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Sunday, September 30, 2012

Leopard Poaching on the Rise, Group Warns

By BETTINA WASSENER

When it comes to the poaching of endangered species, elephants, tigers and rhinos tend to be in the limelight. But a new report sets out to plug the information gap on a different species that is imperiled by a tide of demand related to rising affluence in Asia: leopards.

In India alone, an average of at least four leopards have been poached each week over the last 10 years, according to Traffic, an organization that monitors the trade in endangered wildlife around the globe and issued the report. That's more than 2,000 in one decade.

The estimate is based on a review of seizures of spotted leopard skins and other body parts. While most of the items seized were skins, other body parts, particul arly bones, are prescribed as substitutes for tiger parts in traditional Asian medicine, Traffic said.

“Even though reports of illegal trade in leopard body parts are disturbingly frequent, the level of threat to leopards in the country has previously been unrecognized and has fallen into our collective ‘blind spot',” said Rashid Raza, the lead author of the report, which was released on Friday in New Delhi.

There are no reliable estimates of how many leopards exist in India. The animals are notoriously wary of humans and are spread out over large areas, so tracking their numbers is difficult.

Yet the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, which categorizes leopards as “near threatened” on its so-called red list of species, says that leopard populations have become extinct in some parts of the world and dwindled to tiny numbers in others. Although they dwell widely in the forests of the Indian subcon tinent, Southeast Asia and China, they are “becoming increasingly rare outside protected areas,” the organization says.

Divyabhanusinh Chavda, president of the World Wildlife Fund's India chapter, said that concerted national action was needed. “Without an effective strategy to assess and tackle the threats posed by illegal trade, the danger is that leopard numbers may decline rapidly, as happened previously to the tiger,” he said.

Government estimates put the number of tigers in India at little more than 1,700.



Newswallah: Long Reads Edition

By NEHA THIRANI

In Tehelka, Sai Manish writes about the mismanagement of natural disasters in the northeastern state of Sikkim. One year after an earthquake wreaked havoc in the state, a deluge has caused landslides, landing yet another blow of devastation. The author argues that the lack of timely government intervention has intensified the effect of such disasters. He writes:

Even after three days of floods and landslides due to incessant rains, the chief minister had no clue that people were holding on to dear life waiting for a response from their government. Finally, on 24 September, Chief Secretary Karma Gyatso flew over destroyed hamlets and severed towns. When asked about the CM, Gyatso shot off: “ Why should the CM come? What is his need when I am here?”

Mr. Manish notes that the haphazard distribution of funds without properly maintained records means that those in trouble do not receive the aid they are entitled to, while the government bleeds money.  Public ire is quelled by a combination of coercion and bribery. The author writes: “The tragedy is not just about missing persons or the damage that has been caused. The bigger tragedy is the sheer apathy of the government towards its people who have been suffering since last year's earthquake that jolted their world forever.”

In the latest issue of Open magazine, Hartosh Singh Bal analyzes the impetus behind the recent economic reforms introduced by the Congress Party-led coalition government. In the article titled “The Rebirth of a Prime Minister,” Mr. Bal contends that there were many political factors that played into the timing of the announcement of reforms. He writes that with Palaniappan Chidambaram holding the finance portfolio the task became easier, adding that with Mr. Chidambaram's predecessor, Pranab Mukherjee, the “approach to the Finance Ministry virtually left no room for the Prime Minister.”

Mukherjee enjoyed the confidence of the party and he was seen as someone who brought political pragmatism to the Finance Ministry. But he seems not to have realised that the country had changed since the 1970s, when he was first appointed minister. Attempts at policymaking through bureaucratic tinkering during his tenure in the end yielded neither economic nor political benefits.

The author takes the example of opening up of multi-brand retail to foreign investors saying that it was unlikely to have any immediate impact on the economy. “It is at best a signal of the Government's intent.” Mr. Bal argues that the government was anxious that the recent Coalgate scandal exacerbated the worry about corruption . By linking the reform to “pro-poor” programs, he says, the current government will be able to re-establish its popularity with the electorate.

In the article entitled “In Search of a Dream” the Economist postulates that stalwarts who laid the foundation of the Indian democracy failed to articulate a vision for the economy, which has cost the country dearly. The article argues that economists and analysts broadly agree on the measures required to solve India's current economic problems, but the “political elite” resist them, because of the “risk of being tipped out of power.” The piece gives the example of countries such as Brazil, Sweden and Poland who have successfully pushed through difficult economic reforms despite being democracies.

If the country's voters are not sold on the idea of reform, it is because its politicians have presented it to them as unpleasant medicine necessary to fend off economic illness rather than as a mean s of fulfilling a dream.

The piece draws a parallel between India and the late 19th century America, and says that it needs “its own version of America's dream.”

It must commit itself not just to political and civic freedoms, but also to the economic liberalism that will allow it to build a productive, competitive and open economy, and give every Indian a greater chance of prosperity. That does not mean shrinking government everywhere, but it does mean that the state should pull out of sectors it has no business to be in. And where it is needed - to organise investment in infrastructure, for instance, and to regulate markets - it needs to become more open in its dealings.



Saturday, September 29, 2012

Newswallah: Bharat Edition

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

Jammu and Kashmir: Chief Minister Omar Abdullah dismissed reports of a brewing “battle” between himself and Rahul Gandhi of the Congress party over the issue of providing security to sarpanches, the elected heads of village councils, Kashmir Live reported. A group of  sarpanches from Kashmir met with Mr. Gandhi in New Delhi on Thursday to discuss security concerns after the killing of two village council heads in the Kashmir valley earlier this week.

Arunachal Pradesh: The state government on Thursday introduced a legislation to enhance protection of tigers, according to a report on Firstpost's Web site citing Press Trust of India.  The move came after a Royal Bengal tigress was killed in a zoo in Itanagar, the state capital.

West Bengal: The state legislature passed a resolution Thursday opposing the central  government's recent decision to allow foreign direct investment in retail, India Today reported. The resolution was introduced by the governing Trinamool Congress party, which walked out of the central governing coalition, the United Progressive Alliance, over the issue.

Jharkhand: Government employees on Friday protested the state's decision to privatize the distribution and maintenance of electricity in Ranchi, the state capital, and cities including Jamshedpur and Dhanbad, The Times of India reported.

Rajasthan: The state government has assigned an all-female task force to conduct sting operations in clinics suspected of conducting tests to determine the sex of a fetus, The Daily Bhaskar reported.  Such tests are illegal in India, where female fetuses are often aborted because of a widespread preferen ce for boys.   

Maharashtra: The state faced a week of political turmoil, with the deputy chief minister Ajit Pawar handing in his resignation on Tuesday, Firstpost reported. Nineteen state ministers said they would follow suit, “in what was widely seen as a show of strength,” according to the report.

