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Series of Rapes Behind Muzaffarnagar Riots?

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Series of Rapes Behind Muzaffarnagar Riots?

Monday, September 9th, 2013 | by 
MuzaffarnagarIs a series of rape incidents and support of politicians to the accused a reason behind communal riots happening in Muzaffarnagar? If you go through recent incidents happened in the town, such a question definitely arises. Before concluding that an eve-teasing or a youtube video caused the violence, we need to go back to these incidents happened in last one year.
Here is a list of such incidents reported.
  • Dec 21 2012: Muzaffarnagar panchayat offers rape victim Rs 1.5 lakh to keep quiet (Source)
  • Dec 24  2012: Minor girl gang-raped by three youths in Muzaffarnagar (Source)
  • Dec 29, 2012: Girl, school teacher sexually assaulted (Source)
  • Dec 30, 2012: Two women injured in acid attack in Muzaffarnagar (Source)
  • Feb 18, 2013: Woman gang-raped by four men, filmed in Muzaffarnagar (Source)
  • Apr 3, 2013 Acid attack on three teachers, student in Muzaffarnagar in UP (Source)
  • June 03, 2013: Minor girl raped Muzaffarnagar (Source)
  • July 8, 2013: Man shot dead for demanding arrest of gangrape accused  (Source)
  • July 29 2013: Woman forcibly married and gang-raped as ‘honour’ punishment after her brother eloped with village girl  (Source)
  • Aug 24, 2013: Class IX student raped by youth in Muzaffarnagar (Source) 
  • Aug 23 2012: Schoolgirl gangraped by 5 youths in Muzaffarnagar (Source) 
  • Aug 30, 2013: Muslim cleric arrested for abducting 11-year-old girl (Source) 
  • August 27, 2013: In Kawal village, an eve-teasing incident led to clash, burning bikes and the murders of three youths
  • Aug 28, 2013: A mob returning from the cremation ground indulges in arson.
  • Aug 29, 2013: Stoning between both sides. Women devotees molested near a place of worship.
  • Aug 30, 2013: Huge mob assembles at a mosque in Shaheed Chowk after Friday prayers.
  • Aug 31, 2013: Nearly 40,000 people assemble at Nangla Mandoud  Panchayat. Mob attacks a family going in a car on Khatima road, sets fire to their car.
  • Sept 1, 2013: Police files FIRs against leaders who had spoken at meetings in Shahid Chowk and Nangla Mandoud. Affected family in Malikpura threatens self-immolation.
  • Sept 2, 2013: Walls of places of atemple broken in Sanjhak and Titavi. BJP calls Muzaffarnagar bandh.
  • Sept 3, 2013: Case filed for circulating fake video of Kawal incident. Violence in Shamli town.
  • Sept 4, 2013: Sporadic violence in Muzaffarnagar.
  • Sept 5, 2013: Mahabandh call given across Muzaffarnagar district. The Khap panchayat then announced to organize a ‘Bahu Beti Samaan Bachaoi Mahapanchyat‘ on September 7, at Nagla Mandaur
  • Sept 7, 2013:  The panchayat was organized by the Jat community at Nagla Mandaur, 20 km from Muzaffarnagar city, where over 1.2 lakh people participated. People going to panchayat attacked.
  • Firing  in Muzaffarnagar town as stoning, arson go unabated. Army called in and town put under indefinite curfew.  21 killed, more than a score injured in violence.
Short URL: http://indiawires.com/?p=25917
http://indiawires.com/25917/news/national/series-of-rapes-behind-muzaffarnagar-riots/

Alternatives to Setu Channel project -- S. Kalyanaraman

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Alternatives to Setu Channel project



Dr S Kalyanaraman, Sept. 15, 2013
undefinedIt is the responsibility of the Central or the State Government to promote developmental projects, while protecting the nation’s heritage and the environment. But it becomes a travesty of justice when the governments themselves seek to violate their own environmental protection regulations or disregard economic viability criteria set for projects or fail to protect national heritage monuments.
These are the key issues which are being adjudicated in the Supreme Court where the submission of arguments has been completed and the Bench has reserved judgement on the petitions seeking to declare Rama Setu as a national monument and to scrap the Sethu Samudram Channel Project (SSCP). Until the verdict is delivered, the stay order given by the SC on the SSCP project will continue.

Over 8,000 pages of evidence were provided by petitioners to the Hon’ble Supreme Court, together with the proceedings of an international seminar on scientific and security aspects of the SSCP and how it impacts the Rama Setu and on Rama Setu meeting the criteria for declaring it to be a national monument under the ‘The Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains Act 1958’.
In almost all Indian languages the word ‘setu’ means ‘man-made bund’. Valmiki describes the construction of Setu in detail and even provides bathymetry information about the depths of the Sethusamudram. The word ‘bund’ is derived from the word ‘bandha’ as in Setu Bandha which denotes Rama Setu.
It is unfortunate that some politicians indulge in suppressio veri and suggestio falsi political statements, to promote their pet projects. The issues have been deliberated on many fora and the consensus has been: 1) that SSCP as a navigation project does not make nautical sense, 2) that as noted by many studies SSCP does not also make ecological or economic sense and 3) that it is a national imperative to declare Rama Setu a national monument; indeed, it is world heritage since memory of Sri Ram is venerated all over the globe.
For the arguments related to SSCP, it should be noted that it is a transportation project to provide for movement of goods from west coast of India to the east coast. The objectives of a transportation project can be met without SSCP, for example, by providing for Marine Cooperatives as Special Marine Economic Zones along the coast line of India to provide for the improvement in the lives of coastal people, by building a freight corridor from Vizhinjam, Cochi and Tuticorin to Kolkata by improving the three ports as international container ports, by providing for oil/gas pipelines from the west to the east. Studies should also continue to explore the possibilities of expanding the port facilities of small ports like Cuddalore and Nagapattinam in the context of the ongoing development of a large all-weather, deep water port (with a draft of 18.5 metres), inaugurated on July 17, 2008 at Krishnapatnam in Nellore District on the East Coast of India, located 190 km. north of Chennai port.
Alternatives to SSCP have been studied for over 150 years—starting with a study in 1860 by Alfred Dundas Taylor—and all studies have concluded, including the latest study by Pachauri Committee which was set-up as per the SC directive, that the proposed sea channel is in a very ecologically sensitive marine bio-reserve and protection of the navigation vessels cannot be ensured in a very shallow (only 11 feet deep) mid-ocean channel without earth embankments and structures to retrieve vessels which run into sandbeds—of the type in use in Suez or Panama Canals. This was the primary reason why Ramasamy Mudaliar Committee in 1955 suggested a land-based passage instead of cutting through Rama Setu. They also noted that a mid-ocean passage is open to unprotected navigational hazards subject to shifting sand banks. Sethusamudram is quite shallow, with a depth of less than 10 meters across most of its extent between Tuticorin and Nagapattinam. A shallow channel of the type envisaged for SSCP would have provided for passage of only small vessels of less than 30,000 tonnes. About 95 per cent of the navigation of sea-going vessels are larger than 30,000 tonnes (including oil tankers which could reach upto 2 million tones capacity) which will continue to use the circumnavigation route around Sri Lanka. Saving in navigation time through SSCP was barely two hours between the longer route hence, the project did not make nautical sense. The Pachauri Committee declared that the SSCP project was .  ”economically non-viable”, while some of the assumptions (made by the government) about the economic benefits from the project were also “over optimistic”. The Committee saw SSCP as an ecological disaster in the fragile marine economic zone.
Indian Ocean Rim – Members and dialogue partners
India should be taking the lead in forming an Indian Ocean Community (IOC) as a counterpoise to European Community and using IOC as an economic engine for growth of the Indian Ocean region of 59 nations stretching, along the Indian Ocean Rim, from  Madagascar to Tasmania (Australia). An interdisciplinary team appointed by Sri Lanka in April 2013 found SSCP to be detrimental to the maritime and environmental resources of the island nation and demanded that in terms of International Law of Seas accepted by the United Nations in 1968, Sri Lanka should provide concurrence to such projects before they can be launched.
Why should Rama Setu be protected?
It should be protected because it is a monument for dharma, the global, perennial ethic, because Sri Rama is called Ramo vigrahavaan dharmah, the very embodiment of dharma. The national poet, Subrahmanya Bharati envisioned a day when Setu will be further strengthened as a causeway embankment to act as a bridge between India and Sri Lanka in the Indian Ocean Community.
Detailed studies conducted by international organisations such as the IUCN recognise the Gulf of Mannar as an international priority site for many reasons including it’s biophysical and ecological uniqueness. Without the protective structure called Rama Setu which verily functions as a wall against tsunamis, the next tsunami is likely to devastate southern ports on the experience cited by Dr. Tad Murthy, a renowned tsunami expert.  In a reply to a query regarding the Sethusamudram channel’s impact, he wrote, “During the Indian Ocean tsunami of December 26, 2004, the southern part of Kerala was generally spared from a major tsunami… deepening the Setu Canal might provide a more direct route for the tsunami and this could impact south Kerala.”
Politicians in India should pay heed to expert advice, scrap SSCP and explore alternative transport systems and marine support systems for the coastal people. The primary responsibility of politicians is to protect the integrity of the Indian Ocean coastline and implement projects to improve the lives of the coastal people in the Indian Ocean Rim for whom the Indian Ocean is a major source of livelihood.
(The writer is President, Rameshwaram Rama Sethu Protection Movement and former Sr. Exec., Asian Development Bank)

UPA again hurting the Hindu sentiments: VHP
The Vishwa Hindu Parishad has reacted strongly over the UPA government’s move to revive the Rama Setu project. “When we say ‘Ram Mandir’, the Government says the ‘Supreme Court’.  But as the issue of Sethusamudram is in the Supreme Court, the UPA’s Minister Farooq Abdullah is adamant on breaking the Rama Setu! Reviving Sethusamudram is equal to hurting the Hindus.” said VHP chief Dr Pravin Togadia on August 30. He said the protests will go on; we will go on with the project- these are the most arrogant lines by the Central Minister, said Dr Togadia. He said the “Ram Setu is our religious monument and now just because Farooq Abdullah wants to break it using Setusamudram excuse, Hindus will oppose democratically”, he added.
Move to revive the Sethusamudram project
The Sethusamudram project is back on the Centre’s agenda. The UPA government would soon file an affidavit in the Supreme Court to get a nod for the project worth about Rs 25,000 crore that was first approved eight years ago but still not implemented. The Cabinet Committee on Political Affairs (CCPA) on August 29 gave the go-ahead to file the old affidavit again.
Minister of New and Renewable Energy Farooq Abdullah on August 30 confirmed the government decision. “We have decided to take it up again… It is not about elections,” he said. “There will always be protests, but it is in our interest,” the minister added. The 167 km long canal project in the Palk Strait was approved in May 2005 but it soon ran into trouble and dredging work had to be suspended. It aims to shorten the sea route between the eastern and western coasts of India. However, various Hindu groups have opposed the project, saying it would damage the Rama Setu built during the epic Ramayana era.
Meanwhile senior BJP leader and noted Supreme Court Lawyer Dr Subramanian warned that he is resolute to fight the Centre’s decision on the project. “They can file any affidavit they want, but they will have to face me in court,” he said. The RK Pachauri Committee, appointed by the Government after the Supreme Court asked the government to explore an alternative alignment, had said that the project was unviable in all ways. The Centre’s affidavit questioning the existence of Sri Ram or Ram Setu set-off a political storm. The government was then forced to withdraw the affidavit and file a fresh one in February 2008. It sought vacation of interim orders restraining the project.

http://www.organiser.org/Encyc/2013/9/10/Alternatives-to-Setu-Channel-project.aspx?NB=&lang=4&m1=&m2=&p1=&p2=&p3=&p4=&PageType=N

Attorney General’s son-in-law banned by UK watchdog for manipulating Reliance stocks

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Attorney General’s son-in-law banned by UK watchdog for manipulating Reliance stocks

11 September 2013, New Delhi, Team MP

Financial Service Authority (FSA) of the United Kingdom, now known Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), has decided to ban Attorney General of India GE Vahanvati’s son-in-law, Tariq Carrimjee, and his company Somerset Asset Management, from trading and has imposed a heavy penalty. FCA has imposed 89,000 pounds worth of penalty for his role in recklessly assisting one Ramesh Kumar Goenka in October 2010 to manipulate Gazprom and Reliance Security in 2010.

Meanwhile, senior CPI leader and Member of Parliament, Gurudas Dasgupta, has filed a notice for privilege against the Attorney General, alleging the country’s senior most law officer was causing impediments in his parliamentary responsibilities.

This, after the AG sent legal notice to the MP for writing to the prime minister seeking a probe into the alleged illegal foreign bank accounts of the top legal officer. The CPI leader told media persons Vahanvati was trying to impede his duties as an MP. ‘I have received your notice on the question of privilege against Attorney General for causing impediments in performance of your duties as an MP by getting issued on his behalf a legal notice to you. The matter is under my consideration,’ the Speaker told Dasgupta in the Lok Sabha.

Later, the CPI leader said he had ‘received some sensitive information regarding certain foreign bank accounts. ‘I had asked the Prime Minister to enquire and verify this information.’ Maintaining that this was ‘a privileged letter’, he said following the letter, Vahanvati sent legal notice to him in the matter. In his three-page letter, Dasgupta alleged that Vahanvati was illegally maintaining a foreign bank account at Union Bank of Switzerland’s (UBS) Singapore branch since 1997. He provided the details of the account number, code number and beneficiary details of the foreign bank allegedly in the name of Vahanvati.

The legal notice filed by Ryan Karanjawala against CPI and Member of Parliament, Gurudas Dasgupta, has caused a serious reaction since most political leaders feel that a lawyer cannot send a legal notice against an MP for writing a letter to the prime minister. Incidently, Ryan Karanjawala’s company represents a number of accused people involved in 2G and Coalgate scam. 

US Court summons served on Sonia G in hospital

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Sikh group delivers US court summons to Sonia Gandhi

Last Updated: Wednesday, September 11, 2013, 10:58 

New York: A Sikh rights group says it has delivered a US federal court's summons to Congress party president Sonia Gandhi, who is in New York for medical treatment, through hospital staff and her security detail. 

US based Sikhs for Justice (SFJ), which has filed a class action suit against Gandhi for shielding party officials allegedly involved in inciting attacks on Sikhs in November 1984, said the summons were delivered on Monday at Sloan-Kettering cancer centre in New York. 

SFJ attorney Gurpatwant S Pannun said Ester Ruiz, night shift nursing supervisor at the Sloan-Kettering was handed a copy of the summons, complaint and Judge Brian M Cogan's order directing her to give the documents to Gandhi. 

A copy of the summons was also handed to Alvin Millner, the security manager at the hospital for delivery of the same to Gandhi. 

Under federal rules, Gandhi gets 21 days to respond to the summons barring which a default judgment will be entered against her, Pannun said. 

Earlier Monday, SFJ had obtained an ex parte order from a US federal court for delivery of summons to Gandhi through hospital staff or security personnel assigned to her on the ground that the process servers could not reach her due to her heavy security detail. 

According to Pannun, the group in an emergency motion had argued that as Gandhi is a foreigner and a high profile political figure who is the subject of heavy security, the personal service of summons as required by law is impracticable. 

The suit under Alien Tort Claims Act (ATCA) and Torture Victim Protection Act (TVPA) accuses Gandhi of shielding and protecting Sajjan Kumar, Jagdish Tytler and other Congress party leaders from being prosecuted for their alleged role in the 1984 violence. 

The 27-page complaint against Gandhi alleges that between November 1 and 4, 1984 about 30,000 members of the Sikh community "were intentionally tortured, raped and murdered by groups that were incited, organized, controlled and armed" by the ruling Congress party. 

IANS 

Sonia Gandhi served US court summons in hospital, says Sikh group


New DelhiCongress president Sonia Gandhi was served a US court summons in hospital, in a case accusing her of shielding party leaders allegedly involved in the anti-Sikh riots of 1984.

The rights group 'Sikhs for Justice' served the summonsissued by federal judge Brain M Cogan to Mrs Gandhi at the Sloan Kettering hospital in New York, where she had been admitted for a medical check-up. 

The group, which had petitioned against the Congress president, said they had handed the summons over to the hospital and security staff. But the hospital has refused to comment.

The Congress said Sonia Gandhi, who is back in India, has not received any summons personally. "Summons have to be received personally for us to respond," said a senior leader.

The Sikh group has accused Sonia Gandhi of protecting the leaders of her party who allegedly incited and led mob attacks against Sikhs after the assassination of then prime minister Indira Gandhi - the Congress president's mother-in-law - by her Sikh bodyguards.

The court has reportedly given Mrs Gandhi time till September 30 to respond to the allegations.

"Summons issued almost 30 years after the event when the Congress president is on a medical visit is, to put it mildly, astonishing. Undoubtedly, appropriate legal action will be taken," Congress spokesperson Abhishek Manu Singhvi has said.

In the past, the same rights group has tried unsuccessfully to have Punjab Chief Minister Prakash Singh Badal and Union Minister Kamal Nath summoned to American courts.

