Caste census: After Cong, dissent brews within BJP

New Delhi, May 28 — Signs of dissent are brewing within the BJP against the party’s official line in support of caste census. On Friday, senior leader Murli Manohar Joshi denounced the idea as divisive. This happened even as party spokesperson Ravi Shankar Prasad refused a direct comment on Minister of State for Home Ajay Maken’s call to young MPs to oppose caste census, instead asking the government to clarify its position on the issue. “It is wrong; it should not happen,” Joshi told HT. “It will further divide society and divert attention from issues like internal security, terrorism and poverty. A national debate is required on the caste census, but in my opinion it is not good for the country.” Days back, RSS had also spoken against the caste census. Leaders such as Sushma Swaraj, Gopinath Munde and M. Venkaiah Naidu have said that numbers with regard to OBCs will help the government plan welfare measures for them.

Joshi said the party chief had not yet supported a caste census, and the BJP brass should get together to formulate the party’s position on the matter. There were reports that Gadkari had opposed a caste census, but he denied these reports.

Trauma of Manipur violence victims

Imphal, May 5 (ANI): Manipur has been affected by militant violence for a long time and the worst sufferers are the common people.

Here is a family that was a victim of militant violence and see how they are coping with the loss of their loved one.

The simple and happy life of the family of late Singam Premananda Singh, came to an end after his death.

Premananda, the sole bread earner of the family was killed in an explosion engineered by a militant outfit at Pourabi Road in Manipur on 16th December 2007 along with six other people.

Almost four years later, the dreadful incident still haunts his family.

Premananda has left behind an aged mother, his wife and three children who live in the shadow of poverty.

Ibemma, his wife,now weaves clothes and does other menial labour to keep the family afloat.

“We are facing untold hardships after his death. I’m old and unable to work. Now, all the responsibility of the family has fallen on my daughter-in-law’s shoulder. No one is there to look after us,” said Thamchet Devi, mother of a victim.

The Sstate Government gave Rs one lakh to assist the Singam family and promised to provide assistance in future as well.

Still, Ibemma finds it difficult to make both ends meet and provide a future to her children.

Sometimes, she finds it difficult juggling different roles, but she sees hope in her children’s eyes and is inspired to soldier on.

“It is very difficult to manage and run the family all alone. I have to raise my children, take part in locality’s social services and earn money as well. Even leading a simple life is hard for us,” said Ibemma Devi, wife of a victim.

Manipur has more than 30 militant groups and extortion, abductions and bomb attacks happen quite regularly in the state.

“They (militants) must think about the consequences of their actions, which normally affect innocent people. People are suffering unnecessarily due to their mindless acts. We are against them,” Devi added.

The story doesn’t end with the Singam family; there are several other families that have suffered a similar fate.

Here are many families like that of Premananda who have been victims of militants’ activities in the state.

People in the state live in fear that the same fate could befall them at any time. (ANI)

Meet the 12-year-old Indian headmistress!

London, April 19 (ANI): A 12-year-old Indian girl, who was abandoned at a railway station in Bihar as an infant, has become the head teacher at a school in Kusumbhara, her adopted village.

Bharti Kumari teaches Hindi, English and maths to 50 village kids who would otherwise receive no education.

She gives them lessons every morning and evening, under the shade of a mango tree.

In between, she attends a state school in Akhodhi Gola, a two-mile walk away.

In her school uniform, she passes on the knowledge gleaned from her lessons to the village children, aged between four and 10, in her own class.

“I have a long day. My school is from 10am to 3pm and I study late. This is what I love doing. I enjoy teaching children their ABCs as well as the Hindi alphabets,” Times Online quoted her as saying.

Kusumbhara is a poverty-stricken village 87 miles from Patna, the state capital.

Rampati, Bharti’s adoptive father, an impoverished farmhand, said he would not follow the rural tradition of pushing girls into early marriages but would allow her to continue her studies. (ANI)

Meet the 12-year-old Indian headmistress!

