Followers

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

April 17, 2023

 

INDIA

  • The first edition of the biannual Army Commanders conclave 2023 will be conducted in Hybrid format.
  • National Health Authority is set to introduce face authentication feature for Ayushman Bharat App.
  • Apple’s first two retail stores in India will open this week in Mumbai and Delhi.
  • Ministry of Panchayati Raj will celebrate National Panchayat Awards Week from 17th April to 21st April 2023.
  • Rajasthan’s Nandini Gupta has been crowned as the Femina Miss India World 2023.
  • DRDO Industry Academia Centre of Excellence inaugurated at IIT Hyderabad.

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

  • Global Conference on Compressed Biogas to be held in New Delhi.
  • Steel Ministry: Disinvestment process of Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Limited is under progress
  • NITI Aayog mulls Electric Vehicle policy review to reduce dependence on China.

WORLD

  • April 17 is observed as World Hemophilia Day, this year’s theme is ‘Access for All: Partnership. Policy. Progress. Engaging Government, Integrating Inherited Bleeding Disorders into National Policy.
  • India’s population is expected to reach 1.429 billion by the end of the year, according to the U.N. China will be at second place, with 1.426 billion people.
  • Germany switches off its last three nuclear plants; Germany has been looking to leave behind nuclear power since 2002.
  • The Sudanese military and a paramilitary group battled for control of the nation; 61 dead and 670 injured after clashes.

SPORTS

  • Shaili Singh qualifies for Asian Games; logging second longest jump in India’s history.

Current Affairs-April 18, 2023

 

INDIA

  • President of India Droupadi Murmu presents the National Panchayat Awards and inaugurates the National Conference on Incentivization of Panchayats
  • Union Minister Dr. Jitendra Singh launches ‘YUVA PORTAL’ in New Delhi, to identify potential young Start-Ups.
  • Tribal Affairs Minister Arjun Munda to launch Marketing, Logistics Development for PTP-NER scheme in Manipur.
  • Department of Posts releases special cover on Mahila Samman Savings Scheme in Telangana.
  • Union Ayush Ministry organized a national conference on female infertility in New Delhi.

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

  • India and Russia crossed bilateral trade target of 30 billion dollars before target 2025.
  • ADB provides USD 230 million for flood rehabilitation in Bangladesh.
  • Wholesale Price-based Inflation (WPI) for March 2023 declined to a 29-month low of 1.34 percent.
  • Indian Railways has registered a record revenue of two lakh 40 thousand crore rupees for the financial year 2022-23.

WORLD

  • Bangladesh issues 5-point guideline for limited import of films made in the languages of  ‘the Indian subcontinent’.
  • Multilateral exercise Orion in which the Indian Air Force and French Air and Space Force are taking part begins in France.

SPORTS

  • Russia’s Andrey Rublev wins Monte Carlo title after winning the final against Denmark’s Holger Rune.

Current Affairs- April 19, 2023

 

INDIA

  • Union Home Minister Amit Shah presided over a ‘Chintan Shivir’ of senior officers of Ministry of Home Affairs in New Delhi.
  • Rain and thunderstorm begin in Jodhpur, Jaisalmer, Bikaner due to western disturbance.
  • Government approves 8 projects worth around Rs 638 crore for Clean Ganga Mission.
  • Defence Minister Rajnath Singh approved a proposal for bringing in industry-friendly reform related to Authority Holding Sealed Particulars (AHSP)
  • Manipur Chief Minister inaugurates Hun-Thadou cultural festival at Kangpokpi.

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

  • Apple CEO Tim Cook opens Apple’s first India store in Mumbai.
  • India plans to appeal against WTO ruling on IT tariffs.
  • G20 Digital Economy Working Group meeting held in Hyderabad.

WORLD

  • UN Secretary-General condemns outbreak of fighting in Sudan, calls for an immediate ceasefire to resolve crisis.
  • Kuwait’s Crown Prince announces dissolution of National Assembly and calls for new elections.
  • India and Russia agree to deepen trade and economic relations during the India-Russia Inter-governmental Commission on Trade, Economic, Scientific, Technological and Cultural Cooperation.

SPORTS

  • Suryakumar Yadav was named Wisden’s Leading T20 Cricketer of the Year while Harmanpreet Kaur becomes the first Indian woman to win a Wisden Cricketer of the Year.

Gandhi and Women

 Women in the Phoenix Settlement, founded by Gandhi in 1904 in South Africa, were unrestrained by social taboos and had more freedom than their counterparts anywhere in India. With his experience of South Africa behind him, Gandhi was aware of the potential of women as satyagrahis. He also firmly believed that ‘women of India should have as much share in the winning of swaraj as men.

