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Thursday, March 02, 2017

Trolled into silence


Gurmehar Kaur’s is a textbook case of victimisation through heightened levels of gender-based violence

Gurmehar Kaur, the 20-year-old student from Delhi University who started a social media campaign in opposition to the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad, has been trolled into silence, and has reportedly left Delhi due to rape and death threats. She is not the first youngster to be at the receiving end of the binary of the nationalist/anti-national.

Progressive politics

Ms. Kaur’s politics, similar to vast sections of the student community across the country, is aimed at questioning the narrowing of freedom of speech and expression, aided by the state in conjunction with a society that harbours an increasingly majoritarian attitude. Rohith Vemula of the University of Hyderabad could be demeaned for being a Dalit. Umar Khalid and Shehla Rashid of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), with their Muslim identity, could be slotted as traitorous, and their fellow comrade Anirban Bhattacharya could be projected as a menace for being a follower of left-wing ideology.
It was harder to slot Ms. Kaur with such ease. She is a student at one of the most elite colleges of Delhi University, Lady Shri Ram College (as opposed to JNU, much reviled in the popular imagination as the hub of ‘anti-national’ activity). She belongs to one of India’s most celebrated and prosperous minority communities, the Sikhs. Most significantly, her father, Capt. Mandeep Singh of the Indian Army, lost his life battling militants in Jammu and Kashmir in 1999.
Ms. Kaur has disrupted the narrative of the dying soldier that is brought out by the right wing at the drop of a hat to shut down dissent. The fact that sections of the Army veterans and relatives of those who died on the battlefield in Kargil have come out in her support reflects that there is some discomfort within the Army too over its facile politicisation.

Patterns of abuse

Ms. Kaur’s abusers used two distinct reactions. The first was what has become a standard issue response to the articulation of progressive views by women — sexual harassment. Rape threats and death threats flew thick and wild.
The second was to shame her for using her father, the soldier’s death as a plank for contrived morality. The strategies were used in combination, becoming a textbook case of the militarised society with heightened levels of gender-based violence.
When celebrities such as cricketer Virender Sehwag and actor Randeep Hooda jumped into the fray, they did so in the face of a very real intimidation that Ms. Kaur was facing, providing the cue for hundreds of trolls to move in swiftly with a barrage of abuse and threats. Their cavalier intervention, as also tweets and subsequent comments by Kiren Rijiju, the Union Minister of State for Home, show that the reality that a young woman could possibly have agency and think independently, without any assistance whatsoever from male members of society, has entirely bypassed our leaders and icons of sport and entertainment.
Other types of politics have also played out wherein representatives within the government used the Delhi University brouhaha and student violence to push further the agenda of curbs on freedom of speech and expression.

Identity politics

The incident has also stoked regional identity politics, with some prominent voices supporting Ms. Kaur remarking with condescension on the brawny, sexist Haryanvi in the context of Sehwag and Hooda, and wrestlers Geeta Phogat, Babita Kumari and Yogeshwar Dutt, all belonging to Haryana, reacting with hostility. The space of social media is admittedly a free-for-all. But progressive-minded people using stereotypes constitutes a weak defence and poor strategy. By that logic, the harassment of Ms. Kaur would also end up constituting ‘free speech’, which it is not.
It took a while for apologies to be tendered to Ms. Kaur by some of the personalities who contributed to her painful experience. Nonetheless, she has been vilified for lacking courage for withdrawing herself from the campaign, regardless of the actual grit she has displayed till this point. The Union Home Minister’s attempt at defusing the situation — by referring to her as a daughter who requires protection — continues to infantilise and patronise, in keeping with the attitude of a nanny state.
Sucharita Sengupta is Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi

Source: The Hindu, 2-03-2017
Really Close to God


Once upon a time, a musk deer went searching for musk. Round and round the forest she went, month after month, unaware that the heady fragrance so desperately sought by her, lay beneath her own belly button. Many times, we humans, too, behave like the musk deer. We search for Self-realisation outside, blissfully unaware that it lies within us, untapped.To experience this bliss, however, the seeker has to put in a different sort of effort with regularity and devotion. One way lies through the world of forms through the path of bhakti where the seeker concentrates on any manifest form of the Ultimate. The more arduous way of knowledge involves seeking the truth as the Unmanifest without any attribute: the saguna upasana and the latter nirguna upasana of no-attributes.
“Of the two, which is superior?“ the Pandava prince Arjuna asks Sri Krishna his divine charioteer, in Chapter 12 of the Bhagwad Gita. Both have the same goal, but the way of noforms is not an easy journey for ordinary mortals, Krishna replies. How do you grasp That which lies beyond all epithets and qualities even as you control your senses?
The best way to get immediate and everlasting peace, Krishna finally tells Arjuna, is through renunciation of the fruit of all action. This means doing your duty with the full faith that the fruit, whatever it may be, is the prasad or blessing gifted by the Divine. One who is thus enlightened relates to the world out of his own fullness and not out of any calculated need to seek anything from anyone.
Use of contraceptives down 3% in a decade
New Delhi


