Kamakhya Temple: Story Of A Bleeding Devi


Kamakhya temple is a famous pilgrimage situated at Guwahati, Assam. The temple is located on the Nilachal hill in Guwahati at about 8 kms from the railway station. The Kamakhya temple is dedicated to the tantric goddesses. Apart from the deity Kamakhya Devi, compound of the temple houses 10 other avatars of Kali namely Dhumavati, Matangi, Bagola, Tara, Kamala, Bhairavi, Chinnamasta, Bhuvaneshwari and Tripuara Sundari.

Mythical History

The temple of Kamakhya has a very interesting story of its origin. It is one of the 108 Shakti peeths. The story of the Shakti peeths goes like this; once Sati fought with her husband Shiva to attend her father’s great yagna. At the grand yagna, Sati’s father Daksha insulted her husband. Sati was angered and in her shame, she jumped into the fire and killed herself. When Shiva came to know that his beloved wife had committed suicide, he went insane with rage. He placed Sati’s dead body on his shoulders and did the tandav or dance of destruction.

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To calm him down, Vishnu cut the dead body with his chakra. The 108 places where Sati’s body parts fell are called Shakti peeths. Kamakhya temple is special because Sati’s womb and vagina fell here.

The Name ‘Kamakhya’

The God of love, Kamadeva had lost his virility due to a curse. He sought out the Shakti’s womb and genitals and was freed from the curse. This is where ‘love’ gained his potency and thus, the deity ‘Kamakhya’ devi was installed and worshipped here.

Some people also believe that the Kamakhya temple is a place where Shiva and devi Sati had their romantic encounters. As the Sanskrit word for lovemaking is ‘kama’, the place was named Kamakhya.

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The Bleeding Goddess

Kamakhya devi is famous as the bleeding goddess. The mythical womb and vagina of Shakti are supposedly installed in the ‘Garvagriha’ or sanctum of the temple. In the month of Ashaad (June), the goddess bleeds or menstruates. At this time, the Brahmaputra river near Kamakhya turns red. The temple then remains closed for 3 days and holy water is distributed among the devotees of Kamakhya devi.

There is no scientific proof that the blood actually turns the river red. Some people say that the priests pour vermilion into the waters. But symbolically, menstruation is the symbol of a woman’s creativity and power to give birth. So, the deity and temple of Kamakhya celebrates this ‘shakti’ or power within every woman.

Budget 2013: 4 Factors Which Will Affect Small Businesses


A country’s economy do not only depends on the larger enterprises alone. The small scale enterprises including the medium and the micro enterprises (MSME) also play an important role in the nation’s development.

India has a larger number of these kinds of enterprises. However, all these enterprises are not lucky enough to taste success. Most of these enterprises have to undergo a heavy amount of loss due to various reasons and finally they get shut down.

Here is the list of four factors that the Indian government will adopt in the future to encourage the growth and progress of the MSMEs as reported by ‘yahoo’.

1. Encouraging the growth of the MSMEs

Most of the micro, small and the medium enterprises fail to grow due to the fear of bearing losses in the market. Their main obstacle is the ‘investment’. They are not strong enough to invest a huge amount of money for a longer period of time, expecting profit.

To overcome this, the government has proposed the non-tax benefits for the MSMEs in this year’s budget. Once an MSME qualifies to the next higher category, it can take advantage of this non-tax benefit for three years.  

2. Extended alimony to the MSMEs

The capability of Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI) has been raised to 10,000 crore from 5,000 crore. From this amount, 100 crore will be vested on the India Microfinance Equity Fund.

This year’s budget will allot 500 crore to the Small Industries Development Bank of India as Credit Guarantee Fund for distributing.

3. Including the MSMEs on the SME Exchange

All the MSMEs will be included in the Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) Exchange. The MSMEs would not have to make any offers in the public. Like the large scale enterprises, they will also get an extended number of investors. However, the inclusion of the MSMEs in the SME exchange will be kept limited to certain categories of investors.

