Deployment of women constables cheers farmers in Punjab’s border villages

Rorawala (India-Pakistan Border), Sep.11 (ANI): As women constables of the Border Security Force (BSF) were deployed at the India-Pakistan International Border on Friday, a wave of cheer overwhelmed the villagers here.

Male farmers expressed their delight over the development, saying the presence of women security personnel would encourage their womenfolk to join them in the fields near the border.

The fencing of the 553-kilometer-long border since the 1990s; has created a feeling of reluctance among rural women to cross the border gates to work in fields or to deliver meals.

Most of them were hesitant in undergoing a frisking of their bodies, a security provision to check against the smuggling of unwanted material from across the border.

In such conditions, farmers were compelled to hire outside help on daily wages.

Hailing the step, farmers in the border area said their financial burden would be reduced with their women stepping in to assist them.

They also said that the deployment of women constables would enable them to access cheap labour.

Raj, a woman labourer, said: “I am very happy since it was difficult to get work in the village. We can now go to the fields beyond the fencing and earn much for our families.”

Balwinder Kaur of Rorawala village said that her family owned about ten acres of land beyond the fencing and some times it was difficult to cultivate it due to the shortage of labourers.

Now, with the presence of female security personnel, she said that she and other females of the family were ready to help in the cultivation process beyond the fenced wiring.

Joginder Singh, a farmer, said that he was now looking forward to the fresh meals brought to him by the womenfolk of his family.

Mohammad Aquil, DIG (Border Range) BSF, said the deployment of the lady BSF constables would be done in the state of Punjab within two months.

A senior BSF official said about 178 girls would be posted at the international border dividing India and Pakistan. At a later stage, 60 of these women constables would be deployed along the India-Bangladesh border

These women are aged between 19-25 and are fully trained in the use of weapons, patrolling and other combat tasks, they will be assigned non-combat duties along the fenced border.

Gurbir Kaur, a woman constable, said that the (soldiers)’ uniform always fascinated her. She said that being in uniform was a dream come true.

Raman Preet Kaur, another lady constable, said that apart from frisking, she was also trained to handle a security-related crisis at the border.

These women passed out of the BSF academy in Kharkan near the town of Hoshiarpur on July 25 this year. By Ravinder Singh Robin (ANI)

Radio Pakistan unhappy over criticism of Jaswant Singh book on Jinnah

Abohar, Sep.3 (ANI): The expelled Bharatiya Janata Party leader Jaswant Singh has got a new fan in Punjabi Durbar programme of Radio Pakistan.

In its latest edition, the Punjabi Durbar programme has described all political parties of India be it Bharatiya Janata Party, Congress or Shiv Sena being anti-Pakistan for voicing objection to Jaswant Singh’s book- “Jinnah-India, Partition, Independence”.

In its recent Punjabi Durbar Programme, Radio Pakistan said that Jaswant Singh has paid a huge price for his biography of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan.

Many Indian scholars have expressed sympathy with Jaswant Singh, but have taken exception to Pakistan Radio describing all Indian political parties as anti-Pakistan.

Anil Kumar, a historian and a commentator on current affairs has stated that political parties in India have tried their best to cultivate good relations with Pakistan ever since independence.

“India has been maintaining friendly relationship with Pakistan since 1947. India parted with funds held by united India, when Jinnah demanded it. Even after Pakistani aggression in 1965 and 1971, India returned to Pakistan the territory which was in India’s possession in the hope that there would be cordial relations between the two countries,” he said.

“Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh have been continuously trying to maintain good relations with Pakistan, but Pakistan continued terrorist attacks in India,” Anil Kumar added.

“India is a secular country. There are more Muslims in India than the total population of Pakistan. Moslems are happy to be in India. Many feel that they are safer than in Pakistan, which is being subjected to violence by the Taliban,” said Anil kumar, who is, an expert on Indo-Pak affairs.

India is continuing talks at different levels despite incidents like Mumbai terror attacks and Pakistan’s ongoing support to militancy in Kashmir.