London, April 19 (ANI): A 12-year-old Indian girl, who was abandoned at a railway station in Bihar as an infant, has become the head teacher at a school in Kusumbhara, her adopted village.

Bharti Kumari teaches Hindi, English and maths to 50 village kids who would otherwise receive no education.

She gives them lessons every morning and evening, under the shade of a mango tree.

In between, she attends a state school in Akhodhi Gola, a two-mile walk away.

In her school uniform, she passes on the knowledge gleaned from her lessons to the village children, aged between four and 10, in her own class.

“I have a long day. My school is from 10am to 3pm and I study late. This is what I love doing. I enjoy teaching children their ABCs as well as the Hindi alphabets,” Times Online quoted her as saying.

Kusumbhara is a poverty-stricken village 87 miles from Patna, the state capital.

Rampati, Bharti’s adoptive father, an impoverished farmhand, said he would not follow the rural tradition of pushing girls into early marriages but would allow her to continue her studies. (ANI)

India, Brazil committed to reducing impact of climate change

Brasilia (Brazil), Apr.16 (ANI): Leaders of India and Brazil on Wednesday reaffirmed their concern for climate change and its adverse impacts, and committed themselves to work in close coordination, including in the BASIC group towards achieving a comprehensive, balanced, and effective outcome at the 16th Session of the Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

A joint statement issued after a bilateral meeting between Brazil President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and visiting Indian Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh also said that both leaders were committed to achieving a similar outcome during deliberations at the Sixth Conference of the Parties serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol, to be held in Mexico in November-December 2010.

They welcomed the Resolution of the UN General Assembly to hold a Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20) in Rio de Janeiro, in 2012.

Both leaders reiterated their commitment to fight hunger and poverty, promote democratic values, and foster socially-inclusive economic development policies in their respective countries. (ANI)

Do you trust Generation Y?

Experts are questioning whether the stereotypically confident, technology-savvy, materialistic and carefree Generation Y can be trusted to handle Australia’s future.

The topic was raised last night in an open forum at the University of Western Sydney’s Parramatta campus, where 19-year-old Sacha Krjatian was furiously defending his generation.

The eager, third-year business student believes the public perception of Gen Y is false and that its cohort, including himself, can certainly be trusted.

“I’ve met so many young people doing so many amazing things, it’s absolutely incredible,” he said.

“Whatever the age and circumstances of people that are in Generation Y, I have no doubt that we will be able to solve today’s and the future’s problems.

“Just like any generation, we are the product of the environment that we live in, the culture that we’ve grown up with, and one of those things is the idea of technology surrounding us all the time.

“But that doesn’t mean that Generation Y is lazy and can’t be trusted with the future,” he continued.

“We have a lot of different problems we have to solve, but being so globally connected actually helps us solve those problems as well.”

Mr Krjatian is one member of Gen Y who seems to be doing “amazing things”.

He is set to publish his own book in a few months and aspires to eradicate poverty through business.

“I want people to read my book and be inspired and have the tools to follow their dreams and passions, because that’s what I believe will make a successful future for all of us,” he said.

“I also want to eliminate poverty through business. I’m not waiting for anything to get started. I believe we have so many tools, we’re so privileged to have so much information and knowledge available to use.”

Leading social researcher Hugh Mackay also put forward his defence of Gen Y.

He says the group’s ability to adapt in the face of change is exceptional.

“Australia has changed remarkably in the past 30 years, for example in terms of working hours, the IT revolution, divorce rates and multiculturalism, and Generation Y has learned to be adaptable in the face of this constant change,” he said.

“We will need this adaptability as Australian society continues to evolve.”

Loosely, Generation Y is made up of people born between 1980 and 1995.

Malawi poverty ‘pains’ Madonna

Madonna says poverty in Malawi “pains” her.

The comments came during a visit to the birth country of the pop singer’s two adopted children.

