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Monthly Archives: November 2015

U.S. Futures Daily Cotton Market – 17th November, 2015

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in Farmers

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cotton, Farm prices

 

Contract Open * High Low Close * Settle Change
Dec ’15 61.88 62.25 61.44 61.55 61.53 -0.21
Mar 16 62.59 63.37 62.55 62.76 62.67 +0.06
May 16 63.53 64.04 63.30 63.47 63.38 +0.15
  Jul 16 63.95 64.42 63.72 63.72 63.77 +0.15
Oct ’16 0 0 0 0 63.76 +0.77
� Open and Close prices reflect the first and last trade in the market and do not correlate to any opening or        closing period �
Cotlook ‘A’ Index 69.25 (+0.25)

**MARKET OUTLOOK**


India & International
 Market Highlights:

• The Southern India Mills’ Association has hailed the Central Government’s decision for considering its pleas and enhancing the drawback rates and value caps for various value added products.

• Cotton prices remained firm after Diwali Holidays.

North Zone:

Cotton traded steady tone across major spot markets of north India on Wednesday. 
Prices were up Rs 20-25 per maund. In Punjab, ready delivery cotton traded at Rs 3415-3425 a maund. In Haryana, it offered at Rs 3,365-3,375 while in Rajasthan, ready delivery new cotton quoted at Rs 3,315-3,385 a maund.

Central Zone:


Cotton spot prices steady tone across west India market on Wednesday. Gujarat Sankar-6 new cotton traded at  Rs 32100-32400 per candy and Sankar-6 old variety was traded at  Rs 32000-32500 per candy of 356 kg for best quality cotton. while B-Grade Cotton traded flat at Rs 31500-31800 per candy. V 797 cotton offered at Rs 23500-24500 a candy. While in Maharashtra, New Crop cotton good grade quoted at Rs 32000-32500 a candy.


South Zone:


Cotton spot price was steady tone across the major trading centers of south India.  

US Cotton Futures :

Cotton Rises as Rain Delays U.S. Harvest: November 17, 2015 – Cotton prices rose Tuesday on ideas that rain could further damage crops in U.S. growing regions. Cotton for March delivery rose 0.9% to 63.20 cents a pound, on track for its largest rise since Oct. 30. In the U.S., the cotton harvest is running behind schedule, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. As of Nov. 15, the U.S. crop was 64% harvested versus 74% on average. Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia are the most behind as heavy rains disrupted harvests there. More rain is on the way later this week, WeatherBELL Analytics said in a note. “It is likely that more crops in these areas will be damaged,” Jack Scoville, vice president of Price Futures Group said in a note. “Production in the Carolinas already took a hit from the big rains seen over the summer.” Traders are weighing lower production against a world teeming with cotton stockpiles. The contract has had a difficult time breaking out of a tight trading range this year as cotton continues to lose market share to cheaper synthetic fibers and China, the world’s largest cotton consumer, attempts to unwind from its large cotton stores. In other markets, raw sugar for March dropped 3% to 14.72 cents a pound, frozen concentrated orange juice futures for January fell 2.4% to $1.499 a pound, cocoa for March rose 0.1% to $3,379 a ton and arabica coffee futures for March were up 0.7% at $1.19 a pound. Source:http://www.nasdaq.com

Pakistan :

