Monthly Archives: November 2012

DRDO to set up Missile Test Range in Machilipatnam

Hyderabad, Nov 24 (PTI)

The Defence Research and Development Organisation is planning to set up a long range missile testing centre at coastal Machilipatnam in Andhra Pradesh, a top official said here today.

DRDO chief V K Saraswat said the organization has resolved issues with the Ministry of Petroleum as the area where the facility is likely to come up falls under Krishna-Godavari basin.

“We have intentions to set up a launch site at Machilipatnam.

source: http://www.ptinews.com / PTI – Press Trust of India / Home> National / by Staff Reporter / November 24th, 2012

World Agriculture Forum- 2013 to be held in Hyderabad

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will inaugurate the Congress, being held for the first time in Asia. / Express photo

To discuss steps to make farming economically-viable in the era of WTO regime, a three-day World Agriculture Forum Congress will be organised here from November 4-7 next year.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will inaugurate the Congress, being held for the first time in Asia, which has the theme “Re-shaping agriculture for a sustainable future of small and marginal farmers”.

An agricultural trade fair will also be organised concurrently. As a prelude to the Congress, a meeting was held here today to discuss the agenda and related issues.

World Agriculture Forum Chairman Kenneth M Baker, WAF Advisory Board chairman and former Prime Minister of New Zealand James B Bolger, Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N Kiran Kumar Reddy, Agriculture ministers — Kanna Lakshminarayana (AP), Ramkrishan Kusmariya (Madhya Pradesh) and D Prasad Mishra (Odisha) attended the meeting along with others.

The primary objective of the Congress was to discuss withall key stakeholders like farmers organizations, industry,government and scientists the steps for “re-shaping and re-positioning” small farm-holder agriculture to make farming economically-viable in the era of WTO regime, WAF Chairman Baker said.

Speaking on the occasion, Bolger noted that the challenge was to feed nine billion people in the world in the next 40 years, up from seven billion now.

“About 800 million to one billion people are left hungry everyday now, out of the world’s population of seven billion.

We have to feed not only these people but also an additional two billion people in the next 40 years. We need to produce 70 per cent more food in the next 40 years,” Bolger pointed out.

The task, therefore, in front of agriculture sector was “immense”. Its not a question if it is possible but its a question of the will. The world can feed itself better if there is a political will, the former Prime Minister observed.

“We need to use all the safe sides to reach the goal of feeding all,” he added. Stating that the WAF was trying to reach out to the world, Bolger said the WAF Congress was for the first time being held outside the US.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / by PTI- Hyderabad / November 24th, 2012

Private players eye tourism in East Godavari

Union Territory Yanam to have more attractions

The private investors are now concentrating on tourism development in East Godavari district. Their main concentration is on Union Territory Yanam, Kakinada, Rajahmundry,and Rampachodavaram. .

Most of the tourists visit Rajahmundry for boat cruise to Papikondalu and now they are slowly moving to other places such as Koringa, Mada wildlife forests, Antarvedi beach where Godavari joins Bay of Bengal, Kotipalli Revu, Didi Resorts, Maredumilli forest eco-tourism and other places. However, the State Tourism Department has been concentrating on Dindi resorts and Papi Hills and the rest of the tourist spots are neglected for long time.

Now, the Anand Toursim has taken lead in tourism development. As, Yanam is a developing city with regard to tourism and due to location of a number of petro chemical projects in and around Yanam, many foreign tourists are regularly visiting the place.

They prefer to stay in star hotels in Rajahmundry or Kakinada. “Keeping this in mind, we formally launched a three-star hotel in Yanam and would declare it open officially during Yanam Praja festival on January 5 and 6,” said P. Ramakrishna Kumar, vice-president of Anand Regency Hotels.

According to him, the two specially-designed boats for cruise across Godavari river between Rajahmundry and Papikondalu and from Rajahmundry to Bhadrachalam are getting good response with people from different parts of the State and also from West Bengal Orissa, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu making advance bookings for the cruise. Anand Regency, Yanam has well in advance had planned a big bash on the eve of New Year in an island off Yanam coast. “We have just started cleaning the island and applied for permissions from the forest and other departments,” said Bhaskar, business manager of the hotel.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> National> Andhra Pradesh / by B.K.S. Bhaskar / Rajahmundry, November 24th, 2012

It’s raining milk on APDDCF

PROBLEM OF PLENTY: Extra milk powder will be used in the programme where cooked food is supplied to pregnant and lactating mothers.  / File photo / The Hindu .

