Current Affairs for IAS Exams - 16 October 2014
Current Affairs for IAS Exams - 16 October 2014
National
Record voting in Haryana
• Haryana recorded its highest ever turnout of 73 per cent, marred by
violence and allegations of booth-capturing at several places. According to
Deputy Election Commissioner Umesh Sinha, there were a few sporadic incidents of
violence and a re-poll in some polling stations could be ordered.
• Maharashtra recorded a turnout of 63.4 per cent, roughly four per cent higher
than the 2009 Assembly polls and the Lok Sabha polls in May. DEC Sudhir Tripathi
said two incidents were reported from naxal-affected Gadchiroli district. In
both States, there have been seizures of cash and liquor as well as cases of
“paid” news, EC officials said.
• Exit polls projected the BJP to emerge as the largest party in both
Maharashtra and Haryana Assembly elections, however stopping short of majority.
Global Hand washing Day on oct. 16th
• Municipal schools in the Capital observed Global Hand washing Day on
October 16th October, with students being instructed on the importance of
maintaining hygiene.
• The South Delhi Municipal Corporation’s school teachers showed students the
correct way to wash their hands and the benefits of doing so. The 3.41 lakh
students studying in the SDMC’s primary schools also learned about the need to
conserve water.
• The teachers also told students about keeping away diseases that are caused
due to unhygienic conditions. In the North Delhi Municipal Corporation, a
pamphlet explaining the right way to wash hands was also distributed.
Don’t complicate border situation: China
• China sharply reacted to India’s plans to construct a road network along
the McMahon line in Arunachal Pradesh and expressed hope that India will not
take any action which may complicate the situation before a final settlement is
reached to end the boundary dispute.
• “We still need to verify the specifics. The boundary issue between China and
India is left by colonial past. We need to deal with this issue properly,”
Foreign Ministry Spokesman Hong Lie told a media briefing.
• He was reacting to comments by Union Minister of State for Home Affairs Kiren
Rijiju stating that there was plan to construct a road network along the
international boundary from Mago-Thingbu in Tawang to Vijaynagar in Changlang
district of Arunachal Pradesh.
• “There is a dispute about the eastern part of the China- India border. Before
final settlement is reached we hope that India will not take any action that may
further complicate the situation,” Mr. Hong said. “We should create favourable
conditions for the final settlement of the border issue,” he said.
SC ‘disappointed’ with Centre over clean Ganga
• The Supreme Court expressed disappointment with the Centre for its lack of
a long-term vision to clean the river Ganga.
• A three-judge Bench of Justices T.S. Thakur, A.K. Goel and Ms. R. Banumathi
told Solicitor General Ranjit Kumar, appearing for the Centre: “You are unable
to tell us your vision stage-wise on cleaning the holy river Ganga and your
ultimate aim. This case is pending in this court for the last 29 years and
nothing concrete has been done. We don’t want to wait for another 29 years. We
also understand it can’t be done overnight, but you should have an expert who
has a vision on cleaning the Ganga like the former Delhi Metro chief Sreedharan
who had a vision for the metro project.”
• Expressing his anguish Justice Thakur said: “If the discharge of industrial
pollutants into the river was stopped, 30 per cent of the Ganga would be clean.
Corruption was stalling the clean Ganga project and heads must roll for this.
• The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), a statutory body which is to take
effective steps, is not in a position to stop the polluting units from
discharging effluents into the river. Units are being allowed to run accepting
bribe. This is breeding corruption and the board is not doing its work.”
• The Bench asked the Centre to explain why the post of chairperson of the CPCB
has remained vacant for the past six months. It directed the CPCB to explain
what action it had taken against the 215 industries situated along the Ganga
which had been charged with polluting the river.
Cigarette packs to have pictorial warnings on both sides
• The Union Health Ministry has issued a notification making it mandatory for
cigarette manufacturing companies to carry statutory warning against smoking on
both sides of a cigarette pack and covering at least 85 per cent of the
packaging.
• Beginning April 1, 2015, every cigarette packet will carry the statutory
warning on both sides with pictorial depiction of throat cancer and a message in
English, Hindi or any Indian language. “I have specified that 60 per cent of the
space be devoted to a picture and 25 per cent to the legend,” Health Minister
Harsh Vardhan said.