The use of contraceptives declined by nearly 3% in the last 10 years, the latest health survey conducted by the government across the country has shown.However, the decrease in contraceptive prevalence does not add up with other indicators in the space like decline in the total fertility rate and increased awareness about use of contraceptives. The data also showed an increasing trend in use of pills and condoms.
According to the fourth National Family Health Survey , which covered 6 lakh households, prevalence of contraceptives dropped from 56.3% in 2005-06 to 53.5% in 2014-15. While the use of modern methods also declined marginally , the decline was mainly triggered by a drop in the sterilisation rate.
Male sterilisation, already low, dropped from 1% to 0.3% between NFHS-3 and NFHS-4. Moreover, rate of female sterilisation also witnessed a decline from 37.3% to 36%. Use of modern methods dropped from 48.5% to 47.8% during the period.
Health ministry officials said the “incongruous“ data was mainly because of sociocultural reasons. “People often hesitate to answer questions related to use of contraceptives. We do not get correct responses and often silence is taken for negative.We agree that the data is incongruous,“ an official said.
Health secretary C K Mishra said, “The health ministry will conduct a detailed study to assess the situation so that it can take immediate steps if required.“
India's total fertility rate (TFR), reflective of population control measures, dropped from 2.7 children per woman in NFHS-3 to 2.2 children in the latest survey . The study also noted a considerable decline in the TFR in each of the 30 states. The unmet needs for family planning also declined over the last decade from 13.9% to 12.9%.

Source: Times of India, 2-03-2017
38% of women own house andor land, finds survey


India has witnessed an impressive jump in financial inclusion of women, with 53% of the female population now having bank accounts as compared to a mere 15% a decade ago, according to the latest national family health survey.The study made public on Tuesday reveals a heartening increase in the number of women operating their savings bank accounts, owning houses and participating in decision-making in households as well as opting for antenatal check ups and hygienic methods for protection during menstrual period.
The data also show that violence against married women has come down. The percentage of women facing marital violence has dropped from 37.2% to 28.8%. The survey also shows only 3.3% such women faced violence during pregnancy . This indicator seems to reflect a better awareness of their rights and improved social standing.
The 38% jump in women with bank accounts is complemented by the survey finding that 84% married women in the age of 15-49 years are increasingly participating in decision-making as compared to 76% in the third round of NFHS conducted in 2005-06. The data also show 38.4% of women own a house and or land -alone or jointly with others.
Not surprisingly , im provements in banking and an enhanced role in the household are accompanied by an increase in the female literacy rate that has gone up to 68.4% as compared with 55.1% in the pre vious survey . The female literacy rate, however, continues to lag men who have a literacy rate of 85.6%. Women with more than 10 years of schooling also grew from 22.3% to 35.7% between NFHS3 and NFHS4.


Source: Times of India, 2-03-2017

Tuesday, February 28, 2017


Economic and Political Weekly: Table of Contents


Vol. 52, Issue No. 8, 25 Feb, 2017

Editorials

From 50 Years Ago

Strategic Affairs

Commentary

Book Reviews

Perspectives

Special Articles

Notes

Current Statistics

Postscript

Appointments/programmes/announcements 

Letters

Web Exclusives

- See more at: http://www.epw.in/journal/2017/8#sthash.CdZXxf92.dpuf

Last date to fill AIIMS MBBS 2017 examination form extended, check how to apply


Entrance examination for AIIMS MBBS 2017 will be held on May 28.

The All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) has extended the deadline for registration for Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) 2017 examination by a day. Aspirants can now register for the entrance examination till February 23 on the official site - aiimsexams.org
To be eligible for the examination, aspirants should be at least 17 years old and should have passed Class 12 examination or equivalent (with a minimum of 60 per cent) with English, Physics, Chemistry and Biology as their main subjects.
How to check your result:
1. Visit the website aiimsexams.org
2. Click on 'Academic Courses'
3. You will be directed to a new page. Click on 'MBBS' under branch 'Medicine'.
4. When you are directed to Notification page, click on 'Registration' from the left-hand side panel.
5. Click on 'Login'
6. Follow the registration instructions post that.

About AIIMS MBBS Exams:

AIIMS MBBS Exam 2017 will be held on May 28. The results will be declared on June 14.
Post the result declaration the counselling sessions will be conducted in three in July, August and September, whereas the classes will begin on August 1.
There are seven AIIMS centres in all - New Delhi, Patna (Bihar), Bhubaneswar (Odisha), Jodhpur (Rajasthan), Raipur (Chhattisgarh) Rishikesh (Uttarakhand) and Bhopal (Madhya Pradesh).
Good luck to all the students.

Source: DNA, 22-02-2017

Last date to fill AIIMS MBBS 2017 examination form extended, check how to apply


Entrance examination for AIIMS MBBS 2017 will be held on May 28.

The All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) has extended the deadline for registration for Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) 2017 examination by a day. Aspirants can now register for the entrance examination till February 23 on the official site - aiimsexams.org
To be eligible for the examination, aspirants should be at least 17 years old and should have passed Class 12 examination or equivalent (with a minimum of 60 per cent) with English, Physics, Chemistry and Biology as their main subjects.
How to check your result:
1. Visit the website aiimsexams.org
2. Click on 'Academic Courses'
3. You will be directed to a new page. Click on 'MBBS' under branch 'Medicine'.
4. When you are directed to Notification page, click on 'Registration' from the left-hand side panel.
5. Click on 'Login'
6. Follow the registration instructions post that.

About AIIMS MBBS Exams:

AIIMS MBBS Exam 2017 will be held on May 28. The results will be declared on June 14.
Post the result declaration the counselling sessions will be conducted in three in July, August and September, whereas the classes will begin on August 1.
There are seven AIIMS centres in all - New Delhi, Patna (Bihar), Bhubaneswar (Odisha), Jodhpur (Rajasthan), Raipur (Chhattisgarh) Rishikesh (Uttarakhand) and Bhopal (Madhya Pradesh).
Good luck to all the students.

Source: DNA, 22-02-2017