Andhra Pradesh: Six activists supporting the formation of a separate state of Telangana were arrested Wednesday after chanting slogans against Chief Minister Kiran Kumar Reddy outside his office, The New Indian Express reported. The activists were protesting Mr. Kumar's statement that the fate of Telangana would be decided by the majority of people in Andhra Pradesh.



Vidya Balan and Jairam Ramesh Team Up For Toilets

By SRUTHI GOTTIPATI

NEW DELHIâ€" A traveling village fair is scheduled to kick off next week in India, but instead of cotton candy and tchotchkes, it will sell an important message: Use soap to wash your hands, and don't defecate in the open.

India faces a severe sanitation crisis. More than half of all households have no toilet facilities, according to the latest census figures, a rate that has worsened in the last decade. Earlier this year, the government announced an ambitious goal to end open defecation in the country within 10 years. But it was only on Friday afternoon that the campaign got a bit of glamour: Vidya Balan, a popular actress, was introduced as something of a brand ambassador, to promote the distinctl y unglamorous issues of sanitation and hygiene.

“We have to inspire more and more people to make our country open-defecation-free,” she said, sparkling under the flash of cameras in the capital.

Starting next week, Ms. Balan will appear in radio and television advertisements in which she cajoles villagers to use toilets. In one ad, she notes that brides in India are too shy to lift their veils, much less to defecate in the open.

Ms. Balan said she was drawn to the cause after reading the statistics on sanitation. Advocacy groups say that open defecation has led to the deaths of more than 1,000 children from preventable diarrhea every day. It is also said to have caused a loss of 6.4 percent of G.D.P., due to higher health costs and lower productivity.

India has struggled with sanitation for decades. Critics of government policy contend that people decline to buy toilets not due to their price but because the government fails to supply running water.

Jairam Ramesh, the minister for sanitation and rural development, whose strategy has included raising awareness and pouring funds into village councils if they meet their toilet targets, acknowledged to India Ink on email that running water is a problem but said it wasn't the primary one.

“In India people always like to externalise the reasons for inaction,” he said. ”Behavioral change is of paramount importance.”

At the news conference Friday where Ms. Balan appeared, Mr. Ramesh said that for the next five years, his ministry of clean water and sanitation would have a budget of about $20 billion. “There's no shortage of funds,” he said. “If there's a shortage, it's of resolve.”

The traveling village fair â€" whose purpose, besides encouraging good hygiene, is to increase awareness and demand for sanitation facilities in rural areas â€" is being promoted and facilitated by Mr. Ramesh's ministry , but its funding comes from a host of organizations, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which together raised a little more than $2 million for it.

The concept for the fair was developed by Quicksand, an Indian consultancy, and WASH United, a nongovernment organization that often uses sports stars as ambassadors to promote hygiene.

Organizers said they would use two Indian passions, cricket and Bollywood, to generate excitement about the awareness drive, with stars from both fields to join the fair. They will also use more standard village fair diversions, like a game in which players knock down cans that look like germs.

Ms. Balan promised to make an appearance during the fair, which is scheduled to travel through five states over 51 days. Called the Nirmal Bharat Yatra, which loosely translates as “Clean India Journey,” the fair will stop at a couple of places associated with in India's independence movement to make the point that India n ow needs to become free from poor sanitation.

The last stop will be Bettiah in the state of Bihar, the birthplace of Mahatma Gandhi's satyagraha, his tactic of nonviolent resistance. It's a fitting end. Gandhi himself often stressed the importance of sanitation.



Government Can Decide How to Allocate Natural Resources, Supreme Court Rules

By HARI KUMAR

NEW DELHIâ€"India's Supreme Court upheld the government's right to sell natural resources as it sees fit, saying it wasn't necessary for the administration to use auctions.

The ruling, which was issued Thursday, was prompted by the government's petition to clarify the Supreme Court's decision in February that canceled the government's sale of 122 telecommunications licenses, which were sold at below-market prices in 2008. The court ordered the government to sell the licenses through an auction, but the Indian president's office asked the court to rule on whether all sales of national assets had to be sold this way.

On Thursday, the court said that while the judges believed that it would be better if auctions were used, it was the government's prerogative to allocate resources as a policy decision and that the order for an auction applied only to the wireless spectrum case.

The court said that if the maximization of revenue was not the goal of the sale of a national asset, then the government could use whatever methods it wanted. The judges also said that the government didn't have to always seek the highest bid because “revenue maximization is not the only way in which the common good can be subserved.”

“This is what we were saying for last one and half years,” said Kapil Sibal, communications minister, who held a news conference in Delhi on Friday with Finance Minister P. Chidambaram and the law minister, Salman Khurshid.

Mr. Chidambaram said, “Revenue maximization may be the goal in one case, but may not be the goal in several other cases.”

Whether or not it resorts to auctions, Mr. Sibal said, the gove rnment was committed to transparency in its dealings and has never “defended irregularities and illegalities.” The auction of the wireless spectrum is scheduled to be held later this year.

“Now the government can start taking decisions without fearing that other constitutional authority will interfere,” said Mr. Sibal. “The judgment applies to all of us. It applies to us; it applies to courts; it applies to other constitutional authorities.”

The Congress-led government has been battling corruption scandals while it has been trying to shore up support for a ruling coalition. In August, the government was accused of losing nearly $40 billion by selling coal blocks through negotiated prices rather than through an auction.

Business associations in India called on the government to keep its transactions transparent. “Any method of allocating natural resources should be based on the principles of transparency and fairness,” Adi Godrej, president o f the Confederation of Indian Industry, said in a statement.



Friday, September 28, 2012

Image of the Day: Sept. 28

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

A Dangerous Gateway to Mount Everest

By MALAVIKA VYAWAHARE

An aircraft full of trekkers headed to Mount Everest crashed in Nepal's capital, Katmandu, on Friday morning, killing all the 19 people on board. This accident is just the latest in a string of recent fatal airline accidents in Nepal, and has once-again raised questions about the safety of air travel to one of the most iconic tourist destinations in Asia.

Recent aircraft accidents in Nepal include:

  • Date: May 14, 2012

    “An Agni Air plane carrying Indian and Danish tourists crashed into a hill near a mountain airport in Nepal on Monday, killing 15 people, including the two pilots, ” a New York Times report said.