It is surprising that broadcasters of Radio Pakistan expect political parties in India to sing praise of Jinnah, who was chiefly responsible for the division of the sub-continent on the basis of religious identities.

They accept Jinnah’s contribution during the freedom struggle against the British Raj, but are critical of his role in dividing the country. (ANI)

NASA uses satellite to improve global crop forecasting

Washington, May 27 (ANI): NASA researchers are using satellite data to cultivate the most accurate estimates of soil moisture, which would improve global crop forecasting.

Soil moisture is essential for seeds to germinate and for crops to grow. But, record droughts and scorching temperatures in certain parts of the globe in recent years have caused soil to dry up, crippling crop production.

The falling food supply in some regions has forced prices upward, pushing staple foods out of reach for millions of poor people.

Now, NASA researchers are using satellite data to deliver a kind of space-based humanitarian assistance.

They are cultivating the most accurate estimates of soil moisture and improving global forecasts of how well food will grow at a time when the world is confronting shortages.

In this context, NASA scientist John Bolten described a new modeling product that uses data from the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer for EOS (AMSR-E) sensor on NASA’s Aqua satellite to improve the accuracy of West African soil moisture.

The group produced assessments of current soil moisture conditions, or “nowcasts,” and improved estimates by 5 percent over previous methods.

“Though seemingly small and incremental, the increase can make a big difference in the precision of crop forecasts,” Bolten said.

The modeling innovation comes at a time when crop analysts at agencies like the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) are working to meet the food shortage problem head on.

They combine soil moisture estimates with weather trends to produce up-to-date forecasts of crop harvests.

Those estimates help regional and national officials prepare for and prevent food crises.

“The USDA’s estimates of global crop yields are an objective, timely benchmark of food availability and help drive international commodity markets,” said Bolten, a physical scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland.

Crop analysts must estimate root-zone soil moisture, the amount of water beneath the surface available for plants to absorb.

But estimating the amount of water in soil has posed challenges and data gaps.

Under a new NASA-USDA collaboration known as the Global Agriculture Monitoring Project, Bolten and colleagues from the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service are using AMSR-E to fill the data gaps with daily soil moisture “snapshots.”

Since its launch in 2002, the instrument has “seen” through clouds, and light vegetation like crops and grasses to detect the amount of soil moisture beneath Earth’s surface.

Bolten says that results from AMSR-E are just a precursor to dramatic new improvements in data and prediction accuracy researchers expect from the Soil Moisture Active and Passive satellite, slated to launch in 2013. (ANI)

Unique roof garden in Chattisgarh

Raipur, May 20 (ANI): A man in Maha Samudra District of Chhattisgarh has gained expertise in growing all kinds of crops and plants on his rooftop garden.

B.P. Basai, 64, a retired official from the food corporation of India, is the proud owner of a roof top garden, which is located twenty-five feet above the ground.

Basai says his roof top garden’s success is result of his thirteen years’ toil.

“I’m working towards it (the roof top garden) since 1996 and I have gained enough experience in this filed. I sow all kinds of crops except the big trees etc,” said Basai.

Since 1996, B.P. Basai has been growing fruits, vegetables and crops on top of his 3200 square feet roof.

After seeing Basai’ roof top garden yield all kinds of fruits and vegetables, Maha Samudra District agriculture department has started various schemes to help the farmers increase their yield.

“B.P Basai was interested in collecting the rare plants from the beginning. The department has also started various schemes for the farmers they may be related to irrigation, seed development and other things which lead to increase in yield,” said Vinod Verma, Deputy Coordinator, Agriculture Department, Maha Samudra District.

Basai says his experiment has not only enabled him to cultivate the fruits and vegetables of his choice, but it also keeps his roof cool during the summers. (ANI)

Meditation helps build stronger brains

Washington, May 13 (ANI): A new study has confirmed what many people believed: meditation helps increase gray matter.

A research team from University of California, Los Angeles scanned the brains of people who meditate and found that certain regions in the brains of long-term meditators were larger than in a similar control group.

Meditators showed significantly larger volumes of the hippocampus and areas within the orbito-frontal cortex, the thalamus and the inferior temporal gyrus – all known for regulating emotions.