Cotton market: Panic buying seen by mills ahead of PCGA report: November 18, 2015 – Mills indulged in panic buying on the cotton market on Tuesday ahead of the Pakistan Cotton Ginners Association (PCGA) report shortly, dealers said. The official spot rate was unchanged at Rs 5,300, dealers said. In Sindh, seed cotton prices were at Rs 2400 and Rs 3000 and in the Punjab rates were at Rs 2500 and Rs 3100, they said. In the ready business, over 20,000 of deals were finalised between Rs 4800 and Rs 5600, they said. Some of experts were of the view that reports of crop size and stable dollar propelling mills to make fresh deals, besides fine variety is also a factor behind the rise in fresh demand. Cotton analyst, Naseem Usman said that as a whole, market is firm but higher cost of doing business is not encouraging traders or mills to run their business with a peace of mind. Locally, traders were importing cotton because of short crop, furthermore, weaker Indian rupee is also helping them to make fresh deals, he added. Reuters adds: ICE cotton futures touched their highest level since early November on Monday on a chart-fuelled jump, before paring gains on producer selling. A breach of resistance at a long-term downtrend line around 62.60 cents per lb and the 20-and-50-day moving averages was technically positive, said a US trader. The March cotton contract on ICE Futures US settled up 0.62 cent, or one percent, at 62.61 cents per lb. It traded as high as 63.55 cents a lb. The cash to second-month spread fell 0.52 cent to 0.9 cents per lb. Total futures market volume rose by 15,164 to 56,559 lots. Data showed total open interest fell 7,644 to 184,225 contracts in the previous session. The following deals reported, 1000 bales from Tando Adam at Rs 4800-4900, 400 bales from Nawabshah at Rs 5300, 3000 bales from Khairpur at Rs 5350-5400, 400 bales from Rohri at Rs 5500, 400 bales from Ghotki at Rs 5650, 400 bales from Dharki at Rs 5650, 800 bales from Mirpur Mathailo at Rs 5650, 400 bales from Khanpur Mehar at Rs 5650, 400 bales from Bakhar at Rs 5400, 400 bales from Rajanpur at Rs 5400, 400 bales from Layyah at Rs 5450, 800 bales from Faqirwali at Rs 5450, 600 bales from Dera Ghazi Khan at Rs 5450-5500, 600 bales from Alipur at Rs 5450, 400 bales from Burewala at Rs 5460, 400 bales from Bahawalpur at Rs 5500, 1600 bales from Fort Abbas at Rs 5500-5525, 1000 bales from Yazman Mandi at Rs 5500-5525, 1400 bales from Rahim Yar Khan at Rs 5550-5600, 5000 bales from Mianwali at Rs 5575-5625 and 1000 bales from Sadiqabad at Rs 5600, dealers said.

China :

Blended yarn price remains stable in China while falls in India: 16-11-2015 : In Qianqing, PC (65/35) 32s yarn prices were up US cent 1 a kg in the first week of November while 45s PC combed yarn prices were stable. Prices of blended yarn declined in line with fibre prices in recent weeks. In China, polyester-cotton generally rolled over but there is a possibility of a decline in coming weeks. In India, polyester-cotton prices declined 1.5% in Ludhiana whereas polyester-viscose was lost a tad in Indore. 30s (65/35) PV yarn prices were down US cents 2 a kg in the wee in Indore market. In Ludhiana, PC 30s (52/48) prices fell US cents 4 on the week. Blended yarn buyers in Pakistan expect prices to remain firm in the coming weeks, due to anti-dumping duties on PSF imports from China. Large sales were reported, especially for polyester-cotton of 31s and 24s yarns. However, buyers rejected any price hike while offers may remain stable or slightly down in the coming weeks. Courtesy: Weekly PriceWatch Report

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నాడు ‘పడక’ నేడు ‘పడి’ రైతులను ముంచిన వానలు

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in AP NEWS, Farmers

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ANDHRA PRADESH, Farmers, RAINS

ఆంధ్రప్రదేశ్‌లో, ఎగువ రాష్ట్రాలలో ఖరీఫ్‌ సీజనలో సరైన వర్షాలు పడక నాగార్జున సాగర్‌, మరికొన్ని ప్రాంతాల రైతాంగం ఈ ఏడాది పంటలను నష్టపోయింది. బంగాళాఖాతంలో ఏర్పడిన వాయుగుండం కోస్తాలోని నెల్లూరు నుంచి గోదావరి జిల్లాలు, రాయలసీమలోని చిత్తూరు, కడప జిల్లాలో రైతాంగానికి పెను గండంగా మారింది. లక్షలాది ఎకరాలలోని పంటలు నీట మునిగినట్లు వార్తలు ఆందోళన కలగిస్తున్నాయి. వర్షాలు తగ్గు ముఖం పట్టిన తరువాత గానీ నష్ట తీవ్రతను అంచనా వేయటం సాధ్యం కాదు.