The Federation is left with an extra 1.70 lakh litres of milk per day

Usually there are problems with shortages. But in the case of A.P. Dairy Development Cooperative Federation (APDDCF) the opposite is true. It is faced with the unique problem of glut of milk so much so that it doesn’t know where to store all the milk that is coming its way.

Everyday the Federation is left with an extra 1.70 lakh litres to handle which it simply can’t. Therefore, it is toying with the idea of declaring a ‘milk holiday’ once in a fortnight.

The idea is not to procure milk two days in a month so as to take care of storage problem and also the rising cost of procurement. The proposal will be placed before the APDDCF board to get its nod. The last time the Federation declared a milk holiday was in 1993.

The APDDCF has been flooded with surplus milk from September onwards. The per day procurement shot up from 3.90 lakh litres in August to 4.69 lakh litres in September. It touched 5.27 lakh litres in October and 5.93 lakh litres in November. In December, milk procurement is projected to be 6.29 lakh litres.

Faced with this unusual phenomenon, the Federation has started converting the excess milk into skimmed milk powder (SMP).

“We are doing all this only to not inconvenience farmers,” says Mohammed Ali Rafath, managing director and vice chairman, APDDCF.

Unlike private diaries, the APDDCF is procuring milk beyond its requirement to help the farmers. Its factory has a capacity to handle only 4 lakh litres a day, including 30,000 litres of by-products such as flavoured milk, butter, khova, lassi.

In the last few months it has been getting an extra 1.70 lakh litres milk per day. Of this, 1.02 lakh litres is buffalo milk and the rest cow. To procure this excess milk, it has to shell out Rs.41 lakh per day.

To tide over the problem, the APDDCF has started converting the milk into powder and now it has a stock of 1,000 metric tonnes of butter and 800 metric tonnes of skimmed milk powder. To clear this stockpile, the Federation has asked the Women Development and Child Welfare Department to use its powder milk in its programme of supplying cooked food to pregnant and lactating mothers.

“This way we hope to supply 100 tonnes of skimmed milk powder per month”, says Mr. Rafath.

The excess milk production is the result of milch animal induction programme wherein the government provides 25 per cent subsidy on purchase of cattle and also reimburses transport charges.

Another factor is the vigorous artificial insemination programme taken up by the Animal Husbandry Department.

Why can’t the APDDCF push up its sales? It cannot because there are no takers for its Vijay brand of milk. While Hyderabad has a liquid milk market of 12 lakh litres a day, APDDCF accounts for just 3.60 lakh litres a day.

Now the APDDCF is planning to develop forward linkages by strengthening its district market where the sales are very dismal.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by J. S. Ifthekhar / November 21st, 2012

Persian influence abounds in Bidri ware

A circular basin with perforated cover inlaid in silver. / Photos: Special Arrangement / The Hindu

Their sight is brilliant: silver designs shining against the black metal base. Their variety is extraordinary: spittoons to cloth weights. Wealth of design and varied shapes – the two qualities Bidri wares are praised for – are evidenced in the many specimens of this 400-year-old craft enshrined in Salarjung Museum.

Bidri gets its name from Bidar, some 200 kilometres from Hyderabad.

The basic material of Bidri is an alloy of zinc, copper and lead. There are five stages in the production of Bidri: casting, polishing, engraving, inlaying and blackening.

The decorative methods in Bidri consist of – inlay of wire, inlay of sheet, low relief, high relief, cut-out designs in super imposed metal sheets.

Silver is chiefly used for ornamentation, and gold, very rarely.

The preference for silver is obvious: it creates better contrast when inlaid over the ebony coloured Bidri metal.

Bidri ware, like many other crafts, was a fruit of our contacts with Persia. The art of inlaying precious materials over the articles of daily use is peculiar to Persia and other Middle Eastern countries. The Iranian craftsmen who came to Bidar some 400 years back developed the crafts. It later moved to north India and Hyderabad.

The museum’s Bidri collections of huqqa bottoms, Aftabas, trinket boxes, goglets, spice boxes, contain mostly designs of wine creeper and poppy plants. Geometrical decorations also appear. Later products show Hindu lotus decoration.

A special case is a Bidri huqqa designed with a mixture of Persian and European patterns, the latter having been introduced by the French in 18th century.

B. Kotaiah, Dep. Keeper (Retd) Salarjung Museum

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by B. Kotaiah / November 22nd, 2012

Rising Stars of Don Bosco Academy Nalgonda

Five of Don Bosco high school, Nalgonda students procured a place for themselves in the under-16 state football and basketball teams. Sports Association of Nalgonda on 7th of November 2012 selected Boyapati Bala Shravan, a student from class 9 for basketball, M. Muneer and A. Srinivas of class 7 as well as V. Madhu and P. Sriram of class 8 for football respectively.