“We know that people who consistently meditate have a singular ability to cultivate positive emotions, retain emotional stability and engage in mindful behaviour,” said Eileen Luders, lead author and a postdoctoral research fellow at the UCLA Laboratory of Neuro Imaging.

“The observed differences in brain anatomy might give us a clue why meditators have these exceptional abilities,” Luders added.

During the study, the research team looked at 44 people. Half were asked to practice various forms of meditation such as Zazen, Samatha and Vipassana and the other half acted as the control group.

More than half of all the meditators said that deep concentration was an essential part of their practice, and most meditated between 10 and 90 minutes every day.

The brains of the meditators showed larger volumes of the right hippocampus and increased gray matter in the right orbito-frontal cortex, the right thalamus and the left inferior temporal lobe.

Because these areas of the brain are closely linked to emotion, Luders said, “these might be the neuronal underpinnings that give meditators’ the outstanding ability to regulate their emotions and allow for well-adjusted responses to whatever life throws their way.”

The study is published in the journal NeuroImage. (ANI)

Germany to ban cultivation of GMO maize: Minister

By Michael Hogan and Thorsten Severin

BERLIN/HAMBURG (Reuters) – Germany will ban cultivation and sale of genetically modified (GMO) maize, German Agriculture Minister Ilse Aigner said on Tuesday.

The ban affects U.S. biotech company Monsanto’s MON 810 maize which may no longer be sown for this summer’s harvest, Aigner told a news conference. MON 810 maize is the only GM crop currently approved by the EU for commercial use.

“I have come to the conclusion that there is a justifiable reason to believe that genetically modified maize of the type MON 810 presents a danger to the environment,” Aigner said.

Monsanto declined immediate comment.

Aigner, who took office in October 2008, said previously she would review approval for cultivation of GMO maize in Germany before this year’s sowing took place in late April.

Monsanto gave German authorities a report on compliance with cultivation rules at the end of March.

German authorities had given Aigner differing assessments of the report, the minister said. But the Environment Ministry also believed GMOs presented a threat to the environment.

The decision to ban was based on scientific factors and was not a political decision, Aigner said. It was an individual case and not a fundamental decision against GMO crops, she added.

Her ministry would now prepare a report into Germany’s strategy on GMO crops.

Aigner stressed that five other European Union countries have banned GMO maize cultivation in the face of EU approvals.

Aigner’s decision was welcomed by German environmentalist association BUND.

“The suspicions that genetic maize damages nature and animals are so widespread that a ban is absolutely necessary,” BUND chairman Hubert Weiger said.

Environmental group Greenpeace called on Aigner to work inside the EU to stop further approvals of GMO maize.

A series of scientific studies had shown that GMO maize was dangerous to the environment, Greenpeace spokeswoman Stephanie Toewe said.

German farmers have registered intentions to cultivate some 3,600 hectares of maize for the 2009 harvest, up from 3,200 hectares in 2008.

But the total is an insignificant part of Germany’s annual maize cultivation of around 1.8 to 2.0 million hectares.

(Reporting by Thorsten Severin and Michael Hogan; Editing by Editing by Peter Blackburn)

The all-female ant species that doesn’t need sex to reproduce

London, April 15 (ANI): Biologists at the University of Arizona have identified an all-female species of ant, which has dispensed with sex.

The researchers have revealed that the ant species – Mycocepurus smithii – rely upon cloning for reproduction. They say that the queen ants copy themselves to produce genetically identical daughters.

According to the research team, this species cultivates a garden of fungus, which also reproduces asexually.

Biologist Anna Himler, who led the research, revealed that the research team used a battery of tests to verify their findings.

Upon “fingerprinting” DNA of the ant species, the researchers found them all to be clones of the colony’s queen.

The researchers later dissected the female insects, and found them to be physically incapable of mating.

They said that an essential part of the ants’ reproductive system, known as the “mussel organ”, had degenerated.
While asexual reproduction of males from unfertilised eggs is a normal part of some insect reproduction, the researchers noted that such a process in females is “exceedingly rare in ants”.

