Current Affairs for IAS Exams - 20 November 2014
Current Affairs for IAS Exams - 20 November 2014
National
Rampal was remanded in judicial custody
• Self-styled godman Rampal was remanded in judicial custody
till November 28 by the Punjab and Haryana High Court even as the police slapped
fresh charges of murder and violence against him for the standoff between his
supporters and the police at the Satlok Ashram in Barwala, Hisar.
• “I want to say that two other cases have been registered in Barwala and these
pertain to murder. The six deaths that occurred [inside the ashram of an infant
and five women) have been covered in these two cases,” Director General of
Police, Haryana, S.N. Vashisht said.
• A Special Investigation Team (SIT) headed by Superintendent of Police, Hisar,
is searching the ashram for more evidence. Mr. Vashisht said the SIT would
submit its report within a day or two.
• Earlier in the day, the High Court cancelled the bail granted to Rampal in a
2006 murder case and directed his immediate arrest.
• The Advocate General submitted before the Division Bench of Justices M.
Jeyapaul and Darshan Singh that Rampal had been arrested from his Barwala ashram
in a contempt of court case and hence be produced. The Bench directed Rampal to
be presented at 2 p.m.
Supreme Court raps Sinha for damaging CBI’s reputation
• The Supreme Court-appointed Special Public Prosecutor in 2G
cases, Anand Grover, said there was credibility in the allegations of the NGO,
Centre for Public Interest Litigation, accusing the CBI Director Ranjit Sinha of
shielding the accused in the 2G spectrum investigation.
• The NGO had charged Sinha with “preventing” the filing of a charge sheet in
the Aircel-Maxis deal, “weakening” the case against Reliance and 2G-accused
Shahid Balwa and transferring a senior officer, Santosh Rastogi, out of the 2G
probe.
• The NGO had access to the visitor’s logbook at the residence of Sinha which
showed him meeting accused persons often. Mr Sinha had called for the name of
the person who made available the logbook to be revealed.
• The three-judge Bench led by Chief Justice of India H.L. Dattu agreed with the
argument of Mr. Grover that if the credibility of the information supplied could
be proved, there was no need to disclose the identity of the informant.
• This was closely followed by Mr. Bhushan revealing that he has accessed the
visitors’ register at Mr. Sinha’s residence. The logbook, he alleged, showed
that Mr. Sinha had frequently met with persons who have been accused in the 2G
cases.
• Mr. Sinha, through his counsel Vikas Singh, challenged the veracity of the
allegations. He demanded that Mr. Bhushan first reveal the identity of his
source.
International
Swedish appeal court rejects Julian Assange appeal to revoke arrest warrant
• A Swedish appeals court rejected an appeal by WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange to revoke a detention order issued by prosecutors in 2010
over allegations of sexual assault.
• "In the view of the Court of Appeal there is no reason to set aside the
detention solely because Julian Assange is in an Embassy and the detention order
cannot be enforced at present for that reason," Svea Court of Appeal said in a
statement.
• Mr. Assange has been stuck inside Ecuador's London Embassy since June 2012 to
avoid a British extradition to Sweden. Sweden wants to question him on
allegations of sexual assault and rape, which he denies.
• The Australian says he fears that if Britain extradited him to Sweden he would
then be extradited to the United States where he could be tried for one of the
largest information leaks in U.S. history.
Pakistan & Russia sign defence deal (Register and Login to read Full News..)
Persons in news
Superstar Rajinikanth conferred Centenary Award at IFFI
• South Indian cinema’s superstar Rajinikanth was bestowed
with the Centenary Award for Indian Film Personality of the Year at the opening
ceremony of the 45th International Film Festival of India (IFFI).
• Union Minister Arun Jaitley and Bollywood actor Amitabh Bachchan, who was the
chief guest, presented the award, which consists of a cash prize of Rs.10 lakhs,
a certificate and the Silver Peacock Medal. It was instituted last year to
commemorate 100 years of Indian Cinema.
• A visibly moved Mr. Rajinikanth was seen wiping his tears as he thanked the
Centre for the honour. He dedicated it to all his film producers, directors,
technicians and fans.
• Earlier, Goa Governor Mridula Sinha lit the traditional lamp to formally open
the 11-day festival. Several film personalities and dignitaries, among them
Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar, Goa Chief Minister Laxmikant Parsekar and
State Information and Broadcasting Minister Rajyavardhan Rathore, were present.
• Mr. Bachchan spoke about the history and evolution of Indian cinema and the
iconic films in different periods.
• Mr. Jaitley said the Indian film industry had come of age and pointed to the
diversity it offered and the number of films produced in different languages to
back this claim.
• “Cinema today acts as an alternative religion, as it entertains, educates and
gives a social perspective to issues,” he said. His Ministry was making efforts
to mainstream the National Film Heritage Mission as a policy initiative to
ensure digital preservation of records.
• Mr. Jaitley also highlighted the importance of Goa being made the permanent
venue of the IFFI in the context of its hospitality, growth, natural beauty and
cultural diversity it represented.
N. Ram gets Award (Register and Login to read Full News..)
Science & technology
CO2 emissions must be zero by 2070 to prevent disaster: U.N.
• The world must cut CO2 emissions to zero by 2070 at the
latest to keep global warming below dangerous levels and prevent a global
catastrophe, the U.N. warns.
• By 2100, all greenhouse gas emissions — including methane, nitrous oxide and
ozone, as well as CO2 — must fall to zero, the United Nationals Environment
Programme (UNEP) report says , or the world will face what Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) scientists have described as “severe, widespread
and irreversible” effects from climate change. The UNEP report published is
based on the idea that the planet has a finite ‘carbon budget’. Since emissions
surged in the late 19th century, some 1,900 Gigatonnes (Gt) of CO2 and 1,000 Gt
of other greenhouse gases have already been emitted, leaving less than 1,000 Gt
of CO2 left to emit before locking the planet in to dangerous temperature rises
of more than 2C above pre-industrial levels.
• Jacqueline McGlade, UNEP’s chief scientist, told The Guardian that scientific
uncertainties about the remaining carbon budget had diminished and the real
uncertainty now was whether politicians had the will to act.
• “The big uncertainty is whether you can put enough policies in place from
2020-2030 — in the critical window — to allow the least-cost pathways [to lower
emissions and temperatures] to still stand a chance of being followed,” she
said. “The uncertainties have shifted from the science to the politics.”
• All scenarios in the UNEP report now require some degree of ‘negative CO2
emissions’ in the second half of the century, through technologies such as
carbon capture and storage or, possibly, controversial, planetary wide
engineering of the climate known as geo-engineering. UNEP is “extremely
interested” in the subject and is planning a report in the months ahead.
• Consideration should also be given to compensatory schemes for investors in
fossil fuels companies to address the ‘stranded assets’ issue, Ms. McGlade
added.
More crop yields adding more Carbon to atmosphere (Register and Login to read Full News..)
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Sources: Various News Papers & PIB