Showing posts with label Second. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Second. Show all posts

Friday, December 17, 2010

Dont test our patience over Telangana, TRS chief warns (Second Lead)


Warangal (Andhra Pradesh), Dec 16

Telangana Rashtra Samiti (TRS) chief K. Chandrasekhara Rao addressed a mammoth public meeting here Thursday and warned the central government not to test the patience of people of Telangana any further and implement the process for formation of a separate state.

Urging the government to abide by its Dec 9, 2009 statement on Telangana, he demanded that a bill for formation of Telangana be tabled and passed in the budget session of parliament in February.

Addressing a huge public meeting here Thursday night, he announced that if the central government failed to implement its promise, a massive movement will be launched and a separate state will be achieved at any cost.

"I am warning the centre. I am giving an ultimatum. Through this Telangana Mahagrajna I would like to humbly request the prime minister that patience has a limit. Dont test our patience. It will not be good," Rao said.

"If the centre fails to take any step, we will start with satyagrah and go on to bring the administration to a standstill. Heavens may fall down and the earth may shake but we will achieve Telangana state," said KCR, as the TRS chief is popularly known.

A sea of humanity descended on the town, bringing it to a halt and causing 10-km long traffic jams on the nearby roads. TRS claimed that 2.5 million people turned up for the meeting, held to mark the completion of one year of the central governments announcement.

Earlier, a resolution unanimously passed at the meeting urged the government to table a bill in the budget session of parliament in February for the formation of Telangana state.

The resolution noted that following a mass movement, the government last year announced that the process for formation of Telangana will be initiated. It alleged that due to conspiracies of Andhra and Rayalaseema leaders, the government was delaying implementation it.

The Mahabubnagar MP appealed to people to be ready to make more sacrifices to achieve a separate state. He, however, advised them to show restraint and follow Telangana Joint Action Committee, which will soon announce the future course of action.

It was a massive show of strength by the TRS ahead of the Srikrishna Committees report to the central government on the demand for a separate Telangana state. The five-member panel is to submit its report before Dec 31.

The meeting coincided with the panels last visit to Hyderabad before submitting its report.

KCR alleged that Andhra Pradesh Governor E.S.L. Narasimhan had tried to belittle the 54-year-long movement of four crore people of Telangana. "When he was asked what will happen after Dec 31, he said Jan 1 will come. I condemn his remark. This does not befit a person holding a high post," he said.

KCR also condemned police chief Aravinda Raos statement that additional paramilitary forces would be deployed after Dec 31 and said the people of Telangana were not afraid of lathis or bullets.

He alleged that the agitation in Andhra and Rayalaseema against the central governments Dec 9 statement was stage-managed by leaders of those regions.

The TRS chief lashed out at Congress party legislators from Telangana for going back on their promise made before Telangana Joint Action Committee to resign enmasse, dealing a blow to the Telangana movement when it was nearing its goal.

On Dec 9 last year, following an 11-day hunger strike by Rao, Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram had announced initiating the process for formation of a separate Telangana state.

Swami Agnivesh, TRS ideologue Jayashankar, Telangana Joint Action Committee chairman M. Kodandaram, TRS MP and former actress Vijayashanti, Jamaat-e-Islami chief of Andhra Pradesh and Orissa unit Malik Motassim Khan, leaders of students, trade unions and womens groups were among the prominent speakers.

The public meeting was scheduled to be held Dec 9 but was postponed due to heavy rains.


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Evidence of wrongdoings in 2G spectrum grant: Supreme Court (Second Lead)


The Supreme Court Thursday said there was prima facie evidence of wrongdoings in the grant of licences for 2G spectrum in 2008 and those for dual-use technology to some telecom operators prior to Oct 19, 2007.

The apex court bench of Justice G.S. Singhvi and Justice A.K. Ganguly allowed the plea of the Centre for Public Interest Litigation (CPIL) for court monitoring of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) probe in the spectrum allocation scam.

The court said the allegations of wrongdoings in spectrum allocation made in the CPILs plea were supported by reports of the Central Vigilance Commission and the Comptroller and Auditor General.

The judge said the CBI would conduct a comprehensive probe into the scam in coordination with the Directorate of Enforcement and the income tax department covering the period 2001-07.

The investigating agency would submit the first status report of its investigations Feb 10, 2011, the court said.

The court said there was no requirement for setting up a special investigating team to probe the scam.

The judges said the CBI would conduct investigations without being influenced by any person or authority.

The director general of income tax would provide the transcripts of corporate lobbyist Niira Radias telephone taps to the CBI, the court directed.

The court also asked the investigating agency to probe how ineligible companies got the licence for the 2G spectrum and why no action was taken against those telecom operators who failed in their roll-out obligations (ROO).

The CBI would also look into why the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) did not take any action against the grant of licence to ineligible companies and those who failed in their ROO, the judges said.

The court said that the CBI could register FIR in respect of the officials and people who caused huge loss to the exchequer in the controversial transactions.