“In social insects, there are a number of different types of reproduction. But this species has evolved its own unusual mode,” the BBC quoted Dr. Himler as saying.

She agreed that her team had yet to find out why the particular ant species had become fully asexual.

Her team are presently conducting more genetic experiments to find out how long ago the evolutionary change occurred.

Dr Himler has revealed that her interest in Mycocepurus smithii was originally sparked by their ability to cultivate crops.

“Ants discovered farming long before we did – they have been cultivating fungus gardens for an estimated 80 million years,” she said.

While many different species of ant cultivate fungi, this particular species is able to grow “a greater number of crops than other ant species,” she explained.

Since the fungus crop reproduces asexually, Dr. Himler thinks that it might give the ants some kind of advantage “not to operate under the usual constraints of sexual reproduction”.

“There is certainly more work to be done in this system. We’re quite excited about the direction this research might take us, and its implications,” she said.

The study has been published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. (ANI)

Nationalist Hindu leader Advani eyes India’s top post

New Delhi – Lal Krishna Advani, who fled to India from Pakistan as a refugee and emerged as the country’s top Hindu nationalist leader, has brought about a marked transformation in India’s political scene over the past two decades.

The 81-year-old leader of India’s main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, Advani has helmed the rise of the BJP largely on the basis of Hindu-Muslim tensions and a campaign to have a Hindu temple dedicated to the Hindu god Ram built on the site of a demolished mosque in the northern city of Ayodhya.

In recent years, however, Advani, who is among India’s most versatile politicians, has attempted an image makeover from hardliner to moderate.

He has also tried to connect with young voters ahead of this year’s election, carrying out a vigorous internet campaign and writing a blog. The octogenarian recently tried out some weights at a gym in a tour aimed at youth.

A former journalist, Advani, who has been BJP president three times and a deputy prime minister, has built a reputation as an honest and strict administrator.

Born in Karachi on November 8, 1927, in what is now Pakistan, Advani started his political career in 1942 when he joined Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh, BJP’s ideological predecessor. He later joined the Bharatiya Jana Sangh party and was a member of Parliament from 1970 to 1975.

Advani was instrumental in making the BJP a political force, taking it from two parliamentary seats in 1984 to forming a government 15 years later. His campaign on the Ram temple catapulted his political career as well as his party’s.

Advani travelled across India to muster support for the temple, a crusade that ended with the medieval mosque being destroyed in a frenzied attack by Hindu zealots in 1992.

The demolition triggered massive riots between Hindus and Muslims that left more than 2,000 people dead. Advani has denied allegations that he incited the mobs as the temple issue is being decided by the courts.

Advani’s hardliner image was not easily acceptable to constituents during the formation of the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance government after 1996 elections, and the Ayodhya issue led to his associate, Atal Behari Vajpayee, becoming the face of the BJP.

He served as home minister in the Vajpayee cabinet and later became a deputy prime minister until the alliance’s defeat in the last elections in May 2004.

Although Advani is criticized for communal polarization in India, BJP activists claim that he put India on a high-growth trajectory and restructured India’s relations in the post-Cold War era, which saw close ties develop with the United States and Israel.

Advani was the leader of the opposition in Parliament and has held centre stage in the party as Vajpayee’s health deteriorated.

He has tried to distance himself from his hawkish image since 2005 when he praised Pakistan’s founding father, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, and described him as secular, sparking a furore in India.

Political observers said Advani has been trying to cultivate an image as a senior statesman to widen his electoral appeal in what is likely to prove his final attempt for India’s top job.

But with the BJP asserting its agenda on the temple, the party can hardly expect support from Muslims, who account for 13 per cent of India’s 1.17 billion people.

Lately, the BJP has also been faced with internal discord among its leaders as well as problems with its coalition partners, including a breakup with a powerful ally in the eastern state of Orissa.

Lacking his predecessor’s skills in keeping political alliances together, as well as fractious politics inside his own camp, Advani could fall short in his quest for the coveted post. (dpa)

Ants that carry anti fungal bacteria could be key to advances in biofuels and antibiotics

London, March 30 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have found that leaf-cutting ants that carry colonies of anti fungal bacteria on their bodies, contain a chemical which could help speed the quest to develop better antibiotics and biofuels.