    • Sept. 25, 201 1
      “Nineteen people, including three Americans, died in a plane crash in Nepal on Sunday as they headed back to the capital, Katmandu, after a sightseeing tour of the mountains, including Mount Everest, officials said, ” The New York Times reported.
      “The 3-member crew died in the crash of the Buddha Air flight, as did 10 Indian citizens, 2 Nepalis and a Japanese citizen, according to the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal at the Tribhuvan International Airport, which is not far from the crash site.”
    • 15, Dec. 2010
      A Twin Otter flying with 19 pilgrims “crashed in a forest in eastern Nepal, killing all on board, including the three crew members as well,” The Times of India reported.
    • Aug. 24, 2010
      “Fourteen people, including four Americans, died Tuesday in Nepal when their plane crashed in inclement weather, after a failed attempt to reach a popular destination for touring hikers near Mount Everest, according to Nepali officials,† The New York Times reported.
    • Oct. 8, 2008
      “A small airplane crashed and caught fire Wednesday as it tried to land in foggy weather at a tiny mountain airport near Mount Everest, killing 18 people, including 16 tourists from Germany, Australia and Nepal, officials said,” The Associated Press reported. “Only the pilot survived.”
    • March 3, 2008
      “A United Nations helicopter has crashed in stormy weather in Nepal, killing all 10 people on board, ” The Associated Press reported.
    • Sept. 23, 2006
      “Nepal ordered an investigation Tuesday into a helicopter crash that killed 24 people, including a cabinet minister and several top international conservationists,” a New York Times report said.
    • Aug. 22, 2002
      “A small plane carrying foreign tourists slammed into a mountain about 90 miles northwest of the capital, Kathmandu, killing all 18 people on board including 15 foreign tourists,† The New York Times reported.


India, Home of the Nonviolent Protest, Embraces More Extreme Dissent

By NEHA THIRANI

Gone are the days when picketing, candlelight vigils, marches or hunger strikes were enough to guarantee your cause a spot on prime-time television in India. No matter how grave or frivolous the cause, modern protesters employ far more creative tactics to draw attention.

On Wednesday, 1,500 villagers, including several children, in the southern state of Tamil Nadu buried themselves in the sand to their waists for six hours in the latest demonstration against the building of the Kudankulam nuclear plant. The protesters, who are from fishing families from the surrounding districts, are worried that once the plant is active it will contaminate the fish, ruining their livelihoods.

Extreme protests have been the mainstay of activists around the world for years, but in India, which popularized and perfected the nonviolent protest and the quietly powerful hunger strike, there has been a recent rush to embrace increasingly unusual forms of agitation. Some attribute their rise to the prevalence of new television channels and social media in India, other to deeper causes.

In South Asia today, “ordinary people are under serious stress,” said Ranjan Chakrabarti, vice chancellor of West Bengal's Vidyasagar University and a professor who specializes in the history of crime and protest in India. “They are under pressure and they have decided to register their protest in these novel forms,” he said.

Similar protests happened “during the first phase of industrialization in Europe and during the initial decades of British colonization in India,” he said.

In the case of the Tamil Nadu fishermen, they earlier tried more conventi onal tactics to gain the government's attention: picketing the central government offices in Kudankulam, occupying village cemeteries to symbolically solicit the guidance of their ancestors and using their fishing boats to block entry to the nearby harbor.

On Thursday, the Supreme Court warned  that it will suspend work at the Kudankulam nuclear power plant if safety concerns were not addressed. The court said this while hearing an appeal challenging the judgment of the Madras High Court to allow fuel loading in the plant.

On Sept. 10, the police used violence against the protestors at a rally at the plant, beating them with sticks, firing tear gas and arresting the protestors.  On Thursday, a fact-finding team berated the police for its abusive behavior.

The anti-nuclear activists have continued their protests, according to news reports.

The more recent attention-getting protests aren't always so physically demanding. On Sunday, a group of incense d teachers waved their slippers at the Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar at a rally in the state, in a symbolic gesture of disdain. The teachers, who were on contract, demanded that their salaries be equal to those of regular teachers. However, the chief minister accused the opposition party of instigating the protests.

In Ghogalgaon village in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, 51 villagers stood neck deep in water for 17 days, demanding that the government lower the water level in the nearby Omkareshwar dam on the Narmada River. The “jal satyagraha” or “peaceful water protest,” began on Aug. 25 when the water level in the dam was raised by two meters (6.5 feet). The villagers say that raising the level of the dam will further submerge their lands.

The images of the villagers standing in the water, their bodies shriveled and their skin peeling, was widely circulated on social networking sites. On Sept. 10, the chief minister of the state, Shivra j Singh Chouhan, gave into their demands and agreed to lower the water level and compensate the farmers for their land.

A similar protest in the water was carried out by 245 villagers near the Indira Sagar dam, in Madhya Pradesh, but without the positive outcome - police arrested the protesters. Villagers protesting against the Kudankulam power plant tried the same tactic, with hundreds of people forming a human chain in the water on Sept. 13, but they, too, were disbanded by police.

Unusual “funeral” marches have become another common theme for protests in India. As the government's announcement of a rise in the price of diesel and a cap on subsidized gas cylinders earlier this month unleashed protests throughout the nation, members of the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party held a mock funeral procession of gas cylinders in Bhopal.

And earlier this month in Allahabad, activists opposed to an increase in a house tax staged a parody of a funeral processio n of the members of the municipal corporation administration.

Meanwhile, in a forest in Maharashtra, the Greenpeace activist Brikesh Singh is living in a tree for a month to protest coal mining's devastation of biodiversity and the displacement of forest communities. The protest, which includes gathering petitions from citizens to submit to the prime minister, attracted the attention of a Parliament member, Hansraj Ahir, who visited the activist.

“I wanted people in the city to wake up in the morning and when they are watching the news of television with a cup of a coffee, wonder why has this guy climbed a tree - and that would prompt them to find out about the issue,” said Mr. Singh, 32, who heads public engagement campaigns at Greenpeace India. “To draw people's attention, someone ordinary needs to go out and do something extraordinary.”



Starbucks Makes Long-Awaited India Entry in South Mumbai

By NEHA THIRANI

MUMBAIâ€"Starbucks will open its debut store in India by the end of October, the company said Friday.

The American chain's first shop here will be located in Mumbai's iconic Horniman Circle neighborhood, in South Mumbai's Fort district. The area is home to expensive shops, including a Hermes store, and numerous offices and bank headquarters as well as the Horniman Circle Gardens park, which hosts music and culture festivals.

“We're extremely excited about the opportunity that this location presents to establish the Starbucks brand here in the Indian market,” John Culver, president of Starbucks China and Asia Pacific, said during a press conference in Mumbai on Friday. “The plans to open in th e Indian market are right on track.”

The store will be located in the Elphinstone building, a heritage property owned by Tata Sons, part of the Tata Group conglomerate. Starbucks is partnering in India with Tata's Global Beverages, which describes itself as “Asia's largest coffee plantation company.”

In a first for the coffee chain, all the coffee sold in Starbucks stores across India will be locally sourced and roasted at a facility in India, executives said Friday.

Starbucks joins international fast food chains such as McDonalds, Taco Bell, and Dunkin Donuts, who have entered India because of a large demographic of young people with rising in income levels and international exposure. India has seen a rise in the coffee shop culture over the past few years as chains like Costa Coffee, The Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf have opened stores. The announcement comes at a time when the Indian government is pushing for more foreign i nvestment in the country.

