Sunday 16 August 2015

Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna 2015 and Arjuna Awards 2015

Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports
(14-August, 2015 18:45 IST )Tennis star Sania Mirza. Sania’s name was on Friday officially approved for the coveted Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna award,



Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna and Arjuna Awards are given every year to recognize and reward excellence in sports. Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Award is given for the spectacular and most outstanding performance in the field of sports by a sportsperson over a period of four years immediately preceding the year during which award is to be given.  Arjuna Award is given for consistently outstanding performance for four years preceding the year of award.   
           
A large number of nominations were received for these awards this year, which were considered by the Selection Committee headed by Mr. Justice V.K. Bali, former Chief Justice of Kerla High Court and consisting of eminent sportspersons and sports administrators. 
                                                     
Based on the recommendations of the Committee and after due scrutiny, the Government has approved to confer Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna and Arjuna Awards for 2015 upon the following sportspersons:

i)         Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ranta 2015

S. No.
Name of the sportsperson
Discipline
1
Ms. Sania Mirza
Tennis


(ii)        Arjuna Awards 2015

S. No.
Name of the sportsperson
Discipline
1
Naib Subedar Sandeep Kumar
Archery
2
Ms. M.R. Poovamma
Athletics
3
Mr. Kidambi Srikanth Nammalwar
Badminton
4
Mr. Mandeep Jangra
Boxing
5
Mr. Rohit Sharma
Cricket
6
Ms. Dipa Karmakar
Gymnastic
7
Mr. Sreejesh P.R.
Hockey
8
Mr. Manjeet Chhillar
Kabaddi
9
Ms. Abhilasha Shashikant Mhatre
Kabaddi
10
Mr. Sawarn Singh
Rowing
11
Mr. Anup Kumar Yama
Roller Skating
12
Mr. Jitu Rai
Shooting
13
Shri S. Sathish Kumar
Weightlifting
14
Mr. Bajrang
Wrestling
15
Ms. Babita Kumari
Wrestling
16
Ms. Yumnam Sanathoi Devi
Wushu
17
Mr. Sharath M. Gayakwad 
Para-Swimming


The awardees will receive their awards from the President of India at a specially organized function at the Rashtrapati Bhawan on August 29, 2015. 
           
Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Awardee will receive medal, certificate and award money of Rs. 7.5 lakh and Arjuna Awardees will receive statuettes, certificates and award money of Rs.5 lakh each.

Source : The Hindu and PIB

Employment News Highlights For Aug 15 to 21 Aug

  1.  BORDER SECURITY FORCE, NEW DELHI.
    Name of Post – SI (workshop, master), HC (master, engine driver). 
    No. of Vacancies – 230
    Last Date – 30 days from the date of publication.
  2. OIL AND NATURAL GAS CORPORATION LIMITED Name of Posts –Assistant, Assistant Technician, etc.
    No. of Vacancies - 77
    Last Date – 28.08.2015.
  3. CENTRAL ELECTROCHEMICAL RESEARCH INSTITUTEName of Posts – Sr. Scientist, Scientist, and Tech. Assistant. 
    No. of Vacancies – 26
    Date- 11.09.2015
  4. All INDIA INSTITUTE OF MEDICAL SCIENCES, JODHPUR Name of Posts – Professor, Associate Professor, etc.
    No. of Vacancies –87
    Last Date – - one month from the date of publication.
  5. CENTRAL RESERVE POLICE FORCE Name of Post –Inspector, Sub Inspector
    No. of Vacancies -101
    Last Date: – 60 days from the date of publication
  6. NATIONAL SEEDS CORPORATION LIMITED Name of Post –Assistant (legal), Management (trainee), etc.
    No. of Vacancies –70
    Last Date – 07.09.2015
Details of More job Vacancies & Editorial content can be seen in Employment News Issue dated 15-21 August 2015. For complete job details buy your copy today. ...

Modi's I-Day speech highlights: Social security, war on graft

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is greeted as he walks among schoolchildren after delivering his Independence Day speech from the Red Fort in New Delhi. (AFP Photo)


There is no place for communalism or corruption in India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in his Independence Day address to the nation on Saturday even as he acknowledged a solution is yet to be found to the long-standing demand for one rank one pension for military personnel.
Speaking from the ramparts of the 17th century Red Fort, Modi pointed to need for a medicine to tackle graft, which was eating away at the country “like a termite”. He said the “poison” of casteism and communalism must be fought with the “nectar of development”.
Modi repeatedly referred to the central role of the country’s one billion-plus population – which he dubbed “Team India” – in his government’s development plans, saying the people alone will take India to new heights.