The 66-year-old Congress president, who had a surgery in the US in 2011, spent a week there for a medical check-up. Last month she had to be taken to hospital just before voting on the Food Security Bill that she championed, after complaints of chest pain. She was discharged after five hours at AIIMS hospital.
http://www.ndtv.com/article/india/sonia-gandhi-served-us-court-summons-in-hospital-says-sikh-group-417111?curl=1378899340

5 years later, we've learned nothing from the financial crisis -- James Kwak

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5 Years Later, We've Learned Nothing From the Financial Crisis

Why haven't we destroyed the idea that destroyed the world?
By James Kwak SEP 10 2013, 8:35 AM ET 
REUTERS
Five years ago, Lehman Brothers, AIG, and the global financial system were not blown up by subprime mortgages, collateralized debt obligations, or credit default swaps. They were not blown up by greed or fraud, alone. The financial crisis that left millions of people still out of work was caused by an idea: the idea that unregulated financial markets are always good and that we can rely on the self-interest of bankers to improve all of our lives.
The ideology of free financial markets gained sway in the 1990s, with Alan Greenspan at the Federal Reserve and Robert Rubin at Treasury, and was not seriously contested in Washington before 2008. It was a Wall Street-to-Washington consensus that spanned bankers, lawyers, lobbyists, journalists, college career counselors, legislators, regulators, and the highest reaches of the Clinton and Bush administrations. It gave us derivatives non-regulation, consumer non-protection, the end of Glass-Steagall, creative capital accounting, regulatory arbitrage, and, ultimately, tens of thousands of empty houses rotting in the desert. Ultimately it delivered a financial shock from which the world has still not recovered.
For a brief moment, when it seemed the economy could grind to a halt, it was unthinkable that we would ever return to business as usual. At a low point, even Greenspan admitted that he had made a mistake. Five years later, however, the ideology of financial deregulation is back. And while not completely uncontested, it appears to be comfortably ensconced everywhere that matters.
Last month, for example, the federal regulators gutted a provision of the Dodd-Frank Act that required securitizers to retain 5 percent of the the risk of the securities that they were creating—on the grounds that we really, really need the market for mortgage-backed securities to come back. This followed on earlier rules issued by the CFPB that, while certainly not all bad, gave lenders an expansive safe harbor from liability—because we really, really want banks to make mortgage loans. Then there are Fannie and Freddie, which are still doing that thing they do—using the federal government’s credit to subsidize home loans—because no one has the stomach to take on the real estate-financial complex.
It’s not just housing. Despite serious-sounding noises from the Federal Reserve, capital requirements for major financial institutions—those that could bring down the financial system—will at best increase from laughable to amusing. The opposition to higher capital requirements is based on the (fallacious) claim that more capital will reduce lending and therefore harm the economy.
In addition, federal regulators are woefully behind the curve when it comes to technology risk. In just the past year and a half, we’ve seen the BATS IPO debacle, the Facebook IPO fiasco, the Knight Capital implosion, the London Whale disaster (enabled by faulty risk modeling, done in part in Excel), and the Goldman options snafu. On a bigger scale, at a bad time of day, these shocks could seriously destabilize the financial system. In China, they ban people for life for this sort of thing. Here, where we claim to be so much better at protecting the integrity of the markets, not so much.
Then there is Larry Summers—who, apparently, continues to be President Obama’s first choice for chair of the Federal Reserve. Summers is certainly not devoid of qualifications. But if you actually understood the connection between financial deregulation in the 1990s and the financial crisis of 2008, Summers is just about the last person you would pick (falling somewhere between Greenspan and Rubin on the inappropriateness scale) for one of the two most important financial regulatory positions. Summers was the Clinton administration’s point person for financial deregulation and treasury secretary for both the Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999 and the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000. There’s little reason to think his beliefs on the subject have changed.
If anything, it seems like Obama prefers Summers because of his “crisis-fighting” skills. That’s crazy. Not because Summers doesn’t have crisis-fighting skills, but because it’s a return to the bad old days of the Greenspan put: the idea that you don’t have to worry about downturns because the Fed chair can always bail everyone out. That this thoroughly discredited idea (eight million jobs, anyone?) is back—the Summers put instead of the Greenspan put—is as clear a sign as any of how little we learned.
Why are we behaving as if the past five years didn’t happen? Ideas don’t invent and propagate themselves. They are promoted by economic and political interests. Financial deregulation became the Washington consensus in the first place for a few basic reasons. Business interests dominated the Republican Party. Democrats, in order to compete for campaign cash, had to cultivate Wall Street. Community bankers and real estate agents wanted to sell houses to everyone. Lobbyists became power brokers inside the Beltway. Regulators who cared about their self-interest realized that the long-term money lay in being friendly to industry. And everyone wanted growth and low interest rates.
Fast forward to 2013—skipping over that bit of unpleasantness in 2008—and little has changed. Republicans live in a fantasy world where regulation is always bad and deregulation is always good. Democrats scramble to make nice with hedge fund managers and investment bankers. Everyone wants the housing market to recover. The long-term money is still in industry and lobbying. And everyone—especially Democrats—wants growth and jobs more than ever.
Financial stability has no lobby. It has its advocates and academics, like Elizabeth Warren and Anat Admati, but it has no super PAC or 501(c)(4) organization. For a brief moment in 2009 and early 2010, everyone wanted to tame the financial sector, but the Obama administration—led by Summers and by Tim Geithner—chose not to press for the structural reforms that could have made a difference. Today, the media and the public have moved on. Either President Obama truly believes in the deregulatory rhetoric of the 1990s, or he is picking up nickels in front of the bulldozer, betting that the next financial crisis will not occur on his watch.
Simon Johnson and I argued in 13 Bankers that Wall Street’s greatest and most important accomplishment was convincing everyone (who mattered) that unregulated finance was good for the world. Five years later, their victory endures.
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/09/5-years-later-weve-learned-nothing-from-the-financial-crisis/279506/

Changing China set to shake world economy, again

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Changing China set to shake world economy, again

China
China will remain the most powerful engine of global growth for the next couple of decades.

BEIJING/LONDON: Long after concerns about tightening US monetary policy have faded, a more profound issue will still dog global policymakers: how to handle the second stage of China's economic revolution.

The first phase, industrialisation, shook the world. Commodity-producing countries boomed as they fed China's endless appetite for natural resources. Six of the 10 fastest-growing economies last decade were in Africa.

China's flood of keenly priced manufactured goods hollowed out jobs in advanced and emerging nations alike but also helped cap inflation and made an array of consumer goods affordable for tens of millions of people for the first time.
The second stage of China's development promises to be no less momentous.

Consumption will take over the growth baton from investment. Services will grow as a share of the economy, while industry shrinks. Commodity-intensive mass manufacturing based on cheap labour will give way to greener, cleaner ways of making things.

More of the value added by a better-educated, more productive workforce harnessing new technologies will stay in China instead of going to multinational companies.

That's the plan, anyway.

China will remain the most powerful engine of global growth for the next couple of decades, but it will no longer be just processing imported raw materials and components for re-export, said Li Jian with the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, the Commerce Ministry's think tank.

"China has realised that it cannot blindly rely on investment and exports as the main drivers of growth. So China's demand will be more balanced," Li said.



High stakes

To show it is serious about more sustainable growth, China deliberately engineered the first-half slowdown that unnerved markets in order to address these longer-term structural priorities, according to President Xi Jinping.

Xi and the other new leaders of China's Communist Party are expected to approve a blueprint for reform at a plenum in November. Overcoming vested interests opposed to the new economic model will be a stern test of their credibility.

A lot is at stake for the global economy too.

Philip Schellekens, an economist with the World Bank in Washington, said the importance of the reforms Beijing intends to make cannot be overstated. As China changes, so will the rest of the world.

"The structural transformations that we think are going to happen in China over the next two decades will matter far more than the near-term vulnerabilities," he said.

On balance, commodity-exporting developing economies stand to be affected more than rich nations - an obvious exception being Australia, where the end of a China-driven mining boom was a big issue in Saturday's election. China buys a third of Australia's exports.

Commodity demand should stay strong, especially as China's capital stock per head is only 10 percent that of America's and urbanisation has a long way to go. But rebalancing will favour commodities more closely tied to consumption than to investment.

Economists fret that too many emerging markets spent their windfalls from surging raw material prices instead of ploughing them into infrastructure and other investment. As a result, growth is slowing now that China's demand is softening.

China's appetite for agricultural commodities and energy should hold up well but Capital Economics, a London consultancy, said it was concerned about large metals exporters that have not saved their extra income and so are running current account deficits.

It singled out South Africa, Zambia, Chile and Peru as being particularly vulnerable.

Winners and losers

Of course, lower raw material prices should boost growth and lower inflation for commodity importers.

Take iron ore. With no other country coming close to being able to absorb the slack left by China, which imports about two-thirds of the world's ore, prices risk years of decline as a major oversupply swamps demand, with some forecasting prices to be cut in half by 2015.

Another bonus is that big emerging markets such as India and Indonesia will have a chance to move into basic manufacturing sectors that China is vacating. Bangladesh has quickly become the world's second-biggest textile exporter.

Brazil stands out as an example of a country that has already been under intense pressure from China in low-skill industries such as footwear and will increasingly be going head to head with China in higher-value markets too. Policies to boost competitiveness thus become more imperative than ever.

After largely missing the chance to reform during the boom, Brazil also risks squandering the opportunities thrown up by China's transition slip unless it improves its infrastructure, cuts red tape and overhauls its tax system, economists say.

"Some of the underlying structural shortcomings of the economy were covered up during the bonanza. It's only as the commodity boom has slowed that the supply side constraints have become more visible," said Jens Arnold, who tracks Brazil for the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development in Paris.

In the case of advanced economies, China's transition is a double-edged sword, according to He Yifeng, an analyst at Hongyuan Securities in Beijing.

"For the United States and Europe, China's rebalancing could create more competition for them. But they can take the initiative by focusing on the higher end of the value chain, relying on knowledge and technology exports," he said.

Services bonanza

Already a lucrative market for European purveyors of luxury goods, China will increasingly present opportunities for foreign firms as incomes rise and consumers grow more discriminating.

Safety-conscious parents' choice of foreign-made baby milk formula is a case in point, said Haibin Zhu, chief China economist for JP Morgan in Hong Kong.

"We will probably see a shift in the consumption basket," Zhu said. "The increased focus on product quality is positive news for many international exporters, particularly from advanced economies."

Another rich seam for advanced economies is services, which account for just 43 percent of Chinese GDP, the smallest share of any major economy.

James Emmett, global head of trade finance at HSBC in London, said urbanisation and the rise of China's middle class offered openings to firms in Britain and beyond in sectors such as health, education and tourism.

"We are seeing a change in the nature of China," he said.

As services blossom, foreign companies could reap a windfall of up to $6 trillion by 2025 in everything from retail trade and transport to hotels and finance, said Yale University's Stephen Roach, a former chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia.

Zhu at JP Morgan expects investment to drop from 48 percent of GDP to 35 percent by 2018-2020 as consumption (household and government) rises to 60-65 percent from 50 percent.

At the same time, GDP growth is likely to slow toward 6.5 percent a year by 2016-2020 from 7.7 percent in 2012 and 10 percent a year on average since the late 1970s.

Yet market worries about the transition need to be kept in perspective. Even if growth slows to 5 percent a year by 2030, Schellekens with the World Bank said China will still be adding output every year equal to the size of the South Korean economy.

"Even though China is facing quite a transformation, the long-term future is still a very positive one," he said.

Dismiss UP Govt. for justice to Hindu society -- Ashok Singhal, VHP

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VHP’s Ashok Singhal’s statement on Mujaffarnagar Riots

MEDIA STATEMENT OF SRI ASHOKJI SINGHAL PATRON, VISHVA HINDU PARISHAD
New Delhi, September 11, 2013 - The stalking and felonious behaviour of the ‘Love Jihadis’ with a Hindu girl student returning from her Kisaan Inter-College was the immediate provocation for the grave incidents that took place at the Kawal village of Muzaffarnagar in Uttar Pradesh on 27th August, 2013. The root cause is the Lust Jihad being conducted under the garb of Muslim religion. This incident gave birth to the convening of the “Bahu, Beti Bachao” (“Save Women and Daughters”) Maha Panchayat. When the society could no longer bear the ‘Love Jihadists’ outraging the modesty and dignity of Hindu women and girls in rural and urban areas of U.P. the corrective movement in the form of the “Bahu Beti Bachao Mahapanchayat” came into being.
A number of newspapers, news agencies and electronic media channels have been trying to hide these facts for reasons best known to them. Why was this movement bannered as “Bahu, Beti Bachao Andolan”? When the Love Jihadis in the rabidly pro-Muslim Government of Mulayam Singh found themselves to be above law and conducted themselves accorongly, that compelled the Hindu society to stand on its own feet to safeguard itself. The Love Jihad is not only targeting Bharat (India) and Hindus but also Buddhists and Christians everywhere in the world. These godless Lust Jihadis donning the garb of Muslim religion as a major weapon have, for the last half a century, been targeting the Hindu girls, women, girl students. During the last parliamentary elections the Hindu women had put this problem before Sri Varun Gandhi for an answer as to how to save themselves from these Jihadis.
A solution to this problem has to be found in the said context only. On 27th August, 2013, Gaurav and Sachin – the two brothers of the victim girl student – were hacked to death by Jihadists and then on 30th August, 2013 a huge meeting in support of the Jihadists was allowed to be held in Muzaffarnagar in spite of the curfew under 144 CrPC in place and the family of the victims was accused for all the incidents of Kawal. This laxity on the part of the government emboldening the Jihadists added fuel to the fire infuriating the victims which led to the convening of the “Bahu, Batiyaan Bachao” Maha Panchayat. As a consequence of government support to Jihadists the sparks and fire spread to the entire district and slaughters and arsons took place in villages and urban areas. The Hindus and Muslims had been living in harmony, peace and love all these decades, but the lustful Jihadis made them enemies in no time.
A lesson to be learnt from all these incidents is that a legal ban on Love Jihadis needs to be imposed and the law strictly followed and also the murderer Love Jihadis involved in these incidents given exemplary punishment, otherwise the self-respecting Hindu, even if unwillingly, has to take the responsibility of self-protection into his/her own hands, which would be a matter of shame and suicidal for a government formed under systems of law and constitution.
The state of affairs has come to such a pass that the people have lost all confidence in the Chief Minister Akhilesh Singh government. They also have a compelling feeling that this government is celebrating and emboldening the Love Jihadis on the one hand and crushing the 84-Kosi Parikrama on the other which is why the Hindu society can expect any semblance of justice if this government is dismissed forthwith.

