Thursday, June 06, 2013

Sausage or rat meat?

Food adulteration laws need more teeth to ensure safe food supply

Attention please: the next time you go out to buy mutton, be careful. You may end up purchasing rat or fox meat masquerading as mutton. Shocking, but it's true. Around 20,000 tonnes of rat meat have been sold in the name of lamb meat in the Chinese market so far this year alone. The truth came to light only after Chinese officials began an investigation in January, that too after around 20,000 dead pigs were found floating in a river. Since then, 904 suspects have been arrested and 1,721 factories across China, have been sealed. The Chinese Public Security Ministry revealed that meat dealers have made more than £1 million by selling fake meat packed as mutton and as related products. What is even more galling is that the scandal is not limited to China alone. Counterfeit meat is a common phenomenon across the globe.

 Mao Shoulong, a professor at Renmin University in Beijing, highlighted in his report that “The United States and Europe can’t eradicate these problems either, but they are even more complicated in China.” The ongoing European horse meat scandal is a case in point. In many European countries like the UK, Sweden, France and Ireland, horse meat is being falsely tagged as beef. The Food Safety Authority of Ireland recently confirmed that Tesco’s beef burger contains around 29 per cent of horse DNA. In another report, Stellenbosch University stated in its study that donkey meat was found in South African burgers. The Dutch government too has started an investigation and has recalled 50,000 tonnes of meat (500 million burgers) sold as beef across Europe. In Japan, dolphin and porpoise meat have been illegally traded as whale meat. The Glasgow City Council's environmental services found in an investigation that butchers are selling beef as lamb.

The unnerving part is that the racket has been going on despite the existence of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act in almost every country worldwide. The Act is meant to ensure food safety and curtail food adulteration. But obviously, it has failed to serve its mandate. The 2008 Chinese milk scandal, which victimised around 300,000 people, is the most infamous among all. Even the ongoing meat scandal raises concerns on the credibility and effectiveness of the Act. Clearly, what is required is a holistic and global initiative towards combating adulterated food products. This scandal may not have caused major health problems, but it surely hurts the religious sentiments of many.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
2012 : DNA National B-School Survey 2012
Ranked 1st in International Exposure (ahead of all the IIMs)
Ranked 6th Overall

Zee Business Best B-School Survey 2012
Prof. Arindam Chaudhuri’s Session at IMA Indore
IIPM IN FINANCIAL TIMES, UK. FEATURE OF THE WEEK
IIPM strong hold on Placement : 10000 Students Placed in last 5 year
BBA Management Education

Tuesday, June 04, 2013

Movie Review: Aatma

Fear isn't the key

Stylistically speaking, writer-director Suparn Verma’s paranormal thriller Aatma is anything but conventional. But in terms of substance, it is in the firm grip of the ghoul of the horror genre’s intrinsic limitations.

A dead dad, who was once an abusive husband, returns from the world yonder to lay claims to his angelic six-year-old daughter, and the harried mother fights tooth and nail to protect the girl from harm. That, in a nutshell, is what Aatma is about.

Trouble is that the film isn’t half as scary as it is meant to be. With the screenplay placing all the key cards on the table upfront, the possibility of genuine shocks and surprises are taken out of the equation.

The disgruntled aatma of the title – played by a suitably nonchalant Nawazuddin Siddiqui – turns into a ruthless serial killer, bumping off anybody who threatens to come between him and his daughter.

Aatma looks and feels very different from a run-of-the-mill Bollywood horror flick, thanks to the atypical camerawork and lighting by DoP Sophie Winqvist. If only it had a storyline that match the innate visual energy of the film.

The director resorts to familiar tropes to generate fear. The dialogue, too, tend to get stilted as an effort is made to explicate the strange occurrences around the household.

Inexplicable reflections in the mirror, a rocking chair that sways under an invisible weight, telephones that begin to ring without a warning, a rubber ball that bounces of its own accord and suchlike may suggest the presence of the unknown but do not serve the purpose of sending shivers down the spine.

Apart from the high-quality cinematography, the acting all around is the highlight of the film. Bipasha Basu, Bollywood’s jaded queen of horror movies, makes the most of the limited opportunities that the script offers.

Nawazuddin, too, has little to do except smirk eerily from the shadows. It is a cakewalk for him. Debutante Doyel Dhawan is a promising child star.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles

Monday, June 03, 2013

Hanging in balance

Odisha is a classic case of why India's growth story has gone sour. Dhrutikam Mohanty probes.

Why is India’s growth story not going as per the drawing board? Because its politicians and people have developed the uncanny ability to turn every single project into a personal commercial enterprise and public spectacle.

No better example of this economic slowdown than Odisha where some of the biggest industrial projects that India could have witnessed are languishing because of petty politicking, utter lack of vision, downright blackmail and a deeply flawed land compensation policy.

Its best illustration? Posco's Rs 52,000 crore steel plant in Odisha's Jagatsinghpur district which was set to fetch the country's largest ever FDI of Rs 52,000 crore. Eight years after the MoU was signed between the state government and the company, the project remains where it was.

In fact, it has deteriorated. What should have by now become  a throbbing business hub, Gobindpur, the site of the proposed Posco plant, is a blood-splattered battle ground, victims of a bloody anti-Posco agitation that rears up every now and then. The Posco project become controversial when the land acquisition process began. Displacement became the core issue and gave birth to a well-organized anti-Posco movement. Though the state government is now working towards acquiring land, questions are now being asked about the veracity of the MoU which lapsed on June 21, 2010.