The Prime Minister, who has often been criticised for his silence on attacks on minorities by leaders of the BJP and the Sangh Parivar, said there was no place for casteism and communalism in the country.
“Be it the poison of casteism or the frenzy of communalism, these have no place in the country and should not be allowed to grow. These ills have to be eradicated through the nectar of development,” said Modi, clad in a beige kurta, a matching sleeveless jacket and saffron ‘saafa’.
"If the unity of India is destroyed, then the dreams of the people are also destroyed," he said.
Modi dwelt at length on the need to eradicate corruption during his nearly 90-minute speech. “I want to reaffirm that this nation will get rid of corruption. We can rid the country of corruption, we have to start from the top," he said.
“Corruption is like a termite, it spreads slowly, reaches everywhere but it can be beaten with timely injections,” he said. Modi also declared that there had been no allegation of corruption against his government since it came to power 15 months ago.
Modi, who spoke without the protection of a bulletproof shield, said his government had accepted the demand for OROP in principle but did not commit himself to a timeframe for rolling out the scheme.


“I am assuring again…I am speaking on behalf of 125 crore people, under the tricolour, from the ramparts of Red Fort...In principle we have accepted one rank one pension.”

Talks on the issue with all stakeholders had entered the final stage and the government is hopeful of a “positive outcome", Modi said a day after retired military personnel held protests in Delhi over the issue.
The Prime Minister said the people, including children, had played a key role in implementing schemes such as Swachh Bharat and the winding up of the subsidy for cooking gas cylinders.
“This is Team India, a team of 125 crore Indians. This is the team that makes the nation and takes our nation to new heights,” he said.
Modi also coined a new slogan, "Start-up India, Stand up India", saying the country must become number one in start-ups. "In the coming days, start-ups will be promoted in every corner of the country," he said.
In addition to systems to facilitate start-ups, loans will be given to help such ventures, he added. He floated the dream of creating entrepreneurs – mostly from the underprivileged sections – who will get loans as part of a movement that will change the economic landscape.
A considerable part of his speech focused on the welfare of the poor and farmers, at a time the main opposition Congress party has accused the NDA government of being pro-corporate.
The Congress has upped the ante against the government over a land acquisition bill, saying it hurts the interest of farmers with a contentious clause.
But India's farmers are as important as its soldiers, Modi said minutes after he started his speech with tributes to soldiers.
Modi spoke against the backdrop of some of the most senior leaders of the BJP becaming embroiled in corruption scandals, including foreign minister Sushma Swaraj and chief ministers Shivraj Singh Chouhan and Vasundhara Raje.
The scandals have been embarrassing for the BJP, which rode to power in last year’s election with a pledge to clean up government after a series of scams under the previous Congress administration.
The NDA government’s key reforms, including the land acquisition bill and the GST bill, stalled in the rancorous monsoon session of Parliament because of the allegations of corruption against BJP leaders.
"Corruption has to be removed fully from the system," Modi said. "With your support, I pledge a corruption-free India."
Modi reached the Red Fort at 7:20am after paying tribute to Mahatma Gandhi at Raj Ghat. Top Union ministers such as Arun Jaitley, Sushma Swaraj and Ravi Shankar Prasad were present at the venue.

Source:Saubhadra Chatterji and Vikas Pathak, Hindustan Times, New Delhi

Saturday 15 August 2015

President’s address to the nation on the eve of India’s 69th Independence Day

President’s address to the nation on the eve of India’s 69th Independence Day

Fellow citizens: 1. On the eve of 68th anniversary of our Independence I extend warm greetings to you and to all Indians around the world. I convey my special greetings to members of our armed forces, paramilitary forces and internal security forces. I also congratulate all our sportspersons who have participated and won laurels in various tournaments in India and abroad. My congratulations to Shri Kailash Satyarthi, Nobel Peace Prize winner for 2014, who has done the country proud.

Friends: 2. On 15th August 1947, we won political freedom. The birth of modern India was a moment of historic exhilaration; but it was also tinged with the blood of unimaginable suffering along the length and breadth of our country. The ideals and convictions, that had held through the travails of an epic struggle against British rule, were under strain.

3. A great generation of supreme heroes faced this formidable challenge. The sagacity and maturity of that generation saved our ideals from deviation or degeneration under the pressure of emotion, including rage. India’s pride, self-esteem and self-respect, born from a civilizational wisdom which inspired the renaissance that won us freedom, was distilled into the principles of our constitution by these extraordinary men and women. We have been blessed by a constitution that launched India’s march towards greatness.