ఎగువ ప్రాంతాలలో వర్షాలు లేని కారణంగా ఈ ఏడాది శ్రీశైలం, నాగార్జున సాగర్‌ రిజర్వాయర్లకు తగిన నీరు రాలేదు. ఈ కారణంగా ధాన్యం సాధారణ సాగు ఆంధ్రప్రదేశ్‌లో 16,75,518 హెక్టార్లకు గాను అధికారిక లెక్కల ప్రకారం ఖరీఫ్‌ సీజన్లో 13,76,515 హెక్టార్లలో మాత్రమే సాగు చేశారు. ప్రకాశంలో 27, గుంటూరు జిల్లాలో 66, కృష్టా 81శాతం మాత్రమే( అదీ కృష్ణా డెల్టా ప్రాంతం) సాగైంది. సాగర్‌ ప్రాంతంలో నాట్లు పడలేదు. ఇప్పుడు గత మూడు రోజులుగా కురుస్తున్న వర్షాలు సాగు చేసిన ప్రాంతంలోని వరితో, కోస్తా , రాయలసీమ జిల్లాలన్నింటా మెట్ట పంటలకు సైతం పెద్ద నష్టాన్ని కలగచేస్తాయని రైతాంగ ఆందోళన చెందుతోంది. సకాలంలో వర్షాలు లేక కొన్ని ప్రాంతాలు నష్టపోతే అకాల వర్షాలు అన్ని ప్రాంతాలను దెబ్బతీస్తున్నాయి. కేంద్ర, రాష్ట్ర ప్రభుత్వాలు వుదారంగా ఆదుకోనట్లయితే రైతాంగం మరింతగా అప్పుల ఊబిలో కూరుకు పోనుంది.

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G20 leaders falling US$4 trillion short of growth target

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, International

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G20, growth

Author: Adam Triggs, ANU

The IMF gave G20 leaders some bad news in Turkey: they are not doing enough to lift growth. The G20 has not implemented enough of their previous commitments and their goal of increasing G20 GDP by US$2 trillion by 2018 is falling short by about US$4 trillion. The problem is that G20 leaders are stuck in a business-as-usual mindset. Their commitments are duplicative and relate to reforms they were already planning to undertake. The G20 needs to break out of this mindset by urgently changing the process through which commitments are made in order to deliver meaningful reforms that will boost global growth.

In 2014, G20 leaders committed to implement about 1000 country-specific reforms, with the goal of lifting G20 GDP by 2 per cent (about US$2 trillion) by 2018. Unfortunately, since then, global growth forecasts have been downgraded six times. Instead of being US$2 trillion larger, G20 GDP for 2018 is forecast be about US$2 trillion smaller. This is a serious problem for the global economy, not to mention the credibility of the G20, which now has just three years to come up with US$4 trillion of growth.

In response to this challenge, G20 leaders met in Turkey on 15–16 November and added new reforms to their growth strategies. They developed new documents called ‘investment strategies’ to address the anaemic levels of investment in many economies. But leaders are starting to display ‘reform churn’ where, each year, previous commitments are discarded and new ones added.

For Australia, paid parental leave is out, but childcare funding is in. The medical co-payment and company tax cuts are out, but the small business package is in. And while higher education reforms remain, it’s quite possible they won’t be there next year if the Australian Senate has anything to do with it.

In the US, Obama’s immigration reforms, tipped to increase US GDP by a significant 3.2 per cent by 2023, are now being challenged by 26 US states. Public investment in Germany and market-oriented reforms in China are similarly too small or too slow to contribute what was promised under the original US$2 trillion growth goal.