Released by

(Prakash Sharma)
Advocate
Spokesperson, Vishva Hindu Parishad 
http://samvada.org/2013/news-digest/vhps-ashok-singhals-statement-on-mujaffarnagar-riots/
विश्व हिन्दू परिषद के संरक्षक
माननीय श्री अशोक जी सिंहल का प्रेस वक्तव्य

नई दिल्ली, 11 सितम्बर, 2013
    मुजफ्फरनगर के कवाल गाँव में दिनांक 27 अगस्त, 2013 को किसान इण्टर कालेज से आती हुई हिन्दू छात्रा के साथ लव जेहादियों का अपमानजनक व्यवहार ही मुजफ्फरनगर घटनाक्रम का मूल कारण है। इस घटना ने ही ‘‘बहु, बेटी बचाओ’’ महापंचायत को जन्म दिया। लव जेहादियों के गाँव-गाँव शीलहरण की घटनाएँ जब बर्दास्त के बाहर हो गईं तो उनके विरुद्ध समाज का रौद्र रूप ‘‘बहु, बेटियाँ बचाओ’’ आन्दोलन के रूप में खड़ा हुआ है।
    हमारे देश के समाचार पत्र एवं न्यूज एजेन्सियाँ तथा अनेक दूरसंचार चैनल इस सत्य को उद्घाटित करने से अपने को बचा रहे हैं। इस आन्दोलन का नाम ‘‘बहु, बेटियाँ बचाओ’’ क्यों पड़ा ? मुलायम सिंह की घोर मुस्लिम परस्त इस सरकार में लव जेहादी अपने को कानून से ऊपर समझने लगे हैं और अपनी हरकतों से पूरे हिन्दू समाज को अपनी रक्षा के लिए स्वयं के बल पर खड़े होने को मजबूर किया है। लव जेहाद ने न केवल हिन्दुओं अपितु बौद्धों और ईसाइयों को भी आज अपना भक्ष्य बना रखा है। इस शर्मनाक कामान्ध जेहादियों ने मुस्लिम धर्म की रक्षा और विस्तार के नाम पर इसे एक बड़े शस्त्र के रूप में देशभर में हिन्दू समाज की कन्याओं, अबलाओं, छात्राओं को पिछले अनेक वर्षों से अपना भक्ष बनाया हुआ है। पिछले संसदीय चुनाव में श्री वरुण गाँधी के समक्ष माताओं ने कन्याओं के शीलहरण की इसी समस्या को रखा था और वे इन जेहादियों से अपनी रक्षा का उत्तर चाहती थीं। 
    उपरोक्त परिप्रेक्ष में ही इस समस्या का हल ढूँढ़ना पड़ेगा। दिनांक 27 अगस्त, 2013 को छात्रा के दो भाई गौरव और सचिन की हत्या हुई और हत्या करने के उपरान्त 30 अगस्त, 2013 को उन जेहादियों के समर्थन में शुक्रवार की नमाज के बाद एक बहुत बड़ी सभा 144 धारा होने के बावजूद प्रशासनिक अधिकारियों द्वारा मुजफ्फरनगर में होने दी गई और कवाल की पूरी घटना के लिए मृतकों के परिवार को ही दोषी बताया गया। इस घटना ने आग में घी का काम किया। 31 अगस्त और 7 सितम्बर, 2013 को ‘‘बहु, बेटियाँ बचाओ’’ महापंचायत करने के लिए बाध्य कर दिया। जेहादियों को राजकीय संरक्षण देने का क्या परिणाम होता है कि इस घटना की आग पूरे जिले में फैल गई और यह नर-संहार गाँव-गाँव में फैल गया। जहाँ अनेक वर्षों से गाँव-गाँव में हिन्दू और मुसलमानों में बड़े मधुर सम्बन्ध चले आ रहे थे, उनको इन कामान्ध लव जेहादियों ने एक दूसरे का शत्रु बना दिया।
    इस समस्त काण्ड से एक शिक्षा लेने की आवश्यकता है कि लव जेहादियों पर कानूनी रोक लगाई जाए और कानून का सख्ती से पालन किया जाए। इस घटना में शामिल हत्यारे लव जेहादियों को कठोर दण्ड दिया जाए अन्यथा स्वाभिमानी हिन्दू को इच्छा न होते हुए भी अपनी रक्षा अपने बल पर करने के लिए बाध्य होना पड़ेगा, जो शर्मनाक है और कानून से बनी इस सरकार द्वारा संभव नहीं हो पा रही है।
    परिस्थितियाँ ऐसी आ गई हैं कि मुख्यमंत्री अखिलेश सिंह की सरकार के प्रति लोगों का विश्वास उठ चुका है। वह यह भी सोचने के लिए बाध्य हो गया है कि एक ओर लव जेहादियों को प्रोत्साहन और दूसरी ओर हिन्दू समाज के शान्तिपूर्ण 84 कोसी धार्मिक परिक्रमा को दमन के द्वारा रोकने के प्रयासों ने यह स्पष्ट कर दिया है कि ऐसी सरकार को तत्काल बर्खास्त करने से ही हिन्दू समाज न्याय की अपेक्षा कर सकता है।
जारीकर्ता


(प्रकाश शर्मा) 
एडवोकेट 
प्रवक्ता, विश्व हिन्दू परिषद

Varadarajan, US Citizen as Editor, The Hindu challenged. Delhi HC issues notice.

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Subramanian Swamy as @Swamy39

Delhi HC issued notice on my PIL today to The Hindu editor Varadarajan to show cause why when he is a US citizen he not be removed.

Because of the marathon argument in Delhi HC on Hindu editor I took a week adjournment in the NH case. Next on 19th.

http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/05/appointment-of-foreigner-as-editor.html


SWAMY AGAINST THE HINDU

Subramanian Swamy Vs Siddharth Varadarajan
Congress President Sonia Gandhi is not the only “non-Indian” who Janata Party President Subramanian Swamy is trying to get ousted from her post. He now wants the appointment of – to quote him – an “anti-nation Naxalite” declared null and void as the editor of an esteemed newspaper. And no, the person concerned doesn’t live in Jangalmahal or Gadchiroli district. His official address is Kasturi Building, Anna Salai, Chennai.  If you still haven’t got it, the canker in Swamy’s eyes is the editor of The Hindu, Siddharth Varadarajan.
So, what’s Swamy’s bone of contention? It’s Varadarajan’s US citizenship. Subramanian Swamy has filed a plea in the Delhi High Court saying editors of news organisations in India “must be Indian citizens and residents of India” and not foreign citizens. The court in turn, on May 8, 2013, issued a notice to the Centre asking whether the citizenship of editors of publications in India should be a criteria for their appointment. The court has decided to hear the matter on July 24, 2013.
What does the rule book say?  The Press And Registration of Books Act (PRB Act) 1867, which is a pre-Independence legislation for publications, states that a person who does not ordinarily reside in India would not be permitted to edit a newspaper. However, the Act doesn’t comment on the matter of citizenship. In 2011, the Cabinet approved the Press & Registration of Books and Publication Billwhich would replace the antiquated 1867 ActAccording to Section 2(C) of the Bill, “an editor is a person, whether called editor, chief-editor, sub-editor or by whatever name called, who is a citizen of India and ordinarily resides in India, who controls the selection of the matter that is brought out in a publication”The Bill, though, is pending in Parliament.
Why has Subramanian Swamy filed this petition? Speaking to Newslaundry, Subramanian Swamy said, “The Cable Act says that the editor of a news channel has to be an Indian citizen. The 2002 Cabinet decision on FDI in print media said that the editor of any print organisation receiving foreign funds should be an Indian. So, why should an Indian print organisation funded by Indians have an editor without an Indian citizenship?”
What is The Hindu’s stand? Former Editor-in-Chief of The Hindu and Director of Kasturi & Sons Limited, publishers of The Hindu, N Ram over a long email commented, “The PRB Act does NOT stipulate that only Indian citizens can be the editor of a newspaper. The requirement is that the editor be ordinarily resident in India. Siddharth Varadarajan has been continuously resident in India since September 1995. We were fully aware of the requirements of the PRB Act and that in appointing Siddharth as the Editor of The Hindu we were in full compliance with the provisions of the Act”.
Should citizenship be seen as one of the credentials of an editor before appointment? According to Ram, “No, there is no need to take the citizenship of someone into account before appointing him or her as Editor. What is important is the editor’s commitment to the philosophy, values and ethos of the newspaper and his or her willingness and ability to uphold those values”.
Swamy disagreed and emphasised that newspapers play a vital role in forming public opinion and, therefore, citizenship of the editor should be taken into consideration.  In a letter to the Press registrar dated June 6,2012Swamy wrote, “An editor of a newspaper as part of the Fourth Estate is in a particularly important position to influence the democratic processes including elections in India. It will adversely impact national security and go against public interest if a foreigner is allowed to become editor of a newspaper like The Hindu”.
Is Swamy targeting Varadarajan in particular? According to N Ram, there have been other, well-known instances where publications have had editors with foreign citizenship – although he did not name any. He wrote, “I have no comment on why Dr Swamy raised this particular objection. We do what we think and know to be the right and legal thing”. Swamy on his part says that he has known Varadarajan for long and he is not targeting him in particular. He said that he is seeking more clarity in the press laws and the criteria to appoint editors. He also added that it is Varadarajan who is spreading rumours about Swamy seeking vendetta as Swamy is perceived to be “anti-Communist”.
Swamy’s repeated insistence and mentions of Varadarajan and his own perceived political leanings makes us wonder what Swamy has taken umbrage to in regard to Varadarajan’s eligibility as editor of an Indian newspaper. Is it his citizenship or his political ideology?


Thorium nuclear reactor -- World Nuclear Association

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Thorium nuclear reactor
(Updated June 2013)
·         Thorium is more abundant in nature than uranium.
·         It is fertile rather than fissile, and can be used in conjunction with fissile material as nuclear fuel.
·         Thorium fuels can breed fissile uranium-233.
The use of thorium as a new primary energy source has been a tantalizing prospect for many years. Extracting its latent energy value in a cost-effective manner remains a challenge, and will require considerable R&D investment.
Nature and sources of thorium
Thorium is a naturally-occurring, slightly radioactive metal discovered in 1828 by the Swedish chemist Jons Jakob Berzelius, who named it after Thor, the Norse god of thunder. It is found in small amounts in most rocks and soils, where it is about three times more abundant than uranium. Soil commonly contains an average of around 6 parts per million (ppm) of thorium.
Thorium exists in nature in a single isotopic form - Th-232 - which decays very slowly (its half-life is about three times the age of the Earth). The decay chains of natural thorium and uranium give rise to minute traces of Th-228, Th-230 and Th-234, but the presence of these in mass terms is negligible.
When pure, thorium is a silvery white metal that retains its lustre for several months. However, when it is contaminated with the oxide, thorium slowly tarnishes in air, becoming grey and eventually black. Thorium oxide (ThO2), also called thoria, has one of the highest melting points of all oxides (3300°C). When heated in air, thorium metal turnings ignite and burn brilliantly with a white light. Because of these properties, thorium has found applications in light bulb elements, lantern mantles, arc-light lamps, welding electrodes and heat-resistant ceramics. Glass containing thorium oxide has a high refractive index and dispersion and is used in high quality lenses for cameras and scientific instruments.
The most common source of thorium is the rare earth phosphate mineral, monazite, which contains up to about 12% thorium phosphate, but 6-7% on average. Monazite is found in igneous and other rocks but the richest concentrations are in placer deposits, concentrated by wave and current action with other heavy minerals. World monazite resources are estimated to be about 12 million tonnes, two-thirds of which are in heavy mineral sands deposits on the south and east coasts of India. There are substantial deposits in several other countries (see Table below). Thorium recovery from monazite usually involves leaching with sodium hydroxide at 140°C followed by a complex process to precipitate pure ThO2.
Thorite (ThSiO4) is another common mineral. A large vein deposit of thorium and rare earth metals is in Idaho.
The 2007 IAEA-NEA publication Uranium 2007: Resources, Production and Demand (often referred to as the 'Red Book') gives a figure of 4.4 million tonnes of total known and estimated resources, but this excludes data from much of the world. Data for reasonably assured and inferred resources recoverable at a cost of $80/kg Th or less are given in the table below. Some of the figures are based on assumptions and surrogate data for mineral sands, not direct geological data in the same way as most mineral resources.
Estimated world thorium resources1
Country
Tonnes
% of total
India
846,000
16
Turkey
744,000
14
Brazil
606,000
11
Australia
521,000
10
USA
434,000
8
Egypt
380,000
7
Norway
320,000
6
Venezuela
300,000
6
Canada
172,000
3
Russia
155,000
3
South Africa
148,000
3
China
100,000
2
Greenland
86,000
2
Finland
60,000
1
Sweden
50,000
1
Kazakhstan
50,000
1
Other countries
413,000
8
World total
5,385,000  