4. The most precious gift of this document was democracy, which reshaped our ancient values into a modern context and institutionalized multiple freedoms. It turned liberty into a living opportunity for the oppressed and impoverished, offered equality and positive discrimination to the many millions, who had suffered social injustice, and instituted a gender revolution that has made our country an example of progress. We abolished archaic customs and laws, and ensured change for women through education and jobs. Our institutions are the infrastructure of this idealism.

Fellow citizens: 5. The finest inheritance needs constant care for preservation. Our institutions of democracy are under stress. The Parliament has been converted into an arena of combat rather than debate. It is time to recall what Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, Chairman of the Drafting Committee of the Constitution, said while making his closing speech in the Constituent Assembly in November 1949 and I quote:

“The working of a constitution does not depend wholly upon the nature of the constitution. The constitution can provide only the organs of state, such as the legislature, the executive and the judiciary. The factors on which the working of those organs of the state depends are the people and the political parties they will set up as their instruments to carry out their wishes and their politics. Who can say how the people of India and their parties will behave?” (unquote)

If the institutions of democracy are under pressure, it is time for serious thinking by the people and their parties. The correctives must come from within.

Fellow citizens: 6. Our country’s rise will be measured by the strength of our values, but it will equally be determined by economic growth and equitable distribution of the nation’s resources. Our economy promises much hope for the future. The new chapters of the ‘India Story’ are waiting to be written. ‘Economic reforms’ is a work-in-progress. Our performance over the last decade has been commendable; and it is most heartening that after a dip, we have recovered to 7.3% growth in 2014-15. But the benefits of growth must reach the poorest of the poor much before they land in the bank accounts of the richest of the rich. We are an inclusive democracy, and an inclusive economy; there is place for everyone in the hierarchy of wealth. But the first call goes to those who suffer on the brink of deprivation. Our policies must be geared to meet the ‘Zero Hunger’ challenge in a foreseeable future.

Fellow citizens: 7. The symbiotic relationship between man and nature has to be preserved. A generous nature when violated can turn into a destructive force leading to calamities resulting in huge loss of life and property. Even as I speak, large parts of the nation are barely recovering from floods. We need immediate relief for the afflicted as well as long-term solutions for the management of both, water deficiency and excess.

Fellow citizens: 8. A nation which forgets the idealism of its past loses something vital from its future. Our educational institutions multiply as the aspirations of generations continue to exceed supply. But what has happened to quality, from base to apex? We recall the guru-shishya parampara with legitimate pride; why then have we abandoned the care, devotion and commitment that is at the heart of this relationship? A guru much like the soft and skilful hands of a potter, moulds the destiny of shishya. The student with devotion and humility acknowledges the debt of the teacher. Society respects and recognizes the merit and scholarship of the teacher. Is that happening in our education system today? Students, teachers and authorities must pause and introspect.

Fellow citizens: 9. Our democracy is creative because it is plural, but diversity must be nourished with tolerance and patience. Vested interests chip away at social harmony, in an attempt to erode many centuries of secularism. In an age of instant communication through ever-improving technology, we must remain vigilant to ensure that the devious designs of a few never overcome the essential oneness of our people. For both government and people the rule of law is sacrosanct, but society is also protected by something greater than law: humanity. Mahatma Gandhi said and I quote: “You must not lose faith in humanity. Humanity is an ocean; if a few drops of the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty” (unquote).

Friends: 10. Peace, friendship and cooperation bind nations and peoples together. Recognizing the shared destiny of the Indian sub-continent, we must strengthen connectivity, expand institutional capacity and enhance mutual trust to further regional cooperation. As we make progress in advancing our interests globally, India is also engaged in pro-actively promoting goodwill and prosperity in our immediate neighbourhood. It is heartening that the long pending land boundary issue with Bangladesh has been finally resolved.

Fellow citizens: 11. While we offer our hand willingly in friendship, we cannot stay blind to deliberate acts of provocation and a deteriorating security environment. India is a target of vicious terrorist groups operating from across the borders. Except the language of violence and the cult of evil, these terrorists have no religion and adhere to no ideology. Our neighbours must ensure that their territory is not used by forces inimical to India. Our policy will remain one of zero tolerance for terrorism. We reject any attempt to use terrorism as an instrument of state policy. Infiltration into our territory and attempts to create mayhem will be dealt with a strong hand.

12. I pay homage to the martyrs who made the supreme sacrifice of their lives defending India. I salute the courage and heroism of our security forces who are maintaining an eternal vigil to safeguard the territorial integrity of our country and the safety of our people. I also specially commend the brave civilians who boldly detained a hardened terrorist ignoring the risk to their own lives.