“As a mother, it pains me to see women having no access to potable water and good education,” Madonna said after visiting a poverty alleviation project in the Mchinji district, where she controversially adopted David Banda in 2006.

Toddler Chifundo “Mercy” James, adopted last year, and Madonna’s biological daughter Lourdes accompanied her to visit the Millennium Village site where she will lay the first bricks of a girls academy she is funding.

Construction of the academy has been delayed over a dispute between Madonna’s charity and about 200 villagers who claimed they were not adequately compensated for land used to build the school.

Each villager was paid $US500,000 ($545,000) in compensation by Madonna’s charity, Raising Malawi.

The government has had to forcibly removed the villagers.

Today Madonna and her family were given a hero’s welcome, with villagers staging traditional dances and displays.

Madonna said she would “ask friends and fans around the world to join us in making the difference” in Malawi.

Malawi is one of the world’s poorest nations, with more than half of the population of 13 million living on less than $US1 a day.

Mysterious foreign phone calls behind Sharif brothers’ political moves: Elahi

Lahore, Mar. 29 (ANI): Senior PML-Q leader Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi has claimed that Nawaz and Sahbaz Sharif have been playing politics through telephone, as most of their big political moves have been triggered by “mysterious foreign phone calls.”

The Daily Times quoted Elahi as saying that the telephone has remained a key item in Sharif brothers’ policies as they change their decisions after receiving phone calls.

He further claimed that the Sharifs belonged to the “telephone tribe,” and had started the Long March following some late night phone calls.

The former chief minister attributed phone calls for Sharif’s election as the prime minister.

Elahi challenged the Sharif brothers to make some magical phone call to solve problems of poverty, unemployment and price-rise in Pakistan. (ANI)

Sowing hope in hungry East Timor

There are two distinct seasons in East Timor – the wet season and the dry season.

For many East Timorese, the time in between includes three to four months known as the hungry months, when last year’s supplies of rice and maize have run out and the new season’s crops have yet to yield.

East Timor president Jose Ramos-Horta is acutely aware of his country’s annual famine.

“This for me is a most pressing and heartbreaking situation. I see people who cannot even afford to have a proper meal a day,” he said.

“The number one priority for us is food security to eliminate malnourishment.

“Children who are stunted because of malnutrition in the first few years of their lives, they cannot perform too well in school because they are malnourished.

“It takes time, it takes years for us to improve agriculture with better productivity, better seeds, better farming techniques and better roads for the goods to circulate faster and cheaply.”

It’s almost 10 years since East Timor gained its independence from Indonesia.

The steps on its march to nationhood have often been faltering. The departing Indonesian forces left a country in ruins, its infrastructure in tatters.

Political unrest has further stymied progress.

So the impending wet season makes the farmers restless. Everything depends on good rains and bountiful crops.

In the mountains south of the capital, Dili, a woman stabs the earth with a digging stick, bobbing as she flicks seeds into the thin jungle soils, a method unchanged in centuries.

East Timor’s demographics are staggering.

This farmer has five children aged under 10. The national average is eight children per family. Half of East Timor’s population is less than 10 years old.

Of East Timor’s 1 million people, about three quarters live in rural areas and subsist on about one hectare of land.

Infant and maternal mortality rates are among the highest in the world.

Children are seen not so much as burdens but as essential labourers, and most endure hard physical work from the age of six, lumping firewood from the forest or produce to and from market.

Fighting famine

Of the many hundreds of aid organisations that have worked in East Timor during the past decade, it would be hard to find one more elemental or effective than Seeds of Life.

Rob Williams is an agronomist with the aid agency, which is funded by the Australian Government.

“Seeds of Life aims to do two things,” he said. “One is to increase yields on farms.

“The second is to train East Timorese scientists, East Timorese researchers to a level where they can solve their own agricultural problems so they can do research that assists their farmers.”

Seeds of Life scientists have identified and propagated the best strains of the country’s staple food crops of corn, rice, peanut, sweet potato and cassava.

