Followers

Monday, February 13, 2023

Current Affairs- February 11, 2023.

 

INDIA

  • The Central government appoints two new Supreme Court judges, taking the top court’s strength to full.
  • Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw inaugurates National Philatelic Exhibition- AMRITPEX in New Delhi.
  • Wildlife enthusiasts spot 145 different species during first Sundarban bird festival
  • Animal Welfare Board of India (AWBI) has withdrawn its appeal urging people to celebrate February 14 as ‘Cow Hug Day’.
  • Prime Minister flags off two Vande Bharat trains in Maharashtra high-speed rail connection.

ECONOMY

  • MobiKwik launches UPI payment with Rupay credit card; becomes first app to do so.
  • Union government signed loan agreements to borrow up to ₹13,879 crore to strengthen health infrastructure from international agencies.
  • India’s industrial output growth moderated to 4.3% in December 2022 from 7.3% in November,
  • IMF calls for comprehensive reforms of China’s growth model

WORLD

  • U.S. to resume ‘domestic visa revalidation’ for H-1B holders
  • 11th India-Mongolia Joint Working Group Meeting was held in New Delhi
  • Moldovan Prime Minister Natalia Gavrilita stepped down from her position

SPORTS

  • Union Information and Broadcasting Minister Anurag Singh Thakur flagged off the Formula E Championship in Hyderabad.
  • Deaflympic champion Jerlin Anika Jayaratchagan qualifies in the general category at the Olympics.

Current Affairs- February 12, 2023.

 

INDIA

  • President accepts resignation of Maharashtra Governor Bhagat Singh Koshyari, appoints Ramesh Bais as new Governor.
  • The country’s first lithium reserve, found in Jammu and Kashmir is of the best quality: Officials.
  • DRDO asks Indian industry players to join development of indigenous fifth generation fighter jet, Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA).
  • Year-long celebrations commemorating 200th birth anniversary of Maharishi Dayanand Saraswati commences in Delhi.
  • All India Radio announces to start broadcasting news in local dialect in tribal- Bastar region of Chhattisgarh.
  • The 1st International Conference on Communication, Electronics and Digital Technologies – NICE-DT 2023, lead event of G20 begins.

ECONOMY

  • Gross direct tax collections grew 24 per cent to Rs 15.67 trillion so far this fiscal: Finance Ministry.
  • RBI directs financial institutions and NPCI to allow access to UPI to foreign nationals.
  • Reserve Bank of India revises market hours of government securities from 9:00 AM to 3:30 PM to 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM.

WORLD

  • Mozambique has been hit by floods: four dead, 14,000 persons evacuated
  • 12th World Hindi Conference to be held in Fiji from February 15 to 17; to highlight links with Pacific Ocean region.
  • Scientists find a third natural source of quasicrystals.
  • Study: The world lost about 20% of its natural wetlands between 1700 and 2020.
  • Jaffna Cultural Centre (JCC), which was built with the grant assistance of the Government of India, was dedicated to the people.

SPORTS

  • Border Gavaskar trophy: India register victory over Australia by an innings and 132 runs in first Test.

National Women’s Day 2023

 India celebrates National Women’s Day on February 13. The celebrations commemorate the birth anniversary of Sarojini Naidu, the Nightingale of India. She stood for women’s empowerment. She took an active part in the Indian independence movement. She is popular for her poems on patriotism and other literary works.

Why do we celebrate National Women’s Day?

India celebrates National women’s day to honour the achievements of women in the country, especially in the field of politics, culture, and economy.

About Sarojini Naidu

She was a contributor to the Indian Constitution. She served as the President of the Indian National Congress in 1925. She was imprisoned for 21 months for participating in the Quit India Movement. She did her higher studies in London. She was born in Hyderabad and died in Lucknow.

International Women Day

It is celebrated on March 8 by the UN and other countries of the world. The day is being celebrated since 1975. The day is marked to honour the achievement of women in the field of politics, culture, and economy. (The same reason for which National women’s Day is celebrated). Also, the celebrations aim to achieve Goal 5 of the SDG, which is, Achieve Gender Equality.

World Radio Day 2023

 In 2023, the United Nations and other countries are celebrating the 12th edition of World Radio Day. It is celebrated on February 13. The celebrations of World Radio Day are launched by UNESCO on behalf of the UN. The day aims to highlight the fact that radios are the pillars of conflict prevention and play a major role in maintaining peace in the world

The theme of World Radio Day

Radio and Peace

Significance of the theme

The war between countries may translate into media conflicts. This increases tensions. Radio can fuel conflicts. On the other hand, radios can also prevent conflicts from escalating. Therefore, radio plays a huge role in maintaining peace and making people safe. For sustainable democracy, radio should provide news independently. It should gather evidence impartially and let the citizens know what exactly is happening in the country and in the world.