It is an undeniable fact that the culture of a nation is expressed in the importance it gives to the dignity and rights of its women. Apart from her reproductive function for the continuation of the race, a woman has played an extremely important role since the origin of the human species.

Because by her very biological function, she creates, cares, shares, and does not normally destroy. Many firmly believe that the Chinese revolution has been primarily a woman’s revolution. That is to say, it is China’s women, more than the peasants and workers, who have benefitted from the communist revolution.

The women of today’s China are fortunate, they have a taste of freedom. The women of today’s Russia enjoy an equal position with men. Since ages, Indian women were living in abject conditions, homebound, caught in the grip of fear, illiteracy and social discrimination.

Mahatma Gandhi was concerned about the emancipation and empowerment of women from the early stages of his life. He also felt that a country could not move forward unless there was an awakening among the country’s women.

However, in the formative years, he was deeply influenced by his mother Putlibai, who imparted in him a strong sense of personal ethics and compassion that is conveyed through his favorite prayer song (bhajan) written by the 15th-century religious reformer, Narsinha Mehta: ‘Vaishnav jan to tene re kahiye je peed parai jane re’ (A godlike man is one, who feels another’s pain, who shares another’s sorrow).

Indeed, motherhood was something that was natural to Gandhi. He was involved in a number of tasks that were considered largely feminine ~ nursing, cleaning, cooking and taking care of the ashram members. He firmly believed that the difference between men and women was only physical, and they play complementary roles.

He also expressed several times in his writings in ‘Young India’ and ‘Harijan’ that in many matters especially those of tolerance, patience, and sacrifice the Indian woman is superior to the male.

Gandhi’s views regarding the man-woman relation were very similar to Tolstoy’s. Tolstoy, while reviewing the famous short story entitled ‘The Darling’ written by the famous Russian author Anton Chekhov, made some profound observations. The author made fun of women who lacked originality, and were shadows of men and whose tastes would change with a change of husbands. Tolstoy did not agree with the observation.

He believed that women had their own uniqueness and that both men and women had equal abilities and rights, although they had different roles to play in society.

Gandhi was a keen observer of the women’s movement for voting rights in the UK, which at times did not practice the principled type of non-violence that he had advocated all along.

But he had tremendous faith in women’s inherent capacity for non-violence. In his words: “If non-violence is the law of our being, the future is with the women… who can make a more effective appeal to the heart than women? … God has vouchsafed to women the power of non-violence more than to men.

It is all the more effective because it is mute. Women are the natural messengers of the gospel of non-violence if only they attain high state.” Women in the Phoenix Settlement, founded by him in 1904 in South Africa, were unrestrained by social taboos and had more freedom than their counterparts anywhere in India.

With his experience of South Africa behind him, Gandhi was aware of the potential of women as satyagrahis. He also firmly believed that “women of India should have as much share in the winning of swaraj as men.”

In India, Gandhi’s first experiments with trying out the method of satyagraha was in Champaran district in Bihar in 1917. It was here that a few women such as Pravabati Devi, Rajbanshi Devi and Bhagawati Devi facilitated the entry of women into the freedom struggle.

These women led the fight against the purdah system. Social works gradually led to a political awakening among women. From Champaran Gandhi went to Kheda district (Gujarat) where peasants were protesting against unjust taxation. Gandhi was received with great enthusiasm by women everywhere.

In his historical march to Dandi on 12 March 1930, women came out in thousands. Women’s participation in large numbers in Gandhi’s mass movements was a kind of social revolution which made a breakthrough in their lives.

Gandhi is known to be one of the few people who encouraged women’s active participation in the freedom struggle – making him a rare promoter of woman’s liberation.

And his experience of participation by women in politics from his days in South Africa till the end of his life bears testimony to the fact that they never failed his expectations. In his letters and speeches to women, Gandhi repeatedly emphasized that women were not weak.

Addressing a meeting in Bombay in 1920, where women expressed their views on the atrocities committed in Punjab, Gandhi said: “I, therefore, want the women of India not to believe themselves weak. It is ignorance to call women weak, women who have been the mother of mighty heroes like Hanuman.” And he wrote in ‘Young India’ in 1930, “To call women the weaker sex is a libel; it is man’s injustice to women”.