In a mutually beneficial symbiosis, leaf-cutting ants cultivate fungus gardens, providing both a safe home for the fungi and a food source for the ants.

But, according to a report in Nature News, this 50-million-year-old relationship also includes microbes that new research shows could help speed the quest to develop better antibiotics and biofuels.

Cameron Currie, a microbial ecologist then at the University of Toronto in Ontario, Canada, discovered ten years ago that leaf-cutting ants carry colonies of actinomycete bacteria on their bodies.

Now, Currie, Jon Clardy at the Harvard Medical School in Boston and their colleagues reported that they had isolated and purified one of these antifungals, which they named dentigerumycin, and that it is a chemical that has never been previously reported.

The antifungal slowed the growth of a drug-resistant strain of the fungus Candida albicans, which causes yeast infections in people.

Because distinct ant species cultivate different fungal crops, which in turn fall prey to specialized parasites, researchers hope that they will learn how to make better antibiotics by studying how the bacteria have adapted to fight the parasite in an ancient evolutionary arms race.

“These ants are walking pharmaceutical factories,” said Currie, now at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

According to John Taylor, a mycologist at the University of California, Berkeley, Currie’s continued scrutiny of the lives of ants provides insights into the web of interactions necessary for the survival of any single species.

“I think the coolest thing about this is that you start with one organism, and then you find more and more organisms involved in the relationship,” he said. (ANI)

China cradle of rice cultivation, indicates new evidence

New Delhi, March 28 (ANI): Archaeologists have come across new proof which determines that China is the cradle of rice cultivation.

For the research, Dorian Fuller from the Institute of Archaeology, University College London, Zheng Yunfei from Zhejiang Provincial Institute of Antiquity and Archaeology and a few other Chinese archaeologists, investigated rice remains at the Neolithic excavation site of Tianluoshan, part of the local Hemudu Neolithic Culture that goes back 7,000 years in Zhejing province.

Their research concluded that rice cultivation was slowly domesticated over the course of two or three millennia in the Lower Yangtze region of Zhejiang, China between 6,900 and 6,600 years ago.

“The Hemudu people may not have been the first to initiate rice cultivation, but they certainly did cultivate rice and eventually domesticate it,” said Zheng.

In their research, the team turned to an important trait for rice domestication – loss of seed shattering.

Wild rice shatters automatically, while domesticated rice will not, even when it reaches maturity. It needs to be threshed, according to Qin.

As they dug at the Hemudu site, they observed that the percentage of rice remains among all plant remains went up from eight to 24 percent.

This pointed to the increasing dietary importance of rice over time at the site.

The researchers also separated the rice remains into three categories (wild, domestic, and immature) based on their shattering signs, and determined that as time progressed, the domestic type of rice had increased in occurrence from about 27 to 39 percent over the course of 300 years.

“It is on the basis of this indicator that we have come to our conclusion, convincing not only us but also others,” said Qin. (ANI)

ISI directly supporting Taliban to counter US-led NATO forces in Afghanistan: Report

Washington, Mar 26 (ANI): Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) is directly giving money, military supplies and strategic planning guidance to Taliban commanders fighting the US-led NATO forces, leading to rise in militant outfit’s campaign in Afghanistan.

ISI’s direct help is making possible the Taliban campaign in southern Afghanistan, despite Pakistani Government promises to sever ties to militant groups fighting in Afghanistan, according to US Government officials.

S Wing of Pakistan’s spy service, the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence, is supporting the Taliban and coordinating with other militant groups, the New York Times quoted the officials, as saying.

There is even evidence that ISI operatives meet regularly with Taliban commanders to discuss whether to intensify or scale back violence before the Afghan elections.

US officials said that proof of the ties between the Taliban and Pakistani spies came from electronic surveillance and trusted informants. Pakistani officials said they had firsthand knowledge of the connections, though they denied the ties were strengthening the insurgency.

