Current Affairs for IAS Exams - 05 November 2014
Current Affairs for IAS Exams - 05 November 2014
National
‘Make in India’ programme will meet Russia’s ‘Eastern pivot’
• The government’s “Make in India” programme and Russia’s
“Eastern pivot” will meet as Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin will
discuss more cooperation on energy, the co-production of fighter aircraft and
nuclear cooperation with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, External Affairs Minister
Sushma Swaraj and National Security Adviser Ajit Doval.
• During the visit, Mr. Rogozin will chair the 20th commission (IRIGC-TEC) along
with Ms. Swaraj, as well as draw up the plan for “deliverables” for President
Vladimir Putin’s visit to Delhi, expected in December for the annual
India-Russia summit.
• Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov is expected at the end of November as
well. “Each of these fields, from defence production to nuclear and space
programmes, are fields India is looking to Russia for closer cooperation, and so
Mr. Rogozin’s visit is important,” an official told.
Union Cabinet clears dissolution of Delhi Assembly (Register and Login to read Full News..)
Harappan drawings discovered near Hampi (Register and Login to read Full News..)
Persons in news
Erach Bharucha gets 'Earth Hero' award
• A pioneer of environment education in India, Erach Bharucha,
has been named for the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) 'Earth Hero' award for this
year.
• “All of you need to work with conservation, whichever profession you are in.
The significance of these awards are that it brings recognition for hotspots of
biodiversity and the need for conservation... For conservation to be successful,
we need the number of conservation conscious individuals to reach a tipping
point and the press and schools are the two mediums which can make this happen,”
he said.
• Mr. Bharucha is currently the Director of Bharati Vidyapeeth Deemed University
in Pune.
• The winners of other awards, announced by RBS, include Indian Forest Service
Officer Sujoy Banerjee and P.S. Somashekar (Green Warriors), Nagaland's Pangti
Village Council and Assam's Goutam Narayan (Save the Species award), Tamil
Nadu's Kenneth Anderson Nature Society (KANS) (Earth Guardian), West Bengal's
Padmaja Naidu Himalayan Zoological Park (Special Mention) and wildlife
photographer Dhritiman Mukherjee (Inspire award).
• Uttar Pradesh cadre forest officer Mr. Banerjee is credited with ensuring the
breeding of more than 2,000 gharials in the National Chambal Sanctuary, which
falls in Uttat Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan in 2012-13.
International
U.S. slams Pakistan for using militant proxies in a war against India
• In an unusually candid report, the U.S. Pentagon has openly
criticised Pakistan for using militant groups as proxies in a war against a
“superior” Indian army, a step that could mark growing strategic closeness
between Washington and New Delhi since Prime Minister Narendra Modi assumed
office in May.
• In its report on “Progress Towards Security and Stability in Afghanistan,”
tabled in the U.S. Congress, the Pentagon said, “Afghan - and India - focused
militants continue to operate from Pakistan territory to the detriment of Afghan
and regional stability. Pakistan uses these proxy forces to hedge against the
loss of influence in Afghanistan and to counter India's superior military.”
• The report also strongly hints that the terrorist attack on the Indian
consulate in Herat, Afghanistan, in May, was deliberately timed to coincide with
Mr. Modi’s swearing-in.
• “In May of this reporting period, the Indian consulate in Herat Province was
attacked by a group of four heavily armed militants. The attack came three days
prior to the swearing-in of the new Indian Prime Minister, Narendra Modi. Prime
Minister Modi is perceived as being close to Hindu nationalist groups, a fact
that may have played into the timing of the attack,” the report said.
• It added that within a month of that strike the U.S. State Department
announced that the terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba, the group behind the 2008
Mumbai terror attacks, was responsible for the violence.
• The report assumes additional significance as given Mr. Modi’s use of similar
terms when he said in August, “The neighbouring country has lost the strength to
fight a conventional war, but continues to engage in the proxy war of
terrorism.”
Science & technology
Rare birds of foreign origin sighted off Mangaluru coast
• When a group of birdwatchers sailed out for their fourth
annual survey of birds in the Arabian Sea recently, they were in for a surprise.
They spotted two birds of foreign origin. The birds live on the surface of the
water, squat on floating objects or fly over the high seas and they come to land
only for nesting.
• What surprised the group was the presence of Brown Noddy — commonly bred in
the Australian islands — though it is not a winter migratory bird. “It might
have come in search of food,” a group member, Shivashankar, said.
