Monday, March 8, 2010

Vote on Women's Bill deferred, PM calls all-party meet on Tue

Sonia Gandhi would have liked the Women's Reservation Bill passed in the Rajya Sabha on International Women's Day. That will not happen now, with voting on the Bill deferred till Tuesday after much chaos in Parliament.

The Prime Minister has also convened an all-party meeting on Tuesday to discuss how to move forward on the Bill. In the meantime, senior Congress leaders Pranab Mukherjee and Ahmad Patel have been meeting allies one-by-one.

On Monday, both Houses of Parliament four times, with traditional opponents of the Women's bill, the Samajwadi Party and the RJD, also announcing that they were withdrawing support to the UPA.

At 2 p.m., after repeated adjournments, Law Minister Veerappa Moily moved the Women's Reservation Bill in the Rajya Sabha, but the House had to be adjourned soon after as members of the Samajwadi Party and others opposed to the bill tore up copies of the bill and threw them at Chairman Hamid Ansari.

The MPs rushed into the well of the House ripping off mikes and tearing the Bill. Leaders of parties supporting the Bill later met Ansari in his chamber to apologise for the unruly behaviour of the members who prevented the Bill from being taken up for consideration in the House.

The UPA government finds itself in a spot. Set to table and get the Women's Reservation Bill passed in the Rajya Sabha on International women's Day, it is now faced with the possibility of having to get the Budget passed on a wafer-thin majority. While it does not need the support of Mulayam and Lalu to pass the Women's Bill, since the BJP and the Left will vote in favour, it will find itself on very thin ice on other legislation, like the crucial Finance Bill, without the buffer of the 22 Samajwadi Party MPs and 4 RJD MPs in the Lok Sabha.

The UPA has 276 members in the Lok Sabha. That gives it a margin of just 3 over the 273 votes required to push legislation through in the 545-member House. It is in touch with Independents and rebels.

Sikkim emerges top spender in tourism

Sikkim has emerged as topper in utilising maximum funds in tourism infrastructure in the Eleventh Five Year Plan.

The small hilly state has spent Rs 163.44 crores, which is a maximum utilisation of funds by any state in tourism projects upto September 2009.

Sikkim is followed by Jammu and Kashmir which has spent Rs 141.70 crores for the development of tourism in the state.

"Sikkim is the top state in utilising maximum funds in tourism projects. It has recently undertaken three heliport projects," said Tourism Secretary Sujit Banerjee.

Beside Sikkim and Kashmir, according to the statistics prepared by the Tourism Ministry, Andhra Pradesh (Rs 129.82 crores), Madhya Pradesh (Rs 113.77 cr) and Karnataka (Rs 90.67 cr) also figure in the top ten states in terms of utilising funds in tourism projects.

Other states in the top ten include Goa (Rs 86.24 cr), West Bengal (Rs 82.90 cr), Rajasthan (Rs 82.28 cr), Arunachal Pradesh (Rs 79.50 cr) and Tamil Nadu (Rs 77.92 cr).

To a question why many states are not been able to spend maximum funds, the tourism secretary said, "We monitor the progress of the projects after giving the initial funds. More funds are released only after the submission of the utilisation certificate by the concerned state."

Admitting that Jharkhand is lagging behind in spending in tourism projects, he said the state is slow in submitting utilisation certificate.

Government had earmarked a total fund of Rs 5,156 crores for tourism in the Eleventh Plan beginning 2007-08.

Manipur AG not shot by militants: CM

Manipur Advocate General Nongmeikappam Koteshwar was wounded when the licensed gun of a minister travelling with him went off accidentally, Chief Minister O Ibobi Singh said on Sunday.

The advocate general, who is in stable condition in hospital, was not shot by militants, he told PTI.

Official sources had earlier said the advocate general was
shot by militants in an ambush.

Koteshwar (50), Works minister K Ranjit, and Tribal Development minister D D Thaisi were driving down from Ukhrul
On Saturday night with all three sitting in the rear seat, the chief minister said.

Thaisi, who had a licensed gun, wanted to keep it beside him when it when off accidentally as the car was driving
through Litan area, about 33 km from here, Singh said.

"Since Thaisi has already apologised to the advocate general, there is no point in ordering an inquiry," he said.

Doctors removed the bullet from Koteshwar's chest and he was out of danger, hospital sources said.

Two shot dead in Manipur

Two persons were shot dead by unidentified gunmen in separate incidents in Imphal East district of Manipur, police said on Sunday.

Gunmen shot dead a 40-year-old man, Muhammad Abdul Kalam at Jiribam area, about 222 km west of Imphal, in Imphal East district on Saturday.

