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  • Wake up call

    Sudheendra Aithal of Udupi district was known as an animal lover. He was so fond of wild life that he had almost turned his house into a mini zoo. His dual face was exposed when the CID/Forest Cell of Karnataka police raided his house in October last year. "We were just shocked to see the rare animals he had caged in his house. It was a mini zoo where he had altogether 51 animals and birds, which according to the law cannot be caged or made pets,' says the IGP of CID, Forest, KSN Chikkerur.

  • The enemy within

    Karnataka might soon have a wildlife crime bureau on the lines of the National Wildlife Crime Bureau, which was set up on the recommendations of the Tiger Task Force. The threat to wildlife in the State is more from indigenous tribes than from outsiders. "We are convinced that the Hakki Pikki tribe is involved in the inter-state poaching racket in Karnataka forests. They have nexus with tribes in other states like the Bahelias in Madhya Pradesh and Pardis in Gujarat,' said Inspector General of Police (CID, Forest Cell) KSN Chikkerur.

  • 5,000 chickens culled in Mansehra

    At least 5,000 chickens have been culled at a poultry farm in the Malipur area after a report of the National Institute of Health (NIH), Islamabad, confirmed presence of H5N1 virus.The district livestock officer of Mansehra Dr Ali Akber Khan told Dawn that after the confirmation of the H5N1 virus by the NIH laboratory, over 5,000 chickens were culled in the poultry farm. He said that the infected poultry farm had been sealed, while vaccine was being administered in other areas to check the spread of the bird flu virus. Responding to a question, Dr Akber said that fortunately no worker of the said poultry farm had been infected by the virus. Meanwhile, sources in the provincial health department told this correspondent that a team of the World Health Organisation, which was already monitoring the situation in Hazara region, had reached Mansehra to review the situation.

  • Riverine forests fast disappearing

    The Centre for Environment and Development (CEAD) said on Sunday that riverine forests were disappearing rapidly because of reduced flow of water, unchecked practice of illegally cutting down trees and encroachment upon forest lands. The CEAD office-bearers said in a statement that the entire world was advocating increase in forest cover to face the growing threat of climatic change but unfortunately in Pakistan, forests did not receive much attention. They said that forests were significant for the survival of humanity. In Sindh, forests covered only 2.5 per cent of the total land area and were entirely dependent on monsoon floods in riverine tract and canal water in mainland area, they said. According to recent reports, trees were disappearing due to shortage of irrigation water, arid climatic condition and illegal clearing of forest land, they said. The impact of deforestation included soil depletion, loss of soil fertility, reduction in recharge of aquifer, enhanced sedimentation, lowering of water table, loss of biodiversity and loss of ecosystem, they said. They said that the forests in the areas below Kotri Barrage were the worst affected where many had been cleared of any vegetation and turned virtually unproductive. They said that some time ago, many forests in Kachho area were cut down on the pretext of security fears while the root cause of law and order problem remained unaddressed even this day. They urged people of the area as well as civil society organisations to help protect forests and hoped that the Sindh Forest Department would ensure that all the encroachments were removed, existing forest area was protected and efforts were made to bring further area under forests. Trees helped control soil erosion, check run-off, reduce desiccation of crops, add favourable nutrients to soil, improve physical and chemical properties of soil and enhance rate of biological processes, the CEAD officials said.

  • Panel to study ways to mitigate exporters' woes

    Union Commerce and Industry Minister Kamal Nath (left) being welcomed by FICCI President Habil Khorakiwala at the 80th annual meeting of FICCI in New Delhi on Saturday. NEW DELHI: With a view to bailing out exporters reeling under the impact of a costlier rupee, the Centre has asked the Finance Commission to figure out and suggest ways in which it could refund State levies to traders and adjust the same against the States' accounts. In fact, the terms of reference have been enlarged to enable the Commission to address itself to this aspect.

  • CJI: no need for changes in kidney transplant law

    As the government contemplates amending the Organ Transplantation Act in the wake of the kidney racket, Chief Justice of India K.G. Balakrishnan on Saturday said the present laws were sufficient but they need to be implemented properly. "Sufficient laws are there, they just need to be implemented properly,' Mr. Balakrishnan told reporters when asked about the need for stricter laws to check illegal transplantation of organs. He was speaking on the sidelines of a conference on

  • Decline in sowing area for rabi crops

    Diversification to cash crops and

  • DDA to withdraw Yamuna zonal plan

    The Delhi Development Authority has decided to withdraw the draft Yamuna River Zonal Plan dealing with 90 square kilometres of active flood plain of the river here.

  • Transplant the law (editorial)

    The investigations into the activities of, and the prosecution of, the kidney doctor Amit Kumar promise to be interesting since there are so many loopholes in the law and unknown aspects of the case itself. India's law on transplants, the Transplantation of the Human Organs Act (TOHO), is of relatively recent vintage (1994), but is so loosely worded that it can allow living donations by

  • Jute-makers blame govt for slump

    Say imported materials invading protected domains even as they fail to enter new markets. The domestic jute industry has been unable to shake off its lean patch with slide in all aspects of trade. The industry has struggled in production and despatch, and in exports as well. FLAGGING FORTUNES # Production in the last five years has fallen 23 per cent to 1.3 million tonnes in April -December 2006 from 1.7 million tonnes in 2001 # Jute products have a market of Rs 6,000 crore in the country

  • GAIL may float arm to set up CNG outlets

    GAIL India, the country's largest transporter and marketer of natural gas, is looking at the possibility of floating a subsidiary to set up compressed natural gas (CNG) outlets along the highways where it has its pipelines. The company is targeting to become a Rs 50,000 crore company by 2011. The company plans to set up these outlets under its CNG corridor plan and has already identified in the areas Delhi-Agra-Lucknow highway and on the Mumbai-Pune highway.