While the G20 says it has implemented half of its commitments from the 2014 Brisbane summit, they have not implemented the reforms that matter. This figure also seems dubious since, under the Turkish presidency, the G20 is now only monitoring about 100 of the original 1000 commitments.

Leaders made important new commitments which will be implemented throughout China’s G20 presidency in 2016. Leaders will work to strengthen the global financial safety net. On trade, leaders urged prompt ratification and implementation of the Trade Facilitation Agreement and, following agreement of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, committed to ensuring bilateral, regional and plurilateral trade agreements complement one another. Leaders also completed core elements of the financial reform agenda and endorsed a new commitment to reduce youth unemployment.

Investment is a welcomed focus from the Turkey summit. For advanced economies in particular, investment collapsed during the global financial crisis and has struggled to recover. But the 300 commitments that make up the G20 investment strategies are largely duplicative of its growth strategies and include many of the same initiatives, particularly around infrastructure investment. Analysis by the OECD indicates these strategies will lift the aggregate G20 investment-to-GDP ratio by 1 percentage point by 2018. Although welcome, it is unclear whether this would translate into any additional growth over and above what is already built into the existing growth strategies.

The G20’s investment initiatives still remain too focused on public investment, which is woefully incapable of addressing the US$50 trillion global infrastructure gap. There is a conspicuous absence of any focus on improving multilateral investment. There is clear scope to exploit synergies between investment funding by the World Bank, G20 Infrastructure Hub, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the Asian Development Bank, to name a few.

The growing presence of investment chapters in free-trade agreements as well as bilateral and plurilateral investment treaties demonstrates a clear need for a global investment treaty. Yet, despite repeated calls from the WTO and trade experts to do so, the G20 has not identified this as a priority for boosting investment.

The G20 is an informal forum meaning there is no permanent secretariat and countries do not face penalties or sanctions for falling short on their commitments. Historically, attempts to change this have failed miserably. The only way to get better commitments seems to be by reforming the processes through which commitments are made. There are several reforms the G20 could immediately undertake to strengthen peer pressure and accountability.

First, the G20 needs to stop duplicating commitments. Having growth strategies, investment strategies, fiscal strategies, action plans and employment plans makes little sense. These should be rolled into a single document. The G20 growth strategies is the obvious choice.

Second, the G20 peer review process tends to be largely isolated to lower-level officials with limited engagement from finance deputies, sherpas, ministers and leaders who have the greatest capacity to influence outcomes. Peer review needs to be much more integrated and should take place at all levels, but particularly ministers and leaders.

Third, accountability at the level of officials could be improved. The G20 should adopt a panel of economic experts from outside the G20 community to provide practical suggestions on the individual strategies of members. Providing practical and specific recommendations is often politically easier for an independent panel of experts than it is for G20 countries or even international organisations.

Finally, leaders and ministers are unlikely to make ambitious commitments if there is little public interest back home. Strengthening the G20’s engagement with the public is therefore critically important. To encourage such engagement, members should be required to formally outline through the peer review process what actions they will take to engage with their public on their growth strategy. This could include public events, roundtables and interviews, fora with academic experts, as well as media campaigns and advertising.

The G20 is uniquely placed to provide political cover for G20 members to undertake coordinated reforms. These initiatives will not only boost the G20 forum but can assist countries in undertaking tough reforms back home.

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విజయవాడ రాష్ట్ర సదస్సుకు ముఖ్యమంత్రిని ఆహ్వానించిన ఏపీడబ్ల్యుజేఎఫ్

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in AP NEWS

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AP CM, APWJF

  • ee738561-e24d-4b01-b862-1598a4455921

 