There is no international or standard classification for thorium resources and identified Th resources do not have the same meaning in terms of classification as identified U resources. Thorium is not a primary exploration target and resources are estimated in relation to uranium and rare earths resources.
Source: OECD NEA & IAEA, Uranium 2011: Resources, Production and Demand ("Red Book")1, using the lower figures of any range and omitting ‘unknown’ CIS estimate.
Thorium as a nuclear fuel
Thorium (Th-232) is not itself fissile and so is not directly usable in a thermal neutron reactor – in this regard it is very similar to uranium-238. However, it is ‘fertile’ and upon absorbing a neutron will transmute to uranium-233 (U-233)a, which is an excellent fissile fuel materialb. Thorium fuel concepts therefore require that Th-232 is first irradiated in a reactor to provide the necessary neutron dosing. The U-233 that is produced can either be chemically separated from the parent thorium fuel and recycled into new fuel, or the U-233 may be usable ‘in-situ’ in the same fuel form.
Thorium fuels therefore need a fissile material as a ‘driver’ so that a chain reaction (and thus supply of surplus neutrons) can be maintained. The only fissile driver options are U-233, U-235 or Pu-239 (none of which is easy to supply).
It is possible – but quite difficult – to design thorium fuels that produce more U-233 in thermal reactors than the fissile material they consume (this is referred to as having a fissile conversion ratio of more than 1.0 and is also called breeding). Thermal breeding with thorium is only really possible using U-233 as the fissile driver, and to achieve this the neutron economy in the reactor has to be very good (ie, low neutron loss through escape or parasitic absorption). The possibility to breed fissile material in slow neutron systems is a unique feature for thorium-based fuels and is not possible with uranium fuels.
Another distinct option for using thorium is as a ‘fertile matrix’ for fuels containing plutonium (and even other transuranic elements like americium). No new plutonium is produced from the thorium component, unlike for uranium fuels, and so the level of net consumption of this metal is rather high.
In fresh thorium fuel, all of the fissions (thus power and neutrons) derive from the driver component. As the fuel operates the U-233 content gradually increases and it contributes more and more to the power output of the fuel. The ultimate energy output from U-233 (and hence indirectly thorium) depends on numerous fuel design parameters, including: fuel burn-up attained, fuel arrangement, neutron energy spectrum and neutron flux (affecting the intermediate product protactinium-233, which is a neutron absorber). The fission of a U-233 nucleus releases about the same amount of energy (200 MeV) as that of U-235.
An important principle in the design of thorium fuel is that of heterogeneous fuel arrangements in which a high fissile (and therefore higher power) fuel zone called theseed region is physically separated from the fertile (low or zero power) thorium part of the fuel – called the blanket. Such an arrangement is far better for supplying surplus neutrons to thorium nuclei so they can convert to fissile U-233, in fact all thermal breeding fuel designs are heterogeneous. This principle applies to all the thorium-capable reactor systems.
Reactors able to use thorium
There are seven types of reactor into which thorium can be introduced as a nuclear fuel. The first five of these have all entered into operational service at some point. The last two are still conceptual:
Heavy Water Reactors (PHWRs): These are very well suited for thorium fuels due to their combination of: (i) excellent neutron economy (their low parasitic neutron absorption means more neutrons can be absorbed by thorium to produce useful U-233), (ii) slightly faster average neutron energy which favours conversion to U-233, (iii) flexible on-line refueling capability. Furthermore, heavy water reactors (especially Candu) are well established and widely-deployed commercial technology for which there is extensive licensing experience.
Thorium fuel has been tested over the past 50 years at the NRX and NRU reactors at AECL's Chalk River Laboratories, see R&D section below. CANDU reactors have very high flexibility to switch between uranium and thorium based fuels without extensive modification.
There is potential application to Enhanced Candu 6 and ACR-1000 reactors fueled with 5% plutonium (reactor grade) plus thorium. In the closed fuel cycle, the driver fuel required for starting off is progressively replaced with recycled U-233, so that on reaching equilibrium 80% of the energy comes from thorium. Fissile drive fuel could be LEU, plutonium, or recycled uranium from LWR. Fleets of PHWRs with near-self-sufficient equilibrium thorium fuel cycles could be supported by a few fast breeder reactors to provide plutonium.
High-Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactors (HTRs): These are well suited for thorium-based fuels in the form of robust ‘TRISO’ coated particles of thorium mixed with plutonium or enriched uranium, coated with pyrolytic carbon and silicon carbide layers which retain fission gases. The fuel particles are embedded in a graphite matrix that is very stable at high temperatures. Such fuels can be irradiated for very long periods and thus deeply burn to exploit their original fissile charge. Thorium fuels can be designed for both ‘pebble bed’ and ‘prismatic’ HTR fuel varieties.
Boiling (Light) Water Reactors (BWRs): BWR fuel assemblies allow for structure & composition options, such as extra moderation and/or half-length fuel rods. This design flexibility means that well-optimized thorium fuels can be created for BWRs, for example, thorium-plutonium fuels that are tailored for ‘burning’ plutonium. BWRs are a well-understood and licensed reactor design.
Pressurised (Light) Water Reactors (PWRs): Viable thorium fuels can be designed for a PWR, though with less flexibility than for BWRs. Fuel needs to be in heterogeneous arrangements in order to achieve satisfactory fuel burn-up. It is not possible to design thorium-based PWR fuels that convert significant amounts of U-233. Even though PWRs are not the perfect reactor in which to use thorium, they are the industry workhorse and there is a lot of PWR licensing experience. They are a viable early-entry thorium platform.
Fast Neutron Reactors (FNRs): Thorium can serve as a fuel component for reactors operating with a fast neutron spectrum – in which a wider range of heavy nuclides are fissionable and may potentially drive a thorium fuel. There is, however, no relative advantage in using thorium instead of depleted uranium (DU) as a fertile fuel matrix in these reactor systems due to a higher fast-fission rate for U-238 and the fission contribution from residual U-235 in this material. Also, there is a huge amount of surplus DU available for use when more FNRs are commercially available, so thorium has little or no competitive edge in these systems.
Molten Salt Reactors (MSRs): These reactors are still at the design stage but will be very well suited for using thorium as a fuel. The unique fluid fuel incorporates thorium and uranium (U-233 and/or U-235) fluorides as part of a salt mixture that melts in the range 400-600ºC, and this liquid serves as both heat transfer fluid and the matrix for the fissioning fuel. The fluid circulates through a core region and then through a chemical processing circuit that removes various fission products (poisons) and/or the valuable U-233. Certain MSR designsc will be designed specifically for thorium fuels to produce useful amounts of U-233 – eventually leading to the self-sustaining use of thorium as an energy source.
Accelerator Driven Reactors (ADS): The sub-critical ADS system is an unconventional concept that is potentially ‘thorium capable’. Spallation neutrons are produceddwhen high-energy protons from an accelerator strike a heavy target like lead. These neutrons are directed at a region containing a thorium fuel, eg, Th-plutonium which reacts producing heat as in a conventional reactor. The system remains subcritical ie, unable to sustain a chain reaction without the proton beam. Difficulties lie with the reliability of high-energy accelerators and also with economics due to their high power consumption. (See also information page on Accelerator-Driven Nuclear Energy)
A key finding from thorium fuel studies to date is that it is not economically viable to use low-enriched uranium (LEU - with a U-235 content of up to 20%) as a fissile driver with thorium fuels, unless the fuel burn-up can be taken to very high levels – well beyond those currently attainable in LWRs with zirconium cladding.
With regard to proliferation significance, thorium-based power reactor fuels would be very poor source for fissile material usable in the illicit manufacture of an explosive device. U-233 contained in spent thorium fuel contains U-232 which decays to produce very radioactive daughter nuclides and these create a strong gamma radiation field. This confers proliferation resistance by creating significant handling problems and by greatly boosting the detectability (traceability) and ability to safeguard this material.
Prior Thorium Fuelled Electricity Generation
There have been several significant demonstrations of the use of thorium-based fuels to generate electricity in several reactor types. Many of these early trials were able to use high-enriched uranium (HEU) as the fissile ‘driver’ component, and this would not be considered today.
The 300 MWe Thorium High Temperature Reactor (THTR) in Germany, a HTR, operated with thorium-HEU fuel between 1983 and 1989. Over half of its 674,000 pebbles contained Th-HEU fuel particles (the rest graphite moderator and some neutron absorbers). These were continuously moved through the reactor as it operated, and on average each fuel pebble passed six times through the core.
The 40 MWe Peach Bottom HTR in the USA was a demonstration thorium-fuelled reactor that ran from 1967-74.2 It used a thorium-HEU fuel in the form of microspheres of mixed thorium-uranium carbide coated with pyrolytic carbon. These were embedded in annular graphite segments (not pebbles). This reactor produced 33 billion kWh over 1349 equivalent full-power days with a capacity factor of 74%.
The 330 MWe Fort St Vrain HTR in Colorado, USA, was a larger-scale commercial successor to the Peach Bottom reactor and ran from 1976-89. It also used thorium-HEU fuel in the form of microspheres of mixed thorium-uranium carbide coated with silicon oxide and pyrolytic carbon to retain fission products. These were embedded in graphite ‘compacts’ that were arranged in hexagonal columns ('prisms'). Almost 25 tonnes of thorium was used in fuel for the reactor, much of which attained a burn-up of about 170 GWd/t.
A unique thorium-fuelled Light Water Breeder Reactor operated from 1977 to 1982 at Shippingport in the USA3 – it used uranium-233 as the fissile driver in special fuel assemblies having independently movable ‘seed’ regionse. The reactor core was housed in a reconfigured early PWR. It operated at 60 MWe (236 MWt) with an availability factor of 86% producing over 2.1 billion kWh. Post-operation inspections revealed that 1.39% more fissile fuel was present at the end of core life, proving that breeding had occurred.
Indian heavy water reactors (PHWRs) have for a long time used thorium-bearing fuel bundles for power flattening in some fuel channels – especially in initial cores when special reactivity control measures are needed.
Other Thorium Energy R&D – Past & Present
Research into the use of thorium as a nuclear fuel has been taking place for over 40 years, though with much less intensity than that for uranium or uranium-plutonium fuels. Basic development work has been conducted in Germany, India, Canada, Japan, China, Netherlands, Belgium, Norway, Russia, Brazil, the UK & the USA. Test irradiations have been conducted on a number of different thorium-based fuel forms.
Noteworthy studies and experiments involving thorium fuel include:
Heavy Water Reactors: Thorium-based fuels for the ‘Candu’ PHWR system have been designed and tested in Canada for more than 50 years, including burn-up to 47 GWd/t. Dozens of test irradiations have been performed on fuels including: ThO2, mixed ThO2-UO2, (both LEU and HEU), and mixed ThO2-PuO2, (both reactor- and weapons-grade). R&D into thorium fuel use in CANDU reactors continues to be pursued by Canadian and Chinese groups. In China, INET has been looking at a wide range of fuel cycle options including thorium, especially for the Qinshan Phase III PHWR units, where there has been demonstrated use of 8 thorium oxide fuel pins in the middle of a Canflex fuel bundle with low-enriched uranium. The fuels have performed well in terms of their material properties.
Closed thorium fuel cycles have been designed4 in which PHWRs play a key role due to their fuelling flexibility: thoria-based HWR fuels can incorporate recycled U-233, residual plutonium and uranium from used LWR fuel, and also minor actinide components in waste-reduction strategies.
In July 2009 a second phase agreement was signed among AECL, the Third Qinshan Nuclear Power Company (TQNPC), China North Nuclear Fuel Corporation and the Nuclear Power Institute of China to jointly develop and demonstrate the use of thorium fuel and to study the commercial and technical feasibility of its full-scale use in Candu units such as at Qinshan. This was supported in December 2009 by an expert panel appointed by CNNC. The panel also noted the ability of Candu reactors to re-use uranium recycled from light water reactor fuel, and unanimously recommended that China consider building two new Candu units to take advantage of the design's unique capabilities in utilizing alternative fuels. The expert panel comprised representatives from China’s leading nuclear academic, government, industry and R&D organizations. In particular it confirmed that thorium use in the Enhanced Candu 6 reactor design is “technically practical and feasible”, and cited the design’s “enhanced safety and good economics” as reasons it could be deployed in China in the near term.
India’s nuclear developers have designed an Advanced Heavy Water Reactor (AHWR) specifically as a means for ‘burning’ thorium – this will be the final phase of their 3-phase nuclear energy infrastructure plan (see below). The reactor will operate with a power of 300 MWe using thorium-plutonium or thorium-U-233 seed fuel in mixed oxide form. It is heavy water moderated (& light water cooled) and is capable of self-sustaining U-233 production. In each assembly 30 of the fuel pins will be Th-U-233 oxide, arranged in concentric rings. About 75% of the power will come from the thorium. Construction of the pilot AHWR may start in 2012.
High-Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactors: Thorium fuel was used in HTRs prior to the successful demonstration reactors described above. The UK operated the 20 MWth Dragon HTR from 1964 to 1973 for 741 full power days. Dragon was run as an OECD/Euratom cooperation project, involving Austria, Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Switzerland in addition to the UK. This reactor used thorium-HEU fuel elements in a 'breed and feed' mode in which the U-233 formed during operation replaced the consumption of U-235 at about the same rate. The fuel could be left in the reactor for about six years.
Germany operated the Atom Versuchs Reaktor (AVR) at Jülich for over 750 weeks between 1967 and 1988. This was a small pebble bed reactor that operated at 15 MWe, mainly with thorium-HEU fuel. About 1360 kg of thorium was used in some 100,000 pebbles. Burn-ups of 150 GWd/t were achieved.
Pebble bed reactor development builds on German work with the AVR and THTR and is under development in China (HTR-10, and HTR-PM).
Light Water Reactors: The feasibility of using thorium fuels in a PWR was studied in considerable detail during a collaborative project between Germany and Brazil in the 1980s5. The vision was to design fuel strategies that used materials effectively – recycling of plutonium and U-233 was seen to be logical. The study showed that appreciable conversion to U-233 could be obtained with various thorium fuels, and that useful uranium savings could be achieved. The program terminated in 1988 for non-technical reasons. It did not reach its later stages which would have involved trial irradiations of thorium-plutonium fuels in the Angra-1 PWR in Brazil, although preliminary Th-fuel irradiation experiments were performed in Germany. Most findings from this study remain relevant today.
Thorium-plutonium oxide (Th-MOX) fuels for LWRs are now being developed by Norwegian proponents with a view that these are the most readily achievable option for tapping energy from thorium. This is because such fuel is usable in existing reactors (with minimal modification) and the fuel can be made in existing uranium-MOX plants, using existing technology and licensing experience. A thorium-MOX fuel irradiation experiment is underway for Thor Energy in the Halden research reactor from 2013. The test fuel is in the form of pellets composed of a dense thorium oxide ceramic matrix containing about 10% of plutonium oxide as the 'fissile driver'. Th-MOX fuel promises higher safety margins than U-MOX due to higher thermal conductivity and melting point, and it produces U-233 as it operates rather than further plutonium (therefore providing a new option for reducing civil and military plutonium stocks). The irradiation test will run for around five years, after which the fuel will be studied to quantify its operational performance and gather data to support the safety case for its eventual use in commercial reactors.
Thor Energy is aiming to evaluate the operation of Th-MOX fuel in an advanced reduced-moderation BWR (RBWR). This reactor platform, designed by Hitachi Ltd and JAEA, should be well suited for achieving high U-233 conversion factors from thorium due to its epithermal neutron spectrum and flexible uranium-plutonium fuels in which high conversion or actinide destruction can be achieved. It is based on the ABWR architecture but has a shorter, flatter pancake-shaped core and a tight lattice to ensure sufficient fast neutron leakage and a negative void reactivity coefficient.
The so-called Radkowsky Thorium Reactor is a specific, heterogeneous ‘seed & blanket’ thorium fuel concept, originally designed for Russian-type LWRs (VVERs)6.Enriched uranium (20% U-235) or plutonium is used in a seed region at the centre of a fuel assembly, with this fuel being in a unique metallic form. The central seed portion is demountable from the blanket material which remains in the reactor for nine yearsf, but the centre seed portion is burned for only three years (as in a normal VVER). Design of the seed fuel rods in the centre portion draws on experience of Russian naval reactors.
The European Framework Program has supported a number of relevant research activities into thorium fuel use in LWRs. Three distinct trial irradiations have been performed on thorium-plutonium fuels, including a test pin loaded in the Obrigheim PWR over 2002-06 during which it achieved about 38 GWd/t burnup.
A small amount of thorium-plutonium fuel was irradiated in the 60 MWe Lingen BWR in Germany in the early 1970s. The fuel contained 2.6 % of high fissile-grade plutonium (86% Pu-239) and the fuel achieved about 20 GWd/t burnup. The experiment was not representative of commercial fuel, however the experiment allowed for fundamental data collection and benchmarking of codes for this fuel material.
Molten Salt Reactors: The Oak Ridge National Laboratory (USA) designed and built a thorium-based demonstration MSR using U-233 as the main fissile driver. The reactor ran over 1965-69 and operated at powers up to 7.4 MWt. The lithium-beryllium salt worked at 600-700ºC and ambient pressure. The R&D program demonstrated the feasibility of this system and highlighted some unique corrosion and operational issues that need to be addressed if constructing a larger pilot MSR.
There is significant renewed interest in developing thorium-fuelled MSRs. Projects are (or have recently been) underway in China, Japan, Russia, France and the USA.
It is notable that the MSR is one of the six ‘Generation IV’ reactor designs selected as worthy of further development (see information page on Generation IV Nuclear Reactors). The thorium-fuelled MSR variant is sometimes referred to at the Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor (LFTR). See subsection below.
An aqueous homogenous suspension reactor operated in the Netherlands at 1 MWth for three years using thorium in the mid-1970s. The thorium-HEU fuel was circulated in solution with continuous reprocessing outside the core to remove fission products, resulting in a high conversion rate to U-233.
Accelerator-Driven Reactors: A number of groups have investigated how a thorium-fuelled accelerator-driven reactor (ADS) may work and appear. Perhaps most notable is the ‘ADTR’ design patented by a UK group. This reactor operates very close to criticality and therefore requires a relatively small proton beam to drive the spallation neutron source. Earlier proposals for ADS reactors required high-energy and high-current proton beams which are energy-intensive to produce, and for which operational reliability is a problem.
Research Reactor ‘Kamini’: India has been operating a low-power U-233 fuelled reactor at Kalpakkam since 1996 – this is a 30 kWth experimental facility using U-233 in aluminium plates (a typical fuel-form for research reactors). Kamini is water cooled with a beryllia neutron reflector. The total mass of U-233 in the core is around 600 grams. It is noteworthy for being the only U-233 fuelled reactor in the world, though it does not in itself directly support thorium fuel R&D. The reactor is adjacent to the 40 MWt Fast Breeder Test Reactor in which ThO2 is irradiated, producing the U-233 for Kamini.
Fast breeder reactors (FBRs) play an ancillary role in India's three-stage nuclear power program (see subsection on India's plans for thorium cycle below) but do not themselves use thorium.
Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor
A development of the MSR concept is the Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor (LFTR), utilizing U-233 which has been bred in a liquid thorium salt blanket.g
Safety is achieved with a freeze plug which if power is cut allows the fuel to drain into subcritical geometry in a catch basin. There is also a negative temperature coefficient of reactivity due to expansion of the fuel.
The China Academy of Sciences in January 2011 launched an R&D program on LFTR, known there as the thorium-breeding molten-salt reactor (Th-MSR or TMSR), and claimed to have the world's largest national effort on it, hoping to obtain full intellectual property rights on the technology. The TMSR Research Centre apparently has a 5 MWe MSR prototype under construction at Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics (SINAP, under the Academy) with 2015 target operation. The US Department of Energy is collaborating with the Academy on the program.
India's plans for thorium cycle
With huge resources of easily-accessible thorium and relatively little uranium, India has made utilization of thorium for large-scale energy production a major goal in its nuclear power programme, utilising a three-stage concept:
·         Pressurised heavy water reactors (PHWRs) fuelled by natural uranium, plus light water reactors, producing plutonium.
·         Fast breeder reactors (FBRs) using plutonium-based fuel to breed U-233 from thorium. The blanket around the core will have uranium as well as thorium, so that further plutonium (particularly Pu-239) is produced as well as the U-233.
·         Advanced heavy water reactors (AHWRs) burn the U-233 and this plutonium with thorium, getting about 75% of their power from the thorium. The used fuel will then be reprocessed to recover fissile materials for recycling.
This Indian programme has moved from aiming to be sustained simply with thorium to one 'driven' with the addition of further fissile plutonium from the FBR fleet, to give greater efficiency. In 2009, despite the relaxation of trade restrictions on uranium, India reaffirmed its intention to proceed with developing the thorium cycle.
A 500 MWe prototype FBR under construction in Kalpakkam is designed to produce plutonium to enable AHWRs to breed U-233 from thorium. India is focusing and prioritizing the construction and commissioning of its sodium-cooled fast reactor fleet in which it will breed the required plutonium. This will take another 15-20 years and so it will still be some time before India is using thorium energy to a significant extent.
Developing a thorium-based fuel cycle
Thorium fuel cycles offer attractive features, including lower levels of waste generation, less transuranic elements in that waste, and providing a diversification option for nuclear fuel supply. Also, the use of thorium in most reactor types leads to significant extra safety margins. Despite these merits, the commercialization of thorium fuels faces some significant hurdles in terms of building an economic case to undertake the necessary development work.
A great deal of testing, analysis and licensing and qualification work is required before any thorium fuel can enter into service. This is expensive and will not eventuate without a clear business case and government support - abundant uranium is available.
Other impediments to the development of thorium fuel cycle are the higher cost of fuel fabrication h and the cost of reprocessing to provide the fissile plutonium driver material.
Nevertheless, the thorium fuel cycle offers enormous energy security benefits in the long-term – due to its potential for being a self-sustaining fuel without the need for fast neutron reactors. It is therefore an important and potentially viable technology that seems able to contribute to building credible, long-term nuclear energy scenarios.
UK view
In 2010 the UK’s National Nuclear Laboratory (NNL) published a paper on the thorium cycle, concluding for the short to medium term:
"NNL believes that the thorium fuel cycle does not currently have a role to play in the UK context, other than its potential application for plutonium management in the medium to long term and depending on the indigenous thorium reserves, is likely to have only a limited role internationally for some years ahead. The technology is innovative, although technically immature and currently not of interest to the utilities, representing significant financial investment and risk without notable benefits. In many cases, the benefits of the thorium fuel cycle have been over-stated."
Weapons and non-proliferation
The thorium fuel cycle is sometimes promoted as having excellent non-proliferation credentials. This is true, but some history and physics bears noting.
The USA produced about 2 tonnes of U-233 from thorium during the ‘Cold War’, at various levels of chemical and isotopic purity, in plutonium production reactors. It is possible to use U-233 in a nuclear weapon, and in 1955 the USA detonated a device with a plutonium-U-233 composite pit, in Operation Teapot. Yield was less than anticipated, at 22 kilotons. In 1998 India detonated a very small device based on U-233 called Shakti V. However, the production of U-233 inevitably also yields U-232 which is a strong gamma-emitter, as are some decay products, making the material extremely difficult to handle and also easy to detect.