Starbucks had initially planned to open its first stores in India in mid-2011, but there was a delay in acquiring real estate, executives said. In January, the company announced a 50-50 partnership with Tata Global Beverages, and said it would invest $80 million in India and open 50 stores by the end of the year. Mr. Culver did not provide more detail about the company's planned investment in India, but said that the business was “very well funded” and that the company was looking at the India market as long-term investment.

Avani Saglani Davda, 33, a Tata Group executive, will head the joint venture, the companies said Friday.

Like other international food chains entering India, Starbucks will alter its menu to suit Indian tastes. There will also be one unique dish available in each of the Starbucks stores in each city where it opens in India, executives said. “We are going to make a huge difference in the way that coffee ho uses are perceived in India,” said Ms. Davda.

Mr. Culver said the first store in New Delhi was planned for early next year, and that the company has hired and is currently training 60 people. “We're going to be very thoughtful on how we grow, but at the same time we're going to look at accelerating growth and capturing the opportunity that exists for us here in India,” he said.

India is the latest overseas market for the Seattle, Washington-based coffee chain. Starbucks has operated outside North America since 1996, when it opened in Tokyo, Japan, and today has more than 17,000 stores in 57 countries around the world. The company has been in mainland China for more than a decade, and now has more than 500 outlets there, but has courted controversy in some cases. A Starbucks outlet that opened in 2000 in Beijing's nearly 600-year-old Forbidden City was shuttered seven years later, after protestors said it was denigrating the historical site. Still, Starbucks said in April that it expects China will be its second-largest market by 2014, and that it plans to have 1,500 stores across China by 2015.

In Europe, Starbucks has struggled in some countries, particularly France. The chain started a multimillion dollar makeover this year in Europe to lure patrons raised on café culture into its stores, adding edgy architecture, stages for poetry readings and chandeliers, as well as changing its coffee roast.



Thursday, September 27, 2012

Plane Going to Everest Region Crashes, Killing 19

Associated Press

People gathered at the site of a plane crash near Kathmandu, Nepal, early Friday. The plane crashed just after takeoff, killing the 19 people on board, officials said.

KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) - A plane carrying trekkers to the Everest region crashed and burned just after takeoff Friday morning in Nepal's capital, killing the 19 Nepali, British and Chinese people on board, authorities said.

The pilot of the domestic Sita Air flight reported trouble two minutes after takeoff, and Katmandu airport official Ratish Chandra Suman said the pilot appeared to have been trying to turn back. The crash site is only 500 meters (547 yards) from the airport, and the wrecked plane was pointing toward the airport area.

Investigators were trying to determine the cause of the crash and identify the bodies, and Suman said he could not confirm if the plane was already on fire before it crashed. Cellphone video shot by locals showed the front section of the plane was on fire when it first hit the ground and appeared the pilot had attempted to land the plane on open ground beside a river.

The fire quickly spread to the rear, but the tail was still in one piece at the scene near the Manohara River on the southwest edge of Katmandu. Villagers were unable to approach the plane because of the fire and it took some time for firefighters to reach the area and bring the fire under control.

Soldiers and police shifted through the crash wreckage looking for bodies and documents to help identify the victims. Seven passengers were British and five were Chinese; the other four passengers and the three crew members were from Nepal, authorities said.

Large number of local people and security forces gathered at the crash site. The charred bodies were taken by vans to the hospital morgue.

The weather in Katmandu and surrounding areas was clear on Friday morning, and it was one of the first flights to take off from Katmandu's Tribhuwan International Airport. Other flights reported no problems, and the airport operated normally.

The plane was heading for Lukla, the gateway to Mount Everest. Thousands of Westerners make treks in the region around the world's highest peak each year. Autumn is considered the best time to trek the foothills of the Himalayan peaks.

The crash follows an avalanche on another Nepal peak Sunday that killed seven foreign climbers and a Nepali guide.



Answers From Princeton\'s Dean of Admission

By JANET LAVINE RAPELYE
Higher EducationThe Choice on India Ink

Choice LogoGuidance on American college applications for readers in India from The Times's admissions blog.

This week, The Choice has invited Janet Lavin Rapelye, the dean of admission at Princeton University, to stop by our virtual Guidance Office and answer your questions about college admissions. Ms. Rapelye, who received a bachelor's degree from Williams College and a master's degree from Stanford University, has 30 years' experience in college admissions.

For this week's installment of The Choice on India Ink, we present some of her answers that may prove relevant for international students.

Some questions and answers below have been edited for length and style. - Tanya Abrams

Reviewing College Applications

Do applications go through a series of rounds (filtering)? If an application is strong, is it reviewed by multiple readers?

- Do

Princeton's process for reviewing undergraduate applications is extremely detailed and comprehensive.

As I've noted in an earlier post, when we say that the process is holistic, we mean it is designed to discover all the potential qualities of our applicants, qualities that we know cannot be assessed by evaluating just academic grades or standardized scores, although these are important components of an application.

Last year, Princeton received more than 26,000 applications. We thoroughly read every application twice before rendering a decision; some applications received three and four reviews. Almost 2,100 students received letters of admission. The entire process ensures the integrity and confidentiality of each application. Here's how it work s at Princeton:

When a student's file contains all the required materials, an admission officer begins a thorough first reading of the student's application. The staff member reads the file cover to cover, including teacher and guidance counselor recommendations, the student's essays, transcript, standardized test scores and any other supporting materials. The grades and the rigor of the student's course of study, as well as the extracurricular activities and summer experiences, are taken into consideration. In some cases, faculty members are engaged to review supplementary materials that the students submit.

After the admission officer summarizes the candidate's academic performance, achievements, talents and personal qualities, the file is read completely again by a senior admission officer who is knowledgeable about the high school and the region.

The application is then sent to a committee that includes admission officers, the director of the admission office and me.

Every candidate goes through the committee process, and the files with the most promise are discussed in the committee. It takes many weeks of very long days, evenings and weekends to conclude the work. In the committee meetings, the summaries prepared by the first and second readers are often read out loud and discussed. After deliberating, the committee votes on whether to admit, deny or, in the case of early admission, defer a student. During the regular admission cycle, we also vote to place students on the wait list.

As you might imagine, at each step there are moments for conversation and further discovery. We are always looking for reasons to admit students. The admission process is more of an art than a science, and we have developed it in a way that we believe assures all students the opportunity to present their best case.

Every year we receive applications from thousands more qualified candidates than we can accept. The consolation for us is that we know these are extraordinarily gifted students who will be excellent college students wherever they decide to go.