In another incident, an unidentified man was gunned down at Top Moirangkampu area under Porompat police station, near Imphal on Saturday, sources said.

An identity card recovered from the victim carried the name of one M D Tajuddin (25), the sources said adding that it was not yet known whether the card belonged to the victim or not.

No bargain on political, territorial rights of Nagas: NSCN (IM)

KOHIMA/ITANAGAR: The National Socialist Council of Nagaland-Isak-Muivah (NSCN-IM) Sunday said it would not "compromise the political and territorial rights of the Nagas" and welcomed the central government's "bold step" to resume dialogue.

"The political and territorial rights of the Nagas would not be compromised under any circumstances. We appreciate the union government for (promising to meet) future challenges through a serious political dialogue and admitting past mistakes," NSCN-IM steering committee convenor V.S. Atem said in a statement.

"NSCN-IM welcomed the bold step taken by the centre to resume dialogue with Nagas and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh for extending invitation to its leaders," he said.

A five-member delegation of the Isak-Muivah faction of NSCN-IM led by its general secretary Thuingaleng Muivah met Manmohan Singh and Home Minister P. Chidambaram last week.

The statement said the NSCN-IM upholds the inalienable sovereign rights of the Naga people and would negotiate in the spirit of mutual respect.

The NSCN-IM, one of the oldest and most powerful of about 30 rebel groups in India's northeast, earlier fought for an independent Naga homeland.

It has scaled down the demand to a Greater Nagaland, proposed to be formed by merging Naga populated areas of the adjoining states.

Assam, Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh have rejected the demand. The NSCN-IM entered into a ceasefire with New Delhi in August 1997.

The last round of inconclusive peace talks between the government and the Naga outfit was held in March 2009 in Zurich.

Meanwhile, Arunachal Pradesh Home Minister Tako Dabi reiterated that his government would not spare "even an inch of land" for Greater Nagalim, and would oppose any such move "tooth and nail".

"We expect a permanent solution on the Naga issue through the peace parleys between centre and NSCN-IM so that the entire northeast region could get a huge relief from the decades-old stalemate," Tako Dabi told reporters in Itanagar Saturday.

"Talks with NSCN-IM should progress without touching Arunachal Pradesh and we would not part with even an inch of our territory at any cost," the minister said.

Meanwhile, thousands of Naga and non-Naga people have organised mass rallies in recent days in neighbouring Manipur and Nagaland demanding an early solution to the Naga dispute.

The rallies, held separately in the two states, were organised by the United Naga Council, a socio-cultural Naga body, and other organisations.

Drinking tea ‘cuts down ovarian cancer risk’

LONDON - Having two cups of black tea or one cup of green tea a day can help cut down risk of developing ovarian cancer in women, says a study.

Researchers at the University of Washington studied 2,000 women and noticed a 54 per cent risk reduction in those who drank one or more cups of green tea a day, the Daily Express reported.

A second study by the National Institute of Environmental Medicine in Stockholm discovered that those drinking at least two cups of black tea daily slashed the risk of ovarian cancer by nearly 50 per cent.

Studies have emphasised the cancer-protecting properties of both teas that have also been observed to help the heart, boost the brain and bring down “bad” cholesterol levels. (ANI)

9 in 10 Britons do not get enough sleep

LONDON - A new study has revealed that nine in ten Britons do not get enough sleep and that millions are risking their health by depriving themselves of much needed rest.

The study found that the average Briton sleeps for just six hours and seven minutes a night, well below the eight hours recommended by experts, with 17 percent regularly dozing off at work, reports the Daily Express.esearchers found that in Aberdeen, home to the UK’s most sleep-deprived people, the typical resident has just five hours and 23 minutes a night.

And in Norwich, which is the UK’s sleepiest city, residents spend only six hours and 38 minutes in bed.

More than 3,000 adults were quizzed about their sleeping habits in a survey commissioned by shopping channel QVC.

Money worries are the most common cause of difficulty sleeping, being cited by 48 per cent.

They are followed by relationship troubles (34 percent) and family troubles (33 percent). (ANI)

UN says mother-to-child HIV transmission can be eliminated by 2015

UN says mother-child HIV can be eliminated by 2015

GENEVA — The United Nations says mother-to-child HIV transmission can be eliminated by 2015 if health programs receive increased investments as planned.

Michel Sidibe, the head of UNAIDS, appealed to government and private donors to keep investing in the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.

Michel D. Kazatchkine, the Global Fund’s executive director, said Monday “it is also now possible to imagine a world with no more malaria deaths.”

The Global Fund is meeting in The Hague, Netherlands, on March 24 to examine how it can meet its goals eliminating or reducing instances of the three diseases by 2015.

It estimates that between $13-20 billion are needed for the period 2011-2013.