Why is World Radio Day celebrated?

The day is celebrated to highlight the role played by radio and other broadcasting media. The day emphasizes the impact of news broadcasted by the radio on the public. Also, radio is one of the least expensive mediums of communication. It can easily reach remote areas.

Economic & Political Weekly: Table of Contents

 

Vol. 58, Issue No. 6, 11 Feb, 2023

Editorials

From the Editor's Desk

From 50 Years Ago

Commentary

Book Reviews

Special Articles

Current Statistics

Postscript

Letters

Why it is so difficult to tackle climate change

 Life begins with a single cell, and is a journey from life to death to renewal. Not dust to dust, but soil that nurtures life to soil. Destroy that diversity, and we destroy ourselves as part of that diversity


Sixty years ago, the Club of Rome’s report “Limits to Growth” already projected how human activity was going to change the planet, heating up the climate through carbon emissions that would raise the sea level, change weather and damage food, water and natural resources.

Since most people do not understand how their individual activities change the planet, scientists worked hard to provide more evidence, but economists thought they had a perfect market solution. If carbon markets can be created to price carbon costs and benefits, emitters could pay those who are willing to sequester carbon at the right price. Unfortunately, carbon markets are still nascent in most countries and are so fragmented that their impact is limited. People don’t trade carbon if they don’t understand it.

Dealing with climate change is a complex system change. This is tough because everyone is connected or interdependent in this complex world. This leads to “collective action traps”. Human beings find it difficult to work together because of different values, objectives and circumstances. Each expects the other to act, whereas if all do not cooperate, nothing will change. Like a network of individuals bound to each other, one virus can take the whole network down. This inability to act is called Tragedy of the Commons, because individuals for their selfish action, destroy the commons, or what is considered public good.

When the corporate world adopts ESG (environment, society and governance) standards to improve corporate social responsibility (CSR), it forgets that all three are entangled. Fundamentally, poor human governance is actually the evil that creates environmental destruction and social injustices.

There are essentially three broad categories of governance – state, market, or civil society (communities – the smallest being the family). State institutions are essentially hierarchical, top-down governance, with siloed bureaucracies that often work against each other for their own interests. Profit-driven market organizations end up being highly concentrated with monopolistic or oligopolistic control over their consumers and workers. Civil societies or communities are more flexible, but at the micro or small end often suffer from lack of fair access to funding and incur higher transactions costs than larger multinationals.

United Nations Special Envoy on Climate Action Mark Carney identified what he called the Tragedy of Horizon, namely, people cannot cooperate because of different time horizons. Profit-motivated companies are reluctant to cut carbon emissions because they involve additional costs. Corporate quarterly and annual financial reporting cycles mean that CEOs whose bonuses are tied to short-term profits decline long-term investments for the future.

Similarly, few politicians in a democracy will make very tough decisions for the long-term because they all face electoral cycles of not more than 4-5 years. In seeking popularity, they will not act to inflict pain through tougher regulations or higher taxes. The tragedy of horizons almost guarantees that long-term or public interests will be sacrificed for short-term gain.

All these explain why governments and corporations find it hard to change. However, communities (either urban or rural) that face the consequences of climate change, such as those hurt by wild forest fires, rising seas, food shortages, water pollution, etc. are more driven to work together when they identify common threats. The bottom-up approach works better because those who are most directly affected by climate threats have a common fate and therefore are incentivized to work together to meet these challenges. On the other hand, governments and corporations are hierarchical, divided into top-down bureaucracies that have few incentives to work together because each seeks to deliver partial results for their own vested interests.

The tragedy of horizons reveals a fundamental mismatch of different cycles. What goes around must come around – meaning that there are consequences for any action. Agricultural communities work together because planting any crop works in cycles and seasons. You cannot rely on too much chemical fertilizers or pesticides without polluting or poisoning the crops. Grain crops like rice and wheat or vegetables can be planted once or twice a year. Fruit trees and trees cultivated for their wood have cycles that last decades, since the former may take four-five years before they bear fruit and commercial forests may take much longer, requiring planned cutting, planting, and re-planting. Indigenous farmers know that you cannot rely on mono-crops, which kill the soil and that diverse crops, as well as crop rotation would regenerate the soil.