On March 2, three people were reported killed in Gobindpur. In an ongoing battle of attrition, the Posco Pratirodh Sangram Samity (PPSS), the organization spearheading the movement against the project, said ``Posco and state-sponsored goons' hurled bombs killing three villagers in the district. The district administration says the three who died were in fact making bombs. “We had informed the police but no one came to our help,” says PPSS spokesperson Prashant Paikray.

The killings took place a day before the final phase of land acquisition for the Posco project was to be concluded in an area notified by the Industrial Development Corporation of Odisha (IDCO).

Amid consistent protests, IDCO has acquired about 2,000 acre of land. The attempt now is to get an additional 700 acre in a topography dominated by betel-veins, agricultural waste lands and sweet water zones.

On March 5, 12 platoons of the state armed police led by the Jagatsinghpur DC and SP entered Gobindpur village and acquired more then 25 betel vines, a source of local livelihood. The move was resisted by force. So just when the world was preparing to celebrate International Women’s Day, local women had no hesitation in marking it by a ‘half-naked’ protest to stop land acquisition. The PPSS alleges that women protestors were assaulted by policewomen.

Though the state government has suspended the acquisition temporarily, tension prevails. An earlier attempt in February to takeover land in Gobindpur was similarly thwarted by local campaigners with the backing of a feverish global campaign led by activists worldwide.

A frustrated Posco is now pulling out all stops to make the project viable. Recently South Korea's Ambassador to India met Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik and expressed concern. But that in itself may not be enough.

According to the state economic survey 2012-13, the state government has signed MoUs with 94 reputed investors but most of them are stalled for reasons connected to land acquisition, environmental violations and agitations against displacement.

Posco's current status has now invited comparisons with other proposals which have been held up for long periods in Odisha. For instance Tata Iron and Steel's Kalinga Nagar proposal in Jajpur district, where 14 tribals protesting the Tata plant were shot dead by the police in January 2006. Or the Utkal Alumina project, a subsidiary of Birla group's Hindalco. After 20 years and investments of over Rs 500 crore, the 1.5-million-tonne alumina refinery project is yet to see the light of the day. As the company prepared to give a final push to complete the refinery work by the first quarter of 2013, protesters organized a meeting at Maikanch, near the project site in Rayagada, to pay tribute to three persons killed in police firing on agitators protesting  land acquisition 12 years ago.

Last week Kumar Mangalam Birla met Naveen Patnaik with the same request as the Korean envoy – fast track our industrial projects. Though the Aditya Birla group has proposed to set up an integrated aluminum complex with an investment of Rs 11,000 crore, land acquisition has come in the way of it taking off the ground.

Ditto with the world’s largest steel maker Arcelor Mittal. Land acquisition for it’s 12 million tonne per annum (MTPA) steel plant in mining-rich Kendujhar district has not concluded even though a MoU with the state government was signed in 2006. The MoU which expired on December 31, 2011 is now pending renewal.

Along with Mittal the state government had signed MoUs with Uttam Galva Steel and Sterlite group a few years ago: the results, however, do not vary.

Anil Agarwal-owned Vedanta Alumina is yet another loser. It was forced to shut its one million tonne per annum alumina refinery at Lanjigarh in the state's Kalahandi district due to non-availability of bauxite, 15 years after state-owned Odisha Mining Corporation (OMC) signed over it’s rights to mine bauxite in the Niyamgiri Hills, which houses the primitive clan Dangiria Kandhas.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
2012 : DNA National B-School Survey 2012
Ranked 1st in International Exposure (ahead of all the IIMs)
Ranked 6th Overall

Zee Business Best B-School Survey 2012
Prof. Arindam Chaudhuri’s Session at IMA Indore
IIPM IN FINANCIAL TIMES, UK. FEATURE OF THE WEEK
IIPM strong hold on Placement : 10000 Students Placed in last 5 year
BBA Management Education

Saturday, June 01, 2013

War And Doom!

The economic bane of dual wars on the US and its allies

An influential section of the commentariat believes that the current economic slump in Europe and the US owes its genesis to, at least partially, to the effect of the twin wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. They have sucked up precious resources that could have been otherwise used for bolstering and beefing up the strengths of these embattled economies. According to Brown University’s Watson Institute, a mindboggling $4-6 trillion was spent by the US government on the two wars! The figure is 60 per cent of the entire size of the national budget for the period between 2001 and 2012. One only needs to join the dots to figure out why the country’s spending limits on education, health, infrastructure and R&D, among others, was severely crimped during this period.

The war funding, following the policy of the George Bush administration, was mostly supported through external debt. That has now ballooned to $16.7 trillion (as of March 2013), triggering concerns of a sovereign debt default by America. There are already flying insinuations across the US that the nation could be headed straight for a debt crisis, like so many of its counterparts in Europe. In fact, Europe is in even deeper hock. In terms of external debt, Britain is second-in-line to the US, with $9.8 trillion (as of June 2011). As of June 2010, the British exchequer had been drained to the sum of 20 billion pounds on account of the dual conflicts. In a clear demonstration of the war obsession, as against the obsession for furthering the public good, a paltry 557 million pounds have been earmarked for the nation’s development this year.

Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
2012 : DNA National B-School Survey 2012
Ranked 1st in International Exposure (ahead of all the IIMs)
Ranked 6th Overall

Zee Business Best B-School Survey 2012
Prof. Arindam Chaudhuri’s Session at IMA Indore
IIPM IN FINANCIAL TIMES, UK. FEATURE OF THE WEEK
IIPM strong hold on Placement : 10000 Students Placed in last 5 year
BBA Management Education