  • విజయవాడ,  ఈ ఏడాది డిసెంబర్ నెలలో విజయవాడలో జరగనున్న ఆంధ్రప్రదేశ్ వర్కింగ్ జర్నలిస్టుల ఫెడరేషన్ (ఏపీడబ్ల్యుజేఎఫ్) మూడవ రాష్ట్ర సదస్సు ప్రారంభోత్సవానికి ముఖ్య అతిథిగా హాజరు కావాలని ముఖ్యమంత్రి శ్రీ నారా  చంద్రబాబు నాయుడును  జర్నలిస్టు సంఘం నేతలు కోరారు. మంగళవారం సీఎం కార్యాలయంలో ముఖ్యమంత్రిని కలిసి ఆహ్వానం అందజేశారు.ఏపీ బ్రాడ్ కాస్టింగ్ జర్నలిస్టుల ఫెడరేషన్ ప్రథమ సదస్సును కూడా ఈ సందర్భంగా నిర్వహిస్తున్నట్లు వారు తెలిపారు. అక్రిడేషన్ కమిటీలో తమ సంఘానికి ప్రాతినిథ్యం కల్పించినందుకు ముఖ్యమంత్రికి ధన్యవాదాలు తెలిపారు.ఏపీడబ్ల్యూజేఎఫ్ రాష్ట్ర ప్రధాన కార్యదర్శి ఆంజనేయులు, కార్యదర్శులు కోటేశ్వరరావు, శ్రీనివాస్, ట్రెజరర్ శాంతి తదితరులు ముఖ్యమంత్రిని కలిసినవారిలో ఉన్నారు.

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AP State Employment Council constituted, CM to head

18 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in AP NEWS

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ANDHRA PRADESH, CHANDRABABU

 

 

With an aim to bolster the state’s efforts under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, Andhra Pradesh State Employment Council has been constituted, with Chief Minister Sri N. Chandrababu Naidu as head. Other members of the Council include an official taskforce of 17 ministers and secretaries along with a team of people representatives and leaders of trade unions.

In a meeting of the “AP State Employment Guarantee Council”  held in Vijayawada, the Chief Minister suggested making Janmabhoomi village committees, self-help groups and Smart Andhra Pradesh partners in NREGA to ensure transparency. “Accord top priority to Neeru-Chettu followed by construction of cement roads and personal toilets,” the Chief Minister said.

To keep a track on the progress of various works, the Chief Minister suggested preparing a blueprint, while updating the dashboard in a phased manner. “Make it available to people giving them an opportunity to access the progress of works in their Panchayats,” he said.

In this regard, the Chief Minister stressed on the need to overhaul the selection of candidates under NREGA by reviewing MET and Senior MET cadres every six months. He also directed the officials to review the progress of employees and update it to the dashboard periodically. “Geo tagging, finger prints and online attendance system will eliminate middlemen and bring in transparency,” he added.

Meanwhile, officials informed the Chief Minister that Andhra Pradesh is emerging as a model state by effectively integrating technology and innovation to the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment scheme. They added that Andhra Pradesh is the only state to incorporate technology in all government activities such as master management, measurement checks, social audit vigilance, quality control, etc.

To make this more robust, the Chief Minister suggested setting up of IVRS services which will collect feedback from the beneficiaries. Furthermore, the Chief Minister stressed on emerging Andhra Pradesh as a successful state by utilizing the resources provided under MNREGA.

 

 

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Paraguay: Who is Asuncion’s New Mayor-Elect Mario Ferreiro? Mario Ferreiro,

16 Monday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, International, Left politics

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Asuncion, Mayor, Paraguay

representing the opposition coalition “Juntos Podemos”, celebrates his victory in the municipal elections, in Asuncion, Paraguay