• “Graphic health warnings using a mixture of pictures and words are part and
parcel of every country’s policy on cigarette marketing. Many studies have
established that the inclusion of larger and more noticeable health warnings on
packages significantly impact life expectancy rates and lead to savings on
medical costs,” Dr. Vardhan said.
• A gazette notification amending the Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products
(Packaging and Labelling) Rules, 2008, was also issued. The Health Minister, who
has been highlighting the perils of smoking, said it was very important to win
the war against tobacco consumption.
• “Not only are families being destroyed by the rising burden of oral, throat
and lung cancer, but a disproportionate share of the country’s health
expenditure is going towards covering tobacco’s effects,” he said.
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Persons in news
Tamil poet named for Singapore’s highest cultural award
• Indian-origin Singaporean poet and writer K.T.M. Iqbal will be awarded
Cultural Medallion, the country’s highest cultural award by President Tony Tan
Keng Yam in Singapore.
• It is the highest recognition for the 74-year-old Tamil poet whose
achievements include more than 200 children’s songs written for Radio Singapore
in the 1970s and 1980s, as well as seven collections of poetry.
• Mr. Iqbal said he was “delighted” to receive the award which was “an
incredible honour”. “My first love is poetry. We have been together for 60
years. I never imagined this would bring me the Cultural Medallion award,” The
Straits Times quoted Mr. Iqbal as saying.
• Mr. Iqbal learned the basics of Venpa, a form of classical Tamil poetry from a
poetry-writing workshop. “I would sit on the street in the evening to write or
an idea might come when I was on the bus,” said Mr. Iqbal.
• The poet, also a retired bank executive, has received recognition in the
education system of Singapore also. Mr. Iqbal’s compositions are studied in
schools and some of them have appeared in the subway stations as part of efforts
to bring the arts close to the community.
Science & Technology
ISRO re-positioned its Mars Orbiter
• Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has repositioned its Mars
Orbiter, as the national space agency, along with its counterparts around the
world, is expecting Comet Siding Spring to fly by the Red Planet on October 19.
• “We have repositioned the Mars Orbiter, as the Comet Siding Spring is expected
to be close to the Mars on October 19. We have taken the Orbiter to a position
farthest from the tail of the Comet so that it doesn’t affect the satellite,”
A.S. Kiran Kumar, Director, Space Application Centre, Ahmedabad, said.
• ISRO, NASA and other space agencies in the world, which have sent their
missions to the Red Planet, have taken precautionary measures to save their
satellites from any possible collision with the space debris, which might be
facilitated by the movement of the Comet near Mars.
• According to U.S. space agency NASA, Comet Siding Spring has travelled many
billions of miles and would come within about 87,000 miles of Mars on October
19. The comet comes from the Oort cloud, material left over from the formation
of the solar system, it said.
MAVEN beams first images from Martian atmosphere
• NASA’s Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) spacecraft has
provided scientists their first look at a storm of Solar Energetic Particles (SEPs)
in the Red Planet.
• The SEPs are streams of high-speed particles blasted from the sun during
explosive solar activities like flares or coronal mass ejections (CMEs).
• Around Earth, SEP storms can damage the sensitive electronics on satellites.
At Mars, they are thought to be one possible mechanism for driving atmospheric
loss.
• MAVEN has clicked unprecedented ultraviolet images of the tenuous oxygen,
hydrogen, and carbon coronas surrounding the Red Planet, and yielded a
comprehensive map of highly-variable ozone in the atmosphere underlying the
coronas, NASA reported.
• “All the instruments are showing data quality that is better than anticipated
at this early stage of the mission,” said Bruce Jakosky, MAVEN Principal
Investigator at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
• “It is turning out to be an easy and straightforward spacecraft to fly, at
least so far. It really looks as if we are headed for an exciting science
mission,” he said.
• MAVEN was launched on September 21 to help solve the mystery of how the Red
Planet lost most of its atmosphere.
Stem cells appears safe to treat blindness
• An experimental treatment for blindness that uses embryonic stem cells
appears to be safe, and it improved vision in more than half of the patients who
got it, two early studies show.