Further Information
Notes
a. Neutron absorption by Th-232 produces Th-233 which beta-decays (with a half-life of about 22 minutes) to protactinium-233 (Pa-233) – and this decays to U-233 by further beta decay (with a half-life of 27 days). Some of the bred-in U-233 is converted to U-234 by further neutron absorption. U-234 is an unwanted parasitic neutron absorber. It converts to fissile U-235 (the naturally occuring fissile isotope of uranium) and this somewhat compensates for this neutronic penalty. In fuel cycles involving the multi-recycle of thorium-U-233 fuels, the build up of U-234 can be appreciable. [Back]
b. A U-233 nucleus yields more neutrons, on average, when it fissions (splits) than either a uranium-235 or plutonium-239 nucleus. In other words, for every thermal neutron absorbed in a U-233 fuel there are a greater number of neutrons produced and released into the surrounding fuel. This gives better neutron economy in the reactor system.. [Back]
c. MSRs using thorium will likely have a distinct ‘blanket’ circuit which is optimised for producing U-233 from dissolved thorium. Neutron moderation is tailored by the amount of graphite in the core (aiming for an epithermal spectrum). This uranium can be selectively removed as uranium hexafluoride (UF6) by bubbling fluorine gas through the salt. After conversion it can be directed to the core as fissile fuel. [Back]
d. Spallation is the process where nucleons are ejected from a heavy nucleus being hit by a high energy particle. In this case, a high-enery proton beam directed at a heavy target expels a number of spallation particles, including neutrons. [Back]
e. The core of the Shippingport demonstration LWBR consisted of an array of seed and blanket modules surrounded by an outer reflector region. In the seed and blanket regions, the fuel pellets contained a mixture of thorium-232 oxide (ThO2) and uranium oxide (UO2) that was over 98% enriched in U-233. The proportion by weight of UO2 was around 5-6% in the seed region, and about 1.5-3% in the blanket region. The reflector region contained only thorium oxide at the beginning of the core life. U-233 was used because at the time it was believed that U-235 would not release enough neutrons per fission and Pu-239 would parasitically capture too many neutrons to allow breeding in a PWR. [Back]
f. Blanket fuel is designed to reach 100 GWd/t burn-up. Together, the seed and blanket have the same geometry as a normal VVER-100 fuel assembly (331 rods in a hexagonal array 235 mm wide). [Back]
g. The molten salt in the core circuit consists of lithium, beryllium and fissile U-233 fluorides. It operates at some 700°C and circulates at low pressure within a graphite structure that serves as a moderator and neutron reflector. Most fission products dissolve or suspend in the salt and some of these are removed progressively in an adjacent radiochemical processing unit. Actinides are less-readily formed than in fuel with atomic mass greater than 235. The blanket circuit contains a significant amount of thorium tetrafluoride in the molten Li-Be fluoride salt. Newly-formed U-233 forms soluble uranium tetrafluoride (UF4), which is converted to gaseous uranium hexafluoride (UF6) by bubbling fluorine gas through the salt (which does not chemically affect the less-reactive thorium tetrafluoride). The volatile uranium hexafluoride is captured, reduced back to soluble UF4 by hydrogen gas, and finally is directed to the core to serve as fissile fuel. Protactinium – a neutron absorber – is not a major problem in the blanket salt. [Back]
h. The high cost of fuel fabrication is due partly to the high level of radioactivity that builds up in U-233 chemically separated from the irradiated thorium fuel. Separated U-233 is always contaminated with traces of U-232 which decays (with a 69-year half-life) to daughter nuclides such as thallium-208 that are high-energy gamma emitters. Although this confers proliferation resistance to the fuel cycle by making U-233 hard to handle and easy to detect, it results in increased costs. There are similar problems in recycling thorium itself due to highly radioactive Th-228 (an alpha emitter with two-year half life) present. [Back]
References
1. Data taken from Uranium 2011: Resources, Production and Demand, A Joint Report by the OECD Nuclear Energy Agency and the International Atomic Energy Agency, August 2012 (ISBN 9789264178038).
Australian data from
 Thorium, in Australian Atlas of Minerals Resources, Mines & Processing Centres, Geoscience Australia (see below under General sources) [Back]
2. 2. K.P. Steward, “Final Summary Report on the Peach Bottom End-of-Life Program”, General Atomics Report GA-A14404, (1978) [Back]
3. (i) W.J. Babyak, L.B. Freeman, H.F. Raab, “LWBR: A successful demonstration completed” Nuclear News, Sept 1988, pp114-116 (1988), (ii) J.C. Clayton, “The Shippingport Pressurized Water Reactor and Light Water Breeder Reactor” Westinghouse Bettis Atomic Power Laboratory WAPD-T-3007 (October 1993). [Back]
4. (i) S. Şahin, etal, “CANDU Reactor as Minor Actinide / Thorium Burner with Uniform Power Density in the Fuel Bundle” Ann.Nuc.Energy. 35, 690-703 (2008), (ii) J. Yu, K, Wang, R. Sollychin, etal, “Thorium Fuel Cycle of a Thorium-Based Advanced Nuclear Energy System” Prog.Nucl.Energy. 45, 71-84 (2004) [Back]
5. “German Brazilian Program of Research and Development on Thorium Utilization in PWRs”, Final Report, Kernforschungsanlage Jülich, 1988. [Back]
6. A. Galperin, A. Radkowsky and M. Todosow, A Competitive Thorium Fuel Cycle for Pressurized Water Reactors of Current Technology, Proceedings of three International Atomic Energy Agency meetings held in Vienna in 1997, 1998 and 1999, IAEA TECDOC 1319: Thorium fuel utilization: Options and trends, IAEA-TECDOC-1319. [Back]
General sources
Thorium based fuel options for the generation of electricity: Developments in the 1990s, IAEA-TECDOC-1155, International Atomic Energy Agency, May 2000
Thorium, in Australian Atlas of Minerals Resources, Mines & Processing Centres (www.australianminesatlas.gov.au), Geoscience Australia
Taesin Chung, The role of thorium in nuclear energy, Uranium Industry Annual 1996, Energy Information Administration, DOE/EIA-0478(96) p.ix-xvii (April 1997)
M. Benedict, T H Pigford and H W Levi, Nuclear Chemical Engineering (2nd Ed.), Chapter 6: Thorium, , p.283-317, 1981, McGraw-Hill(ISBN: 0070045313)
Kazimi M.S. 2003, Thorium Fuel for Nuclear Energy, American Scientist (Sept-Oct 2003)
W.J. Babyak, L.B. Freeman, H.F. Raab, “LWBR: A successful demonstration completed” Nuclear News, Sept 1988, pp114-116 (1988)
12th Indian Nuclear Society Annual Conference 2001 conference proceedings, vol 2 (lead paper)
Several papers and articles related to the Radkowsky thorium fuel concept are available on the Lightbridge (formerly Thorium Power) website (www.ltbridge.com)
Robert Hargraves and Ralph Moir, Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactors, American Scientist, Vol. 98, No. 4, P. 304 (July-August 2010)
Thor Energy website

Muzaffarnagar aftermath: a locked house. Over 10,000 displaced; 10,000 arrested.

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Muzaffarnagar aftermath: A locked house, a grieving family, police, paramilitary and army

  | Muzaffarnagar, September 11, 2013 | 22:05
Police at the entrance of Kawal village, Muzaffarnagar district. The village has seen heavy police presence since the August 27 triple murders. Photo: Vikram Sharma/India Today
Muzaffarnagar'
s orgy of communal violence began with three murders in the village of Kawal on August 27. 

Shahnawaz Qureishi, 25, a small-time cloth hawker from the village, was allegedly murdered by two youth -- Sachin, 24, and Gaurav, 18 -- for sexually harassing their sister. 

Watch the slideshow of the village

The two youngsters, who lived in Malikpur barely two kilometres away, were lynched by Muslim villagers of Kawal. 

The murders triggered off riots elsewhere in the district but the village of approximately 12,000 people has not known any disruption since August 27. 

A peace committee, formed in the village a week ago, now meets every day; a small group of villagers walks behind a youngster dressed as Lord Hanuman, signals the start of Ramlila festivities. 

The village, which is evenly divided among Hindus and Muslims, is calm. It is a calm enforced by personnel in khaki and olive green fatigues. 

Hundreds of police personnel stand guard even as military flag marches that kick up dust clouds through the narrow village bylanes. 

A Superintendent of Police from Ghaziabad sits in the control room that functions out of an abandoned house and engages the villagers in light banter over tea and biscuits. 

Out of sight from the policemen, villagers whisper about anti-social elements in their midst who brutally murdered the boys. 

Shahnawaz's family fled the village fearing retaliation around a week back. They haven't returned so far even to claim the Rs 10-lakh compensation being offered by the tehsildar. 

The family home, a single-room brick dwelling in Hussainpura mohalla on the village outskirts, stands locked. Work has also stopped on the two-room concrete home the Qureishis were building for themselves on an adjacent plot. Shahnawaz was a small cloth trader who frequently plied his wares in Bangalore and Chennai. 

Two kilometres down a narrow dirt path, the tiny village of  Malikpur silently mourns its dead sons. The incessant cawing of crows at sundown is the only sound. 

Bishan Singh, 45, a sugarcane farmer, lost his son Sachin and his sister's son Gaurav, a student of 12th standard. He now sits with other male members of his family on charpoys outside the family home, greeting visitors who drop by to offer condolences. Two policemen sit on chairs, AK-47s on their laps, fanning themselves in the enervating heat. There is only one happy face there. Sachin's son Gagan, 2, gurgles, laughs and darts around the charpoys. 

"He keeps asking for his father," says Bishan Singh. "I don't know what to tell the boy."

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/muzaffarnagar-aftermath-locked-house-policemen-uttar-pradesh/1/309364.html

Muzaffarnagar violence: Over 10,000 displaced; 10,000 arrested

Puja resumes at Kedarnath temple

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Kedarnath Mahadev’s worship resumes, kapat reopens after monsoon disaster

Priests along with temple committee members perform prayers at the Kedarnath temple in Uttarakhand on Wednesday.(PTI Photo)
A view of the Kedarnath temple where prayers resumed on Wednesday after 86 days following devastating floods and land slides. (PTI Photo)

http://youtu.be/roe7i1dTj28
Rawal Bhima Shankar Ling Shivacharya pray with other priest at Kedarnath Temple on Wednesday.(PTI Photo)
The deathly silence brooding over Kedarnath for the past 86 days since the June calamity hit Uttarakhand broke on Wednesday by the chanting of Vedic hymns as prayers resumed at the Himalayan shrine.The Puja began with a ‘shuddhikaran’ of the temple and ‘prayashchitikaran’ (atonement for prolonged suspension of prayers at the shrine). ‘Teerth’ purohits and Badrinath Kedarnath Samiti officials accompanied the chief priest as the prayers resumed. The resumption of prayers was however of limited nature, as no pilgrim was being allowed to visit the famed Himalayan temple. The date for resumption of Yatra to the temple will be decided in a meeting scheduled to be held on September 30.
http://www.niticentral.com/2013/09/11/kedarnath-mahadevs-worship-resumes-kapat-reopens-after-monsoon-disaster-131815.html?pid=5265#gallery

For the first time, tornado reported in Chennai

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In a first, tornado strikes briefly in Chennai

DC | S. Sujatha | 12th Sep 2013
The funnel shaped tornado witnessed at Uthandi on ECR in Chennai. DC
The funnel shaped tornado witnessed at Uthandi on ECR in Chennai. DC
Chennai: Robert Gagarin (58) of Uthandi  is not a habitual star-gazer. He just happened to be on the rooftop of his house in time to catch a glimpse of a tornado  in the distance.

The day was Thursday last and the time, 4.30 pm. “The sky turned pitch dark and I saw a circular cone shaped cloud formation for about 15 minutes. I clicked some pictures and also a video with my smart phone,” says an excited Robert.

 Met officials confirmed that he had indeed seen a tornado, the first one reported in Chennai. “Our officials, who were on their way to Puducherry too experienced some effects of this phenomenon but we confirmed it only after seeing the picture you sent us,” Dr Y. E. A. Raj, deputy director general of meteorology, Regional Meteorological Centre (RMC), Chennai, told the Deccan Chronicle.

According to  Robert, who lives near the coastline, heavy rain and winds measuring nearly 60 kmph  hit the area soon after he saw the tornado. “My friend, who was about 1.5 km away from my house, did not see anything unusual. So the tornado must have been completely localised,” he adds.

 Dr Raj too says there was a definite disturbance during the time mentioned on ECR Road. “We not only encountered intense weather, but our officials, who were travelling in a car to Puducherry  felt the vehicle being jolted to the left of the road. It may not have been an intense tornado as the funnel clouding did not extend to the ground, but  it was unmistakably a tornado,” he concludes.

A plea for caution from Russia -- Vladimir V. Putin in NYTimes OpEd

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OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

A Plea for Caution From Russia

What Putin Has to Say to Americans About Syria

Oliver Munday

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U.N. Rights Panel Cites Evidence of War Crimes by Both Sides in Syria (September 12, 2013)

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http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/12/opinion/putin-plea-for-caution-from-russia-on-syria.html?pagewanted=all

American policy-makers’ role in geopolitics

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American policy-makers’ role in geopolitics

In a situation which has made Vladimir Putin, President of Russia address the American people directly through an Oped in New York Times of Sept. 12, 2013, the lawmakers should realize that their powers to represent American citizens have been usurped by the Russian President.

This should be a sober moment for introspection by all policy-makers of America before they become irrelevant even on issues related to nation-building back home. They could end up facing people like Putin advising American people about what it means to engage in nation-building back home.

Every nation has a destiny which sets the goalposts for national leadership. The goalposts have to be shifted as changes occur in geopolitical situation in many parts of the globe.

A dramatic change had occurred in the wake of the Second World War. The change is the end of colonial regimes and declaration of independence and self-rule by many nations.

United Nations as an institution to provide a democratic forum for nations to deliberate on issues of common concern activate after the Second World War has not proved to be an effective mechanism for adjudicating tensions between and within nations. This is the one principal reason why America has tended to assume the role of a world policeman to set things right when some law and order situation arises.

Should America continue to play such a policeman’s role, despite its past record and experience in interventions in Vietnam, Iraq, Egypt, Libya and now attempted in Syria?

America today is beset by continuing, as yet unresolved problems created 5 years ago to the global financial system which was sundered by subprime mortgages, collateralized debt obligations, or credit default swaps. Lessons have not been learned to undo the nerds-driven derivatives from an artificially-inflated transactions of the marketplace. Despite American intervention in Afghanistan to fight the Taliban, there is no visible dent on the activities of Taliban which continue to pose a jihadi threat to the free-world, to America, in particular.

What really has gone wrong with American attempts at military intervention?

One view is that American military has become addicted to war and tends to get involved militarily to resolve issues which occur beyond the territorial jurisdiction of America.

Is this addiction the reason why the focus on nation-building at home gets murky or simply sidelined?

Is the choice a stark one between choosing America or choosing to selectively bomb Syria to teach President Assad a lesson and make him behave in the interest of Syrians?

Is it the responsibility of America to do nation-building in states outside of American soil?

Military interventions by America result in bizarre postures of no fly zones and laser-sharp remote-controlled missile strikes at targets selected by drones, citing the justification of ‘conscience of the world’, or ‘threat to the civilians’ or ‘breach of Red Line by using chemical weapons or weapons of mass destruction’.

The interventions also end up in bizarre outcomes like the handing over of Benghazi to Islamist militias who persecuted Christians.

When Sunnis use chemical weapons, America will end up bombing a Shiite state which used chemical weapons. Does it serve America’s national interest intervening in sectarian conflicts between Sunni and Shiite? If this is intended to weaken the political hold of Islam in the affairs of nation-states, America should state so in unequivocal terms, instead of hiding behind phrases such as ‘red line drawn by an imaginary world’.

Sure, America should get involved in nation-building back home. Is Afghanistan America’s home? Is Syria America’s home?

One way America can redefine her role in global polity is to promote regional groupings which will mirror United States of America. One such regional grouping could be an Indian Ocean Community of 59 nations along the Indian Ocean Rim. American can participate in and encourage the formation of IOC on the lines of the federating United States of America and create a United States of Indian Ocean.

Kalyan

Abject Silence of Indian media on Swamy Vs ‘The Hindu’

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Abject Silence of Indian media on Swamy Vs ‘The Hindu’ 

-- on illegal appointment of US citizen as Editor

Indian media is completely on a silent mode about Dr.Subramanian Swamy’s case in Delhi High Court, challenging ‘The Hindu’ newspapers’ decision to illegally appoint the US Citizen Siddharth Varadrajan as its Editor. 