SAT Scores and the Importance of Standardized Tests

To what extent are SAT scores scrutinized? Is there a defined cutoff for the composite SAT score, or is it more about individual module? For example, would a composite score of 2130 that included a 780 math, 710 writing, and 640 critical reading scores be regarded in the same light as a 2130 composite score that included 700 math, 700 writing and 730 critical reading scores?

- Raj

Can you get into Princeton with a 1730 on the SAT?

- Joe Smith

Despite their biases, inaccuracies, limited ability to measure achievement or ability, and other flaws, why does such a world renown and highly accredited institution like Princeton University require applicants to take standardized tests? Is admission possible without it?

- Andre

To answer these questions , it is important to understand how admissions officers read an application. At Princeton, every application is given a holistic review. Because we look at the totality of your experience, there is no formula to the process.

We look first at the transcript that is sent by your secondary school, and we evaluate the rigor of your program and the grades you have received. If you are in our applicant pool, we expect that you have taken the most demanding academic program offered at your school. You will be challenged when you get to our campus, and we want to be sure you are well prepared to handle our college courses.

We are looking not just at your potential, but at your performance. If you had a slow start to your studies in high school, we hope to see academic improvement.

We then review the recommendation letters that are sent by your teachers and guidance counselor. We read your essay and assess your extracurricular activities, how you have spent your sum mers, if you have had a job or were engaged in community service, what you may have done outside of school, and any other supporting material.

Admission officers understand that standardized tests measure quantitative ability, critical reading, an understanding of some subject areas, and writing skills. Combined with your grades, they only partially predict first-year performance in college. They do not predict, however, other values we hold in high esteem at the college level, such as motivation, creativity, independent thought, intellectual curiosity and perseverance.

When we shape our class, we look for students who will continually challenge themselves and contribute to a lively exchange of knowledge and ideas in the classroom. We seek students whose interests are varied and who have a record of accomplishment in athletics or the arts. We look for qualities that will help them become leaders in their fields and in their communities.

If one test could me asure all these things, our jobs would be easy. Standardized test scores help us evaluate a student's likelihood of succeeding at Princeton, but by themselves are not accurate predictors. For all these reasons, we have no cutoffs in test scores, nor do we have cutoffs in grade point averages or class rank. We consider all of these measures within the context of each applicant's school and situation.

Although our most promising candidates tend to earn strong grades and have comparatively high scores on standardized tests, we look at other parts of the application, including essays, to learn more about the kind of student you are and how you approach learning.

The Essay

You hear admission officers and counselors talk about how important the essay is and how it shows that you are not just a test score. The importance, however, is still not clear. What exactly does an admission officer think as he goes about an applicant's essay? What does he look for? What w orks in the applicant's favor?

- Emiliano Lopez

Your ability to write well is critical to our decision because your writing reflects your thinking. No matter what question is asked on a college application, admission officers are looking to see how well you convey your ideas and express yourself in writing. It is our window to your world.

Your command of the English language, whether or not you are a native speaker, is important because you will be asked to write extensively when you get to our campuses.

The best applications come from students who have spent time writing their essays, editing their work, and refining their message.

It is important to answer the question that is asked by a specific school, and not just to “recycle” one essay. This is not the time to take an academic paper you have written for a high school course and edit it for the application essay. This is your moment to be authentic.

Let me suggest that you take th is opportunity to sit down and write about a topic you care about and know well. If you are stuck, you might begin with this question from the Common Application: “Indicate a person who has had a significant influence on you, and describe that influence.”

Each of you has someone in your life who has played a role in your development, someone to whom you are grateful, and someone you could describe well. That person may be an adult, a child or a peer. Write a draft that you can put aside for a few days or weeks and edit later. Even if this is not the final essay you send to a college, it will get you started, and working from a draft is much easier than staring at a blank page with a blinking cursor.

Please resist the Web sites that give you access to college essays. This needs to be your own work. Your integrity in this process is paramount.

Finding the Right College Fit

How would you suggest a student determine the culture of a school and whet her or not it would be a good fit? Suggestions for both on-campus visits or schools that one cannot visit would be appreciated. I think this is a very hard decision for many 17-year-olds.

- Older and hopefully wiser

Determining culture and fit is indeed difficult for a high school student looking at colleges. If you are a parent, you want to do your best to support your son or daughter throughout this process.

On paper, a school might seem to meet all the right criteria: selectivity, number and choice of majors, resources, quality of faculty, student-faculty ratio, size, location, climate and extracurricular offerings, among others. Until your student has actually had a chance to visit, however, it is difficult to answer the all-important question, “Will I like it here?”

I have always been a strong proponent of the campus visit. Parents often marvel at how quickly a student can formulate a response to that question after a visit. For some student s, the reaction is visceral and immediate.

The visit is most valuable because it gives prospective students an opportunity to talk to undergraduates, meet with faculty or even sit in on a class.

Students, when you arrive at the school, it is important to let the college or university know you are on campus by signing in at the admission office, even if you are taking just the tour. As you are leaving the campus, jot down your impressions so you can remember the highlights of your visit.

If you are visiting a college or university that offers interviews on campus, take them up on their offer.

Be sure to read about the school before your trip so you can ask good questions in the interview, such as how students choose majors at that institution, or are freshmen allowed to participate in a particular program of interest in the first year.

We know, however, that a school visit is not always possible. Many schools are making investments in a variety o f visit proxies, everything from videos and virtual tours to online chats and blogs hosted by students, professors and administrators.

College Web sites can also be a valuable resource. Most are packed with information that can supplement the printed materials schools generate. We host off-campus information sessions around the country and the globe. These sessions give parents and students a chance to discuss whatever they wish with our admission officers.

College fairs at high schools and other nearby locations are useful resources, too.

Finally, person-to-person research should not be overlooked as an important research tool. Your college counselor may be the most important resource for you. Alumni and current students also can help parents and students determine if a school might be the right choice.

What Does It Take to Get In?

My husband and I both went to Ivy League schools and are keenly aware and appreciative of the remarkable educat ional and social opportunities they offer. We have not encouraged our own children to strive for the Ivy League, largely because it appears that perfection is now required for admission. In the old days, intelligence, success in high school courses and engagement in some interesting extracurriculars could get you there. Am I wrong? I hope you say that I am. I would like to think that smart, curious and engaged 17-year-olds with the occasional B have a shot at the outstanding educational opportunities that Princeton offers.

- Curious

In many of the questions and comments submitted to The Choice this week, I noticed that students and parents are seeking “guarantees” in the admission process. The reality is there are none.

If students are applying only to highly selective schools, they will encounter steep competition. Spreading a wide net in terms of the selectivity of the colleges where they apply will greatly enhance the number of admission choices the y will have in April.

I am often asked why the admission process is so much more competitive now than it was 10, 20 or 30 years ago at our school. The qualities of being smart, curious and engaged as cited in the question above are still very much in demand. As I've mentioned several times in this forum, Princeton considers every applicant as an individual and takes into account many factors before making an admission decision.