• Researchers followed 18 patients for up to three years after treatment. The
studies are the first to show safety of an embryonic stem cell treatment in
humans for such a long period.
• “It’s a wonderful first step but it doesn’t prove that (stem cells) work,”
said Chris Mason, chair of regenerative medicine at University College London,
who was not part of the research. He said it was encouraging the studies proved
the treatment is safe and dispelled fears about stem cells promoting tumor
growth.
• Embryonic stem cells, which are recovered from embryos, can become any cell in
the body. They are considered controversial by some because they involve
destroying an embryo and some critics say adult stem cells, which are derived
from tissue samples, should be used instead.
• Scientists have long thought about transforming them into specific types of
cells to help treat various diseases. In the new research, scientists turned
stem cells into retinal cells to treat people with macular degeneration or
Stargardt’s macular dystrophy, the leading causes of blindness in adults and
children.
• In each patient, the retinal cells were injected into the eye that had the
worst vision. Ten of the 18 patients later reported they could see better with
the treated eye than the other one.
• No safety problems were detected. The studies were paid for by the U.S.
company that developed the treatment, Advanced Cell Technology, and were
published online in the journal, Lancet.
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International
The focus shifts to Ukraine in Finland
• India feels that a “constructive dialogue” is the best way out of the
difficult situation in the Ukraine and wants all sides to abjure violence and
work towards a peaceful, negotiated solution to bring peace and stability to the
area.
• This was conveyed by President Pranab Mukherjee to his Finnish counterpart
Sauli Niinisto during their official talks even as the two countries signed 19
agreements that ranged from a “bio-refinery” in Numaligarh, Assam, to
cooperation in the field of biotechnology, education and nuclear safety.
• India and Finland also want to double their trade of $1.5 billion in the next
three years even as they focus on knowledge-based education and research
cooperation.
• In this part of the world, concerns over Ukraine are running high and the
Finnish President conveyed his concerns to the President during their
discussions.
• Top External Affairs Ministry official Navtej Sarna said that the issues of
terrorism, including the threat from the Islamic State (IS), Syria and
Afghanistan also figured in the dialogue between the two leaders.
• Finland also felt that India was a “natural claimant” to a permanent seat on
the United Nations Security Council, with Mr. Niinisto telling Mr. Mukherjee
that Delhi must “play a central role in global affairs”.
• However, the Finnish leader clarified to the press that his country did not
want any extension of the veto right to new members of the UN Security Council.
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Business & Economy
U.S. placed India on the ‘Priority Watch List’
• The U.S. has launched a review of India’s Intellectual Property Regime, in
which the focus is to measure the engagement that New Delhi has pursued in terms
of intellectual property.
• The USTR’s ‘Out-of-Cycle’ (OCR) Review follows the 2014 Special 301 Report
that came out in April, in which the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) had placed
India on the ‘Priority Watch List’
• It had noted that it would conduct an OCR of India focusing in particular on
assessing progress made in establishing and building effective, meaningful, and
constructive engagement with the Government of India on IPR issues of concern.
• “Specifically, the out-of-cycle review is focused on engagement, what type of
engagement has India pursued in terms of intellectual property,” a USTR official
told.
• The move comes soon after Prime Minister Narendra Modi made a high profile to
the U.S. last month.
• The official said that from the U.S. government side, there had been ‘a good
deal’ of engagement, including three trips since July to India one of which was
specifically focused on intellectual property.
• The official added that in the joint statement released following Prime
Minister Modi and President Barack Obama’s meeting also had a reference to
intellectual property.
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Sports
Abhishek Verma rewrites National record
• Abhishek Verma, who won team gold and individual silver in the
recently-concluded Asian Games, scored 709 points to rewrite the National record
in the men’s individual compound competition in the National archery
championship at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium.
• In fact, it was double delight for Verma as he overhauled the previous mark to
achieve his personal target set prior to the championship.
• With this the Delhi archer, who attended three felicitation ceremonies in the
last two days, also bagged the men’s 50+50m gold medal.
• Khyam Poudal Chhetri and Sandeep Kumar, who shot an identical 705 each, also
went past the previous National record of 702, jointly held by Verma (made in
2013) and Rajat Chauhan (2012).
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Sources: Various News Papers & PIB