No Main Stream Media entity published the Delhi High Court’s notice on Wednesday (September 11, 2013) sent to the newspaper and to Siddharth Varadarajan for explaining reasons for continuing illegally as Editor, The Hindu.
So many Supreme Court judgments and High Court judgments for the past few decades have clearly cited that Editor of an Indian publication should be a citizen of India and should be a resident. This means even a NRI can’t be appointed as Editor in Indian publications.  But ‘The Hindu’, the newspaper which always preaches ethics and roars on others’ violations of laws, simply ignored all these basic rules and conventions by appointing Siddharth Varadarajan as its Editor. It is nothing but utter disregard of the rule of law.
Left, pseudo Secularists and so called Liberals – as Siddharth Varadarajan positions into this tribe - make a curious claim that there was no mention on the word ‘Citizen’ in the archaic PRB Act of 1867, which is still in force after six decade of independence. They conveniently ignore that the word – "Citizen" came into existence only after the First World War. These jhollawallahs or big mouths hushes up the fact that so many regulations, rules, guidelines and even several judgments after the independence of India clearly insist that Editor of a publication in India should be a Citizen and must be a resident.
The new PRB Bill, approved by the Standing Committee of Parliament is still pending for introduction and being deliberated in Parliament. This new Bill clearly mandates the provision for Citizenship of the Editor as well as for the Publisher. Why is the UPA Government delaying the passage of the Bill? The simple answer is – nothing but Crony Capitalism. So many people from next generation belong to the newspaper owner families and are studying abroad and many have given up their Indian citizenship and opted for US or UK citizenships. So the current owners' lobby for the delay in passing the new Bill. And the Government sees this opportunity to buy unholy friendship with the media houses.
Some Left, Liberals and pseudo secularists say Siddharth is a fine journalist and Dr.Swamy is having some hidden agenda. If you praise Dr. Swamy for his crusades against corruption and then why not support his fights for undoing illegalities of media houses?  Of course most of the politicians keep silence on illegalities of media. This is simply the politico-media house nexus.  
Siddharth, fine journalist? He was the Deputy and Bureau Chief of ‘The Hindu’s New Delhi Bureau, when all the mega scams of UPA – 2G Spectrum and Coalgate – took place in 2007-2009 periods. Has this journalist or his New Delhi Bureau written a single word about these day light robberies of those days? When Chennai-based scams happen, ‘The Hindu’ where DMK controlled trade union rules the roost, glance shifts to Chile, Syria, Bolivia, Burkina Faso.
It is reported that the Registrar of Newspaper, who questioned the appointment of Siddharth Varadrajaran was silenced by none other than powerful Big Mouth Ministers of UPA.  Even one Chhattisgarh DGP, who came out in open was also silenced.  Some in UPA Cabinet advised the US Citizen Editor to apply for Indian Citizenship, when Dr.Swamy opted for filing the case. They promised fast track issue of Indian Citizenship!
Then why is Siddharth Varadarajan not taking Indian Citizenship, even after the assurance of UPA managers? The reason is simple. Is the luxury US Citizenship a matter of pride?
Dr.Swamy filed this petition in early 2013 in Delhi High Court. No media reported, though all have correspondents in Delhi High Court.  Ofcourse – one media critics website ‘News Laundry’, headed by a veteran journalist Madhu Trehan reported in detail :  http://www.newslaundry.com/2013/05/swamy-against-the-hindu/    

Other noted media critic websites like ‘Sans Serif’ and ‘The Hoot’ which usually report on all and sundry affairs of media world also prefer to keep mum on the issue. This was simply due to the so- called Liberal ideological baggage of Krishna Prasad, who runs ‘Sans Serif’ (The same man: Editor –in- Chief of Outlook Magazine) and Sevanti  Ninan, who runs the ‘The Hoot’. (The same person - who led the PR exercise of Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu in early 2000, when hundreds of farmers were committing suicide). Normally in those days, those who sang on Chandrababu Naidu’s development and tech savy image were allotted plots in plush Banjara Hills of Hyderabad.
I don’t know if Sevanti Ninan or any of her close relatives also got the same bumper land allotment.  Any way the book -‘Plain Speaking’ -she Co-Authored with Chandrababu Naidu on governance and reforms in Andhra Pradesh is nothing but a PR leaflet.  I hope she must also laugh loud, if she read this book now.
Allotment of land is always a tool used by governments in both Centre and State to lure the journalists. Now journalists are even accused of land grabbing.  The Hindu’s former Editor N Ram is facing land grabbing charges. Luckily, some media reported.  Sometimes good things happen in dark days.  This land grabbing case is about the prime land in the sea shore in Chennai East Coast Road. Incidentally, Finance Minister P Chidambaram’s family members are also facing the same allegations of land grabbing in the same plush locality.
As media Houses are hushing up the case in Delhi High Court, for the benefit of readers let me put below the prime points of Dr.Subramanian Swamy’s case against ‘The Hindu’ for illegally appointing a US Citizen as its Editor:

POINTS MADE BY Dr. SWAMY ON THE PIL AGAINST FOREIGN CITIZEN EDITOR of THE HINDU

                            In W.P.(C)  2986 of 2013 in Delhi High Court on 21.8.13
1.     The Order passed by the Hon’ble Bench of Delhi High Court on 8.5 13 refers. The matter has arisen because the Editor of The Hindu newspaper is admittedly a foreigner, a US-born citizen [p.47], not a citizen of India.
2.     India’s democracy is structured on four pillars: Legislature, Judiciary, Executive and Media. In the first three pillars, the Constitution requires that the members be citizens of India.
3.     For the fourth pillar, the media, whose membership is not prescribed by the Constitution, all statutes enacted by Parliament since Independence require, inter alia, the editor to be a citizen of India.
4.     In the case of TV & Cable visual media, and print newspapers which seek permission to receive foreign direct investment, require citizenship.
5.     Press Council Act which is a statute for constitute an oversight body for the media postulates citizenship for editor.
6.     For the print media which does require FDI, the presently applicable statute, the Press and Registration of Books Act [1867], was enacted in 1867 when there was no lawful concept of citizenship.
7.      Not until after end of World War I in 1919 was there a formal concept of citizenship and a passport issued for travel purposes.
8.     Therefore what is prescribed is the  term “ordinarily resident in India” in Section 1  r/w  the proviso to Section 5(8) of the Press and Registration of Books Act[1867].
9.     This Hon’ble Court has on my Writ Petition in the nature of a PIL framed the issue as: Whether the  term “ordinarily resident in India” in the said Sections of the Act is to be harmoniously constructed to be interpreted and mean that print media editor of the news paper that does not receive FDI has also to be a citizen of India.
10.                        A skeletal Counter Affidavit has been filed by the Respondent UOI which logically is neither here nor there. It evades the issue framed by this Hon’ble Court.
11.                         It fails to mention that the UOI has introduced a Bill No. 24 in Parliament in 2011 [p. 43]to repeal the said 1867 Act and to enact a new statute in which Clause 2 (c ) [ p. 46]  requires Indian citizenship for the print media editor.
12.                        The Standing Committee of Parliament in 2012 has already cleared the Bill for passage recommending  citizenship for the editor as in the Bill.
13.                        This Committee has a representation from all parties in both House.  Standing Committee approval, according to Rule 273 r/w 277 of the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business framed by Parliament , a Bill cleared by the Committee and reported to Parliament “ shall have  persuasive value and shall be treated as considered advice..” [Annexed]
14.                        Submission on the framed issue is, therefore, is that : Applying the principles of statutory interpretation, of purposive and harmonious construction, and/or following the   Doctrine of Casus Omissus, the said term “Ordinarily Resident” must be taken as inclusive of citizenship, for the following reasons:
15.                         First, the Respondent Union Government had introduced Bill to require citizenship,  which having cleared the crucial Standing Committee, is awaiting formal passage by Parliament.
16.                        In the meantime it is against public interest since we are in an election year, therefore to permit any further delay in terminating the appointment of the present foreign citizen as editor of The Hindu.
17.                        The Hon’ble Supreme Court [in (2013) 3 SCC 697 at para 14] has held that news items published in a newspaper “cause far–reaching consequences in an individual and country’s life.”
18.                        The Hon’ble Apex Court has also held that newspaper editorials have profound effect in national debates and in the formation of opinion of the voter in a parliamentary or any other election [See (2002) 6 SCC 670 para 16, and Indian Express case (1985)1 SCC 641}.
19.                        The editor is solely responsible for deciding what will and will not be published [op.cit., para    ].
20.                        Second, Articles 19(1)(a) and 19(2) of the Constitution will not extend to foreign citizens. An editor to be fearless, must have the secure cover of protection of fundamental rights under the Constitution, in particular the shield of Article 19(1)(a).
21.                        But only Indian citizens are entitled to this protection of Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution.
22.                        Moreover,  foreign citizen editors cannot be expected to be committed to the sovereignty, integrity and security of the Indian State as required under Article 19(2).
23.                         Hence,  the readers/subscribers’  Right  to Information and free expression, which is subject to First Amendment restrictions,  is prejudiced, when the editor,  the sole authority for selecting what will and will not be printed, is not a citizen of India.
24.                        Third, in 1954, the First Press Commission discussed the subject of foreign nationals as owners and of influence in the press [p.272], and viewed it “with disfavor”. As a consequence, in 1955, the Union Cabinet passed a Resolution which endorsed this view, and this Resolution holds the field today.
25.                        This is also the meaning of ordinarily resident for a voter in the Representation of Peoples Act 1950.
26.                        The law,  for the these reasons,  has therefore to be read down to mean that “ordinarily resident” means necessarily an Indian citizen, and who is also ordinarily resident of the country. 

Genetic links between India and Mesopotamia in Bronze Age Ancient Near East

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A maternal genetic link between ancient Mesopotamia and the Indian subcontinent

Press Release Medial University of Lodz, Poland

Dept. of Molecular Biology, Medical University of Łódź, Poland

Searching for the origin of four individuals living between the Early Bronze Age and the Roman Period in the middle Euphrates valley, Henryk W. Witas, PhD, a molecular biologist at the Medical University of Łódź, Poland, isolated and genotyped with his team the specimens’ mitochondrial DNA for changes indicating haplogroups and nuclear DNA for a few alleles. The remains were found and unearthed by JacekTomczyk, Ph.D., an anthropologist at the Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University of Warsaw, Poland. 

“Extremely well preservation of the DNA is probably a result of alkaline pH of the surrounding soil and deep deposition of the findings, as indicated prior to DNA isolation by high content of collagen in the samples. It allowed the Authors to isolate and analyze not only the Hypervariable Region I (HVR-I) sequence of all the studied individuals, but also to type mtDNA coding region and even chosen nuclear alleles in the case of one of the specimens.” says professor Witas.

The paper by Witas and colleagues, published today (12th September 2013) in PLOS ONE, contributes to the debate on the possibility, probable location in time and ways of human movements from the Indian subcontinent to Mesopotamia. The Researchers have found markers of M4b1, M49 and M61 haplogroups in mtDNA of people living in ancient Kar-Assurnasirpal (today Tell Masaikh) and Terqa (today Tell Ashara). The haplogroups likely arose more than 20 Kyrs ago in the region of the South Asia and are also present in today’s Himalaya, India and Pakistan. They are, however, absent in the modern population of Syria. The Authors anticipate that the analyzed remains from Mesopotamia belonged to people with genetic affinity to the Indian subcontinent, since the distribution of identified ancient haplotypes indicates a link with populations from the region of South Asia (Trans-Himalaya) as confirmed by the result of the median-joining network analysis. However, “only complete mtDNA genome sequencing would help to narrow down the geography and establish the precise origin of the studied individuals”, says Dr. Gyaneshwer Chaubey, co-author and a molecular biologist at the Estonian Biocenter, Tartu, Estonia.

According to the Authors, the fact that the studied individuals comprised of both males and a female, each living in a different period and representing different haplotypes, suggests that the nature of their presence in Mesopotamia was rather long-lasting than incidental. Thus, it is likely that they may have been descendants of migrants from much earlier times, who founded regional Mesopotamian groups like that of Terqa, a city constructed in the early Dynastic Period (early Bronze Age), at the time only slightly preceding the dating of two of the studied skeletons.

Although the Authors in their study identified neither the allele LCT-13910T coding for lactase persistence, delta F508 CFTR, the main allele responsible for cystic fibrosis phenotype, delta32 CCR5 protecting in moderns against HIV infection nor sequences responsible for the most common types of alfa- and beta-thalassemia in the region, they have proved for the first time ever that isolation of amplifiable ancient nuclear sequences from the remains deposited at the Near Eastern sites was possible.

“We will attempt to analyze the complete mtDNA along with a number of autosomal markers in order to fetch more information regarding ancient link which has been discontinued in populations living contemporarily around the Euphrates banks. Our current finding gives hope for conducting studies on ancient Mesopotamians at the population level”, says professor Witas.

The article is available at http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0073682

mtDNA from the Early Bronze Age to the Roman Period Suggests a Genetic Link between the Indian Subcontinent and Mesopotamian Cradle of Civilization

  • Henryk W. Witas mail,
  •  
  • Jacek Tomczyk,
  •  
  • Krystyna Jędrychowska-Dańska,
  •  
  • Gyaneshwer Chaubey,
  •  
  • Tomasz Płoszaj
  • Abstract


    Ancient DNA methodology was applied to analyse sequences extracted from freshly unearthed remains (teeth) of 4 individuals deeply deposited in slightly alkaline soil of the Tell Ashara (ancient Terqa) and Tell Masaikh (ancient Kar-Assurnasirpal) Syrian archaeological sites, both in the middle Euphrates valley. Dated to the period between 2.5 Kyrs BC and 0.5 Kyrs AD the studied individuals carried mtDNA haplotypes corresponding to the M4b1, M49 and/or M61 haplogroups, which are believed to have arisen in the area of the Indian subcontinent during the Upper Paleolithic and are absent in people living today in Syria. However, they are present in people inhabiting today’s Tibet, Himalayas, India and Pakistan. We anticipate that the analysed remains from Mesopotamia belonged to people with genetic affinity to the Indian subcontinent since the distribution of identified ancient haplotypes indicates solid link with populations from the region of South Asia-Tibet (Trans-Himalaya). They may have been descendants of migrants from much earlier times, spreading the clades of the macrohaplogroup M throughout Eurasia and founding regional Mesopotamian groups like that of Terqa or just merchants moving along trade routes passing near or through the region. None of the successfully identified nuclear alleles turned out to be ΔF508 CFTR, LCT-13910T or Δ32 CCR5.
    Figure 3. Identified haplotypes of studied individuals as seen from direct sequ
    Figure 4. Median joining network [28] of four individuals living in the middle

Terqa (Tell Ashara) with genetic links to Meluhha

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Terqa (Tell Ashara) on the right bank of middle Euphrates, Syria

See: http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/09/genetic-links-between-india-and.htmlGenetic links between India and Mesopotamia in Bronze Age Ancient Neast East