Also, this country and the world have changed in the last few decades; demographic trends in the high school population play a major role in the way many admission offices do their work.

Consider United States high school graduation numbers as analyzed by the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education report Knocking at the College Door. Since 1992, the projected number of high school graduates has grown by approximately one million students, from 2.2 million to 3.2 million graduates. The latest data collected by Wiche sugges ts that the number peaked in 2007-8 at about 3.3 million graduates and dipped slightly afterward. These same projections show that the next peak will be reached again in 2017-18 and that by 2021-22, the number of high school graduates will exceed the 2007-8 level.

Not all these students are college bound, but with about a million more students graduating from high school now than in the early 1990s, significantly more students are in the applicant pools of colleges that have a national pool.

At the same time, we are seeing interesting trends in international applications. According to the Institute of International Education, the United States has attracted a growing number of international students at the undergraduate level over the last few years. While international students still account for a small proportion of the total enrollment in U.S. higher education, the combination of demographic factors in the United States and interest from abroad has contributed to the record levels of applications at some colleges and universities. For example, in the last decade, applications to Princeton have almost doubled to more than 26,000. In the same period, the first-year class has grown by only 11 percent. However, not every college or university has seen this rate of growth in its applicant pool, and the subsequent drop in admission rates, and yet they are excellent institutions.

In the next few years we may see a flattening of application numbers, but it is unlikely the numbers will drop to pre-2000 levels. For parents, the take-home message is to support your daughter or son in their efforts, rather than encourage them to apply to the school you wish you had attended or even the school you did attend. Be realistic about the competition and set your son or daughter up for success in the process.

Ms. Rapelye is no longer taking questions. However, if you would like to further discuss college admissions, please feel free to s hare your thoughts in the comments box below.



Image of the Day: September 27

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

Beware...the Curse of the IPL?

By PRASHANT AGRAWAL

After the failed auction of the Deccan Chargers, I can't help but notice an interesting trend: the stock prices of the owners of nearly all the Indian Premier League cricket teams have lost substantial value since the league was started four years ago.

It's not just Kingfisher Airlines and Deccan Chronicle, the corporate owners most often in the headlines now, that have suffered. The same holds true for GMR, Reliance and others.

Of the nine Indian Premier League teams, seven are owned by companies that have lost a combined $25 billion in market value since the league began in April 2008. While the Sensex index has also suffered during that time, returning just 15 percent before the rally connected to the government's recent economic policy changes, all seven stocks associated with the I.P.L., including India Cements, News Corporation and Bombay Dyeing and Manufacturing, have underperformed the Sensex.

The remaining two I.P.L. team owners, Shah Rukh Khan and Subrata Roy, do not have large listed companies, but Mr. Roy's Sahara Group is deeply troubled, having been recently ordered to pay $3 billion to investors. (At least Mr. Khan is still a king at the box office.)

Could the I.P.L. be cursed?

That may be overstatement. What's true in India appears to be true throughout the world. Let's call it the curse of the sports team, instead.

Guess which company owns the naming rights to the newest major sports stadium in the United States, the nearly $1 billion home of the Brooklyn Nets? Barclays - yes, the Barclays that agreed in June to pay $450 million to settle accusations that it tried to manipulate the benchmar k London interbank offered rate, or Libor. Barclays bought the naming rights in 2007, years before there was a hint of the Libor scandal.

Citigroup bought the naming rights to the New York Mets' new stadium in 2006. Two years later, as the global financial crisis erupted, Citigroup's stock plummeted.

But the steepest downfall in recent years of a company with a sports connection may have been that of Enron, which bought the naming rights to the Houston Astros' park in 1999. In December 2001, it was embroiled in one of the most spectacular bankruptcies in modern corporate history.

“Pro sports teams are a lot like works of art,” the author Malcolm Gladwell wrote last year on the sports-oriented Web site Grantland. He argues that buying a team, like buying a painting, is less about profit than about “psychic benefits,” that is, “the pleasure that someone gets from owning something - over and above economic returns.” Mr. Gladwell notes that sports t eams do go up in value in the United States because they are inherently so few of them. One day, the I.P.L. owners may see similar gains, but at least in the auction of the Deccan Chargers that wasn't the case.

It's not clear whether I.P.L. team owners make money from their franchises, because these numbers are not public, but they have certainly lost equity value on their main businesses. And the loss in equity value in the main businesses would dwarf any operating losses in running any I.P.L. team.

If any of India's banks buys a sports team, or the naming rights to a new stadium, perhaps the Reserve Bank of India should take notice.

There are some exceptions to the rule, at least in the United States. The technology entrepreneur Mark Cuban, for example, has done wonders with a once-moribund Dallas Mavericks, who won the N.B.A. championship in 2011, but he spends in an inordinate amount of time on the team. Similarly, the Pittsburgh Steelers and New York G iants have been profitably run by families who focus on the teams, rather than treating them as part-time occupations. Corporations that stray into sports often end up on the losing side.

In India, however, sports teams appear to be a distraction from the main business. And, for most I.P.L. owners, it has been a very expensive distraction indeed, given the amount of share market equity lost on their main businesses.



Waterlogged Northeast on Road to Recovery

By NEHA THIRANI

MUMBAI - The northeastern states of Sikkim and Assam, which have been inundated with flash floods and landslides in the past week, have begun the long road to recovery, officials said Thursday.

Flood waters are receding, damage is being evaluated and rescued villagers are being fed and reunited with their families, they said. Heavy rainfall has stopped in many areas, they said, allowing rescue workers to travel.

“In Assam, the situation is slowly improving,” Nandita Hazarika, deputy secretary of the state's disaster management department, said by telephone. Most of the state, apart from Majuli, a large, populated island in the Brahmaputra River, is now reachable b y road. In Assam, 18 people have died and 10 are still missing.

About three million people are estimated to have been affected by flooding and landslides over more than half of Assam, including nearly 2,600 villages. State officials have set up more than 1,000 relief camps housing more than 430,000 displaced people, Ms. Hazarika said. The Indian Army has been helping with relief efforts, using helicopters for rescue efforts and to drop food packages, she said.

Assam is home to several wildlife sanctuaries that have been affected by the flooding.  In Kaziranga National Park, a total of 22 protected animals have been killed, including four rhinos. Ninety percent of the Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary, which is home to a large population of one-horned rhinos, is under water.

The weather has improved in Sikkim, and relief and rescue efforts are under way there, said S.B.S Bhadauria, the state relief commissioner. Sikkim has reported 29 deaths, with seven people st ill missing, he said. Helicopters are being used in the search efforts.  Road connectivity has been restored to some parts of the state, and normal power supply is expected to be restored by Friday, Mr. Bhadauria said.