Fellow citizens: 13. India is a complex country of 1.3 billion people, 122 languages, 1600 dialects and 7 religions. Its strength lies in its unique capacity to blend apparent contradictions into positive affirmations. In the words of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, it is a country held together and I quote: “by strong but invisible threads….. About her there is the elusive quality of a legend of long ago; some enchantment seems to have held her mind. She is a myth and an idea, a dream and a vision, and yet very real and present and pervasive” (unquote).

14. On the fertile ground laid by our Constitution, India has blossomed into a vibrant democracy. The roots are deep but the leaves are beginning to wilt. It is time for renewal.

15. If we do not act now, will our successors seven decades hence remember us with the respect and admiration we have for those who shaped the Indian dream in 1947? The answer may not be comfortable, but the question has to be asked.

Thank you.

Jai Hind!

Friday 14 August 2015

HAPPY INDEPENDENCE DAY IN ADVANCE

WISH YOU ALL A HAPPY INDEPENDENCE DAY



https://youtu.be/WBRtIxMtGfA Watch this years Special National Anthem...


Download Question Bank for Various Departmental Examination



Act under british rule
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Manuals of Dept. Of Post

Delegation of Financial Powers to the HOC for providing security services to Departmental Buildings/Offices.

Department of Posts (Estt. Division) vide its Letter No.43-14/2014-PE-II Number dated 20.01.2015 and reminders dated 08.04.2015, 30.06.2015 and 10.08.2015 has requested the Circles to furnish inputs on the following observations of the IFW in connection with delegation of financial powers for providing security services to departmental buildings/offices:-
 
(a) How the work is being managed at present;

(b) Details of expenditure incurred for providing security services for the last three years;

(c) What are the procedures adopted for providing security services by the Circles and

(d) Detailed justification given by Circles for seeking full powers.

Attention : PA/SA Candidates 2014 affected by abeyance on joining

While browsing some Postal union websites, I found some drafts for representations to be submitted by the candidates to their respective CPMG. I'm reproducing them below.

Please read following guideline before you print and submit it :

1. Every application should be individual. Govt rule does not allow single application signed by many persons.

2. Drafts are given for 3 categories of candidates in 3 separate pages. First page --- for those who have completed the in-house training, second page --- for the candidates whose in-house training was started but stopped before completion, third page --- for the candidates whose in-house training did not start at all. Please be careful to choose your category and take the printout.

3. Please select Postal Assistant or Sorting Assistant in the subject and in the first line of the second paragraph as your selected cadre. Do not keep both.

4. Certain information is left blank in the draft, like --- the division you have selected for, or the post office where the in-house training was going on (second category). Please type in these information before you take the printout.

5. Please type in the place (where you reside), date (of submission of the representation) and your full name with address below the draft.

6. Please contact us if you have any question/confusion regarding the draft. Feel free to submit it, there is no risk or nothing wrong in submitting it and it would rather make your ground strong in future, if required. Do not forget to keep a copy for yourself and the receipt of registry post / speed post.

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PRESENTATION FOR CBS DIVISIONAL LEVEL WORKSHOP

No Proposal To Increase IAS, IPS Officers Retirement Age: Govt

Minister of State for Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions
 Jitendra Singh
There is no proposal to increase the retirement age of IAS and IPS officers, the government said today.


“There is no such proposal for enhancement of retirement age of IAS and IPS officer and to bring the same at par with the retirement age of Judges of Supreme Court and High Courts,” Minister of State for Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions Jitendra Singh told Rajya Sabha in a written reply.


An officer of Indian Administrative Service (IAS) and Indian Police Service (IPS) retires after attaining the age of 60 years.

PTI

Upper Division Clerk (UDC) Limited Departmental Competitive Examination 2015-reg

Compliance of Court Orders

The wilful disobedience of any judgment, decree, direction, order, writ or other process of a court or wilful breach of an undertaking given to a court constitute a contempt of court under the provisions of the contempt of Courts Act, 1971. Further, under Article 215 of the constitution of India, every High Court shall be a court of record and shall have all the powers of such a court including the power to punish for contempt of itself. The statutory provisions are binding on everybody including Central Government, State Governments and all local or other authorities within the territory of India and they are duty bound to obey the court judgment/orders. The Central Government does not maintain any data in this regard. 


This information was given by Union Minister of Ministry of Law & Justice, Shri D. V. Sadananda Gowda in a written reply in Lok Sabha today.


Source : PIB Release, 13.08.2015