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Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Current Affairs- December 19, 2022

 

INDIA

  • Indian Railways received 800 proposals from startups to solve 11 problems under the ‘Startups for Railways’ initiative.
  • Railways to roll out Vande Metro train by 2023 for middle class and poor
  • Bird Flu outbreak in Kerala’s Kottayam; several thousand ducks culled in the state
  • Aviation regulator DGCA introduces new features on its e-governance platform- eGCA
  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate India Energy Week 2023 in Karnataka in February 2023.
  • Sela Pass tunnel is being built by BRO, to provide all-weather connectivity to China border in Arunachal Pradesh.
  • Telangana to disburse ₹7600 crore to farmers under ‘Rythu Bandhu’ scheme
  • Government plans to put on sale six mineral blocks in the states of Odisha and Rajasthan

ECONOMY

  • Jindal Steel and Power Limited (JSPL) will spend ₹7,930 crore under PLI scheme for specialty steel
  • Net direct tax revenue rises 20%, gross revenue rises 26% to ₹13.63 lakh crore in 2022-23
  • CCPA issues notices to Flipkart, Meesho for sale of acid on their platforms

WORLD

  • North Korea fired two medium-range ballistic missiles: Seoul
  • UN nature deal proposed calls to protect at least 30 percent of the planet by 2030
  • European Union (EU) reaches deal on major carbon market reform

SPORTS

  • Argentina becomes FIFA World Cup champion; beats defending Champion France 4-2 in penalties
  • FIFA World Cup 2022: Lionel Messi wins Golden Ball for best player; Mbappe wins Golden Boot

Current Affairs-December 20, 2022

 

INDIA

  • Indian Navy’s sailboat INSV Tarini will participate in Cape to Rio Race 2023- expedition to Cape Town, South Africa.
  • Bhutan enters into an agreement with PTC India Ltd, for purchase of power from Indian power market during winter.
  • Atal Innovation Mission (AIM), NITI Aayog calls for ‘ATL Marathon 2022-23’-innovation challenge under AIM’s Atal Tinkering Labs program.
  • National Test House to set up EV battery testing facilities in Mumbai and Kolkata; transformer testing facility at Jaipur.
  • Rajasthan CM Ashok Gehlot announces 12 gas cylinders a year at Rs 500 each for poor families.
  • India Jumps 8 Spots in Global Download Speeds Index from 113th in October to 105th in November.

ECONOMY

  • Domestic Air Passenger Traffic Rises 11% in Nov- latest data from aviation regulator DGCA.
  • Government to refund GST if purchase of incomplete house is called off.
  • Wipro signs agreement to buy Kerala Food Brand Nirapara.

WORLD

  • UAE launches a biometric service at the Abu Dhabi airport under which no passport or ticket will be required; passengers’ face will be their boarding pass.
  • US Capitol riot panel recommends criminal charges against Donald Trump
  • Fiji’s election ended with two rival leaders failing to win a majority; two leaders need the backing of a minor party to secure power.
  • IMF approves program for Ukraine to maintain economic stability

SPORTS

  • Lionel Messi creates record as the professional football player with the most appearances in FIFA World Cup.
  • Martyn Pawelski of Poland beat top seed Sasikumar Mukund to clinch USD 15,000 ITF men’s tennis tournament in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt

 

Current Affairs-December 21, 2022

 

INDIA

  • Indians can enjoy visa-free travel to 22 countries, according to Arton Capital Passport Index.
  • Parliamentary Standing Committee flags victimisation of SC/ST employees of PSUs
  • Nominated Rajya Sabha member P.T. Usha joins Vice-Chairman’s panel; first nominated member to be on the panel in the history of the Rajya Sabha.
  • The fifth Scorpene-class submarine, Vagir, was delivered to the Navy by Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders; scheduled to be commissioned into service in January.
  • Sethrichem Sangtam was awarded the first Rohini Nayyar prize for outstanding contribution to rural development.
  • Bill seeking to amend the law on multi-State cooperative societies was referred to a joint committee of Parliament.

ECONOMY

  • Share buybacks through stock exchanges to be phased out under new SEBI rules
  • CIBIL, SIDBI, Online PSB loans launch MSME rankings – model uses machine learning to predict the probability of MSME becoming a NPA
  • Puducherry, Lakshadweep and Goa emerged as best-performing states on the Social Progress Index (SPI)
  • Fitch Ratings affirmed India’s long-term foreign currency issuer default rating at ‘BBB-‘ with a stable outlook.