“We’ve tested these new varieties on thousands of farmers,” Mr Williams said.

“And as a result of this, last year we distributed about 100 tonnes of seed in five-kilogram lots that have gone out to more than 20,000 farming families, so it’s starting to have a large impact on farming families in East Timor.

“The varieties are public domain varieties, which means the farmer can plant them, keep the seed and plant them again the next year.”

In East Timor’s Alieu district, Senor Zacharias Mouzinho Gusmao proudly shows us his flourishing corn crop, a high-yielding variety with large cobs.

It is one of two new corn varieties introduced, tested and released by Seeds of Life in partnership with the ministry of agriculture.

Sold as fresh corn, it has made Senor Gusmao a tidy sum.

Demand for crops

Throughout the country’s farming districts, word has spread of the new, superior varieties, and Seeds of Life cannot meet demand.

In Baucau province in the country’s east, newly installed seed cleaning and bagging machines have revolutionised the process of seed distribution.

And nearby, in a communally planted field, local dignitaries attending a field day are pulling large sweet potato tubers from the red soil.

The new variety is yielding about 18 tonnes per hectare – double the traditional varieties and on par with world standards.

These sweet potatoes are being sold in Dili and for the first time families have some disposable income. Some say they will now be able to send their children to school.

In Dili, agriculture minister Senor Mariano Assanami Sabino says his most pressing duty is overcoming rural poverty.

“And how to realise the dream of the majority of people in Timor Leste,” he said.

“We fight for the independence and continue the fight of how to reduce the poverty in Timor Leste.”

Local workers

Locally trained staff members are crucial to the success of Seeds of Life.

“We currently have a group of 40 young researchers, mostly graduated from the University of East Timor as agronomists,” Mr Williams said.

“We’ve taken them on board and we’re training them in many, many skills. Some never knew how to ride a motorbike when they started with Seeds of Life.

“Some now can interview in English. They can go out and run a field day by themselves. They work with farmers testing the new innovations. They can conduct their own research experiments to choose the best varieties for their own country.”

One of those trainees, Luis Perriera, distributes the new varieties in the Maubisse region of the country’s central highlands.

“The farmers really like it. I’ve been working with them for the last two years in this district,” he said.

“They can see with their own eyes that the yields are better and they prefer to keep growing the new varieties.

“The farmers themselves will be producing more seed so that they can grow their own seed in future years.

“I think it’s very important work, very worthwhile work because I am working for the development of my own country through agriculture, and in this way we can marry the hard work of the farmers together with the new varieties to get better yields for farmers.”

Rebuilding research stations

Seeds of Life is working closely with East Timor’s ministry of agriculture to rebuild research stations.

“After the violence in 1999 when Indonesians left East Timor, all the research stations in this country were destroyed,” Mr Williams said.

“Many of the trained, professional staff in East Timor were Indonesians who then moved back to Indonesia, so there was a large gap of trained people in East Timor.

“Seeds of Life has a mandate of rebuilding and re-establishing three agricultural research stations in this country.”

Loes Research Station is a 12-hectare site on a fertile river plain several hours’ drive west of Dili.

“The research stations are important to Seeds of Life,” Mr Williams said.

“That’s the locations where we test a large number of varieties on a small number of locations before choosing a small number of varieties to test on a large number of locations.”

Rowan Clarke and his fiancee Rebecca Andersen are Australian agronomists based at Loes with Seeds of Life.

After the violence and civil unrest in 1999, the complex lay abandoned and derelict for almost a decade.

Now it is undergoing a spectacular revival. The land and buildings are being repaired under Mr Clarke’s guidance.

“The story is there was only one building that had been burnt and that was probably accidental,” Mr Clarke said.

“But the rest had just been robbed of anything of any value. All the roofing iron went with the Indonesians. The copper was all taken out of the wiring. The white ants had been through any wood and they were just shells.”

Ms Andersen trained in horticulture and decided to work in East Timor after a holiday there.

She says their work is important for the country’s food security.