Officials said there was no early indication that the flooding could have been prevented. “There is nothing you can do to avoid the flooding â€" how can you make it stop raining,” Ms. Hazarika said. “The flood warning system was done in time as well,” she said.



A Conversation With: Tinkle Magazine Editor Rajani Thindiath

By MALAVIKA VYAWAHARE

Tinkle, India's first English-language comic book for children, published its 600th issue last month. Anant Pai, a former news executive known fondly to readers as Uncle Pai, introduced the magazine in April 1980.

Mr. Pai, who died last year, was best known as the creator of the popular comic book series Amar Chitra Katha, or Immortal Illustrated Stories; published since 1967, it retells quintessentially Indian stories, whether great epics, folk tales or biographies.

Tinkle, on the other hand, takes as its motto “Where Learning Meets Fun,” and its pages are filled with comic strips, facts about everything from sports to physics and a generous helping of quizzes and contests. Beloved by millions of Indians, the magazine has made many a tedious train journey more enjoyable for children (and the other passengers, too).

In 2007, the Amar Chitra Katha brand, including Tinkle, was sold to two entrepreneurs, who in turn sold a majority stake to the Future Group, a clothing and finance conglomerate, last year. The monthly circulation of Tinkle's print properties, which include the magazine and several digests, is now about 225,000, growing at 30 percent over the past two years, said Manas Mohan, chief operating officer at ACK Media.

India Ink recently caught up with Rajani Thindiath, Tinkle's editor, who joined the company four years ago armed with a degree in psychology and diplomas in animation and journalism. In an e-mail interview, Ms. Thindiath discussed the 600th issue of Tinkle, how Indian comics are different from those in other countries and the possible television debuts of some of Tinkle's most popular character s.

First things first. Why is Tinkle called “Tinkle”?

Subba Rao, who was the associate editor of Amar Chitra Katha, proposed the idea of a comic book for children to Anant Pai during a meeting. Mr Rao's idea was accepted, and the team began discussing a name for the magazine. Mr. Pai said he wanted a musical name-and that's when a call interrupted the meeting.

Mr. Rao, whose phone had rung, told the caller that he was busy and that he would give a “tinkle,” or call back, later in the day. Then, when he put the phone down, Mr. Rao proposed ‘Tinkle' as the name of the new magazine. Mr Pai liked the name and Tinkle was born.

Soon the ‘Tinkle Tinkle Little Star' campaigns started airing on radio and TV, based on the popular children's rhyme, to launch the new magazine.

You launched Tinkle's 600th edition last month; tell us about that and your Laugh-a-thon campaign.

Tinkle 600 is a “thank you” to everyone associated with the magazine. Since it is designed to be a collector's edition, we focused on the number six and had six famous storytellers from India writing for us â€" Samit Basu, Samhita Arni, Priya Kuriyan, Anushka Ravishankar, Vishwajyoti Ghosh and Roopa Pai.

Tinkle's motto “Where Learning Meets Fun” shapes the magazine. There is loads of learning to be done with loads of laughter. So we thought what better way to celebrate the 600th issue than to try and create a laughter record with our readers. That is how the Tinkle Tickles Laugh-a-thon was born. We asked readers to call us or log on to our Web site to record their laughter and help us create a laughter record.

Do you think comic book readership in India is limited to children, unlike in other countries? Is the content designed with that in mind?

We have gained because of the legacy of Uncle Pai. Children in India have grown up reading Tinkle and are very much used to having it in their lives. Right from the outs et he had decided to create a magazine for children in the age group 8 to 14 years. When we design the story, we keep that in mind, but like movies certified as “U” or for unrestricted public exhibition, it is more like family entertainment.

Children enjoy reading it with their parents and grandparents. This is something we always keep in mind while creating content; we do not portray unnecessary violence or allow abusive language.

As for comics in India, they have remained in a limbo till recently when there was an explosion in content, geared mainly for older readers. These are exciting times; there is so much exploration and experimentation going on. It's like we are hurrying to make up for lost time.

The superhero phenomenon does not seem to have caught on in India. Tinkle also focuses more on memorable characters than superheroes.

You know, I am glad. We seem to have blinders on when we think of comic characters. Generally when we ask someone to name his or her favorite comic character, it is invariably a superhero. At Tinkle, we've always had the space to explore different characters, all commonplace and relatable.

As for a truly Indian superhero, it would have been a success had the idea been good and the focus was on mass distribution. Subconsciously till now our superheroes have been inspired by Western superheroes, making them “wannabe” in a way.

But the superhero is not a Western concept; it has resonance in mythology as well. That is not to say we should focus only on mythological characters. I believe the superhero genre is immensely exciting simply because of the scope it offers. With comics becoming relevant again, I'm sure we'll soon see an upsurge in superhero comics as well.

Who is your favorite Tinkle character and why?

That's easy! The Defective Detectives. They are paranoid, they are melodramatic, they are absurd and they almost always get it wrong. It is super fun tak ing the ordinary and dreaming up conspiracy theories for the bungling duo. Rather like telling the lunatic inside me to go out and have a blast.

Why don't we see Tinkle characters on television or in movies?

Oh, but you soon will. ACK Animation's “Suppandi! Suppandi!” will be screened on Cartoon Network, possibly later this year, and there are plans for the other characters as well.

Some people believe that with the advent of cable television, Internet and the popularity of cinema specially for children, comic book readership has been affected.

There will be new technology and as a result, new media will emerge in each generation. But those who like to read will always read. Some just need that little push, and I think comics provide just that.

The medium is that perfect bridge between visual media like cinema and the written word, bringing alive what are essentially static words and images. Comics are an ideal crossover tool, with ready con tent for films and animation.

How has Tinkle adapted to the changing demands of today's readers?

Tinkle has stayed relevant because of the great connection it shares with its readers. We talk to them, take their feedback and involve them in every facet of our magazine, from stories and art to look and design. I'd say we have evolved with our readers, and the storytelling style and our characters match the pace and awareness of our readers, who are exposed to computer games, the Internet, special effects in the movies and a host of new-age technologies.

It is my desire to expose our readers to diverse storytelling and artwork styles so that their worldview, their sense of stories and art, is not limited.

Another wish is to urge children out of their comfort zones and push them to explore the world. We have already begun this in Tinkle through nonfiction sections such as Tinkle Spotlight, an interview feature with experts from various fields to help chi ldren discover diverse career options, and Mark Your Calendar, a monthly events segment that introduces readers to sports, festivals and cultural events from all over the globe.



A Conversation With: Tinkle Magazine Editor Rajani Thindiath

By MALAVIKA VYAWAHARE

Tinkle, India's first English-language comic book for children, published its 600th issue last month. Anant Pai, a former news executive known fondly to readers as Uncle Pai, introduced the magazine in April 1980.

Mr. Pai, who died last year, was best known as the creator of the popular comic book series Amar Chitra Katha, or Immortal Illustrated Stories; published since 1967, it retells quintessentially Indian stories, whether great epics, folk tales or biographies.