Ferreiro has promised to improve transparency and tackle social inequality.Mario Ferreiro, of the Febrerista Revolutionary Party and the Together We Can alliance, won the Asuncion mayoral race on Sunday, Nov. 15, beating his closest challenger, incumbent mayor Arnaldo Samaniego, by more than 10 points. But who is he and what can we expect of his plans for Paraguay’s capital Asuncion?​  “A festive climate surrounds Mario Ferreiro, during the final vote count.”  Mario Ferreiro is a journalist who entered politics in 2012, with the center-left Guasu Front coalition headed by former President Fernando Lugo, who was ousted from power in a constitutional coup the same year. In 2013, Ferreiro unsuccessfully ran for president against current president Horacio Cartes with the center-left coalition Forward Country. Since then, he has continued as the host of the radio show “Mario x 800” and the television program “The Mañanero.”  “In my old home, with my companions @yolandapark1 and #CarlosTroche.”   With Ferreiro’s victory, Asuncion could see a political change. The shift could also signal popular will for broader change across Paraguay when the presidential race comes around again in 2018. Ferreiro has promised to improve transparency in city institutions and describes his platform as focused on resolving the problems of social inequality. “There are a hundred thousand people living in flood zones,” he said in an interview with teleSUR. “Infrastructure is needed to protect our people from the floods.”  Mayoral candidate Mario Ferreiro poses with youth voters. I Photo: Twitter/Mario Ferreiro The rise in Ferreiro’s popularity reflects growing popular discontent with the Colorado Party and its neoliberal policies. In recent weeks, students, teachers, medical staff, and transport workers have launched strikes to protest the lack of government support for public institutions. Campesinos, indigenous people, and educators have also marched on Asuncion to demand President Cartes resign and to protest policies that contribute to poverty and weak institutions.  Amid the wave of protests, diverse social sectors and unions have declared their participation in a general strike planned for Dec. 18, one month after the municipal elections. The action, the second general strike in President Cartes’ two years in office, will demand freedom of association and expression, solutions to various disputes, and social justice policies that benefit the people, not just corporations. Ferreiro’s social-democratic Revolutionary Febrerista Party is now part of the newly formed Together We Can alliance, which unites various left and center-left parties. The coalition also includes the main traditional opposition to the ruling Colorado Party, the Authentic Radical Liberal Party, as well as former president Lugo’s Guasu Front coalition.  During his presidency, Lugo introduced policies to combat poverty, including creating new free treatment hospitals and investing in housing programs for low-income people. This content was originally published by teleSUR at the following address:
“http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Paraguay-Who-is-Asuncions-New-Mayor-Elect-Mario-Ferreiro–20151115-0017.html”. If you intend to use it, please cite the source and provide a link to the original article. http://www.teleSURtv.net/english

 

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Paraguay: Left Mayoral Candidate Mario Ferreiro Wins Asuncion

16 Monday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, Left politics

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Left, Paraguay

Ferreiro defeated his closest challenger by more than 10 points. Supporters hope the victory can mean a political shift in Asuncion.

Mario Ferreiro, of the Febrerista Revolutionary Party and the Together We Can alliance, won the Asuncion mayoral race with 100 percent of the vote counted, beating his closest challenger by more than 10 points.

With Ferreiro’s victory, Asuncion could see a political shift that could also signal popular will for broader change when the presidential race comes around again in 2018. Ferreiro unsuccessfully ran for president against Cartes in 2013 with the center-left coalition Forward Country.

Polls closed in Paraguay’s municipal elections on Sunday at 5pm, local time. Nearly 4 million voters were eligible to cast their vote for mayors and council members in 250 districts across Paraguay’s 17 states, as well as the capital district Asuncion. Participation in Asuncion was at roughly 55 percent.

The vote count began shortly after polls closed at 5pm, local time.

Voters chose between candidates from the country’s three main political parties: the ruling Colorado Party, the Liberals, and the Together We Can alliance.

Several exit polls, released as the voting stations closed were closing, showed the incumbent Colorado Party mayor Arnaldo Samaniego several points ahead of Ferreiro, despite the final results. Leading up to the elections, polls showed Ferreiro maintaining a healthy lead over Samaniego in Asuncion.

“Thank you for so many hugs. Thank you for turning up the hope. Thank you for reclaiming happiness and hope!”

The ruling Colorado Party has been the subject of intense criticism over its increasingly unpopular conservative policies.

In the weeks leading up to the Sunday’s elections, students, teachers, medical staff, campesinos, indigenous people, and transport workers have protested the lack of government support for public institutions and even demanded the president’s resignation.

