Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Drive these cars @ 40 paise per km!

You might not have heard of Tara International or the electric cars and mopeds it plans to launch. But once the company unleashes Tara Tiny and Tara Titu -- which will cost about Rs 99,000 -- and Tara Shuttle and Tara Carrier, it is quite likely to become a household name.

"While Tara Tiny and Tara Titu are priced at Rs 99,000 (approximately), Tara Shuttle and Tara Carrier are priced at Rs 500,000 (approximately). The company's electric bikes are priced between Rs 12,000 and Rs 35,000.

The running cost of these cars is about 40 paise per km, while the two-wheelers' running cost will be as low at 15 paise per km. (100 paise = 1 rupee)

So here are some of vehicles that the company will soon be unleashing and the charming history of the company. Read on. . .

Text: Indrani Roy Mitra
Photographs: Dipak Chakraborty

source: rediff.com

6th Pay Commission report

The following are the highlights of the 6th Pay Commission Panel report that was submitted to the government on Monday: The 18-month tenure of the Commission was till April 4, 2008.
  • Implementation of the revised pay scales from January 1, 2006. Recommendations relating to allowances to be implemented prospectively.
  • To remove stagnation, introduction of running pay bands for all posts in the Government presently existing in scales below that of Rs 26,000 (fixed).
  • Four distinct running pay bands being recommended � one running band each for all categories of employees in groups 'B' and 'C' with 2 running pay bands for Group A posts.
  • The posts of Secretary to Government of India/equivalent and Cabinet Secretary/equivalent to be kept in distinct pay scales.
  • A separate running pay band, designated as -1S scale, is not to be counted for any purpose as no future recruitment is to be made in this grade and all the present Group D employees not possessing the prescribed qualifications are to be upgraded and placed in the Group 'C' running pay band PB-1 after they are suitably retrained. Group D employees possessing the minimum prescribed qualifications to be placed in PB-1 pay band straightaway.
  • Minimum salary at the entry level of PB-1 pay band to be Rs 6660 (Rs 4860 as pay in the pay band plus Rs 1800 as grade pay). Maximum salary at the level of Secretary/equivalent to be Rs 80000. The minimum: maximum ratio 1:12.
  • Every post, barring that of Secretary/equivalent and Cabinet Secretary/equivalent to have a distinct grade pay attached to it. Grade pay (being a fixed amount attached to each post in the hierarchy) to determine the status of a post with a senior post being given higher grade pay.
  • The total number of grades reduced to 20 spread across four distinct running pay bands; one Apex Scale and another grade for the post of Cabinet Secretary/equivalent as against 35 standard pay scales existing earlier.
  • At the time of promotion from one post to another, the grade pay attached to posts in different levels within the same running pay band to change. Additionally, increase in form of one increment to be given at the time of promotion. A person stagnating at the maximum of any pay band for more than one year continuously to be placed in the immediate next higher pay band without any change in the grade pay.
  • Annual increments to be paid in form of two and half percent of the total of pay in the Pay Band and the corresponding grade pay. The date of annual increments, in all cases, to be first of July. Employees completing six months and above in the scale as on July 1 to be eligible.


  • Saturday, March 22, 2008

    Happy Easter.

    AndamanSikkim wishes you a Happy Easter. Eggs... forget it! Curse Bird Flu!
    All the flowers used in this design are from Dentam,West Sikkim.(photos are taken today..fresh flowers!)

    Friday, March 21, 2008

    March 18, Author Arthur C. Clarke dies


    (CNN) -- Author Arthur C. Clarke, whose science fiction and non-fiction works ranged from the script for "2001: A Space Odyssey" to an early proposal for communications satellites, has died at age 90, associates have said.

    Clarke had been wheelchair-bound for several years with complications stemming from a youthful bout with polio and had suffered from back trouble recently, said Scott Chase, the secretary of the nonprofit Arthur C. Clarke Foundation.

    He died early Wednesday -- Tuesday afternoon ET -- at a hospital in Colombo, Sri Lanka, where he had lived since the 1950s, Chase said.

    "He had been taken to hospital in what we had hoped was one of the slings and arrows of being 90, but in this case it was his final visit," he said.

