagrakata.


Source: Times of India, 19-03-2016

Friday, March 18, 2016

India ranks 118th in happiness index

Denmark takes the top spot; India among group of 10 countries witnessing the biggest happiness declines, along with Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Yemen and Botswana.

Denmark took the top spot as the ‘happiest country’ in the world, displacing Switzerland, according to The World Happiness Report 2016, published by the Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN), a global initiative of the United Nations.
India was ranked 118th in the list, down one slot from last year on the index. The report takes into account the GDP per capita, life expectancy, social support and freedom to make life choices as indicators of happiness.
Switzerland was ranked second on the list, followed by Iceland (3), Norway (4) and Finland (5).
The report said that India was among the group of 10 countries witnessing the biggest happiness declines, along with Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Yemen and Botswana.
India comes below Somalia (76), China (83), Pakistan (92), Iran (105), Palestinian Territories (108) and Bangladesh (110).
The U.S. is ranked 13th, coming behind Australia (9) and Israel (11).
Inequality, a key parameter
The report, released ahead of the UN World Happiness Day on March 20, for the first time gives a special role to the measurement and consequences of inequality in the distribution of well-being among countries and regions.
“People are happier living in societies where there is less inequality of happiness. They also find that happiness inequality has increased significantly (comparing 2012-2015 to 2005-2011) in most countries, in almost all global regions, and for the population of the world as a whole,” the report said.