WORLD

  • Nepal blacklists 16 Indian pharma companies, including Baba Ramdev’s Pharmacy
  • Taliban authorities ordered a nationwide ban on university education for girls
  • Elon Musk will step down as the Twitter CEO; to quit after finding a replacement.
  • NASA’S Mars rover Perseverance to start dropping samples of rock on surface of Mars

SPORTS

  • Reigning World champion Nikhat Zareen and World Championships bronze medallist Simranjit Kaur win on the opening day of National women’s boxing in Bhopal.
  • Indian men’s doubles pair of Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty reached a career-best world No. 5

You are a Buddha

 Zen says Buddhahood is not somewhere far away. You are just sitting on top of it. You are it!... It has already happened. Nothing has to be achieved, nothing has to be practised. Only one thing: you have to become a little more alert about who you are.


A man came to a Zen master and asked, 'I would like to become a Buddha.' The master hit him hard. The man was puzzled. He went out and asked an old disciple, 'What kind of man is this? I asked such a simple question and he got so angry. H ..

However, the man asked, 'But what is the message?' The disciple replied, 'The message is simple. If a Buddha comes and asks how to become a Buddha, what else is there to do? You can hit him and make him aware that you are it. What nonsense are you talking!'

IIT-Bombay, Delhi and JNU most sustainable institutes in India: QS World University Rankings

 IIT-Bombay emerged as the best educational institutions in India in the first of it’s kind QS World University Rankings: Sustainability released on Wednesday. With a total of 15 Indian universities getting a place in the list, the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay (IIT-B) featured in the 281-300 rank range, followed by IIT-Delhi (321-340 rank) and Jawaharlal Nehru University at the third rank (361-380).

In order to assess how universities are taking action to set the world’s most pressing environmental and social issues, QS World University Rankings: Sustainability ranking has been started this year.

As of this year, experts took view of over 1300 higher education institutions meeting particular eligibility requirements, out of which 700 institutions made it to the final ranking list.

Fourth rank has been saved by the University of Delhi which marks in the 381-400 rank range and the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur (IITK) took on the fifth spot (451-500).

However, not just these but many other Indian universities like the Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee (IITR), Aligarh Muslim University, Jadavpur University, Indian Institute of Science, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur (IIT-KGP), Banaras Hindu University, Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati (IITG) and the Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IITM) also featured in the list.

Meanwhile globally, the University of California, Berkeley (from the US) has taken the lead in the sustainability frame as it has achieved top scores in both the Environmental Impact and Social Impact categories, each providing 50 per cent of the all-around score. It is followed by two Canadian institutions, the University of Toronto securing the second place and the University of British Columbia making it to third spot.

Source: The statesman, 27/10/22

Regress report: Editorial on ever-increasing rape cases in India

 Almost ten years on after the Delhi rape case, 4,28,278 cases of crimes against women were registered in 2021, almost double when compared to the 2,44,270 reported cases in 2012.


The gang rape of a woman in a Delhi bus on December 16, 2012 is seen, for many reasons, as a watershed moment in the discourse of crimes against women and relevant deterrence. A decade is perhaps an adequate time to take stock of the situation. A year after the horror, the rape law was amended — the definition of sexual assault was expanded, the quantum of punishment for rape increased, the unscientific ‘two-finger test’ discontinued, and filing police complaints made less bureaucratic — at least on paper. Almost ten years on, 4,28,278 cases of crimes against women were registered in 2021, according to the National Crime Records Bureau, almost double when compared to the 2,44,270 reported cases in 2012. These are just official figures. The ground reality could be far worse because sexual crimes often go unreported owing to shame, ostracisation, fear of perpetrators, and an expensive, long-drawn-out and often fruitless legal process. After 2012, a dedicated corpus called the Nirbhaya Fund was established, partly to get rape victims easy access to justice — 30% of this fund remains unutilised; in Maharashtra, the money was used to provide security to legislators. The conviction rate of rape cases stood at a poor 28.6% in 2021. This can be attributed to institutional warts: poor investigation, procedural flaws that weaken prosecution and so on. Combined with institutional failures is the attendant social regression: rapists being asked to marry their victims by quasi-judicial authorities is not unheard of; these days, there seems to be tacit political support for certain instances of transgression — Bilkis Bano’s tryst for justice is a case in point. The popular endorsement for instant retribution — the death penalty remains in place in India — is an outcome of larger failures.

NCRB data also throw up a more potent source of threat — the home — but the law remains non-committal. Even though 32% of all crimes against women were committed by their husbands, there is a dogged refusal to address, even recognise, marital rape. The regression on women’s safety is also evolving. India saw a 45% increase in rapes of Dalit women and girls between 2015 and 2020, many of these were punishments for ‘violating’ caste lines. An NGO working to provide legal aid to rape survivors has noted that the nature of the crime itself has changed — the rise in gang-rapes bears evidence of the transformation. Things have certainly changed in 10 years — but for the worse.

Source: The Telegraph, 21/12/22

Monday, December 19, 2022

Quote of the Day December 19, 2022

 

“The first recipe of happiness - avoid too lengthy meditations on the past.”
Andre Maurois
“खुशी का पहला उपाय - पिछली बातों पर बहुत अधिक विचार करने से बचें।”
एन्ड्रे माऊराउस