On this occasion Fr Gopu Anand, the director of the Academy said that the importance of sports and games is being increasingly recognized at the Academy, from both the educational and social points of view. He exhorted all the students, regardless of all backgrounds and works, to participate in games, and not merely watch matches occasionally to cheer up their favourite teams or attend the prize distribution functions at the end of a sports season.

Fr Balashowry, the principal of the College and Fr Bhaskar the headmaster of Don Bosco High School commended the students for their achievements and verbalized their opinions of Don Bosco’s acclaimed pedagogy and educative system which empowers a child in his or her integral growth.

source: http://www.DonBoscoHyderabad.org / Home / by K. Suresh, Teacher, Don Bosco High School / November 20th, 2012

Two prizes for Nalgonda in State science test

Subramanyam of Prakasam district and K. Yeshwant of Nellore bagged the first prizes in Telugu and English respectively in the State-level science talent test conducted by the Jana Vignana Vedika (JVV) at Nagarjunasagar on Friday. Seventy-five students from 16 districts took part.

The other prize winners were Yesasvi (Kadapa) and Nandakumar (Nalgonda) in Telugu, and Rajesh (Nalgonda) and Vijaysai (West Godavari) in English.

K. Sripraja of Nellore and N. Ajita Reddy (Krishna) won the first and second prizes respectively in the display of science exhibits.

Dr. P. Rama Rao, State JVV president, gave away the prizes that included laptop , tablet and cell phone . Chandana Chakravarty, formerly of the CCMB, and Krishna, a professor from the University of Hyderabad, were among those present, along with JVV leaders Dr. Brahma Reddy and N. Bheemarjun Reddy.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> National> Andhra Pradesh / by Hindu’s Correspondent / Nalgonda, November 17th, 2012

Hyderabad: Pearls from China dominate pearl market

Hyderabad:

Much like the market of decorative items, toys and a lot of other goods in India, the pearl market of Hyderabad is now dominated by China. Shop owners in the city say China has overtaken other countries from where pearls are being imported. Hyderabad is known as the “city of pearls”. But the irony of its pearl story is that the city is nearly 300 km away from the ocean!

The pearls that give the city its moniker are all sourced from outside. After being imported, they are drilled in different parts of the state. In Chandanpet, just outside Hyderabad, for instance, almost the entire population is engaged in the delicate art of pearl drilling. Once they are drilled, the pearls are bleached, washed and separated in accordance with their shape and size.

Vijay Dochania, manager at the Amarsons Pearls jewellery shop, said though pearls are sourced from several countries, China dominates all. “Pearls from China have been coming here for more than 100 years now, but today they dominate the market. They are available in different price ranges, depending on their shape, size, sheen and lustre,” Dochania told IANS.

China has been the world’s biggest pearl producer for two decades, flooding the world market with small and cheap pearls of costume-jewellery quality. The pearl farming industry there is now using new techniques to push into the lower reaches of the market. Freshwater pearl farms in east-central China are reported to be producing white pearls that cost a fraction of the saltwater variety.

It was the patronage of the Nizams for pearls that attracted Arab traders from the Gulf to Hyderabad, which was also known for its diamonds — the latest being a diamond from Golconda that fetched a record price at Christie’s auction. “Long time back, pearls from Ceylon (Sri Lanka) were imported. Basra pearls which come from the Gulf countries were also very popular at one time since they are of very fine quality. You will still find them in the market today, but rarely so,” Dochania said.

Jai Prakash, another jewellery shop owner in the city, said pearls are also imported from Japan, Tahiti, Indonesia, Australia and Venezuela. South Sea pearls, which are sourced from the South China Sea, are also readily available and fall in the expensive range because of their large size and sheen. Tahitian pearls cost more than others.

“There are three kinds of pearls – natural, cultured and semi-cultured or man-made. Natural pearls come from places like Tuticorin (India) and Venezuela. Basra (Iraq) pearls are also natural pearls. Cultured pearls mostly come from Japan and China. When Japan was struck by the tsunami, the pearl trade here was affected to some extent. In any case, they come more from China than Japan,” he said. The Majorica pearl is a man-made pearl from Spain.

The city’s pearl trade is worth around Rs 500 crore annually. “Almost 40 percent of our sales are attributed to tourists. People are mostly not too bothered about where the pearl has come from, they are more concerned about the quality of the pearl, its shape, its colour,” said Naresh Agarwal of Mangatrai Pearls.