    In a videotaped 90th birthday message to fans, Clarke said he still hoped to see some sign of intelligent life beyond Earth, more work on alternatives to fossil fuels -- and "closer to home," an end to the 25-year civil war in Sri Lanka between the government and ethnic Tamil separatists.

    "I dearly wish to see lasting peace established in Sri Lanka as soon as possible," he said. "But I'm aware that peace cannot just be wished -- it requires a great deal of hard work, courage and persistence."

    Clarke and director Stanley Kubrick shared an Academy Award nomination for best adapted screenplay for "2001." The film grew out of Clarke's 1951 short story, "The Sentinel," about an alien transmitter left on the moon that ceases broadcasting when humans arrive.

    As a Royal Air Force officer during World War II, Clarke took part in the early development of radar. In a paper written for the radio journal "Wireless World" in 1945, he suggested that artificial satellites hovering in a fixed spot above Earth could be used to relay telecommunications signals across the globe.

    He is widely credited with introducing the idea of the communications satellite, the first of which were launched in the early 1960s. But he never patented the idea, prompting a 1965 essay that he subtitled, "How I Lost a Billion Dollars in My Spare Time."

    His best-known works, such as "2001" or the 1953 novel "Childhood's End," combined the hard science he learned studying physics and mathematics with insights into how future discoveries would change humanity.

    David Eicher, editor of Astronomy magazine, told CNN that Clarke's writings were influential in shaping public interest in space exploration during the 1950s and '60s.

    "He was very interested in technology and also in humanity's history and what lay out in the cosmos," Eicher said. His works combined those "big-picture" themes with "compelling stories that were more interesting and more complex than other science fiction writers were doing," he said.

    Tedson Meyers, the chairman of the Clarke Foundation, said the organization is now dedicated to reproducing the combination of imagination and knowledge that he credited the author with inspiring.

    "The question for us is, how does human imagination bring about such talent on both sides of the brain?" he asked. "How do you find the next Arthur Clarke?"

    Clarke was knighted in 1998. He wrote dozens of novels and collections of short stories and more than 30 nonfiction works during his career, and served as a television commentator during several of the Apollo moon missions.

    Though humans have not returned to the moon since 1972, Clarke said he was confident that a "Golden Age" of space travel was just beginning.

    "After half a century of government-sponsored efforts, we are now witnessing the emergence of commercial space flight," he said in his December birthday message.

    "Over the next 50 years, thousands of people will travel to Earth orbit -- and then, to the moon and beyond. Space travel and space tourism will one day become almost as commonplace as flying to exotic destinations on our own planet."

    http://www.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/books/03/18/obit.clarke/index.html

    Important Day.

    andamansikkim exclusive--(Pic:People celebrating Holi at Jorethang on 21.03.2008)
    Today Holi,Miladi Nabi and Good Friday all three came together..A Great Secular Day to be remembered.

    Tibetans off to Nathu-la

    The Tibetan marchers in Salugara. Telegraph picture.

    March 20: Around 300 Tibetans from Salugara today set off on foot for Nathu-la on the India-China border to protest against “Chinese aggression” in Lhasa, but the Sikkim government said they might not be allowed to enter the state.

    Nathu-la, a mountain pass at 14,400ft connecting India and China, is located in North Sikkim.

    Ugyen Tsewang, the secretary of the Northeast Tibetan Youth Congress, said theirs was a non-confrontational peace march. “Our intention is to march ahead and express solidarity with all Tibetans protesting against the brutal Chinese aggression and killings at Lhasa,” he said.

    The marchers started off from Salugara at 2pm, armed with Tibetan and Indian flags and posters and banners in support of Free Tibet.

    However, in Sikkim, the principal secretary of the state home department, Jasbir Singh, said the protesters might not be allowed entry.

    “We cannot stop them from entering the state if they have the necessary documents, but we will first have to find out what their intention is,” the principal secretary said.

    Although Singh did not elaborate, “documents” could mean proof of Indian citizenship, or special permits that foreign nationals require to enter Sikkim (inner-line permit issued by the state government) or to go to Nathu-la (restricted area permit issued by the Centre). Most third-generation exiled Tibetans are Indians by birth.

    The marchers from Salugara claimed that they have a no-objection certificate from the Bhaktinagar police, indicating that their march is non-violent.

    “We will not go in for any confrontation and decide on other democratic forms of protests (if we are stopped). We may resort to hunger strike at the point where we are detained,” said Ugyen.