“We’ve got about 15 varieties of maize that we’ve got on station at the moment and about another 15 peanut varieties, and about 20 cassava varieties, and we’re also beginning to test kava crops and different types of legumes,” she said.

“I think the ministry of agriculture has the leading priority in the country and so places like this are making a really big impact on food security.”

Watch the full Landline report at 12:00pm Sunday on ABC 1.

PPP government pushing Pak towards ‘anarchy’: Imran Khan

Lahore, Mar.20 (ANI): Criticising the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP)-led government for failing to address issues such as price hike, poverty and unemployment, cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan has said that the ruling leaders are pushing the country towards ‘anarchy’.

Referring to the Friday’s incident of street violence in Islamabad, Imran said politicians must address the ‘core’ issues facing the country, and warned that the present volatile situation could lead to massive civil disobedience in the coming days.

“ Rulers should focus on the core issues instead of making all best efforts to safeguard their vested interests and corruption, he said, adding that the country was facing serious challenges and this was the time to think for the people,” The Nation quoted Imran, as saying.

The Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI) chief said the people of the country have lost faith in the government which had only been offering fake and hollow promises.

Commenting on President Asif Ali Zardari’s recent announcement that he would be donating all his body parts after death, Imran said: “It would be better for Zardari to bring back his foreign assets in the country and spend it for the welfare of the people in his life.”

“ This will be not less than a gift for the nation from Zardari,” he added. (ANI)

Broome launches a return to country programme

Aboriginal people living on the streets of Broome are being offered free bus tickets to get them back to their communities.

Hundreds of Aboriginal people sleep rough in the town’s parks and sand-dunes in conditions the local Shire has described as third world.

The shire last week called their living conditions a disgrace and said children were being put at risk of abuse.

CentreCare and government agencies have now pooled funds to provide a free bus ticket home.

Kimberley CentreCare Manager Trish Jones says she is expecting 200 people to be repatriated in coming weeks.

“I am anxious and deeply concerned that poverty-stricken and destitute families, especially children, are being placed in vulnerable, at -risk situations.”

“They’re camping in third world conditions. This is a small example of how one small, not-for-profit organisation can quickly make a difference to a difficult problem here in Broome.”

Ms Jones says Centrelink has agreed to pay for people’s bus tickets home.

“It’s made very clear to every client that this is a once-off thing, and should you abuse it, then we’re not a position to help you again.”

Already, six people have been returned to communities across the north-west.

A further 200 are expected to be repatriated in coming weeks.

Sharif, Zardari two sides of forged coin: JeI Chief

Lahore, Mar. 15 (ANI): Jammat-e-Islami chief Syed Munawar Hasan has said that Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari and PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif and are two sides of a forged coin.

Addressing a public gathering on Sunday, Hasan claimed that Pakistan could easily get rid of poverty if Sharif and Zardari brought their black money back to the country.

“Both leaders are acting on the dictation of the United States. Nawaz Sharif is awaiting his turn now…These two are two sides of a forged coin,” The News quoted Hasan, as saying.

He added that Pakistan is not a poor country, but it was the International Monetary Fund (IMF) that was trying to convert it into a poor state. (ANI)

Impoverished kids forced to work in Siliguri tea-estates

Siliguri, Mar. 5 (ANI): Poverty-stricken children, below the permissible employment age of 14, are being made to work in the tea gardens of Siliguri.

At present there are 300 tea plantations in the Terai Doars region of northern Bengal, and the people of the tribal community called Madeshis are employed as workers in these gardens.

Workers are paid just 60 rupees per day, which makes it difficult for them to support their families. Such a situation forces children to work in tea gardens as well.

“Our parents can”t teach us and send us to school because they are paid very less here, in the tea gardens. That is why they send us to work here,” said Preeti Oraon, a ten-year-old girl working in Sukna Tea Estate.

Employing child workers proves beneficial for the owners as they are made to work nearly as much as an adult, but for a much smaller wage.