• Mr. Shivashankar, a software engineer, who has co-authored the book ‘Birds of
Southern Coastal Karnataka’ along with K. Prabhakar Achar, a
biologist-cum-academic, told that the group spotted four Brown Noddy.
• “This is the first time our group has spotted this species,” he said. The
group also came across another species, the Red-necked Phalarope.
World’s first dengue vaccine likely by next year: Sanofi
• As India deals with increasing number of dengue cases,
pharma major Sanofi said the world’s first vaccine against the mosquito-borne
viral disease may be available by the second half of 2015.
• Sanofi Pasteur, the French drugmaker’s vaccine unit, will file for
registration of its vaccine candidate and subject to regulatory approval the
world’s first dengue vaccine could be available by the second half of 2015, the
company said in a statement.
• Results of the last stage of the clinical study showed that the vaccine gives
a 95.5 per cent protection against severe dengue and an 80.3 per cent reduction
in the risk of hospitalisation, it said.
• Dengue has been a serious challenge to public health as it affects lakhs of
people annually in India, Sanofi said.
• The company added that its phase III efficacy clinical study programme for the
dengue vaccine candidate was conducted in over 31,000 participants across 10
endemic countries in Asia and Latin America.
• “We plan to submit the vaccine for licences in 2015 in endemic countries where
dengue is a public health priority,” Sanofi Pasteur president and CEO Olivier
Charmeil said.
• Sanofi Pasteur India head Stephan Barth said dengue is a serious health
concern in India, causing a significant but under-reported burden.
French Scientists find mechanism for spontaneous HIV cure (Register and Login to read Full News..)
Business & economy
Payments space is going to see disruption in next 5 years
• The payments space is going to see lot of invention and
disruption in the next five years, a top official from online payment firm
Paypal said.
• “This entire space is rife for disruption whether it is Apple Pay, whether it
is Paypal or somebody. It is bound to happen in the next five years that is my
forecast,” Anupam Pahuja, General Manager, Paypal Technology- APAC, said.
• Every time a customer bought a product for Rs. 100, he paid Rs 2 of that to a
bank, he said. For merchants, transaction fees was the fourth highest item in
their P&L after cost of space, cost of inventory and employee cost, he pointed
out.
• “Nobody wants to pay such transaction fees. There is going to be so much
invention and creative in this space. Fees merchants are forced to pay because
there is no competition today is going to come down,” Mr. Pahuja said.
• He also saw lot of payments happening through mobile going forward. About $12
billion or 20 per cent of total payments volume came through mobile for Paypal
in the third quarter. “From 0, we have to gone up to 20 per cent in two years
time in mobile payments,” he said.
• Mr. Pahuja said India had seen a slow pace of growth in electronic payments
because most payments happened through cash.
• “We are cash-driven economy today, but five years down the road, I don’t see
that happening. Will it come down to 80 per cent mobile payments? No. But not in
nature today,” he added.
• Once issues of easier use and security were addressed, mobile payments would
pick up in India as well, according to Mr. Pahuja.
Sports
Manavaditya Rathore wins gold at Asian Championships
• Manavaditya Rathore, son of Olympic silver medallist
Rajyavardhan Rathore, clinched the gold medal in junior men’s trap at the 4th
Asian Shotgun Championships. Rathore shot 114 out of 125 to win the junior trap
event in a shoot-off.
• Commenting on Manavaditya’s performance, Raninder Singh, president, NRAI said,
“I would like to congratulate Manavaditya on winning the gold today. This is
India’s third gold in the championship and this showcases India’s strength in
the world of shooting and how our youngsters like Manavaditya are the rightful
stars of the future that India is going to bank on for years.
• “However the lack of the required entries resulted in the junior trap event
being converted to a grand prix, which eluded Manavaditya of an Asian
Championship gold but with the precision and accuracy that he has showcased I am
sure he is not far away from earning many other big international medals for
India.”
• Other members of the junior trap squad Sharan Susheel and Kismat Chopra shot
113 and 105 respectively. In the senior trap event for men, Kynan Chenai
finished 5th in the finals, after having shot an impressive 120 in
qualification.
• The senior men’s trap team finished fourth overall with other members of the
team namely Manav and Prithvi Raj Tondaiman shooting 115 and 114 respectively to
add to Kynan’s tally.
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Sources: Various News Papers & PIB