    There is a substantial Tibetan population in Sikkim as well. A source in the Sikkim police said vigil has been increased at all checkposts on way to Nathu-la. Travel agents and taxi drivers have also been told not to entertain requests from Tibetans for trips to Nathu-la.

    The police are also keeping a lookout for protest material among Tibetans living in the Sherathang and Kupup areas.

    http://www.telegraphindia.com/1080321/jsp/siliguri/story_9041962.jsp
    Top

    Gurkha war veterans protest ‘discrimination’

    Hasan Suroor

    LONDON: In a symbolic protest against what they called “immoral discrimination” 50 Gurkha veterans, who served in the British army, have returned their medals as part of their campaign to be treated on par with their fellow British soldiers.

    They handed over the medals — awarded to them for their long service and good conduct — to the Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg who said he would pass them to Prime Minister Gordon Brown to shame the government into considering their demand. The “handover,” held at a sombre event near the Houses of Parliament, marked the start of a new phase of Gurkhas’ protest over the British Government’s policy under which Gurkhas who retired before 1997 get much lower pension than their British counterparts and do not enjoy automatic right to remain in Britain.

    Gurkhas argue that this is discriminatory as on the battlefield they faced the same risks as their British colleagues and their sacrifices are no less. One angry Gurkha veteran said he was without a job and could barely survive on the meagre pension he received after serving for 17 years in the British army.

    Sunday, March 16, 2008

    Say Cheese!

    Alpine Cheese is produced in Sikkim at Dentam-West Sikkim .The Cheese factory(Plant) is of Indo-Swiss collaboration. Now it is under Sikkim Dairy Products Pvt.Ltd.I bought this Alpine cheese Baby Ball(270 gms) for 69.00Rs(@255/Kg). It tastes good.

    INTERNATIONAL FLOWER SHOW -2008 IN SIKKIM




    PHOTO SOURCE: Sikkim:A Himalayan Review

    Friday, March 14, 2008

    SHOPS TORCHED IN LHASA

    photo:AFP ...sourced news item.....

    LHASA (TIBET): Lhasa, capital of Tibet Autonomous Region of China, witnessed violence on Friday with protesters setting many shops on fire.

    Witnesses said a number of shops along two main streets in the city and around the Jokhang Temple, the Ramogia Monastery and the Chomsigkang Market were set on fire around 2 p.m.

    All shops near the Jokhang Temple and Ramogia Monastery shut down in the wake of the violence.

    Many injured

    Witnesses said people ran out of the square in front of the Jokhang Temple after the fire erupted. Many were reportedly injured in the violence. Some vehicles were torched.

    Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said in Beijing on Thursday that the recent protests by some monks here was a deliberate political plot by followers of the Dalai Lama to cause social unrest, separate Tibet from China, and wreck the harmonious life of the Tibetan people.

    He was responding to questions on the rally taken out by monks on Monday. Mr. Qin said the current situation was stable because of the prompt action taken by the local government.

    “We are resolute”

    “We are resolutely opposed to any plots attempting to separate Tibet from China,” Mr. Qin said.

    Relevant Chinese departments will handle the issue. — Xinhua

    Thursday, March 13, 2008

    PETROL PRICES


    THE TAX ON PETROL EXCEEDS THE PRICE OF PETROL IN INDIA!
    DOUBLE CLICK THE ABOVE PICTURE TO READ THE DETAILS....