“Small children have left their school and are now working here in the tea gardens. The manager of the estate is getting his work done by these kids because of which they will never be able to study. The child labourers work at daily wages of 28 rupees and the money tempts these children to continue working at the tea estate. We are protesting against this,” said Sambhu Toppo, leader of the Tea Gardens Trade Union in the region.

Toppo said that more than 100 to 150 underage children work with their parents in the Sukna Tea Estate alone. This trend is becoming quite visible in numerous tea estates of the region.

Sukna Tea Estate”s manager O P Mishra admitted employing child workers, but said that they were forced into labour by their parents.

“Workers in the tea estate are very poor. We stop the underage children from working here and only allow kids above the age of 14 to work, and that too sometimes. But these children do not listen to us. Their parents come and threaten us and forcibly make them work here. They say that unless the children also work they will not be able to survive and earn a decent living,” said Mishra.

Officially, India has 12.6 million child workers, the world”s highest number, but activists suggest the figure is at least five times more. (ANI)

Letters by Lawrence of Arabia discovered

London, Sept 19 (ANI): Fascinating letters written by Lawrence of Arabia have been found years after they were thought to have been burned on a fire.

In the letters, the hero of the Arab revolt in the First World War talks about his love of motorcycles, which led to his death in a road accident in 1935, reports The Telegraph.

Speaking about one of his machines, he wrote: “It’s a heavenly bike, goes like smoke and is as smooth as milk to ride.”

The correspondence – found when an envelope fell out of an old book – will be auctioned on October 1 in Dorchester, Dorset, and could fetch more than 10,000 pounds.

Dorset historian Rodney Legg, who has written numerous books on Lawrence, said: “It’s mysterious how Lawrence managed to balance his finances. He sometimes spent lavishly and at other times wrote letters to friends proclaiming poverty.

“So anything that throws light on the relationship with his banker is quite revealing.” (ANI)

Negative public opinion about foreign countries an early warning signal for terrorism

Washington, September 18 (ANI): People’s negative views toward the leadership and policies of other countries may be an indication that a terrorist act may be carried out, say researchers.

Alan Krueger, a Princeton University economist, and Jitka Maleckova, of Charles University in the Czech Republic, came to this conclusion after analysing public opinion polls and terrorist activity in 143 pairs of countries.

Writing about their findings in the journal Science, the researchers say that there is a strong relationship between attitudes expressed toward a foreign country — indicated in surveys on foreign leaders’ performance-and the occurrence of terrorism against that country.

“Public opinion appears to be a useful predictor of terrorist activity,” said Krueger, the Bendheim Professor in Economics and Public Policy.

“This is the first study to relate public opinion across countries to concrete actions such as terrorism,” he added.

He pointed out that the notion that public attitudes can contribute to terrorism has been inadequately explored to date.

According to him, the study’s findings attain significance as they suggest that public opinion may provide a valuable early warning signal of terrorism, and help researchers better understand the causes of terrorism.

The researchers carried out their study by mining public opinion polls of residents in 19 countries in the Middle East and northern Africa conducted by Gallup.

They asked the respondents whether they approved of the job performance of the leaders of nine large countries.

According to the researchers, the countries selected for the study are world powers in terms of size, population or military strength, are the United States, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Japan, Russia and the United Kingdom.

The opinions, both positive and negative, were linked to the number of terrorist attacks conducted against the nine world powers by people from the 19 countries between 2004 and 2008. The terror attacks were compiled by the National Counterterrorism Center.

Based on the findings, Krueger says that there is not a direct connection between poverty and terrorism, contrary to a popular view.

He adds that economic status has more to do with target countries than it does with the states where the attacks originate.

He says that countries with advanced economies as well as a high degree of civil liberties are most likely to be the targets of terrorism.

The researchers admits that the study does not explain whether terrorists act in response to public opinion or whether they are simply reacting just like the larger public to external events.

However, he insists that, in either case, public opinion surveys can provide a powerful indication of the likelihood of terrorist activity.