  • Canada asks Ranbaxy to withdraw painkiller

    The Canadian health and drug regulator Health Canada has asked Ranbaxy Pharmaceuticals Canada (RPCI), a wholly owned subsidiary of Ranbaxy Laboratories Limited (RLL) to withdraw its generic, 25 microgram per hour strength, fentanyl pain-relief patches from the Canadian market due to safety concerns. Ranbaxy controls more than 50 per cent of the generic fentanyl market in Canada and this is among the four major revenue earners for Ranbaxy in that country.

  • Big babu twists facts to defend killer corridor

    An angry chief secretary rang up The Times of India on Saturday. The morning's report of a fatal accident on the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) corridor

  • Where peacocks enjoy pride of perch

    The highway from Pune to Ahmednagar is an interesting one. Farmers in traditional white peaked caps zip past you, some in fancy new cars. Signs of prosperity are apparent, although the region battled with severe drought just a couple of years ago. A few kilometres down the highway, beyond the small town of Chikrapur, a left turn reveals the road that leads to our destination

  • Garbage woe returns, KMC points at fuel shortage

    The Kathmandu Metropolitan City (KMC) has said it is unable to collect garbage from city thoroughfares beginning Sunday because of lack of fuel to run its garbage trucks. Since last three days, the KMC has not sent its vehicles to dump garbage in landfill site in Sisdole and the transfer station in Teku has already filled up. "Due to lack of diesel, we cannot collect and transport the garbage. We cannot resume our task unless fuel is made available,' Rabinman Shrestha, environmental engineer at KMC's Environment Department. The KMC has said it requires 2000 liters of diesel everyday to run its garbage collecting vehicles. nepalnews.com sd Feb 17 08

  • Big retailers wake up to ill-effects of plastic

    It is understandable that consumers are switching over to supermarket chains for household shopping. These outlets offer competitively priced groceries and other essentials under one roof. An unfortunate offshoot of this phenomenon, though, is the alarmingly high use of plastic in both product wrappings and carrybags .

  • Home is where the water is

    Ten ideas for sustainable water management in layouts and apartments Play it safe: Check quality of water before use. As urbanisation spreads, layouts with individual sites and apartments are coming up all around our cities. It is clear that the mere presence of a large overhead tank or a brochure promising 24 hours water supply is not sufficient enough for buyers to be convinced that they will have water when they need it. What are the key questions that a potential site buyer or apartment owner should ask regarding water before making the big investment decision? What are the 10 key things that a developer has to address before a potential owner is satisfied with the way things are handled with water and its sustainability? 1) What is the source/s of water and how sustainable are they in the long run? Clearly multiple sourcing of water has come to stay. Water will be sourced through city mainlines, borewells, private tankers, bottled water and recycled water. How does one know that this mix is stable and will be available all through the year? Quality 2) What is the quality of water in the borewell? What are the treatment systems for the various waters sourced? As borewells are the main source of water in the periphery of the cities, the quality of water from them becomes important. What are the measures of monitoring water quality for everybody to know and take action accordingly. 3) What is the dependency of supply during failures of electricity on site? Are there back up generators or overhead tanks to assure you that water will be available even when there is no electricity? 4) Does the layout have sewage collection and treatment plants? Is it ensuring a quality of water high enough for it to be reused for at least non-potable purpose thus reducing demand on higher quality water? 5) Does the layout have rainwater harvesting systems? Has it put into place good rainwater harvesting systems to either collect or recharge water for reuse? Is this being measured or is this only a token gesture? 6) Is the storm water collected and recharged? Storm water drains can pick up, treat and recharge the groundwater so that it can be drawn again from open wells or bore wells for use. Is this system designed well and is it working? Are there measurements for its success? 7) What is the landscape plan to minimise water consumption? Does the landscape demand high water use? Will this cause water problems such as over draw from the ground water or high bills for private water tankers? 8) Are there separate water meters for each site and each flat? Will the system reward me for low water use and punish those who use more of it? This will only be possible if individual connections are metered and bills served individually. 9) Is there a good garbage management plan for the entire layout/apartments? Weak collection and disposal of waste is a problem that contaminates not only the landscape but also surface water and groundwater. Have adequate precautions and systems been put in place, for example, for source segregation composting and recycling. S.Viswanath, Bangalore

  • Scope of rural health mission to be widened

    Activities of the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) in the State will get a new dimension by the first week of April, with some new components expected to be included in the coming budget. "Preliminary discussions with regard to district-level health plans are under way and so far, 24 districts have been covered as part of the State-level exercise,' according to a senior official. A meeting of health officials of 12 districts was held in Madurai on Friday. The proposals will be forwarded to the government. According to the official, it is for the first time that the NRHM has decentralised its budget planning activity by going to the districts. Stating that a major announcement is likely by April, he says the focus will now include health management. "The NRHM is ready to extend financial support to need-based health projects. But, due to procedural delays in districts, the time taken to release the funds is getting longer,' says another State-level official based in Chennai. A meeting covering the remaining five districts will be held next week. "Till now, health projects were taken up on an ad hoc basis. It will not be the case in future,' the official avers.

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