    Wednesday, March 12, 2008

    INTERACTIVE PORTAL ON DISABILITY




    New Delhi, Mar 12 (ANI): To help make the world a better place for persons with disability,a comprehensive national interactive portal - punarbhava.in -was launched here today.
    The portal -which means rehabilitation -- was launched by the Minister of State for Communication and Information Technology, Dr. Shakeel Ahmed along with Union Minister for Social Justice and Empowerment Meira Kumar.
    On the occasion, Dr. Ahmed said: "My Ministry is committed to serve the disadvantaged in the country in order to build an inclusive society, and this of course includes persons with disability. Initiatives like this help in building a strong society that knows how to take care of its people".
    This is the first ever initiative in India where two Government of India organizations have joined hands for reaching the un-reached and providing them opportunities to fully participate in the social life and become productive members of society.
    This unique web portal by Media Lab Asia and Rehabilitation Council of India is likely to make it easier for persons with disabilities, their parents, NGOs, community members, rehabilitation professionals and a variety of other individuals associated with disabled to access information on Government Acts or National policies on disability, institutions working in this field, assistive devices available, educational courses and employment opportunities.
    The portal is categorized mainly into three segments: the first segment will be a National Disability Register that will give statistical information on the disabled population in India.
    The second segment of the portal covers the resources, which include available online courses, catalogues knowledge repository of audio, video and Braille files in Indian languages, books related to disability and news magazine.
    The third segment is proposed to have Grievance Redressal mechanism through Web Court. In future, this will redress the complaints related to Chief Commissioner for Persons with Disabilities, National Trust, and Rehabilitation Council of India . It also proposes to provide transaction assistance.
    Dr. Ahmed also released a screen reading software - SAFA (Screen Access for All) for the education and computer literacy of visually impaired. (ANI)

    Friday, March 7, 2008

    Mountain Biking -SIKKIM-2008

    Pic:Bikers crossing Dentam- on their way to Uttarey on 8th march 2008.

    Sikkim Tourism is organising the first Kangchendzonga Mountain Biking expedition from March 3 to 13.

    The expedition is supported by the Union Ministry of Tourism under 'Incredible India' campaign and involves participation of private stakeholders and sponsors as well. Also dubbed as an expedition to conquer the Himalayas, the ten-day thrilling experience will cover all the four districts of the state.

    The prize money has been kept at 25,000 US dollars. The awards category includes overall winner open for men and women, overall Indian (Men and women), master 50 plus, best uphill and best downhill.

    The routes to be covered include Gangtok-Ranka-Rumtek-Sang in east Sikkim, Sang-Martam (East)-to Rabong(South Sikkim), Rabong-Kewzing-Tashiding (South & West Sikkim), Yuksom-Darap-Pelling-Dentam-Hee Bermiok-Kaluk Soreng (West Sikkim) Sombaria-Daramdin (West)-Jorethang (South), Namchi-Namthang-Rangpo in South and East and also places like Mangan-Dikchu, Chungthang-Lachen Lachung in North Sikkim. They will cover 60 KM a day.

    ''The idea is to popularize Sikkim as a destination for adventure tourism since there is big scope for it and there are visitors willing to spend money for thrill and adventure. It also does not require specialization or training like other forms of adventure sports like hang gliding or paragliding. We want to take a lead in India as far as adventure tourism is concerned,'' said G P Upadhyaya, Commissioner-cum-Secretary, Sikkim tourism, on the motive of the expedition. He also said that around 100 participants, including national and international adventure lovers, were expected to take part. ''This is a big event and being held for the first time in Sikkim at this scale. We will make it a regular and annual affair,'' he said.

    -- (UNI)

    International Women's Day

    A fisherwomen with her daughter(photo:andamansikkim-RRO,M.Andaman)
    International Women's Day (IWD) is marked on March 8 every year. It is a major day of global celebration for the economic, political and social achievements of women.
    Started as a political event, the holiday blended in the culture of many countries (primarily Russia and the countries of former Soviet bloc).In some celebrations, the day lost its political flavour, and became simply an occasion for men to express their love to the women around them in a way somewhat similar to Mother's Day and St Valentine's Day mixed together. In others, however, the political and human rights theme as designated by the United Nations runs strong, and political and social awareness of the struggles of women worldwide are brought out and examined in a hopeful manner.
    The IWD is also celebrated as the first spring holiday, as in the listed countries the first day of March is considered the first day of the spring.

    6 per cent hike in DA for Central government employees


    6 per cent hike in DA


    New Delhi: The Centre on Friday approved a 6 per cent hike in dearness allowance to Central government employees and an identical rate of dearness relief to pensioners with retrospective effect from January 1 this year.

    andamansikkim reaches Dentam,West Sikkim




    Now we are at Dentam ,a small but beautiful town in West Sikkim..which is famous for its Alpine Cheese and Terrace farming and the peas.!!!.we will also try to explore this part of Sikkim soon...Meanwhile ,these photos...

    Sunday, March 2, 2008

    At Kalimpong: Rally to celebrate




    Pictures are the follow-up of the last Post in this blog....