Krueger believes that greater disapproval of another country’s leaders or policies may result in more terrorist acts because it increases the number of people who provide material support and encouragement for terrorism, and increases the number of people interested in joining cells and carrying out terrorist acts themselves. (ANI)

Emma Watson used gap year to design teen summer wear for People Tree

London, Sep 18 (ANI): Harry Potter star Emma Watson has revealed that she spent her gap year designing a ‘complete teenage summer wardrobe’ for the fair trade fashion brand People Tree.

Watson, 19, who has just enrolled at Brown University in the US, acted as a creative advisor for the ethical fashion collection, which will reach shops in February.

“I wanted to help People Tree produce a younger range because I was excited by the idea of using fashion as a tool to help alleviate poverty and knew it was something I could help make a difference with,” Sky News quoted her as saying.

“I think young people like me are becoming increasingly aware of the humanitarian and environmental issues surrounding fast fashion and want to make good choices but there aren’t many options out there.

“It has been the most incredible gap year project,” she added.

Among items that the teen actress has had a hand in designing were knitwear, cotton t-shirts, jersey dresses, and poplin shorts.

Her range also includes some more bizarre items, including “bohemian hand embroidered bed throws, recycled sweetie wrapper jewellery, banana fibre slouchy beanies and head scarves.”

They will be sold by People Tree, a company which aims at supporting developing countries and promoting environmental projects. (ANI)

Spanking found to have negative effects on low-income toddlers

Washington, September 16 (ANI): Spanking negatively affects the behaviour of toddlers in low-income families, according to a new study.

Published in the journal Child Development, the longitudinal study looked at how low-income parents discipline their young children.

It showed that spanking 1-year-olds leads to more aggressive behaviours and less sophisticated cognitive development in the next two years.

Verbal punishment, however, was not found to be associated with such effects, especially when it was accompanied by emotional support from mothers.

Besides, 1-year-olds’ fussiness predicted spanking and verbal punishment at ages 1, 2, and 3.

The study explored whether mothers’ behaviours lead to problematic behaviour in children, whether children’s challenging behaviours elicit harsher discipline, or both.

It looked at more than 2,500 exclusively low-income White, African American, and Mexican-American mothers and their young children, interviewing and observing them at home when the children were 1, 2, and 3 years old.

All participants’ family incomes were at or below the federal poverty level.

Using their own interpretations of spanking, mothers reported how often anyone in the home had spanked their children in the past week.

The study also looked at how often mothers verbally punished-scolded, yelled, or made negative comments-their children.

It showed that African American children were spanked and verbally punished significantly more than the other children in the study.

The authors speculated that that might be due to cultural factors, such as belief in the importance of children’s respect for elders and in the value of physical discipline to instil that respect.

Moreover, some African American mothers said that in preparing their children for a harsh, physically dangerous, and racially discriminating world, there was little room for error in their childrearing.

The study also shed light on information about the effects of such types of discipline.

“Our findings clearly indicate that spanking affects children’s development,” said Lisa J. Berlin, research scientist at the Center for Child and Family Policy at Duke University and the study’s lead author.

Specifically, children who were spanked more often at 1 behaved more aggressively when they were 2, and had lower scores on tests measuring thinking skills when they were 3.

Similar findings were made even after taking into consideration such family characteristics as mothers’ race and ethnicity, age, and education; family income and structure; and the children’s gender.

The study also found that children who were more aggressive at age 2, and had lower cognitive development scores at ages 1 and 2, were not spanked more at ages 2 and 3.

“So the mothers’ behaviours look more influential than the children’s,” said Berlin.

Unlike spanking, however, verbal punishment alone didn’t affect either children’s aggression or their cognitive development.

Interestingly, when verbal punishment was accompanied by emotional support from moms, the children did better on the tests of cognitive ability. (ANI)

Charles Dickens ‘displayed mild OCD symptoms’

London, Sept 13 (ANI): Charles Dickens developed a ritualistic routine in his domestic life, together with an obsessive approach to work, which is consistent with obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), and can be seen reflected in some of his characters, claims a new biography.