Meluhha may mean the lands of the Indian ocean. [J Reade "Commerce or Conquest"]
"Meluhha was certainly the most distant of the countries beyond the sea the list of its products which were embarked there is among the richest and most varied and comprises precious stones, (chalcedony, cornelian and lapis luzuli) copper, gold and other prized metals, ebony, the wood of sissoo, the gis-ab-be 'sea wood' (maybe mangrove) cane, peacocks and roosters. The texts also speak of ships, skilled sailors and sophisticated  inlaid furniture." [G Weisgerber "Dilmun a Trading Entrepot]
"...seafaring merchants from the distant lands of Dilmun, Meluhha and Maakan tied up at Akkads quay during Sargon's reign 2334-2279 BC. Copper was shipped directly from Maakan. During the reign of Gudea of Lagas, copper diorite and wood were delivered from Maakan and Meluhha delivered rare woods, gold *Tin* lapis Lazuli and carnelian to Lagas.There are no records indicating that ships from Meluhha docked in Sumeror that Sumerian seamen were themselves in Meluhha.""Tukulti-Ninurta refers to himself as 'King of the Upper and Lower Seas and ruler over Dilmun and Meluhha."
 [G Weisgerber "Dilmun a Trading Entrepot]
Mesopotamian carnelian, lapis lazuli, and gold beads, restored as a necklace, l. 14.3 cm, mid-third millennium BCE from Iraq, Kish, Mound A, Burial A51. Chicago, the Field Museum of Natural History, inv. no. 228533.
The gold 'Bactrian' did not originate in that region, but further east, possibly from the mountains of Dardistan (Vogelsang 1989: 169) to the north of Peshawar.
Examples of long-barrel carnelian cylinder beads from Chanhu-daro (after Mackay 1943: Pl. LXXXI) were discovered in Tello in contexts datable to the time of Gudea or the Ur III period.
Amongst the earliest evidence of Harappan carnelian in Mesopotamia15 are four 14-15-cm-long barrel-cylinder beads (Fig. XII. 7) from the Royal Cemetery at Ur ( Tosi 1980:450).
Indus valley seals have been found in East Arabia. A ceramic tripod which made Bronze in Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam starting in the 3rd millenium BC. Could the tin of Meluhha have come from Indonesia? “The Indonesians were sailors, crossing the Indian Ocean to settle Madagascar in the Bronze Age. The Persian Gulf, Gulf of Aden, Bay of Bengal, and Red Sea, along with the Indian Ocean were all together called the Erythrian Sea and people from the Erythrian Sea settled Sideon and Tyre; eventually becoming Phoenicans. Meanwhile, people from Indonesia moved through Melanesia to the Pacific and became Polynesians, so the two cultures Phoenicians and Polynesians are related.” (Steve Glines, https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/sci.archaeology/9KwZXeEJ_Bs)
Map showing the locations of the Molucca islands, a traditional center of clove cultivation, and Terqa, where cloves have been discovered in an Old Babylonian context, ca. 1700 BCE.
Tin is listed as coming with the copper from Meluhha in the south.
Meluhha in ancient cuneiform texts may be a reference for areas along the north coast of the Persian Gulf and extending east, possibly as far as Baluchistan. Magan was located near the straits of Hormuz and the peninsula of Ras Hamra (near present-day Muscat in Oman). In mid first millennium BCE, the location changes direction because Magan was designated as an area the other side of the Gulf upto Oman and Meluhha got a new reference to Egypt and Nubia. The ships  of Meluhha moored at the quay of Agade would have perhaps come  to meet on the horn of Africa with Egyptian ships heading for Punt. The rediscovery of this Bronze Age thalassocracy over the Indian Ocean and its long development toward the Arabian coastlands perhaps represents one of the most exciting perspectives to be opened up by archaeology, as M. Tosi notes. 
"The text may date back to 2300 BC and has come to us in a bilingual version in Summerian and Akkadian probably compiled 600 years later in Old Babylonian times Here is the Akkadian version according to H Hirsch"
MA Mw-lukh-kha MA
ma qan
Ma Dilmun
in gar-ri-im
si a-ga-de
ir-ku-us [M. Tosi "Early Maritime Cultures"]
"Dilun emerges as the trading power par excellence in the Gulf securing direct lines of supply from Meluhha and Maakan."
[C C Lamberg-Karlovsky "Death in Dilmun"]
"Sumers foremost copper producer now definitely associated with the rich copper bearing regions of Oman and to Meluhha."
"The acceptance of a possible pre-Akkadian date for at least some of the  Meluhha trade with Mesopotamia"
"Appears to suggest a possible Meluhha trade through the Arabian Gulf in pre- Akkadian times"
[E C I During Caspers "Animal Designs and Gulf Chronology"]
"Agum-kakrime II, the ninth king of the kasserites in Babylon, dated after 1600 BC speaks of importing eye stones from the land of Meluhha"
Terqa structures on a mound.
5 August 2011
Chambered tomb unearthed in Terqa, Syria
Team leader Jacek Tomczyk of Poland's Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University reports on two Bronze Age burials in a tomb from the ancient trade town of Terqa, a Mesopotamian archeological site in modern-day Syria.
     "The middle Euphrates valley was inhabited by the 'dimorphic society' of the nomadic and semi-nomadic pastoralists, who lived in the steppe, and by the agriculturalists who inhabited the river valley," Tomcyzk writes. "The nomads were identified (as) 'the wild and uncivilised peoples' - they came from the desert." "The tomb from Terqa consisted of two chambers with stone domes. The smaller chamber contained many luxury grave goods, including jars, plates and pieces of ancient jewellery. The artefacts were placed in an orderly manner, one upon another. Small animal bones and crushed ostrich eggshells indicate that this part was visited by people who left there some offerings. The other chamber was bigger and contained human skeletons," says the study. The twin-domed tomb is about 5 metres long, 3.5m wide and 1.8m high, and contained two skeletons - one of a woman and one of a man. "The man's skeleton is extremely heavy and large," says the study, which estimates the man died around the age of 45. Shoulder, back and upper arm bones look unusually thick, while his forearms and leg bones were "massive," says the study, all signs of a thickly-muscled fellow. He stood about 1.8m - quite tall for the Bronze Age. "Bronze parts of a coat and belt together with bronze weapon-blades were found on the right side of the hip." The dead man bore two healed cuts on his right upper arm. "The wounds are deep and long," says the study. "... the blow[s] must have been strong." The woman, who lived to at least 40, "was neither slim nor lightly built," says the study, showing signs of leg bone wear caused by long periods of squatting. She was about 1.6m - more typical for the time. The researchers succeeded in studying the maternal DNA of the man, finding he belonged to the "K" grouping, a family traced to the Near East from about 14,000 years ago, and South Asia even further back, about 53,000 years ago.
http://www.stonepages.com/news/archives/004452.html


Third millennium city wall remains - Area B Terqa.

Map of modern Syria, showing location of Terqa along Euphrates trade route.
Hematite duck weight (ca. 2 cm)
Carbonized spices found in a jar in the pantry room. These second millennium sices included cloves which were possibly traded from the Moluccas.

"In the pantry of a house belonging to an individual named Puzurum, dated by tablets to c. 1700 BCE or slightly thereafter, were found 'a handful of cloves...well preserved in a partly overturned jar of a medium size' (Buccellati 1983:19; cf. Buccellati and Kelly-Buccellati 1983:54)...cloves are native to Molucca islands off the coast of Indonesia and whether or not it was via India that they arrives in Mesopotamia, from which they were transhipped up the Euphrates to Syria, they are almost certainly of Moluccan origin (Reade 1986: 331)...no consensus exist on whether the word is of Sumerian (Hempel 1993: 53) or non-Sumerian (Parpola and Parpola 1975: 205-38) origin...Terqa cloves bear witness to the extroardinary range of Mesopotamia's contacts in the second millennium, even if they reached Syria via Harappan, Dilmunite, and/or Babylonian middle men." (Potts, Daniel T., 1996, Mesopotamian civilization: the material foundations, Cambridge University Press, p.270).
“Since 1976, the middle Euphrates site of Ashara, Syria, ancient Terqa, has been excavated by a team of archaeologists under the co -direction of Dr. Giorgio Buccellati and Dr. Marilyn Kelly-Buccellati. IIMAS – The International Institute for Mesopotamian Area Studies has been the catalyst…Ancient Terqa, modern Ashara, is located along the banks of the Middle Euphrates river. Bounded to the north by the Khabur plains and on the south by the flat, alluvial plains of Mesopotamia, the region surrounding the city is at the heart of the Fertile Crescent, and a natural bridge between the desert and the mountains, between the north and south…After the first ten seasons, the site has revealed indications of occupation dating back to the Fifth and Fourth Millennia, with a major sequence of cities occupying the tell in the Third and Second Millennia as well as a reduced occupation during the First Millennium…(The Ancient Citystate of Terqa, ca. 3000 BCE was) dominated by massive defensive rings surrounding the city – 60 acres of land surrounded by three concentric, solid masonry walls, 60 feet thick,with an additional 60 foot wide moat encircling the outer ring: these are extraordinary dimensions by any standard...  Immediately inside the walls, excavations have revealed industrial installations such as large ovens, kilns and storage facilities, and along one area, a number of Third Millennium burials…The Fifth Season at Terqa uncovered not one but four superimposed temples dedicateed to the Goddess of Good Health, Ninkarrak (the end of the 18th century BCE)…A surprising find was an elephant rib – not a tusk – lying on the floor of one of the service rooms, possibly implying the presence of live animals. Tablets were found near the cella inscribed with lists of offerings brought to the Temple, seal impressions which had been used to close the lids of jars bore inscriptions of her name, and one clay tablet preserved an ancient hymn to the “Mistress of the Abyss.” Finally, at the very end of the season, within a few feet of the altar, a small bag yielded the ancient Goddess’ jewels, her healing talismans. Thousands of precious stones-carnelians, agates, lapis lazuli, serpentine rock crystals and frit, shells and hematites, shaped into beads. Mostly geometrical in form, in an infinity of sizes and shapes. Some had been styled into little animals, ducks, frogs and dogs. After cleaning and stringing, the more than ten pounds of beads numbered over 6700, and stretched for meters. Along with this impressive array, eight Egyptian scarabs were found, indicating early Egyptian influence at the site…Tablets of his financial activities, mostly contracts of purchases and sales of land, include some involving loans from the Temple Treasury (relate to) Puzurum and give us insights into the administrative and banking procedures of the economy and the Temple…Contracts were signed at the left of each line by the witnesses to the contract, and they read like the “social registry” of Second Millennium Terqa, signifying that Puzurum had some pretigious associates during the reign of King Yadikh-Abu.

     The tablets themselves were small, pillow-like in shape and easily held in one hand. They were normally enclosed in an envelope of clay, sealed with cylinder impressions and additional inscriptions.Broken only in the case of a dispute over the terms of the agreement, or upon repayment of the loans due, the tablets were “supervised” by the Temple. When all terms had been completed, the “cashier” would purposely break the tablet and its envelope with a special tool which has left its mark clearly visible, and return the fragments to Puzurum… Since (Terqa) was at the hub of a large communication network which linked the arms of the civilized world, it was identifiably in contact with distant lands…A Hittite stamp seal was found next to an unpretentious child burial in the higher levels of Puzurum’s house. It represents a stylized hare, characteristic of Old Hittite seals from Anatolia, and may have been left behind by Hittite troops as they passed on their way to sack Babylon in 1595 BCE… A small but very important find reflecting the scope of Terqa’s international trade connections was indicated by the contents of a jar in the pantry of Puzurum-a few kernels of cloves. This spice was not known in the west before Romah times, and more significantly, is known to have been grown only in the distant far East on the Molucca Islands. Long distance trade routes to the Indian sub-continent probably followed the coastline to the East. That a middleclass private individual like Puzurum not only possessed this spice but used it for cooking indicates a high degree of trans-cultural absorption. 
http://www.iimas.org/Terqa.html
There are 550 cuneiform tablets from Terqa held at the Deir ez-Zor Museum.

The entire bead cache of the altar room. Here, the thousands of carved, semi-precious stones are strung for recording ease. They were, most likely, strung and buried in a cloth bag beneath the cella floor as a hiding place.

The undersides of several Egyptian-type scarabs found among the cache of beads.

Bronze saw with antler handle found in second millennium rubble shows the Phase I abandoned rooms of the Temple service quarter.

An inscribed sealed bulla and another dated tablet place the building to the reign of Shamshi-Adad (ca. 18th century BCE). The temple quarter was in the southern Khana period city.

The ancillary chamber in the service quarter during excavation. The two tables and stationary vessel are at center. The arched passage obstructed by a bench and damaged by pitting is at the top. The oven is partially visible at the far right. The brick platform was perhaps the place where the scribes knelt to shape tablets from the clay stored in an adjacent jar.

1. Styone, tripodic offering bowl from the Temple of Ninkarrak. 2. Shallow, ceramic offering bowls of The temple to Dagan, the god of grain and Ninkarrak, the goddess of good health.

Dagan appears rarely in Mesopotamian mythology, he is mentioned in connection with the senior deity An in the Old Babylonian (early 2nd millennium BCE) versions of the myth of Anzu, and in the Neo-Assyrian (early 1st millennium BCE) version he makes a speech recounting the deeds of Ninurta (Crowell 2001: 39-40). In other cases Dagan is said to keep with him the seven children of the underworld god Enmešarra, and this netherworld aspect to Dagan is possibly supported by the temple built by Šamši-Adad I (ca. 1808-1776 BCE) at Terqa called the é-kisiga "temple of the funerary offerings" (Black and Green 1998: 56)… A possible etymology of the name Dagan from the West Semitic/Ugaritic root dgn, which can be translated as 'grain', and the Hebrew dāgōn, an archaic word for 'grain' (Black and Green 1998: 56), has tempted some scholars to assume that he played a role in vegetation/fertility, which might be confirmed by his son's, the West Semitic deity Ba'al, role as a vegetation deity (Black and Green 1998: 56)… While Dagan is recorded as the father of the west Semitic deity Ba'al at Ugarit, Ba'al is also known as the son of El, and some scholars, therefore, have suggested a syncretism of Dagan and El (Dietrich 1976: 1.2 I 18-19 and 1.3 IV 48-53). Others have suggested a link in function and syncretism between Dagan and Ba'al - both having the attributes of a 'storm god' or a link to vegetation (Crowell 2001: 64). Pantheons should not be viewed as static or monolithic; the city of Ugarit was cosmopolitan, complex and interactive, and the Ugaritic pantheon necessarily should be understood as highly complex with multiple and competing rituals, myths and comprehensions (Crowell 2001: 63-64)… In Mesopotamia the earliest textual references to Dagan come from the Royal Inscriptions of Sargon (2334-2279 BCE) and Naram-Sin (2254-2218 BCE). From this period Dagan also appears as atheophoric element TT  in personal names, e.g., Pu-Dagan, on the Maništušu (2269-2255 BCE) Obelisk (Crowell 2001: 35). In the Ur III period (2112-2004 BCE), the personal name evidence increases across Mesopotamia, and is prevalent in the Middle Euphrates region (Singer 2000: 221; Crowell 2001: 63-64). Dagan was an important deity in this period, he appears in the contemporary god and offering lists, and is commonly attested in the records from Puzriš-Dagan (the administrative hub of the Ur III period located near Nippur) and at Nippur itself (Crowell 2001: 36)… Dagan's relevance to the middle Euphrates is found throughout the 2nd millennium. The Code of Hammurabi (1792-50 BCE) names him as the protector of the people of Tuttul, and many of the individuals known from this area have names involving the element Dagan (Crowell 2001: 37-39). At Mari in the early second millennium, Dagan appears in a variety of texts, such as in the letters, god and offering lists, and administrative tablets. Yahdun-Lim (ca. 19th century BCE) declares Dagan as the deity who gave him kingship, while Yasmah-Addu (ca. 1795-1776 BCE) describes himself as the "Governor of Dagan" (Crowell 2001: 56)… From later periods of Mesopotamia Dagan is less well attested, but he continues to appear in personal names, god and offering lists, and in connection with An, e.g. Aššurbanipal (668-627 BCE) describes himself as 'beloved of Anu and Dagan', but the latter may have become a fossilised literary phrase (Crowell 2001: 40 and 47). He is still a deity of some consequence, however, for, Dagan makes a speech recounting the deeds of Ninurta in the Neo-Assyrian Mytho of Anzu, and within the temple ofAššur there was a chapel to Dagan built by Shalmanser V (726-722 BCE) (Crowell 2001: 46-47)… The prominence of Dagan on the eastern Mediterranean of the first millennium BCE comes mainly from the Hebrew Bible and the Second Temple literature, which associate Dagan (Heb. Dāgōn) with the temples of the Philistines. Recent work, however, has suggested that the role and position of Dagan may not be so definite. While Dagan is mentioned in the pantheon and sacrificial lists from Ugarit (Ras Shamra) and he does occur as a theophoric element in some local personal names, he is not well attested in the Levantine mythological literature…A statue of Dagan is mentioned in the zukru festival at Emar (Crowell 2001: 44-45)… In syllabic texts the name of Dagan is usually spelled dDa-gan, but other attested spellings includedDa-ga-an. There have been some suggestions that there may have been logographic writings for the name of this deity, e.g. dKUR, and dBE, but the reading of these as Dagan is not certain (Crowell 2001: 32). http://oracc.museum.upenn.edu/amgg/listofdeities/dagan/
Dagan in Online Corpora

Flowers that Have Changed the World of Food # 3: Cloves

Posted on October 24, 2012
“And somewhere near India is the island containing the Valley of the Cloves.  No merchants or sailors have ever been to the valley or have seen the kind of tree that produces cloves:  its fruit, they say, is sold by genies . . . the islanders feed on them, and they never fall ill or grow old.”
Summary of Marvels  (Ibrahim ibn Wasif-Shah, ca. 1000 CE)
From Indonesia’s Moluccas (Maluku) Islands to the rest of the world come the tiny but powerful flowerbuds we know as cloves.  More accurately, cloves are flowerbuds from theSyzygium aromaticum tree that are picked before opening and dried in the sun until they resemble the little reddish-brown batons used in most of the world’s cuisines.  Mentioned in the Indian Ramayana by the 5th or 4th century BCE (but possibly as early as the 10th Century BCE) and in later Sanskrit medical texts (Charaka Samhita) from the 1st Century BCE wherein they were recommended along with nutmeg to freshen the breath, these little blasts of bittersweet peppery flavor that we know today for their ability to energize other spices was first used for its aroma and as a medicinal ingredient.* **

Cloves Dried and in Flower
Maluku natives and other Indonesians smoked cloves and used them to treat stomach ailments, but did not use cloves in cooking.  These medicinal and aromatic uses were exported as the clove trade began in antiquity.  The Han Chinese used it as a breath freshener to mask the scent of tooth decay and halitosis and used cloves in perfumes and incense.  Additional medicinal uses in China and India included chewing cloves as a dental anesthetic or using an external rub of clove oil as a general analgesic or to lessen the pain of rheumatism.
Aromatic and Medicial Uses of Cloves
It is unclear when cloves started to be used as a culinary spice.  It is used in modern five-spice powders and garam-masalas, but there is little but unreferenced and contradictory information about the antiquity of its use in these culinary mixtures.  In the west, by the time of Pliny the Elder, the clove was still used as an aromatic perfume (NH 12.15), and there is also no mention of the culinary use of cloves in the 4thcentury ACE Cooking and Dining in Imperial Rome.  In the 6th and 7thcentury Byzantine writings of Kosmas Indicopleustes and Paulus Aegineta, cloves are still used for their scent and clove oil used topically as medicine.
There are intermediate uses of cloves as both medicine and culinary spice in 9th Century Europe at the Carolingian monastery of St. Gall in Switzerland, where monks used cloves to season their fasting fish (Pharmaceutical Journal and Transactions, 1877; viii, 121) along with pepper and cinnamon and several other indigenous plants and herbs.  In the 10thCentury, Andalusian traveller Ibrâhîm ibn Ya`qûb notes that the burghers of Mainz (Germany) used cloves to season their food.
Ingredients for Baharat
Also in the 10th Century, it appears in The Book of Dishes by Ibn Nasr ibn Sayyar al-Warraq, listed as an aromatic along with musk, ambergris, and rosewater.  In this 10th Century tome, it is used along with purslane in a peach drink and in a relish of crumbs, raisins, vinegar and spices.
By the 13th Century, the acceptance of cloves as a culinary spice is widespread. In the 13th Century Andalusian Cookbook translated by Charles Perry, cloves are used inAhrash, a type of lamb-burger,Mirkâs a cheese-based sausage; Sweetened Mukhallal a meat stew topped with beaten eggs; Madhûna, a baked chicken dish, a stuffed lamb breast; and an egg-based sausage, as well as several other dishes.
Also in the 13th Century, in the Book of Dishes by al-Baghdadi, cloves are used in the recipeHummadiyya to flavor meatballs and the broth they cook in along with cinnamon, coriander, ginger, and pepper.