Visiting Hyderabad on work, 42-year-old Shalini Singh said the only concern that she has while shopping for pearls is their quality. “I bought a set of necklace and earrings of South Sea pearls from a reputable shop, so I am assured of the quality. I also bought a whole lot of pearl earrings, which, the shop owner mentioned, were China pearls. They look good and the price fits my budget, so I am happy,” Singh said.

Victoria Humphrey, a British tourist, however, found it surprising that the pearls that Hyderabad is so famous for are all imported. “I asked a shopkeeper what was so typically Hyderabad about the pearls here, and he replied quite honestly that they were mostly from China! I appreciated his honesty but I had bought my share of Chinese pearls when I was in Beijing; so I did not buy here,” Humphrey told IANS.

source: http://www.ibnlive.in.com / Home> South> Andhra Pradesh / Pradesh /  IANS / November 20th, 2012

The Hindu Young World Quiz on November 28

The multi-city mega quiz will be held in 16 cities, while the grand finale will be in Chennai

The 13th edition of the hugely popular The Hindu Young World Quiz Competition, a part of the The Hindu-NIE Initiative is all set to kick off in the Andhra Pradesh capital on November 28.

It will be held between 12 noon and 3 p.m. at the Hari Hara Kala Bhavan and participants should report at 11.15 a.m.

Any two students studying in classes seven to nine can form a team and a maximum of four teams from each school are permitted to participate.

ENTRY CARD FORMAT

Completed entry cards may be sent to P. Ranga Reddy, Regional General Manager, The Hindu, Hyderabad, for registration.

Once registered, the top portion of the Entry Card must be carried by participants to the venue without fail. Photocopies of the cards will not be accepted. Entry for the event is free.

Six teams for the regional finals on stage would be selected based on a preliminary, written round.

The winning team from each region will qualify for the Grand Finale at Chennai.

Certificates of participation apart, a large number of prizes await the winners at every stage.

OUTSTATION TEAMS

In the case of outstation teams that qualify for the Grand Finale at Chennai and for one accompanying parent or teacher, the cost of travel, boarding and lodging will be borne by the organisers.

The multi-city, mega quiz is being held in 16 cities – Bangalore, Hubli, Mangalore, Puducherry, Tirupati, Thiruvananthapuram, Trichy, Salem, Coimbatore, Madurai, Kochi, Kozhikode, Hyderabad, Visakhapatnam, Vijayawada and Chennai.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by Special Correspondent / November 19th, 2012

In Andhra Pradesh, Catholic nuns bring drinking water to 250 tribal families

Residents in the village of Koderna (East Godavari District) drank polluted water, fighting malaria and typhoid. Five Sisters of the Cross were instrumental in getting a pump to bring water from a clean source as well as opening a school and a dispensary.

Hyderabad (AsiaNews)

Thanks to the efforts of five Sisters of the Cross of Chavanod, a tribal community in Koderna (East Godavari District, Andhra Pradesh) now can meet basic needs like safe drinking water and education for their children. Until a year ago, the 250 families that call the village home had to rely on polluted water and typhoid and malaria were widespread. Local kids did not go schools. Now villagers have a well with clean water, a dispensary for basic health needs and a school.

Last year, the Sisters of Chavanod visited the unspoilt mountains that are next to the village. During their trip, they discovered the village. “Beside the tranquil streams and sparkling atmosphere of the mountains stood the village where people drank highly polluted water,” said Sister Priyanthi Samala.

Sadly, the government has shown little interest for the fate of this village, as did other communities in the area. A school does exist in Koderna but it lies empty because the teacher comes every two months.

Outsiders do visit the village but only to buy local goods, like tamarind, wood, charcoal, ragi (finger millet), bamboo, brooms and spices at very low prices.

In view of the situation, the nuns got in touch with an engineer who looked at the ground to see how drinking water could be brought to the village from another source.

Eventually, he succeeded in his search. The nuns then approached the government for help and began to work on the villagers to have them join the project.

“After a year of assiduous efforts to motivate this community and several frequent visits, we gained the confidence of the people and established our work in their location. We were certain of their cooperation,” Sister Samala said.

“They did not hesitate to send their children to the school,” but “the few children who saw the school for the first time were terrified and perplexed.”

Now about100 of them attend the school the nuns set up and run out of a rented house. Eventually, the sisters hope to get a building of their own.

source: http://www.asianews.it / Home> India / by Santosh Digal / November 17th, 2012