The real barrier in tackling climate change is therefore high population Homo Sapiens, a species that has grown to become a monoculture that is killing biodiversity through overconsumption of natural resources. Indigenous people have always lived with nature. Life is a cycle from dust to dust, but death returns our physical body to the soil, so that micro-bacteria, viruses and fungi replenish the soil from which other plants, worms and life regenerate. Tackling climate warming and biodiversity cannot be two separate tracks, as is being done through COP27 in Egypt and COP15 on biodiversity in Toronto.

The unity of complex systems within complex systems is through cycles linking different parts, just as ocean and air currents circulate like Nina weather effects that impact on rain, thunderstorms and fish and farm growth.

By discovering fossil fuels, which are after all carbonized energy deposits of previously living things, humanity has used these to power its domination over the rest of mankind and other living things, destroying biodiversity wantonly.

When individuals, communities, corporations and states want to deal with climate action, they only have to look in the mirror to see the major culprits. Until we become aware that we, the collective humanity, are the ultimate threat to our own existence, through either nuclear war or wanton waste of what nature provided, we will never stop climate warming.

Life begins with a single cell, and is a journey from life to death to renewal. Not dust to dust, but soil that nurtures life to soil. Destroy that diversity, and we destroy ourselves as part of that diversity.   

Andrew Sheng 

Source: The Statesman, 11/02/23

The Indian ease with translation and multilingualism: GANESH DEVY

 I grew up in a small town named Bhor in Pune district. Bhor was a one-time“Princely State”, but the prince was really a minor prince. Among thearchitecturally interesting “monuments” he created out of his negligible revenuewere a small palace, a temple, a high school, and a library. As a middle-schoolstudent, I used to go to the library. It had a few thousand books, mostly in Marathi.Among them, many were translations of English, European, and Bangla books.

Among the translations were a biography of Abraham Lincoln, a translation ofVictor Hugo’s

Les Miserables

, a prose rendering of one of Alfred Tennyson’s poems,and the Tarzan stories. I was not aware that they were translations. It did notstrike me at that age, but to bring a book from the US or France or Africa tomonolingual readers in a small town inhabited by people who had rarely evercrossed the borders of their State was quite a miracle.

A few years later, when I started reading newspapers, I wondered how the Marathireporters could get the details of things happening all over the world so fast. I wasnot aware that the editorial desks had to depend on translation of news in otherlanguages, mainly English. I had not realised how important a role the invisibletranslators play in the spread of information and culture. And it was not just thespread of information but also the spread of empires where they played a key role.

The dubhashis

I do not know if enough documentary evidence exists to support the story I haveheard about the fi rst encounter between offi cers of the East India Company andthe people in Surat where the EIC wanted to begin its trading operations. It seemsthe Englishmen, who obviously did not know either Gujarati or Persian, had toemploy Armenian translators. The Englishmen knew some Portuguese; theArmenians also understood Portuguese.

Thus an English sentence was translated fi rst into Portuguese, then thePortuguese was translated into Armenian, followed by its Persian translation fromArmenian, and fi nally the Persian was translated into Gujarati. In reply to thecommunication, the whole chain of translations was played back. Yet, despite thislong linguistic journey along the path of translation, the communication did takeplace.

I often wonder if the European powers could have built their colonial empires ifthat anonymous translator had not come to their rescue. Later, the Company

2/10/23, 11:08 AM The Indian ease with translation and multilingualism - Frontline

https://frontline.thehindu.com/columns/india-this-side-ganesh-devy-learnt-in-translation-on-the-indian-ease-with-translation-and-multilingualism/art… 3/6

created an offi cial position of dubhashis or multilingual functionaries. Twocenturies later, the EIC offi cials were fi rst trained in a few Indian languages beforebeing posted to India. By the end of the 18th century, many of them translatedtexts from Persian and Sanskrit into English. Some, like Sir William Jones (1746-1794) and Charles Wilkins (1749-1836), became world famous.

Over the last fi ve decades, I have come across innumerable scholars andenthusiasts who have translated from or into their own languages. In comparison,the numbers of those interested in translation in England or in other English-speaking countries is much smaller. I often think of poets like A.K. Ramanujan,Dilip Chitre, and Arun Kolatkar, whose ease with several languages wasremarkable, as being characteristic of the Indian attitude to language andliterature. Ramanujan translated from Tamil and Kannada into English. He wrotehis poems in English as well as in Kannada. Chitre had an ease with translation andwriting both in English and Marathi. When I was in Gujarat, I translated a fewcomplex texts from Gujarati to English. I have also translated from Marathi toEnglish and from English to Marathi without becoming too self-conscious.Besides, when it came to writing in Gujarati, Marathi, and English, I did notexperience any great unease.