4. New Investment

From the new investment grant for new high value investments, the Finance Ministry has estimated “enormous spill-over benefits to small and medium enterprises”. The Budget recommends that any company investing Rs 100 crore or more in plant and machinery from April 1, 2013 to March 31, 2015 will be allowed to subtract an investment allowance of 15 percent of the investment. This will be subjected to the existing rates of depreciation.

 

BJP blames UPA policies for poor economic growth


Accusing the government of flip-flops, indecision and mis-governance, the BJP today said its policy paralysis and corruption have affected the country’s growth rate and left its economy in a mess.

Slamming the government for its “failure” to control price rise and inflation, it also demanded an “immediate” roll back of hike in all administrative prices of diesel, gas, petrol, rail and other services “as the common man is reeling under unprecedented economic burden.”

Targeting the government on the issue of corruption, it said, the VVIP helicopter scam and the Farm Loan Waiver scam are the latest additions in this government’s “unending list of corruption.”

“It is fascinating to note that Italy, which was to benefit from the helicopter deal, went after the bribe givers immediately when they got the wind of corruption, while India, the sufferer of this scam is not ready to trace the bribe takers. Mystery still shrouds over the mention of the recipients as ‘the family’,” the BJP Economic Resolution passed at its National Council meeting here said.

It said while the government has ordered a CBI probe, it is not ready to have it monitored by the court.

“It has neither registered FIR nor issued Letters Rogatory (LR). It is offering JPC knowing full well that it cannot investigate and come to conclusion. This fuels speculation that the government is more interested in ensuring a white wash to protect the bribe receivers rather than unearth the truth and punish the guilty,” it said.

It said the biggest failure of the UPA government is its inability to tame inflation and bring down the prices.

Goa Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar, while seconding the Economic Resolution, said India will scrap FDI in multi-brand retail policy when BJP-led NDA comes to power.

“Unfortunately, inflation is not the result of any natural disaster but is purely a gift of this government. Bad food stock management and distribution anomalies triggered the inflationary pressure in the first place,” the resolution said.

When the country is required to stock only 30 million tonne of food grains in the godowns, the UPA has stocked a huge quantity of more than 70 million tonne of food grains thereby creating shortages in the market and fuelling prices, the opposition party said.

Drawing comparison of the economic situation of the country between now and the NDA government headed by Atal Bihari Vajpayee, the resolution maintained that the BJP-led government inherited a lowly growth rate of 4% in 1998, but due to its commitment to make India an economic superpower, it had put the economy on a fast growth trajectory.

“As a result of the visionary leadership of Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee, India for the first time in decades witnessed 8.25% growth rate in 2004 when the BJP led NDA government demitted office.”

It said the NDA government had put in place the historic economic legislation – the Fiscal Responsibility and Budgetary Management (FRBM) Act which sought to rein in the fiscal deficit below 3%.

“Ironically, under the Congress leadership, it is the central government that has shown scant commitment towards this resolve while the state governments are instead broadly adhering to the FRBM targets which is reflected in their financial numbers,” the resolution said.

It alleged that inflation and corruption have become the “hallmarks” of the UPA government.

“The country also has to suffer the ignominy of experiencing economic downslide under the leadership of an economist Prime Minister under whom every economic macro-parameter has steadily declined…The BJP holds the Congress led UPA government guilty of non performance, policy paralysis and lack of direction,” the resolution said.

-PTI

Popular antibiotic Amoxicillin could trigger harmful side-effects


 

Popular antibiotic Amoxicillin, prescribed for bacterial infections of the chest, urine or ear and dental abscesses, could be harmful, suggest medical researchers, while warning that the drug could lead to side-effects such as diarrhoea, rash, vomiting and the development of resistance.

Amoxicillin is commonly used to treat coughs accompanied by lower respiratory tract symptoms (LTRI), and since viruses are believed to cause most of these infections, even whether or not antibiotics — used against bacteria — are at all effective in treating these conditions is hotly debated.

