Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Himachal's apple basket bountiful this season

Shimla: There is good news for apple lovers this year as they can soon expect a good supply of the deep, crunchy crimson apples from Himachal Pradesh, the country's largest apple basket.

The state horticulture department estimates say the state is heading for a bumper apple production, the mainstay of the state's economy, after two consecutive years of less than normal yield.

"We are expecting a production of over 3.75 crore apple boxes (of 20 kg each) this season," Gurdev Singh, director of horticulture, said on Wednesday.

Last year, he said, over 2.04 crore boxes were harvested - 20 percent less than state's normal yield of 2.5 crore boxes - while it just 1.36 crore boxes in 2011.

In both the years, the reduced output was owing to adverse weather - extended winter and the fury of hailstorms when the crop was maturing.

Horticulture experts said plentiful snow in last winter and now good spells of rain have sufficiently increased the moisture content in the soil, which helped the plants obtain sufficient nutrients.

They say early varieties such as Red June, Summer Queen and Tydeman's Early Worcester, though inferior in quality, will start arriving in the markets by the end of July.

Superior grades like Royal Delicious, Red Chief, Super Chief, Oregon Spur and Scarlet Spur will start arriving by the middle of August and their harvesting will continue till November.

"There was some damage to the crop in the recent hailstorms and significant premature fruit dropping too, but overall the crop is healthy. At present, the fruit is in development stage," Gopal Mehta, a prominent apple and cherry grower of Kotgarh in upper Shimla, said.

He said most of the fruit crops in the state, including cherries, pears, peaches, apricots, almonds and plums, are heading to a bumper yield.

Upper Shimla areas, which account for 80 percent of the total apple production, have seen congenial weather with plentiful snow during winter.

Snow is considered white manure for apple orchards.

According to the meteorological office in Shimla, the entire apple belt has seen adequate rain even before the monsoon has set in.

"We are expecting the monsoon will arrive a week in advance," Manmohan Singh, director of the meteorological office here, said.

The monsoon normally hits the state by June 27.

Himachal Pradesh's apple industry, which is currently worth over Rs 2,000 crore, is credited to Satyanand (Samuel Evans Stokes Junior).

Satyanand, an American missionary, first introduced high quality apples in the Kothgarh-Thanedar belt in Shimla district in the early 1920s.

His daughter-in-law, Vidya Stokes, now state horticulture minister, manages most of the family's orchards.

IANS 

IPS man on water harvesting mission

AHMEDABAD: While the country like India does not lack adequate rains for agricultural and domestic use, it certainly lacks methods of how to tap water and conserve it from monsoon to monsoon. Mahendra Modi, a UP-cadre IPS officer, spoke at length on this subject at a function organized by a city-based youth group on Tuesday.

Modi, additional director general of police (inquiry), has so far traveled to nine states and addressed 60 gatherings in the past five years on the subject of water conservation, well recharging and harvesting by inexpensive methods. "I got interested in the issue when I was posted in western UP as DIG. During my meetings with citizens, I was surprised to learn that people were more worried about water issues than law and order as there had been scanty rains for two consecutive years and farmers were apprehensive about the agricultural produce. It was thought provoking. I started consulting experts, researched national and international practices," he said.

"Everyone, right from a farmer to an apartment dweller, can conserve water and harvest it through ways such as recharge trenches in land and collection of rainwater on terraces. These methods are not expensive or complicated. I have seen dramatic changes in water levels in various parts of UP through such initiatives.

As the monsoon has arrived, it is a model time to start the savings for future so that we should not witness water wars," he said.

Source:TNN

11 from south Delhi slums get bank, BPO jobs

NEW DELHI: Young men (17-25 years), staying at the shanties in Coolie Camp, Nepali Camp and Motilal Nehru Camp, which dot the upscale areas of VasantVihar and VasantKunj in south Delhi, were in for a surprise during the weekend. HR executives from top banks like ICICI and SBI as well as call centres lined up outside for hiring capable candidates.

To their delight, 11 of them were placed at entry-level positions with average salaries a little above Rs 8,000. So far, 45 youngsters have been trained in the basics of computer, as part of an initiative between Vasant Vihar police and the NGO JustRozgar.com. The three-month course teaches students-mostly school dropouts, onetime child labourers and drug addicts, some of them with petty cases against them-DTP, Tally and MS-Office to equip them for an entry-level data operator's job.

Another 19 of them from the same batch have now resumed formal education, some of them opting for computer science after completing Class XII.

The cops, who launched this scheme in November last year, redoubled their efforts to include more students after the Nirbhaya gangrape incident. "We wanted to show that girls are equal to boys and aimed to induct the maximum number of women. We are finally getting a good response after the first round of placements, necessitating three classes in a day," a trainer at the Vasant Vihar police station, where the classes are held, told TOI.

"Some telecom companies have also shown keen interest in our students," said B S Jaiswal, DCP (south).

Anil Sharma, the area SHO, said 19 more students are benefiting from the initiative.

According to the NGO We the People, in charge of the project, every trained person is given the minimum monthly pay as stipulated by the government. "Some of our students have been offered Rs 11,000 as the initial salary as our course, developed in consultation with industry leaders, has been aligned with market needs. We hold classes in three shifts-from 8am to 10am, 3pm to 5pm, and finally between 5pm and 7pm. Each batch has a maximum of 15 students," says said an NGO representative.