Gandhi asked women to be fearless. As Jawaharlal Nehru wrote: “The dominant impulse in India under British rule was that of fear-pervasive oppressing, strangling fear; … It was against this all-pervading fear that Gandhi’s quiet and determined voice was raised: Be not afraid” (Discovery of India). Not only did he inspire women to be brave, he taught men too to respect women. Gandhi did everything to correct gender imbalances and bring women to the forefront in India’s social, economic, cultural and political mainstream.

Empowerment and uplift of women and the poor became his prime concern. He repeatedly pointed out that seeking freedom by imitating men would be a mockery of freedom. In his words: “Man and woman are equal in rank but they are peerless pair being supplementary to one another.”

As a result, women became prominent during the freedom struggle. Initially, many highly-educated women took part in the women’s movement launched by Gandhi, but as the movement spread among the masses, women from middle and lower class families ~ educated, uneducated and half-educated ~ came out and joined hands with each other to strengthen the movement.

Many observers of the Indian scene during those times were amazed at the phenomenon. Depicting the picture of those days Pandit Nehru wrote: “Most of us menfolk were in prison. And then a remarkable thing happened. Our women came to the front and took the charge of the struggle.

Women have always been there, of course, but now there was an avalanche of them, which took not only the British Government but their own menfolk by surprise” [Discovery of India]. With Gandhi’s inspiration, they took the struggle right into their homes and raised it to a moral level. Women organized public meetings, sold khadi and proscribed literature, started picketing shops of liquor and foreign goods, prepared contraband salt, and came forward to face all sorts of atrocities, including inhuman treatment by police officers.

They came forward to give all that they had ~ their wealth and strength, their jewelry and belongings, their skill and labour ~ for this unusual and unprecedented struggle. During the 40 years of his political career, Gandhi only found more reasons to deepen his faith in what he wrote. He never had a specific programme for women, but women had an integral role to play in his programmes.

For this reason, women participated in all programmes overwhelmingly. “Womanhood is not restricted to the kitchen”, he opined and felt that “only when the woman is liberated from the slavery of the kitchen, that her true spirit may be discovered.” It does not mean that women should not cook, but only that household responsibilities be shared among men, women and children. He wanted women to outgrow their traditional responsibilities and participate in the affairs of the nation.

He connected women with services and not with power. In his words: “If by strength is meant moral power, then a woman is immeasurably man’s superior.”

JAYDEV JANA

Source: The Statesman, 17/04/23

Poverty points

 A recent paper by the Brookings Institution’s Stuart M. Butler and Nehath Sheriff underlines the impact of the US’ Housing First program, which shows that providing stable housing can improve the efficacy of psychiatric and substance abuse treatment as well as aid in connecting individuals to social services.

There is a raging debate on poverty levels in the country among that arcane group known as Indian economists. The argument centres around which dataset is the most credible to base assessments on whether poverty has increased or decreased over varying time spans ~ from 20 years to two.

But neither side is claiming that poverty has been eradicated or even that the number of Indians living on under $2 a day is not significant. Which brings us to the real-life impact on our fellow citizens attempting to survive on such meagre means. In this respect, there are useful learnings from the USA on how to deal with the causative implication of exposure to poverty ~ measured on metrics of homelessness, food security, and hygiene poverty ~ on mental health. India has begun to address some of these issues ~ the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana, the National Food Security Act, Midday Meal Scheme, and Swachh Bharat Abhiyaan are laudable initiatives that often don’t get the credit they deserve.

While these programmes are designed to lessen the incidence of poverty, its consequences on mental health are rarely dealt with given resource constraints. A recent paper by the Brookings Institution’s Stuart M. Butler and Nehath Sheriff underlines the impact of the US’ Housing First program, which shows that providing stable housing can improve the efficacy of psychiatric and substance abuse treatment as well as aid in connecting individuals to social services.

The authors assert there is a close connection between homelessness and mental health. Since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, homelessness and associated behavioural health issues have increased in the USA ~ and there is no reason to assume the situation is any different in India. US Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration data suggests between 20 and 50 per cent of the homeless have serious mental illness.

Additionally, official estimates (2021) are that over 34 million Americans, including nine million children, were living in households that did not have enough to eat. Many of these families do not qualify for federal nutrition programs and are dependent on food banks or community donations. A national study quoted by Butler and Sheriff found that food insecurity was associated with a 257 per cent higher risk of anxiety and a 253 per cent higher risk of depression among low-income families.

Mothers and children appear to be at an especially high risk of mental health distress associated with food insecurity. Inequitable access to personal care and hygiene products is an overlooked public health crisis, add the authors; data is limited on the mental health implications of what is widely described as “hygiene poverty.” A 2021 study found a link between women struggling to afford menstrual products and depression ~ for young women in low-income households, this added stress in their daily lives is a significant factor in their mental health.