In the study, 2,061 adults with acute uncomplicated LRTI from primary care practices in 12 European countries — including England, the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Sweden, France, Italy, Spain and Poland — were randomly assigned to receive either amoxicillin or a placebo three times a day for seven days. Doctors assessed symptoms at the start of the study and the participants completed a daily symptom diary, the journal Lancet reports.

Results showed there was little difference in severity or duration of symptoms reported between the two groups, even among older patients aged over 60 where antibiotics appeared to have a very limited effect, according to the Daily Mail.

More patients in the placebo group experienced new or worsening symptoms, 30 people needed to be treated to prevent one case of worsening symptoms, and just two patients in the placebo group and one in the antibiotic group required hospitalisation.

But the study also revealed that patients taking antibiotics reported significantly more side effects — including nausea, rash, and diarrhoea — than those given the placebo.

Paul Little, professor at the University of Southampton, said: “Patients given amoxicillin don’t recover much quicker or have significantly fewer symptoms. Using amoxicillin to treat respiratory infections in patients not suspected of having pneumonia is not likely to help and could be harmful.”

IANS

#Delhi’s Chandni Chowk Market Online Now-Thanks to #Google and #Hostgator


Delhi’s famous market Chandni Chowk gets  websites for individual businesses.

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New Delhi: About 2500 businesses in India’s well known market, Chandni Chowk, Delhi have their own websites now. It is one of the oldest markets in India built by Mughal rulers centuries ago. The websites were built by Hostgator,the leading Indian web hosting company in association with Google as part of a program called “India Get Your Business Online” launched in November 2011.The program offers free websites and domains to small business owners in India.

Most of the small businesses in India do not have a website and hence Google’s new initiative is to bring them online to increase their business. Google India Vice President Rajan Anandan said that in India there were 137 million internet users and great majority of them look online for various information. Only few small businesses have a decent looking website, he added.

Under the present scheme, Google provides a domain name, a website and free hosting for one year. The free hosting is given by Hostgator, its hosting partner. The websites will be integrated with Google Maps by which the businesses will be listed under various categories. After one year, an amount of 700 Indian rupees as hosting fees will be charged by Google to continue the service.

A common directory of businesses in Chandni Chouk, http://www.chandnichowknowonline.in has also been launched in addition to individual websites. The directory offers a main search bar for browsing shops and businesses in the home page. It also gives business owner’s name, address, contact number and link to the business website.

According to Pradeep Jain, Kinari Bazaar Gota Zari Association of Chandni Chowk, the initiative by Google would make it easier for customers to find them online. He added that the place was a hub of product suppliers, exporters, wholesalers and many other medium sized shops in north India. Most of them have been operating there for over hundred years. The communication and IT minister of India, Kapil Sibal also said that the move would help those business owners increase their business.

RBI Asks Banks to Issue Debit Cards with Photographs to Check Misuse of Cards


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Reserve Bank of India asked the banks to observe the possibility of issuing debit cards with the photos of customers to prevent misuse of them. RBI has suggested in its new guidelines that banks should consider taking various steps to prevent the misuse of debit cards by having the customer’s photo on the card of through other latest technology methods.

In India there are around 31 crore debit cards. Reserve Bank of India issued guidelines after analyzing the present rules and regulations in the issuing of debit cards in India.

  • Bank should take the responsibility of any loss to the customers of the bank due to system malfunction.
  • Banks should provide full security to the debit cards.
  • Banks should always be ready to take the complaint/information from customer regarding the loss of theft of debit card and take immediate action to prevent the misuse of card.
  • Debit cards must be issued to customers having savings account or current account in the bank but not to those who are having credit account.
  • Banks should review the debit card issue procedure for every six months.
  • Debit cards should not be issued offline. If any bank is issuing debit cards in offline method, they should stop the process within six months from the day this circular is issued. In the offline debit card issue method customer only requires to sign during the payment but in online payment method, customers will have to enter their payment also.
  • RBI has given approval for issue of co-branded pre-paid cards.
  • Reserve Bank of India further said that there should be a system in which customer complaints are acknowledged. The banks should give a complaint number of docket number for every compliant they receive for making it convenient for the customers to follow-up.