The CBI would also look into the conduct of the department of telecommunications officials who signed on the loan applications of telecom companies for securing loans from public sector banks, the court said.

Speaking to reporters after the hearing, senior counsel Prashant Bhushan welcomed the court order expanding the scope of the CBI probe into the spectrum scam.

He said that now the investigating agency will probe the 2G spectrum muddle in its entirety, starting from 2001 to 2007.

The probe will go into the role of the department of telecommunications (DoT) officials who signed bank loan papers of telecom operators, he said.

"The apex court order has expanded the scope of the investigations into the 2G spectrum scam," Bhushan told IANS.

He had argued the case on behalf of NGO Centre for Public Interest Litigation (CPIL), which has sought the court monitoring of the CBI probe into the scam.


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Thursday, December 16, 2010

Spectacular ceremony fetes 60 years of India-China ties (Second lead)


Jugglers, acrobats, folk performers from the Fujian province, magicians, bowl dancers, Indo-Chinese fusion orchestra and Indian Kathak recitals said “Jai ho” to 60 years of diplomatic ties between India and China in a spectacular closing ceremony of the Festival of China in India here Thursday that was attended by visiting Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

The wrestling arena of the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in the capital stretched to its seams to accommodate more than 700 guests that included Chinese delegates, hundreds of school children and invited guests, who rocked to the colourful exposition of contemporary and Chinese music, fusion dances and an unique rendition of A.R. Rahmans signature melody, “Jai Ho”, by a Sino-Indian orchestra.

Addressing the gathering, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said: "The festivals of China in India and the Festival of India in China have played a crucial role in increasing awareness about each others cultures and civilisations. We have been touched by the response to the festival of India in China. People in India got a glimpse of the richness of Chinas culture through the Festival of China in India.

"India and China are two great civilisations that have flourished for thousands of years. The arts, culture and the unyielding quest for progress and development over the last six decades have helped India China discover each others aspirations and has been the cornerstone of India and Chinas foreign policy."

"India-China cooperation will be the keystone of the Asian century that is unfolding before us," he added.

"In the development of this century, India and China will march as friends, not as rivals," he said, adding: "There is enough space in the world for both India and China to grow and fulfil development aspirations of their respective people."

He said that both countries should work towards bridging the "information gap" between the two nations.

"We must close the information gap between us and learn about each others achievement, directly rather than through third countries," he said.

“Our interest in creating a more equitable world order has led to a strategic and global partnership. In the exchange over the two days, I am happy to note that there has been a convergence of ideas on what the two countries can do together,” he said.

The Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao also called for "heart-to-heart" exchanges between the two populous nations. He designated 2011 as the year of exchange between India and China in youth, media, culture and academic affairs.

“The hospitable Chinese people warmly receive you with open arms,” Jiabao said.

The nine-month long festival of China opened in April 2010 at the Purana Qila with a religious concert Harmony of the Divine Land: A Symphony of Chinese Buddhist Music by a 160-member Buddhist orchestra.

The reciprocal festival of India in China began in May with a play, “Uttar Priyadarshini” based on the life of Emperor Ashoka.


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Monday, December 13, 2010

Center for Chemical Process Safety - Guidelines for Use of Vapor Cloud Dispersion Models (Second edition)



Center for Chemical Process Safety - Guidelines for Use of Vapor Cloud Dispersion Models (Second edition)
Publisher: Wiley-AIChE | 1996-12-15 | ISBN: 0816907021 | PDF | 292 pages | 29.93 MB

The second edition of this essential reference updates and combines two earlier titles to capture the many technological advances for predicting the "footprint" of a vapor cloud release. Cited by EPA in its 1996 document, "Off-Site Consequence Analysis Guidance," the aim of the book is to encourage and facilitate the development and use of dispersion modeling as an everyday tool, providing practical understanding of basic physical and chemical principles, guidance in selecting release scenarios and the best available models, and information and examples on how to run some models and interpret outputs. Equally useful to beginners and experts, it compares 22 programs based on input from model developers, and presents 7 examples of typical accidental release scenarios. The book comes with a disk providing input and output data for scenarios.


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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Handbook of Pulping and Papermaking, Second Edition by Christopher J. Biermann (Repost)



Handbook of Pulping and Papermaking, Second Edition by Christopher J. Biermann (Repost)
Publisher: Academic Press; 2 edition (August 5, 1996) | ISBN: 0120973626 | Pages: 754 | PDF | 88 MB
In its Second Edition, Handbook of Pulping and Papermaking is a comprehensive reference for industry and academia. The book offers a concise yet thorough introduction to the process of papermaking from the production of wood chips to the final testing and use of the paper product. The author has updated the extensive bibliography, providing the reader with easy access to the pulp and paper literature. The book emphasizes principles and concepts behind papermaking, detailing both the physical and chemical processes.

* A comprehensive introduction to the physical and chemical processes in pulping and papermaking
* Contains an extensive annotated bibliography
* Includes 12 pages of color plates






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