Although I cannot yet prove my suspicions, my intuition tells me that that Arabs might have been the first to use cloves as a culinary spice and that this was spread to Europe with the conquest of Andalusia and Catalonia in 711 and throughout the known Islamic World during the Abbasid Caliphate, beginning in 750.
Called kutakaphalah in Sanskrit, qaranful in Arabic or karyphyllon in ancient Greek (as well as cengkeh in North Moluccan Malay), it is now hard to imagine the culinary world without cloves.  What would any of the eastern Asian five-spice powders be without cloves, or the subcontinental garam-masalas, not to mention Arab baharat, Moroccan Ras-el-hanout, Tunisian gâlat dagga and Ethiopian berbere?  Thailand’s Massuman Curry is also clove laden as are the many spice rubs used on kebabs in central and western Asia, and cloves are a major constituent in my favorite Central Asian spice tea bal.


References
  • Crowell 2001, "The development of Dagan".
  • Feliu 2003The god Dagan in Bronze Age Syria.
  • Gelb, J., 1987, "Makkan and Meluhha in Early Mesopotamian Sources," Revue d'Assyriologie 64 (1979) 1ff.
  • Heimpel, W. 1987, "Das Untere Meer," Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie 77 
    (1987) 22-91 
  • Hilgert 1994, "Erubbatum im Tempel des Dagan".
  • Michalowski, Piotr, 1988, "Magan and Meluhha Once Again," 
    Journal of Cuneiform Studies 40 (1988) 156-64
  • Parpola, A. and Parpola, S., 1975, On the relationship of the Sumerian toponym Meluhha and Sanskrit mleccha. StOr 46 (1975): 205-38.
  • Pettinato and Waetzoldt 1985, "Dagan in Ebla und Mesopotamien".
  • Singer 2000, "Semitic Dagān and Indo-European *Dhheĝhhom".
Adam Stone, 'Dagan (god)', Ancient Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses, Oracc and the UK Higher Education Academy, 2013 [http://oracc.museum.upenn.edu/amgg/listofdeities/dagan/]


Source: Liggett, Renata M., 1982, Ancient Terqa and its temple of Ninkarrak: the excavations of the Fifth and sixth seasons. http://128.97.6.202/tq/EL-TQ%5CLigett_1982_Ancient_Terqa_and_Its_Temple_-_NEASB_19.pdf

Assam floods. SoniaG UPA, announce National Water Grid, interlink rivers as directed by SC. Move floodwaters to Kanyakumari.

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Assam floods: 4 lakh affected, Brahmaputra flowing above danger mark


By Niticentral Staff on September 12, 2013
Assam floods: 4 lakh affected, Brahmaputra flowing above danger markWith the Brahamputra river flowing above the red mark, the siutaion in Assam has worsened. More than 4 lakh people have been affected by floods. Life in Kaziranga National Park home to the famous one-horned rhinoceros and Pobitra wildlife sancutires was most affected.
At least 600 villages were affected in the districts of Bongaigaon, Barpeta, Chirang, Dhemaji, Hailakandi, Jorhat, Kamrup, Golaghat, Lakhimpur, Morigaon, Nagaon, Nalbari and Sonitpur where vast tracts of of human habitation and farm land overrun by the surging waters, official sources said.
Huge area in Burapahar, Bagori and northern parts of Agratoli Ranges were under water with animals taking shelter on high platforms within the Park and in neighbouring Karbi Anglong district,the sources said.
Assam: 4 lakh people hit by floods,Brahmaputra flowing above danger markSimilar was the situation in Pobitora where 90 per cent of its 38.8 sq km area were inundated and the rhinos along with other animals taking shelter on buffer zones there. The water level of the Brahmaputra is flowing above the danger level in the world’s largest river island Majuli,Kamalabari,Nematighat,Jhanjimukh and Dhubri,the sources added.
According to the Central Water Commission report,the Brahmaputra was flowing above the danger mark at Nematighat, Goalpara and Dhubri,while Dhansiri was flowing above the red mark at Numaligarh in Golaghat.
(With Inputs from Agencies)

Assam's Majuli and Kaziranga worst affected in floods, say officials

GuwahatiAt least 10 districts of Assam were reeling under flood water with the Asia's largest river island Majuli and the Kaziranga National Park being the worst affected, officials said.

Rising water of the Brahmaputra has inundated vast tracts of land in Kaziranga's Burapahar, Bagori and northern parts of Agratoli.

The situation in the world's largest island was also grim with the water level of the Brahmaputra flowing above the danger level at Majuli, Kamalabari, Nematighat and Jhanjimukh affecting over 45 villages with an estimated population of 25,000.
Vast areas of agricultural land have been inundated with severe scarcity of drinking water reported from most of the villages.

A 10-member team from the State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) was camping at Majuli island to conduct rescue operations in the villages submerged during the third wave of flood this year.

Nearly four lakh people have been affected in 28 revenue circles and 615 villages in the 10 districts - Bongaigaon, Chirang, Dhemaji, Jorhat, Golaghat, Lakhimpur, Morigaon, Nagaon, Nalbari and Sonitpur.

At least 77 relief camps have been set up in the affected districts with the district administration providing relief, the officials said.
Published: September 9, 2013 18:37 IST | Updated: September 9, 2013 18:39 IST

Assam reels under floods, Majuli and Kaziranga affected

PTI
The photo shows villagers moving to a safer place in a boat at a flooded village near Kaziranga National Park on September 7. File Photo: PTI
The photo shows villagers moving to a safer place in a boat at a flooded village near Kaziranga National Park on September 7. File Photo: PTI
At least 10 districts of Assam were reeling under flood water with the Asia’s largest river island Majuli and the famed Kaziranga National Park being the worst affected, officials said today.
Rising water of the Brahmaputra has inundated vast tracts of land in Kaziranga’s Burapahar, Bagori and northern parts of Agratoli with three animal casualty reported.
Two deer were knocked down by speeding vehicles in Harmoti area when they were on way to the highlands, while an elephant drowned in the flood waters in Bagori range.
The situation in the world’s largest island was also grim with the water level of the Brahmaputra flowing above the danger level at Majuli, Kamalabari, Nematighat and Jhanjimukh affecting over 45 villages with an estimated population of 25,000.
Vast tracts of agricultural land have been inundated with severe scarcity of drinking water reported from most of the villages.
A 10—member team from the State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) was camping at Majuli island to conduct rescue operations in the villages submerged during the third wave of flood this year.
According to the Central Water Commission report, Brahmaputra was flowing above the danger mark at Nematighat, Tezpur, Guwahati, Goalpara and Dhubri, while Dhansiri was flowing above the red mark at Numaligarh in Golaghat and the Jiadhol in Sonitpur while the Puthimari and Beki in Barpeta.
Nearly four lakh people have been affected in 28 revenue circles and 615 villages in the 10 districts — Bongaigaon, Chirang, Dhemaji, Jorhat, Golaghat, Lakhimpur, Morigaon, Nagaon, Nalbari and Sonitpur.
Altogether 77 relief camps have been set up in the affected districts with the district administration providing relief, the officials said. 
Fresh floods affect Jorhat district in Assam, 25,000 families hit Sep 9, 2013

RJorhat (Assam): Water level of the Brahmaputra river was flowing above the danger level at several places affecting more than 45 villages in Assam’s Jorhat district, official sources said today. The water was flowing above the danger level at Majuli, Kamalabari, Neematighat and Jhanjimukh with over 45 villages with population of 25,000 families affected. Representational image. PTI A ten member team from the State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) arrived at Majuli island to conduct rescue operations in the villages submerged during the third wave of flood this year. The team arrived with three speed motor boats, rubber boats, lifesaving jackets and other life saving gadgets etc. The district administration today distributed relief food materials to the affected families following the sudden rise in the water level since Friday last. Meanwhile, link between Upper and Lower Majuli has been severed due to the rise in the water level and fresh areas being submerged. The affected villages in Nematighat are Kokila, Upper Kokila, Kyoimari, Bhitor Kokila, Jhanjimukh Kumar village, Jhanjimukh Mising village and Dyne. PTI ALSO SEE 15 districts of Assam, Arunachal Pradesh hit by flooding, torrential rains Assam flood situation remains grim, 13 districts hit Bihar flood toll rises to 201 RELATED VIDEOS Assam floods: Why PM's Rs 500 cr is too little, too late Assam floods leave nearly 600 animals dead in Kaziranga Death toll from Assam tragedy crosses 100, likely to rise further

15 districts of Assam, Arunachal Pradesh hit by flooding, torrential rains Sep 9, 2013

Guwahati: Lakhs of people have been hit in at least 15 districts of Assam and Arunachal Pradesh by floods caused by torrential rains in the last few days, an official bulletin said. Flash floods have affected over three lakh people in Assam’s 10 districts of Jorhat, Dibrugarh, Bongaigaon, Dhemaji, Lakhimpur, Nagaon, Nalbari, Sivsagar, Sonitpur and Tinsukia district, said the bulletin prepared by the Assam State Disaster Management Authority. The bulletin said 36 relief camps have been set up by the district authorities for the flood-hit. Representational image. PTI The officials of the Central Water Commission warned that the Brahmaputra river and three of its tributaries – Dhansiri, Jiadhal, Puthimari – and the Beki river were still flowing above the danger mark at several places of the state. In neighbouring Arunachal Pradesh, at least five districts were affected by floods in the last few days. Chief minister Nabam Tuki Saturday made an aerial survey and visited the flood-hit areas of Changlang, Lohit, Upper and Lower Dibang Valley and East Siang districts. The chief minister announced an amount of Rs.2.5 crore for emergency protection works in all the flood-hit areas and instructed the chief secretary to release the fund immediately. Official sources in the Arunachal Pradesh said that the rising water level of the Noa-Dihing and the Siang rivers had caused the floods.
http://www.firstpost.com/india/15-districts-of-assam-arunachal-pradesh-hit-by-flooding-torrential-rains-1094049.html
Assam floods 2012

Muzaffarnagar fire spreads: AK 47 cartridges recovered in Baghpat

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Muzaffarnagar fire spreads: AK 47 cartridges recovered in Baghpat


By Niticentral Staff on September 12, 2013
Muzaffarnagar fire spreads: AK 47 cartridges recovered in Baghpat
Following reports of sporadic clashes on Tuesday and Wednesday between people of two communities in Kirthal village under Ramala police station of Baghpat district, police launched search operations in which AK 47 cartridges have been recovered.
This has shocked the top brass of UP administration as well as the intelligence agencies. The speculation that such a dangerous fire arms have been procured by some people to be used in the communal clash has pushed the alarm bell to the echelons of the State administration.
Police have recovered the cartridges from the house of Rozuddin, a resident of Kirthal village which had seen stone pelting among the people of two communities on Wednesday following firing on Tuesday evening.
Suspecting presence of the deadly arms in his house or in the vicinity, police searched the whole area but to no avail. Police also recovered cartridges of 9 mm pistols, countrymade firearms besides many sharp weapons.
Speaking on this, CO Rajesh Sonkar said that the matter regarding who procured the cartridges is being investigated.
It has been also reported that the police investigation and search operation has been stopped midway. According to police sources, they had instructions from above to do so.
(with inputs from agencies)
http://www.niticentral.com/2013/09/12/baghpat-clashes-administration-in-shock-after-recovery-of-ak-47-rifels-132159.html

Growth of agriculture sector - NaMo's vision. NaMO, make National Water Grid happen during your first term as PM.

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Kudos to CM Narendra Modi for articulating his correct perception of the importance of growth in agricultural sector for a developed India.

A National Water Grid can be established in 5 years' time, given the roadmap detailed in Hon'ble SC's directive to Govt. of India.

Interlinking of rivers will be the centre-piece of the Grid which should reach out to everyone of 6.5 lakh villages of India with assured tap water in every household.

The mitigation of the devastating effects of virtually annual floods in the northeast region of the nation will be a salutary component of the Grid providing new developmental potential to the NE region.

Interlinking based on moving flood waters of Brahmaputra to all rivers south of Vindhyas upto Kanyakumari will result in an additional 9 crores of wet land with assured irrigation and 24x7 availability of irrigation which will provide options to the farmers to go for 3 annual crops and more than double agricultural production of the nation. We have the potential to feed the world thanks to the rich alluvial soil of India's land requiring only water to every nook and corner of the land.

If these 9 crores of addl. wet land can be distributed to 9 crore landless families, the benefit of land ownerhip will directly reach 45 crore Indians. The multiplier effect created by the canal, tanks, reservoirs network linked with ground-water and desalinated sea water or saline water bodies will be phenomenal and catapult the nation to abhyudayam and ensure increase in the purchasing power of farm workers dependent upon agriculture. Every village can be developed through Panchayat Raj empowerment to attain urban facilities of health care, infrastructure and education.

More power to you, NaMo. Promise to make the National Water Grid happen in the first term of your office as Prime Minister of the nation.

Kalyanaraman

CM shares his vision for growth of agriculture sector during valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit 

Narendra Modi addresses valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit

We should dream of fulfilling the world’s stomach: Narendra Modi

CM shares his vision for growth of agriculture sector

Shri Modi calls for holistic water management to help our farmers

Interlinking of river water grid is what we as a nation must think about in the coming days: Narendra Modi

Shri Modi speaks of integrating the youth of the nation, especially in rural areas, in agriculture: Narendra Modi

On the evening of Tuesday 10th September 2013 Shri Narendra Modi addressed the valedictory session of the Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit at Mahatma Mandir in Gandhinagar. Shri Modi said that we should dream of filling the world’s stomach and shared his vision on the growth of agriculture sector.
Shri Modi stressed on holistic water management that can help our farmers. He said that while some parts of our nation face problems due to abundant water, the other parts face problems because they do not get much water and this is what holistic water management could solve. He recalled that when Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee was the Prime Minister, the Government was working on a dream of integrating the rivers. Shri Modi shared that in Gujarat, the Narmada has been integrated with over 20 rivers and a prime example is that the water flowing in the Sabarmati is actually water of the Narmada river! He opined that such things can be done on a bigger scale across the nation. “Interlinking of river water grid is what we as a nation must think about in the coming days,” stated the Chief Minister.
Valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit
Likewise, Shri Modi talked about the importance of wastewater treatment and that if they reach the farmers, it can remove tension between the villages and the cities.
The Chief Minister called for integrating the youth, especially the rural youth of the nation into agriculture. He recalled his visit to an agriculture University where he noticed that out of 35 farmers he was honouring, about 25-28 were around the age of 30. He noted that changes in agriculture would help the young farmers immensely and added that it is not essential that the young farmers face the same problems as their previous generations did.
In his speech, Shri Modi also drew focus on combining agriculture with allied activities be it poultry farming, fisheries, agro-forestry etc. He also talked about seaweed cultivation in the coastal areas and the steps Gujarat has taken to promote the same. He even stressed on the importance of agro marketing linkages to help the farmer.
Shri Modi said that there are a lot of PHDs in agriculture and there is a lot of research in agriculture but that research must go into helping someone.Thus, he called for ‘lab to land’ approach and also called for compiling together all the research done on agriculture so that it can help the concerned people on the ground. Shri Modi spoke about strengthening financial networks for the farmers.
Valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit
Referring to the opposition from vested interest groups who questioned the Gujarat Government’s decision to award progressive farmers from other states Shri Modi said, “Today some have questioned why Modi is giving Rs. 51,000 to farmers of other states. But, this nation is one. Do we not owe it to farmers of other states? In times of drought is it not farmers of other states who help us? Do we not thank the farmer, wherever he or she is, who fills our stomachs? We gain so much due to our farmers. No divisions must be made among farmers. We need to unite and integrate. May this land be Sujalam Sufalam.” Shri Modi pointed that while there is news of states fighting over water, Gujarat gladly gave Narmada water to Rajasthan when the state required it. “We have to help each other in this nation and that is when he will succeed,” said Shri Modi.
He also thanked the participants for attending the 2-day summit and apologized if there was any visitor faced any difficulty. Shri Modi also invited people to participate in the next edition of the Summit.
The session was attended by Cabinet Ministers of Gujarat including Finance Minister Nitinbhai Patel, Revenue Minister Anandiben Patel, Forest Minister Ganpatbhai Vasava, Sports Minister Ramanlal Vora and Ministers of State. The Agriculture Minister of Chhattisgarh attended the programme. Also present was Agriculture Secretary, Government of India Shri Ashish Bahuguna and Dr. Ayappan.
Valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit
Valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit
Valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit
Valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit
Valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit
Valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit
Valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit
Valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit
Valedictory session of Vibrant Gujarat Global Agriculture Summit

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