Given these findings, Indian policymakers could consider addressing mental/behavioural health issues among the poor by integrating the effort, possibly under the aegis of the Ayushman Bharat (PM-JAY) scheme, with the four flagship initiatives mentioned above. This would improve the quality of our human resources which, in turn, will have positive effects in the social, economic, and psycho-cultural domains.

Source: The Statesman, 18/04/23

All work and no wage

 Demands for respectable academic contracts with adequate living wage and social security are not surprising


Underpaid scientific labour has been systematically justified, if not internalised, by the very intellectual community whose standards of living and passion for building a science-conscious society are being invisibly compromised. The status quo seems to be challenged by the recent academic workers’ strike at the very core of Western capitalist nations, the United States of America and the United Kingdom, where cost-cutting in the academia has been institutionalised in the name of market competency in scientific endeavours. Around 48,000 academic workers from the University of California went on strike demanding full-time wages and academic benefits (picture, top); about 70,000 academic workers, covering 150 universities across the UK, took part in the university strike (picture, bottom).

Demands for respectable academic contracts with adequate living wage and social security are not surprising. Numerous underpaid academic employees are burdened with the rising costs of living and pre-existing debts. Many of them are now realising that the university system has forced them into indebtedness by encouraging the marketisation of education and the delegitimisation of rightful, free college education.

Hypothetically speaking, if the cost-of-living crisis subsides by short-run economic management, should university employees forget the demands for better academic pay and social security benefits for their junior peers? No, they should not. Evidence suggests that decades of low wages for academic labour are detrimental: for instance, research at the University of Colombia found that persistent low wages are linked to a faster decline in memory.

Underpaid wage combined with increasing work dissatisfaction and diminished career prospects among researchers is a reflection of a structural crisis in the labour market of science. Scientific research is undoubtedly a risky and expensive venture. But why should economic vulnerability be imposed on doctoral students, postdoctoral fellows and trainees? Policy-instituted economic insecurity is harmful to the nurturing of scientific passion and innovation. It also undermines the emancipatory potential of scientific projects for society.

The slogan, “U.C., U.C., you can’t hide! We can see your greedy side”, echoing from the walls of campuses, is emblematic of the sentiment of every underpaid researcher across the globe. Scientists are leaving academia in response to low wages. Economic security and academic freedom are two fundamental conditions that must be met to stem the tide.

Such anxiety-inducing ec­o­nomic penury has been per­sistent in the scientific com­munity. Post-doctoral fel­lows are being forced to accept underpaid wages in the form of stipends and fellowships. However, despite the growing disenchantment, researchers are delivering remarkable innovations.

There is an additional dimension to the crisis. The underpayment of the scientific community — researchers and others — may have wider societal consequences. What society is receiving in terms of returns, such as scientific innovation and endeavours, is only a small percentage of what researchers are capable of. If ideal conditions — fairer wages and intellectual freedom — are met, the returns from the scientific community would be greater.

Jameel Barkat, Amit Sadhukhan

Source: The Telegraph, 18/04/23

Plant ‘cries’: Recalling Jagadish Chandra Bose

 

Researchers have picked up ‘distress’ calls from plants in difficulty, such as when they need water. More than a century ago, a pioneering Indian scientist had demonstrated that plants can ‘feel’ pleasure and pain.


Late last month, a group of researchers from Tel Aviv University in Israel reported that they had been able to pick up distress noises made by plants. The researchers said these plants had been making very distinct, high-pitched sounds in the ultrasonic range when faced with some kind of stress, like when they were in need of water.

This was the first time that plants had been caught making any kind of noise, and the breakthrough research findings made global headlines. But many Indians just had a sense of déjà vu. Several previous generations of Indians had grown up hearing that Jagadish Chandra Bose had shown, more than a century ago, that plants experienced sensations and were able to feel pleasure and pain just like animals. Children were often advised not to pluck leaves, flowers or twigs because that could cause pain to the plants or trees. The discovery that plants ‘cry’ in distress, therefore, did not come as much of a surprise to them. It seemed just a logical extension of J C Bose’s work. Bose might not be a very familiar name to the current generation, but he is a colossal figure of Indian science. A physicist-turned-biologist, Bose, who lived between 1858 and 1937, made pioneering contributions in both the fields and was the first Indian to have made a powerful impact on modern science, much before Srinivasa Ramanujan, C V Raman, or Satyendra Nath Bose, a student of Jagadish, arrived on the scene.