Axis Bank, ICICI Bank, State Bank of India, HDFC Bank and Indian Overseas Bank launched the saral Money Bank account. This account can be opened based on Aadhar card. Recently, Reserve Bank of India ordered banks to consider Aadhar card as identity proof if the address mentioned by the applicant and the address on the Aadhar card of the customer is same. Saral Money account facility will be introduced in Delhi and surround areas presently and will be expanded to other areas by the end of 2014, it is informed.

FDI in retail would push country into economic slavery: Rajnath Singh


Senior BJP leader Rajnath Singh has said the decision to allow FDI in retail will push the country towards economic slavery, and his party will start a nation- wide campaign against it once ongoing winter session of Parliament ends.

There is enormous human resource potential in the country and India does not need foreign investment in the sector, Singh said.

The BJP leader, here to attend a wedding, said implementation of FDI had proven to be detrimental to the interests of farmers across the world.

BJP will start a nation-wide campaign against FDI in retail and corruption in the government once the ongoing winter session of Parliament ends, he said.

The BJP leader said in a few months, his party would be ready with the list of candidates for the 2014 general elections.

The exercise to shortlist the electoral candidates had already begun, and former Union Minister and sitting MP Murli Manohar Joshi will remain the candidate from Varanasi, he said.

Singh questioned the wisdom of not hanging Parliament attack accused Afzal Guru.

He said the SP government had waived off the farmers loan in the state but only with certain riders which was not mentioned in their election manifesto.

Referring to the SP government’s academic grants for students from the minority community, the BJP leader said there should be no discrimination in the name of religion and caste in providing educational aid.

Will Wal-Mart do the job we don’t want to do ourselves?


The debate over foreign direct investment (FDI) in multi-brand retail is getting surreal. Witness the statements made by Sushma Swaraj, and the equally doubtful replies of Kapil Sibal in yesterday’s debate

Neither the opposition, nor the government is speaking the truth for the simple reason that nobody can really predict whether the entry of Wal-Mart and other such global retailers will be beneficial or harmful.

The government says it will benefit farmers and create jobs, the opposition says it will destroy kiranas, and both of them could be right in a small way, but wrong in a big way. Nobody can really say how Indian farmers and kirana stores will adapt to competition, and how Wal-Mart will adapt to India. We will know only after a few years.

FDI in retail is thus really a shot in the dark, and even though there is ample evidence that Wal-Mart has indeed destroyed mom-and-pop shops in the west, the situation is so different here that it is impossible to presume that it will do the same damage here.

So it’s worth debunking the specious arguments put forth both by those who want Wal-Mart and those who don’t. At the very least, they should junk bogus arguments and start discussing how to help our kiranas to compete, and how to help our farmers to gain from Wal-Mart.

The first argument for allowing FDI in multi-brand retailing is that it will help farmers obtain a better price. Plus, it will create jobs. The truth is jobs can be created even by Indian big retailers, and not particularly by Wal-Mart. Jobs depend on local labour and employment creating policies, not foreign investment.

The second argument is that Wal-Mart will help improve the supply chain from farm to fork. This is true, but the fact is 100 percent FDI is already allowed in food processing, cold chains and logistics. Wholesale cash-and-carry trading is already open to Wal-Mart. What the government is not telling us is this: Wal-Mart won’t make these investments till it is allowed to set up its own shopfront – which is where the real margins are.

Instead of being truthful on the real issue, the government is telling us how Wal-Mart will help farmers when our policies already allow foreign retailers to do so. This help is not forthcoming without the rider of being allowed to open their own shops.

Third, the government fails to tell us that its own policies are not helpful to farmers. Farmers can get higher prices if they are allowed to develop export markets. But we place curbs on free trade in order to keep domestic prices down. We allow exports only when prices crash in the home market due to temporary over-production, whether it is in rice or vegetables.