Dickens had a habit of rearranging furniture whenever he stayed in a hotel room and inspecting his children’s bedrooms every morning, leaving behind notes when he was not satisfied with their tidiness.

According to Michael Slater, emeritus professor of Victorian literature at Birkbeck college, London, and author of the book, Charles Dickens, the genius’ behaviour could be traced to his childhood when poverty forced his family to move home repeatedly, reports The Times.

Slater said: “The disorder of his upbringing may have had the effect on him of wanting to be in control.”

He reckons that Little Dorrit, the main character in Dickens’s novel of the same name, reflected his character.

“There she is, the epitome of neatness, in the squalid atmosphere of the Marshalsea prison making order and making her father comfortable and sweeping and cleaning and tidying all the time,” said Slater.

Slater said there were also signs of OCD in the semi-autobiographical David Copperfield.

Also, when it came to women, the author’s attitude was governed by neatness. (ANI)

Smugglers using kids as ‘carriers’ on Indo-Nepal border

Kolkata, Sep. 11 (ANI): Smugglers active along the porous Indo-Nepal border are now using children, as ‘carriers’ to smuggle goods like sugar and tobacco.

Hundreds of children, in the age group of six to years, are being hired by the mafia of smugglers to carry out this illegal trade along the Sunauli check point of Uttar Pradesh.

Reportedly, the reliance on children has been so successful in smuggling that the influence of such a modus operandi is even witnessed in West Bengal.

The chosen children are paid around rupees 200 per day for running the errands.

“I travel at least 10 times in a day. I carry five kilograms of sugar in one visit and I get 200 rupees. I also study. I live in Jogiabadi,” said Akhil.

Shree Chand Gupta, President, Indo-Nepal Friendship Organisation contended that it is the poverty stricken parents who are persuading their children.

He added that this trends can turn out to be heinous in the long run if not checked at the right time.

“Today they are carrying sugar but tomorrow they can also smuggle arms and ammunitions on the other side and can work as traitors. Hence officers of both the countries should take a note of this crime as it can also cause a serious threat to the society,” said Gupta.

Physically challenged persons and aged women are also becoming soft targets for smugglers, as they don’t have any regular source of income.

Awareness campaigns in the border villages and schools can put a stop to the malpractice.

“Above all, the customs and the security personnel manning the transit points along the India-Nepal border need to pull up their socks,” Gupta points out. (ANI)

Malaria spreads in Orissa’s Gajapati district

Gajapati (Orissa), Sep 4 (ANI): Malaria scare is on an all time high in Orissa’s Gajapati district as at least 15 tribals have succumbed to the deadly disease in the past one-month and around 300 people are being treated at ill-equipped primary health care centres.

Being one of the tribal dominated and poverty stricken districts of the state, Gajapati is deprived of basic amenities and medical facilities, following which the region has become a breeding ground for mosquitoes and the situation is further complicated by the unhygienic life-style of many poor families.

“Around thirteen people have died due to malaria in our village council. We apprehend more deaths in the coming days. If the government and the health department do not take any notice of this emergency situation, then people may die like worms,” said Udaya Nath, a local resident.

Most of the affected villages are in remote areas and isolated in the dense forests, due to which medical facilities are out of reach to the ill people.

However, officials of the State Government contend that the Health Department is keeping a track of the situation in this region.

Orissa’s Revenue Minister, Surya Narayan Patra, claimed that numerous awareness camps are being held to educate the people about cleanliness and they are keeping a check on breeding of mosquitoes.

“Not only Gajapati, but most of the tribal belts are prone to malaria. The Health Department and the NGOs have taken lot of preventive measures. We have held training camps, where people were taught how to destroy the wastage of their houses. We have also provided mosquito nets and medicines to the tribals,” Patra said. (ANI)