J C Bose could — many believe he deservedly should — very well have been India’s first Nobel Prize winner, ahead of his life-long friend and confidant Rabindranath Tagore, with whom he used to have a prolific, and often poetic, correspondence.

Bose’s science

Jagadish Chandra Bose is remembered for two things — his work on wireless transmission of signals, and on the physiology of plants. He is also credited as one of the first contributors to solid state physics. Sir Neville Mott, Nobel Prize winner in 1977, is said to have remarked that Bose was “at least 60 years ahead of his time and he had anticipated the p-type and n-type semiconductors”, according to an account in Remembering J C Bose, a 2009 publication by D P Sen Gupta, M H Engineer and V A Shepherd.

Bose is widely believed to be the first one to generate electromagnetic signals in the microwave range. In 1895, just a year after he began his active research, he demonstrated, before an audience in Kolkata, how microwaves could be used, wirelessly, to ring an electric bell on the other side of a building. He published as many as 12 papers on radio waves in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, and many more in some other prestigious journals, as reported in the book Jagadis Chandra Bose and the Indian Response to Western Science, by Subrata Dasgupta. He lectured on his work at some highly publicised scientific gatherings in Europe, in the presence of some of the leading scientists of the day. He was the first one to come up with radio receivers, which enabled wireless telegraphy.

And yet, Guglielmo Marconi, an Italian scientist who carried out the first transmission of signals across the Atlantic in 1901, is recognised as the sole inventor of the radio. Marconi, along with another colleague, was awarded the 1909 Nobel Prize for work that Bose is known to have accomplished earlier.

It was not just bias, but as several accounts put it, a reluctance on Bose’s part to obtain patents for his work, that deprived him of the Nobel. As mentioned in the publication Remembering J C Bose, he wrote to Tagore about being approached by a big businessman in Europe with the offer to get his work patented. Bose not just rejected the offer, he felt disgusted at the idea of making money from science. “If only Tagore would witness the country’s (England’s) greed for money,” Bose wrote to Tagore. “What a dreadful, all-consuming disease it was”.

His study of plants

Bose, rather abruptly, changed tack in the initial years of the 20th century and began to focus his attention on plants. But as Professor A S Raghavendra from the University of Hyderabad explained, Bose’s work was not as disjoined as it seems.

“J C Bose was extremely talented at picking electric signals. The other thing he was extremely creative at was making instruments. Bose was working with rudimentary facilities and, yet, was able to build some remarkably sensitive instruments. He used these instruments to try and detect the faintest signals from the plants. He was carrying over his skills from physics to probe the world of biology,” Raghavendra, a former J C Bose National Fellow, who has written extensively on Bose’s work, told The Indian Express.

“His (Bose’s) contributions to the communication systems in biology as well as physics are amazing. He devoted strong attention to studies on the biology of movements, feelings and nervous system. The word ‘feelings’ was used for plants, but clearly this is a matter of semantics; plants react both chemically and physically to touch, but to use the word ‘feeling’ or ‘sensation’ as we know it is quite different. The simple experiments of Bose revealed a high degree of similarity in the responses of plant and animal tissues to external stimuli. This principle was amply demonstrated later by biophysicists, using highly sophisticated instruments,” Raghavendra wrote in a 2010 paper.

In a way, Bose was possibly the world’s first biophysicist. But some of his work became controversial as well, particularly when he claimed that not just plants, even inanimate inorganic matter could respond to stimulus, and that there was actually no sharp demarcation between living and non-living worlds. Such “mental leaps” have sometimes been attributed to Bose’s “deep convictions in Indian philosophy” and his “faith in universalism”. Bose regarded plants to be the “intermediates in a continuum that extended between animals and the non-living materials”, according to the authors of Remembering J C Bose.

His work on plants, too, was also not easily digested. Bose himself records the opposition he faced. In a letter to Tagore, he mentioned a lecture he was delivering in Europe. “When I commented during my lecture at the Royal Society that plants which come between the living and the non-living will provide similar response, (John) Burden Sanderson (a leading physiologist of his time) told me that he had worked all his life with plants. Only mimosa (touch-me-not) responds to touch. That ordinary plants should give electrical response is simply impossible. It cannot be”. Over the years, much of Bose’s work has been confirmed, though his genius is not always acknowledged. “He was much ahead of his times, no doubt. Many of his contemporaries did not fully understand him,” Raghavendra said, adding that the recent discovery of distress noise from plants could lead to some exciting research in the field. “We cannot lose sight of the fact that it was Bose who started it all”.

Written by Amitabh Sinha 


Source: The Indian Express, 19/04/23