ANALYSIS: Will Crisis Spur Gains for the Left in Paraguay’s Elections?

Sunday’s vote was the country’s first elections since the victory of Paraguay’s current president Horacio Cartes, whose approval ratings have plummeted since coming to office two years ago.

Regional electoral observation missions from the Union of South American Nations as well as the U.S.-backed Organization of American States monitored polling stations and vote counting throughout the country.

“#UNASURElectoralMission began its agenda in Paraguay, leading up to the municipal elections.”

The election was the first time the country offered special support for voters who are deaf, blind, or illiterate, marking an important step toward takling inequality in the democratic process amid wider social crises in the country.

It was also the first election that included voting in the indigenous Guarani language, spoken by 95 percent of the population. Though many Paraguayans speak both Spanish and Guarani, a significant portion of the population only communicates in the indigenous language.

But the advances in equality with respect to voting accessibility hardly scratched the surface of Paraguay’s larger social and economic problems, including poverty, weak institutions, and vastly unequal land distribution.

Last September, Latinobarometro, a Santiago-based research organization, released a poll, which showed that only 14 percent of Paraguayans considered their country to be progressing.

This content was originally published by teleSUR

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WHO warns of widespread misunderstanding of superbug threat

16 Monday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in Uncategorized

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superbug, WHO

 LONDON | BY KATE KELLAND

People across the world are confused about the major threat to public health posed by drug-resistant superbugs and do not know how to stop that risk growing, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Monday.

Ramping up its fight against antibiotic resistance with a survey of public awareness, the United Nations health agency said 64 percent of those asked believed wrongly that penicillin-based drugs and other antibiotics can treat colds and flu, despite the fact such medicines have no impact on viruses.

Around a third of people surveyed also wrongly believed they should stop taking antibiotics when they feel better, rather than completing the prescribed treatment course, the WHO said.

“The findings … point to the urgent need to improve understanding around antibiotic resistance,” said Keiji Fukuda, the WHO’s special representative for antimicrobial resistance.

“One of the biggest health challenges of the 21st century will require global behaviour change by individuals and societies.”

Antibiotic resistance happens when bacteria mutate and adapt to become resistant to the antibiotics used to treat the infections they cause. Over-use and misuse of antibiotics exacerbate the development of drug resistant bacteria, often called superbugs.

Superbug infections — including multi-drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis, typhoid and gonorrhoea — kill hundreds of thousands of people a year, and the trend is growing.

“The rise of antibiotic resistance is a global health crisis,” the WHO’s director-general Margaret Chan said in a statement. “It is reaching dangerously high levels in all parts of the world.”

The WHO surveyed 10,000 people across 12 countries — Barbados, China, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Nigeria, Russia, Serbia, South Africa, Sudan and Vietnam — and found many worrying misconceptions.

Three quarters of respondents think antibiotic resistance means the body is resistant to the drugs, for example, whereas in fact it is the bacteria themselves that become resistant to antibiotics and their spread causes hard-to-treat infections.

Some 66 percent believe individuals are not at risk of a drug-resistant infection if they personally take their antibiotics as prescribed.

And nearly half of those surveyed think drug resistance is only a problem in people who take antibiotics often. In fact, anyone, anywhere, of any age, can get a superbug infection.

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Common man feels relieved after Bihar verdict: Ex-Foreign Secretary

15 Sunday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in Communalism, Current Affairs

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The common man is feeling relief after the results of Bihar elections but it seems unlikely that the central government and its ministers or the ruling party BJP will take any lessons: Muchkund Dubey

Source: Common man feels relieved after Bihar verdict: Ex-Foreign Secretary

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Facing evil in Paris and beyond – The Washington Post

15 Sunday Nov 2015

Posted by raomk in Current Affairs, International

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The United States has lessons for France — and lessons to learn alongside France.

Source: Facing evil in Paris and beyond – The Washington Post

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