Fourth, farmers can get better prices even in domestic markets. But we don’t have a free domestic market. The problem with “middlemen” is a self-created problem, with state governments forcing farmers to sell their produce at mandis – where middlemen dominate. Chandrabhan Prasad and Milind Kamble, writing in The Times of India today, point out that middlemen, called adhatiyas, preside over mandis and the Agricultural Produce Marketing Committee markets.

Adhatiyas preside over mandis (marts) and regulate trading in foodgrains, vegetables and fruits. From farms to kirana stores, they call the shots. The Mandi Parishad rules make it mandatory for farmers to bring their products to adhatiyas. Kisans who bring their trucks full of apples from Shimla or vegetables from Meerut don’t have the freedom to sell their produce to whosoever they want. It is some adhatiya who sells their produce for a commission.”

If this is the case, it is obviously our domestic anti-market policies that prevent farmers from getting a better price. Wal-Mart is merely an additional battering ram to break this nexus between politicians and middlemen. Apparently, we need a Wal-Mart to fix our own problems. We can’t honestly battle our own vested interests unless we give it a more esoteric justification.

Fifth, those opposed to FDI always trot out the China argument. If Wal-Mart comes here, Chinese good will overrun the Indian markets. Quite apart from the fact that Chinese goods are already taking over the world due to their extremely low prices, the truth is everybody – from Apple to Nike to our own makers of white and brown goods – uses Chinese costs to expand the market.

Many Indian small manufacturers have given up manufacturing and have taken to imports to improve their turnover and profits. In short, Indian manufacturing – which began from trading – is now going back to trading because we are simply not competitive.

The only way to become competitive is by removing regulations, lowering corruption and creating enabling conditions for people to produce at low costs. But our policies are headed in the other direction.

Land, an important element of overhead costs, will become more and more expensive once the Land Acquisition Bill – which wants farmers to be compensated at four times the market price, not to speak of rehabilitation costs – is passed by the UPA government. Our manufacturing will thus become even more uncompetitive once this happens.

Labour laws do not allow our manufacturers to hire and reduce jobs depending on demand conditions. As a result, Indian manufacturing is becoming more and more capital-intensive, and organised labour is becoming more expensive. Thanks to make-work schemes like NREGA, labour costs are rising faster than capital costs.

Carmakers Hyundai, Honda and Maruti are at the forefront of the drive to use more robots for many operations in their Indian plants, reports The Economic Times. After its recent factory violence, Maruti has decided to accelerate automation of many more of its operations in Manesar, and this trend is evident in other factory floors as well.

Clearly, the China argument is important, but the real reason for India losing it competitive advantage in manufacturing vis-à-vis China is our land, capital and labour policies, and not FDI in retail.

If the UPA needs to be attacked, it should be for failing to reform our land, labour and agricultural produce markets, which are killing the India growth story.

Our businessmen know this, and this is one reason why they use crony links to get favourable deals on land and related policies to make money.

FDI in retail will succeed or fail in India the same way Indian business succeeds or fails – by making compromises with the political system and through corruption.

And that’s the real tragedy about FDI in retail, not the mere fact of Wal-Mart’s threat to kiranas.

Starbucks debuts in India


US based Coffee giant Starbucks served its first cup of coffee in India, on October 19, 2012. The American global coffee company will serve a Cappucino Cafe Latte for between Rs 95 and Rs. 135 depending on the size of the drink, while iced beverages have been priced between Rs. 115 and Rs. 200.

Currently Cafe Coffee Day serves a Cafe Latte for between Rs. 78 and Rs. 85, with cold beverages costing between Rs. 100 and Rs. 133. Starbucks opened its first store in India on October 19, 2012 at Horniman Circle in South Mumbai. The company has opened its first store in the country in partnership with Global Beverages. The joint venture plans to open 50 stores by the end of 2013.