A half-dozen US, Pakistani and other security officials during recent interviews in Washington and Islamabad, described details of the ISI’s continuing ties to militant groups.

American officials have complained for more than a year about the ISI’s support to groups like the Taliban. But the new details reveal that the spy agency is aiding a broader array of militant networks with more diverse types of support than was previously.

US officials have also said that midlevel ISI operatives occasionally cultivate relationships that are not approved by their bosses.

The ISI helped create and nurture the Taliban movement in the 1990s to bring stability to a nation that had been devastated by civil war between rival warlords, and one Pakistani official explained that Islamabad needed to use groups like the Taliban as “proxy forces to preserve our interests.”

Little is publicly known about the S Wing of ISI, which officials say directs intelligence operations outside of Pakistan.

American officials said that the S Wing provided direct support to three major groups carrying out attacks in Afghanistan: the Taliban based in Quetta, Pakistan, commanded by Mullah Muhammad Omar; the militant network run by Gulbuddin Hekmatyar; and a different group run by the guerrilla leader Jalaluddin Haqqani. (ANI)

Gujarat’s Sabarmati Prison promotes organic cultivation

Ahmedabad, Mar 23 (ANI): The Sabarmati Prison in Ahmedabad has launched an initiative to promote organic cultivation.

Taken up by Siddharth Jaiswal, an alumni of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad (IIM-A), with the help of prison authorities, the initiative is aimed at training prison inmates in organic cultivation.

Armed with an MBA in Agribusiness management, Jaiswal wanted to start organic farming in the state and got in touch with the prison authorities. They agreed to let him start the project in their premises.

Jaiswal is working with inmates to produce vermicompost, organic manure, which is excreta of earthworms rich in minerals and nutritional value.

He also plans to provide training to farmers and gardening enthusiasts in organic farming.

“We wanted to start a revolution in the state for organic cultivation which is sustainable in the long run. So this vermicompost, we caught this idea with the IG, Keshav Kumar, they already have 35 acres of land cultivation, but which is not organic. They use the conventional, normal, urea, fetilisers, so we want to develop the Sabarmati Jail as hub for organic cultivation,” said Jaiswal.

“We are giving training to farmers in organic cultivation plus this urban populace. Suppose they want to develop their own vegetables in the kitchen garden, we will be providing them the seeds, fertilisers, earthworms so that in their earthen pots they can grow organic vegetables,” Jaiswal added.

The inmates at the Sabarmati Prison are quite happy to learn the new cultivation technique which they feel is better than the conventional method of farming.

“Conventional farming uses a lot of chemical and other stuff. In organic farming, all these things are not required. I can use this technique to grow crops like wheat, cotton. I can utilise that to cultivate organic crops on my field,” said Raju, an inmate.

Initially, crops like wheat would be grown in the prison under the project and slowly they will pick up vegetable cultivation.

Jaiswal is also working on an annual crop table for organic cultivation in the prison. By Ami Sharma(ANI)

Uttarakhand farmers benefit from hi-tech farming

Nainital, Mar. 22 (ANI): Farmers in Uttarakhand are reaping it rich by cultivating vegetables, fruits and flowers by using hi-tech methods like greenhouse farming.

Government’s Horticulture Technology Mission has initiated several benefiting schemes for the farmers in Padampuri region near Nainital.

The schemes include providing good quality seeds, fertilisers and insecticides at subsidised rates to the farmers. Technical and financial aids are also given to set up poly greenhouses to cultivate various fruits and flowers.

“We are enjoying lot of benefits. I have also applied for a motor and the scheme will help me get it. Overall, the scheme is very beneficial. Those who really want to reap the benefit can take advantage of it,” said Tarachand Saini, a farmer.

The scheme particularly benefit farmers in mountainous region, where crops are subject to vagaries of nature like incessant rains during monsoon season.

“The scheme is very successful. Small farmers are joining it. All that they need is motivation,” opined Praveen Sharma, a Padampuri based floriculturist.

Out of forty percent subsidies extended to the farmers, the Union Government bears twenty percent of the overall cost. (ANI)

The lone orange tree of Srinagar

Srinagar, Jan 21 (ANI): A resident of Srinagar has succeeded in growing oranges in the backyard of his house.