Police say they are banking on the initiative to provide gainful employment to the youth. "This belt has been crime-prone and the only way to wean the youth off crime is by helping them to stand on their feet," said an officer.

Source:TNN

60,000 sq km of Western Ghats to be green zone

NEW DELHI: The Union environment ministry is expected to approve the K Kasturirangan panel report on Western Ghats and declare around 60,000 square kilometers of the southern hills — spanning across six states — as no-go area for mining, thermal power plants and heavily polluting industries.

Sources in the ministry said, the process has begun to finalize the decision after receiving comments from public and state governments on the panel report.

The panel — headed by the Planning Commission member K Kasturirangan — had been set up by the central government after an earlier report of a team of ecologists, headed by NAC member Madhav Gadgil, had suggested for almost 75% of the ghats to be put under various levels of restrictions much to the opposition of the states and other interest groups alike. The Gadgil committee had suggested a blanket ban on mining and pitched for the powerful Western Ghats Authority to be the final arbiter of development activities in the region.

The Kasturirangan panel had scaled down the area that was recommended for providing protection under the eco-sensitive zone provisions of the Environment Protection Act. Disagreeing with the Gadgil report it also recommended against setting up a centralized authority that would override all existing decision-making mechanisms under the green laws and the federal structure.

Even when the environment ministry does accept the Kasturirangan panel report the process of declaring eco-sensitive zones is bound to take long as it requires extensive regional and on-the-ground due diligence.

The Kasturirangan panel had also recommended against bringing farmlands, plantations and habitations under the restrictive regime, or Ecologically Sensitive Area (ESA) of the Environment Protection Act, 1976. It has instead suggested that 90% of the natural forests in the Western Ghats complex - adding up to 60,000 sq kilometers and constituting 37% of the entire hilly belt — be conserved under the ESA provisions of the green law. The forest area falling within the ESA would also cover 4,156 villages across six states. The panel has said, "The villages falling under ESA will be involved in decision making on the future projects. All projects will require prior-informed consent and no-objection from the gram sabha (village council) of the village."

While the Kasturirangan panel may have taken a more moderate stand as compared to the Gadgil committee, the Centre is unlikely to have an easy time convincing the state governments even now.

The second panel report has recommended that there should be a complete ban on mining activity in this zone and current mining activities should be phased out within five years, or at the time of expiry of the mining lease. It has banned development of any township or construction over the size of 20,000 square metres in the ESA zone. It has not recommended a ban on hydroelectric projects in the zone, but put a regime of stricter clearances for dams and other projects. For dams it has demanded an uninterrupted ecological flow of at least 30% level of the rivers flow till individual baselines for dams are set. Cumulative studies to assess impact of dams on a river and ensuring that the minimum distance between projects is maintained at 3km, and that not more than 50% of the river basin is affected at any time.

Source:TNN

Two surrendered Maoist insurgents get married to each other

Gadchiroli: Two surrendered Maoists got married to each other on Tuesday at the police headquarters here in the presence of 27 other surrendered Maoists as well as senior police officials.

Jeevan and Janaki, who had worked in different Maoist platoons until they surrendered before the police, tied the knot in the presence of Special Inspector General of Police Anup Kumar Singh and CRPF Deputy Commandant Kartar Singh.

The bride Renuka alias Janki Fakri Timma (21), a resident of Godri village in Bhamragad taluka used to work as member of the Chetana Natya Manch since March 2009 while the groom Surendra alias Jeevan Ramsay Narote (30), a resident of Made village in Korchi taluka used to be a Maoist platoon commander in 2003.

Both of them had surrendered a few months ago and decided to marry.

The wedding ritual was performed in the traditional Vedic way by a priest especially brought by the police for the occasion.

Dignitaries blessed the couple and extended them their best wishes for their married life.

PTI 

Bihar nod to preparing DPR for Patna metro rail

Patna: Bihar moved a step closer to Chief Minister Nitish Kumar's dream of a Metro train service in Patna with the state cabinet Tuesday approving the proposal to prepare a detailed project report (DPR).

Cabinet Secretary Brajesh Mehrotra told media persons here that state cabinet has selected Rail India Technical and Economic Service (RITES) for the purpose.

"RITES will prepare DPR for the Metro rail in Patna," he said.

Earlier, the state government had said that Metro rail would be a reality in Patna by 2016. The project is set to cover a distance of 40 km and is estimated to cost Rs.8,000 crore.

IANS

New York man, 97, gets diploma eight decades late

Associated Press:

Watertown, New York: It took nearly eight decades, but
Frederick Gray is finally a high school graduate.

The Watertown Daily Times reports that the 97-year-old World War II veteran was presented on Monday with a diploma from Watertown High School during a ceremony at his northern New York home.

Gray was set to graduate in 1934 but dropped out a year early to get a job to help support his family during the Great Depression.

Gray worked in a factory before being drafted into the Army in 1942. He served in the 24th Infantry Division in the Pacific campaign, earning a Bronze Star.

He returned to his job and retired as head of the company's billing department.

Gray says he never expected to get a diploma and is "dumbfounded by the thoughtfulness."

Scientists discover vast undersea freshwater reserves

Scientists discover vast undersea freshwater reserves SYDNEY: Australian researchers said on Thursday they had established the existence ...