Wal-Mart: Love It or Hate It


As Wal-Mart gears up for entry into the Indian retail market speculations are rife over its business structure and partnerships and its impact on the Indian consumer market. Previously, Indian policy on foreign investment in retail restricted multi-brand overseas chains to protect local retail players. This meant Wal-Mart could only operate as wholesalers in partnership with the domestic retailer, Bharti Mittal group. The partnership between Bharti and Wal-Mart spawned many retail outlets in India with the brand name Easyday. Now, with the relaxation of restrictions in retail FDI, Wal-Mart seems to be looking for a majority 51 percent stake in a joint venture. Raj Jain, President, Wal-Mart India, and also Managing Director, Bharti–Wal-Mart, the Cash & Carry Joint Venture, has called Bharti as Wal-Mart’s “natural partner in India” .But he also indicated that Wal-Mart is keeping its options open.

Bharti Mittal, meanwhile, has expressed hopes of being able to continue with the 50-50 partnership arrangement with Wal-Mart even in front-end retail. Mittal also stated that “Wal-Mart is not in the habit of insisting on its brand name,” and hopes to retain the already established Easyday brand name as well.

Wall mart’s entry into the Indian market has been marred by controversies. According to a CNBC TV 18 report Wal-Mart made investments in the Bharti Mittal group to manipulate and circumvent Indian policy norms. The allegation is that Cedar Support Services, (originally Bharti Retail Holdings) which was carrying out multi-brand retail business in India through a 100 per cent subsidiary Bharti Retail, amended its articles of association in December 2009 enabling it to provide services as a real estate consultant and allegedly facilitating Wal-Mart’s business interests in India. In March 2010, Wal-Mart Holdings invested 456 crore in Cedar Support Services. Then on 29 March, 2010, Cedar issued nearly 455 million zero per cent compulsorily convertible debentures with a face value of 10. These were convertible into nearly 426 million equity shares at a premium of 70 paise per share.

In effect, Wal-Mart Holdings invested 456 crore in a company that was a real estate consultant. But, Cedar then went ahead and allegedly invested the entire funds in its wholly owned subsidiary Bharti Retail, the company that has been engaged in the business of multi-brand retail. India permitted 51 per cent FDI in multi-brand retail only this September. Specific questions as to whether Bharti or Wal-Mart has at any point ever informed the RBI about this were not answered by the two companies as per the CNBC TV18 report. On July 11, 2012, public interest litigation was filed in the Delhi High Court calling on the court to investigate whether Wal-Mart was making an indirect entry into India’s retail sector through Bharti Enterprises. The court has served notices to the corporations and the government.

Wal-Mart is no stranger to legal complications. There have been allegations of predatory pricing and law suits filed in the U.S. There were cases filed against it for discrimination against its women workforce as well.

Another hurdle for Wal-Mart, the $447-billion retail giant, would be the government policy that gives the Indian states the right to decide where the foreign chains can set up shop. Also, only cities with a population of over a million are permitted to have these. Wal-Mart’s usual format of leviathan stores might prove difficult in such cities as they might not have large pieces of land to offer within the city limits. There are mixed feelings about the employment generation capabilities of Wal-Mart in India. It promises to lead to greater employment in the service industry and its success is likely to attract even more FDI to India.

On the other hand, as per a study published in Economic Development Quarterly, University of Illinois Chicago economics professor Joe Persky, one of the co- authors states “No matter which direction you go from Wal-Mart, there’s a very high rate of business closures in the immediate vicinity, and the further away you get there’s less and less.”

Raj Jain, President, Wal-Mart India in an effort to boost confidence has stated that Wal-Mart will look to sourcing mostly from local suppliers and work on arrangements to price 10-15 percent lower, while concentrating on products with high functionality as opposed to brand names. A supplier side concern could be fears of Wal-Mart monopoly in the retail sector leading to greater power over suppliers.

Wal-Mart is looking to cash in on the consumerist wave in India. The gullible middle class might just end up falling for the hugely discounted items and end up paying more in a bid to avail cost margins on relatively unnecessary items.