Kashmir’s climate is not suited for cultivating oranges as the temperatures in the valley fall to sub-zero levels during winter with frost being common to which oranges are sensitive.

However, Abdur Rashid Badyari has succeeded in growing the lone orange treen Srinagar.

Badyari has a hobby of planting a variety of plants since his childhood days but never did he ever expect that he would be able to grown orange tree.

Some years back, Badyari bought few plants along with an orange plant from outside the state and planted it in the backyard of his house knowing very well that the valley’s climate is not favorable for the growth of an orange tree.

But astonishingly his orange tree not only grew but also bloomed to bear the fruit astonishing his friends and neighbours.

“Earlier many people including my friends thought of this tree as an artificial one. But when they came and saw the orange tree, they started appreciating it. I feel very happy,” said Rashid Badyari.

The tree has presently about 100 oranges hanging from its branches that too in the winter season to the bewilderment of local horticulture experts. They maintain that the climate of Kashmir valley is not congenial for growing oranges.

“It is not possible to grow oranges in Kashmir valley because ours is a temperate area where we can cultivate apples, plums, apricots, cherry and walnut. We can’t grow oranges as the weather is not like Nagpur, but we can grow something like rough lemon,” said M S Qasba, Director, Horticulture Department, Kashmir.

The Kashmir Valley is not a citrus belt. Its summers are usually cool, and the winters experience snow and are freezing. Oranges are sensitive to temperatures below four degrees celsius and that is why an orange tree that seems to be defying natural laws baffles the local agricultural experts. By Pervez Butt(ANI)

Trouts, a lucrative proposition in Kashmir

Rajouri, Jan 20 (ANI): Trout fish cultivation has gained fillip in Jammu and Kashmir’s Rajouri District as the State Fisheries Department is successfully harnessing the potential to produce trout, a valuable commercial fish.

Trout, both brown and the rainbow species, is a coldwater fish found aplenty in the Beas, Sutlej and Ravi rivers flowing in from the upper reaches of the Himalayan range.

In 1984, a trout fish-farming project was set up at Kokernag, 79 kilometres south of Srinagar with assistance of the European Economic Community (EEC).

The project was successful and emerged as Asia’s largest trout farm.

The Kokernag farm has now restocked trout fishes in the valley’s streams and the trout production has increased manifold.

Consequently, quality trout is available at State’s fishery centres at much cheaper rates as compared to other trout producing nations of Asia.

The Fisheries Department is propagating trout farming in the cold-water rivers for the promotion of sport fishing to attract more tourists from abroad.

“We cultivate fish in the still waters. In fish farming, the investment is less as compared to the profits we generate. We have more than 100 units engaged in the farming in the Rajouri District alone. And we earn minimum 20 to 30 thousand through one Kanal,” said Qasim Lone, Assistant Director,isheries Department, Jammu and Kashmir.

Commanding massive demand within India and abroad, 10,000 to 150,000 of trout fish are being exported. This is apart from the amateur anglers and tourists netting this fish.

“We export nearly ten thousand to fifteen thousand a fish every year.We want more of our trout fish to be exported. We also get support from the Jammu and Kashmir Government,” said Mohammed Iqbal, a private fish firm owner.

Trout is highly nutritious. It is said that an average-sized trout contains about 1.8 grams of Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid that is needed for the development of brain and retina in infants.

This fish also contains 20 percent protein, Vitamin A, B, B1, C2 and D and forms the basis of healthy, low fat and fibre-rich diet.

The saga of trout in Kashmir valley dates back to the era of British colonial rule.

It is believed that trout was introduced here for angling by an Englishman named Frank Mitchell in 1899.

He reared the trout in premises of his private carpet factory at Bagh-e-Dilawar Khan (Garden of Dilawar Khan) located in old city Srinagar.

Later,he established the first trout hatchery at Harwan, situated on the outskirts of Srinagar in 1901,which today has become a prospective proposition. By Tahir Nadeem Khan (ANI)