This is not to say that one has complete mastery over all these languages. The fewexamples I have given are brought in to point to the sense of ease that Indianshave in dealing with several languages. Millions of workers and traders in Indiawho work in States other than their own engage with several languages as easily asfi sh swim in water. We can perhaps say that the Indian Consciousness is aTranslating Consciousness.

“What myths describe as “Parakaya-prvesh” (getting under another’sskin), is a way of life for us.”

Metamorphosis, or what myths describe as

Parakaya-prvesh

(getting underanother’s skin), is seen as no great deal by Indians who are used to beingmultilingual. It is a way of life for us. It is an important soft power India hasinherited, the importance of which we have not fully assessed.

Fortunately, we have a long tradition of considering translations as equally sacredas the original texts. We also have an amazing diversity of languages which makesmultilingualism a natural cultural practice. The convention of bestowing a sacredstatus on translations emerges in the circumstances under which many of ourmodern languages were born.

2/10/23, 11:08 AM The Indian ease with translation and multilingualism - Frontline

https://frontline.thehindu.com/columns/india-this-side-ganesh-devy-learnt-in-translation-on-the-indian-ease-with-translation-and-multilingualism/art… 4/6

Most of them have translations of Sanskrit texts such as the Mahabharata or theRamayana as the fi rst or early texts in the initial phase of their emergence. The

Jnaneshwari

for Marathi, the

Gita Govinda

for Oriya, the

Charyas

in Assamiya, theMahabharata translations in Telugu and Kannada and the

Ramcharitamanas

forHindi exemplify this peculiar phenomenon. These texts are as sacred for thespeakers of those languages as the King James version of the Bible is forEnglishmen.

Language diversity

As far as language diversity is concerned, data on “Mother Tongues” in successiveCensus reports may suffi ce. The 1961 Census had listed 1,652 mother tongues asreported by Indian citizens. In 2011, 1,369 mother tongues were reported. The highdensity of languages in India provides a favourable social context for anyone toaccept bilingualism or even multilingualism as a natural way of life. In turn,multilingualism supports translation as a mental habit in day-to-day life. Theenormous advantage that such a society has over a purely monolingual societyshould not be underestimated.

When I grew up reading Marathi translations of books from many countries, Hindiwas not an easily understood language in Maharashtra. Later, the popularity ofHindi fi lms and Hindi songs brought Hindi closer to the Marathi-speaking people.During the same period, the Marathi language kept distancing itself fromnumerous tribal languages in Maharashtra and either marginalised them or plainfi nished them off. I have noticed a similar process in Gujarati during the last sixdecades.

At this juncture in our national history, Hindi is being presented as the linguistic“Big Brother”. An insistence on displaying Hindi signboards in southern States isthe beginning of an intended diminishing of Kannada, Telugu, Tamil, andMalayalam. The Language Committee’s recommendation that Hindi be made thelanguage of inter-State offi cial communication in the name of national unity is anill-advised step towards linguistic social engineering. It may look like a desirablemove for a myopic nationalism, but it will spell the beginning of the decline ofIndia’s multilingualism and inherent translation ability. It will, in simple words,erode the soft power that our ancestors have handed down to us.

Recently, I was in Chennai for the International Book Fair organised by the TamilNadu Textbook and Educational Services Corporation. The fair attractedparticipation from a large number of publishers from various continents. I learntthat plans are afoot to have a number of Tamil works translated into several Indianlanguages, English, and other global languages. I fi nd this an extremely imaginative

2/10/23, 11:08 AM The Indian ease with translation and multilingualism - Frontline

https://frontline.thehindu.com/columns/india-this-side-ganesh-devy-learnt-in-translation-on-the-indian-ease-with-translation-and-multilingualism/art… 5/6

cultural move. It is bound to increase the prestige of Tamil the world over. Besides,it will strengthen the age-old institution of translators.

To my mind, the BJP’s ham-handed imposition of Hindi and the DMK’s imaginativestrategy to increase its soft power stand in sharp contrast. One betrays impatienceand inadequate understanding of India’s cultural past, the other showsstatesmanship and a good grasp of the cultural make-up of India. After all, the onlyNobel Prize for Literature given to any Indian was for a translation, RabindranathTagore’s Bangla

Gitanjali

in its English version.

The ability to translate, transform, and transmigrate and the ability to get underanother’s skin with complete empathy, which are at the heart of India’s culture andpast, cannot be easily understood by an ideology that thinks of every “other” as anenemy within. The working of the invisible hand cannot be grasped by those whobelieve that hands are made only for wielding lathis.

Ganesh Devy is a cultural activist and founder of Dakshinayana.

Source; Frontline Magazine, 24/02/23