Tinkle, on the other hand, takes as its motto “Where Learning Meets Fun,” and its pages are filled with comic strips, facts about everything from sports to physics and a generous helping of quizzes and contests. Beloved by millions of Indians, the magazine has made many a tedious train journey more enjoyable for children (and the other passengers, too).

In 2007, the Amar Chitra Katha brand, including Tinkle, was sold to two entrepreneurs, who in turn sold a majority stake to the Future Group, a clothing and finance conglomerate, last year. The monthly circulation of Tinkle's print properties, which include the magazine and several digests, is now about 225,000, growing at 30 percent over the past two years, said Manas Mohan, chief operating officer at ACK Media.

India Ink recently caught up with Rajani Thindiath, Tinkle's editor, who joined the company four years ago armed with a degree in psychology and diplomas in animation and journalism. In an e-mail interview, Ms. Thindiath discussed the 600th issue of Tinkle, how Indian comics are different from those in other countries and the possible television debuts of some of Tinkle's most popular character s.

First things first. Why is Tinkle called “Tinkle”?

Subba Rao, who was the associate editor of Amar Chitra Katha, proposed the idea of a comic book for children to Anant Pai during a meeting. Mr Rao's idea was accepted, and the team began discussing a name for the magazine. Mr. Pai said he wanted a musical name-and that's when a call interrupted the meeting.

Mr. Rao, whose phone had rung, told the caller that he was busy and that he would give a “tinkle,” or call back, later in the day. Then, when he put the phone down, Mr. Rao proposed ‘Tinkle' as the name of the new magazine. Mr Pai liked the name and Tinkle was born.

Soon the ‘Tinkle Tinkle Little Star' campaigns started airing on radio and TV, based on the popular children's rhyme, to launch the new magazine.

You launched Tinkle's 600th edition last month; tell us about that and your Laugh-a-thon campaign.

Tinkle 600 is a “thank you” to everyone associated with the magazine. Since it is designed to be a collector's edition, we focused on the number six and had six famous storytellers from India writing for us â€" Samit Basu, Samhita Arni, Priya Kuriyan, Anushka Ravishankar, Vishwajyoti Ghosh and Roopa Pai.

Tinkle's motto “Where Learning Meets Fun” shapes the magazine. There is loads of learning to be done with loads of laughter. So we thought what better way to celebrate the 600th issue than to try and create a laughter record with our readers. That is how the Tinkle Tickles Laugh-a-thon was born. We asked readers to call us or log on to our Web site to record their laughter and help us create a laughter record.

Do you think comic book readership in India is limited to children, unlike in other countries? Is the content designed with that in mind?

We have gained because of the legacy of Uncle Pai. Children in India have grown up reading Tinkle and are very much used to having it in their lives. Right from the outs et he had decided to create a magazine for children in the age group 8 to 14 years. When we design the story, we keep that in mind, but like movies certified as “U” or for unrestricted public exhibition, it is more like family entertainment.

Children enjoy reading it with their parents and grandparents. This is something we always keep in mind while creating content; we do not portray unnecessary violence or allow abusive language.

As for comics in India, they have remained in a limbo till recently when there was an explosion in content, geared mainly for older readers. These are exciting times; there is so much exploration and experimentation going on. It's like we are hurrying to make up for lost time.

The superhero phenomenon does not seem to have caught on in India. Tinkle also focuses more on memorable characters than superheroes.

You know, I am glad. We seem to have blinders on when we think of comic characters. Generally when we ask someone to name his or her favorite comic character, it is invariably a superhero. At Tinkle, we've always had the space to explore different characters, all commonplace and relatable.

As for a truly Indian superhero, it would have been a success had the idea been good and the focus was on mass distribution. Subconsciously till now our superheroes have been inspired by Western superheroes, making them “wannabe” in a way.

But the superhero is not a Western concept; it has resonance in mythology as well. That is not to say we should focus only on mythological characters. I believe the superhero genre is immensely exciting simply because of the scope it offers. With comics becoming relevant again, I'm sure we'll soon see an upsurge in superhero comics as well.

Who is your favorite Tinkle character and why?

That's easy! The Defective Detectives. They are paranoid, they are melodramatic, they are absurd and they almost always get it wrong. It is super fun tak ing the ordinary and dreaming up conspiracy theories for the bungling duo. Rather like telling the lunatic inside me to go out and have a blast.

Why don't we see Tinkle characters on television or in movies?

Oh, but you soon will. ACK Animation's “Suppandi! Suppandi!” will be screened on Cartoon Network, possibly later this year, and there are plans for the other characters as well.

Some people believe that with the advent of cable television, Internet and the popularity of cinema specially for children, comic book readership has been affected.

There will be new technology and as a result, new media will emerge in each generation. But those who like to read will always read. Some just need that little push, and I think comics provide just that.

The medium is that perfect bridge between visual media like cinema and the written word, bringing alive what are essentially static words and images. Comics are an ideal crossover tool, with ready con tent for films and animation.

How has Tinkle adapted to the changing demands of today's readers?

Tinkle has stayed relevant because of the great connection it shares with its readers. We talk to them, take their feedback and involve them in every facet of our magazine, from stories and art to look and design. I'd say we have evolved with our readers, and the storytelling style and our characters match the pace and awareness of our readers, who are exposed to computer games, the Internet, special effects in the movies and a host of new-age technologies.

It is my desire to expose our readers to diverse storytelling and artwork styles so that their worldview, their sense of stories and art, is not limited.

Another wish is to urge children out of their comfort zones and push them to explore the world. We have already begun this in Tinkle through nonfiction sections such as Tinkle Spotlight, an interview feature with experts from various fields to help chi ldren discover diverse career options, and Mark Your Calendar, a monthly events segment that introduces readers to sports, festivals and cultural events from all over the globe.



Is Rushdie the Voice of a Billion?

NEW DELHI - The relationship between Salman Rushdie and is consecrated in the adjective “Indian-British,” which he is, including the hyphen between. It is a feeble, almost spectral bond, but circumstances have given it a depth that has benefited Mr. Rushdie.

It is indisputable that he was born in India, in what was then known as Bombay, and that he was raised in an affluent portion of the great city. Then, when he was still a boy, he left for England and felt the stinging discomfort of yet another wealthy Indian migrant who was suddenly not on the top of the human pyramid. As a young writer in England on the brink of accepting fatal failure, Mr. Rushdie has written in his memoir, “Joseph Anton,” which was released this month, he took a gamble and used India as material for his second novel, “Midnight's Children.” His success, and later notoriety, made Indians claim him as their own. It was inevitable that the Western literary system would appoint him as the pre-eminent interpreter of the Subcontinent. Like Jake in the Hollywood film “Avatar,” Mr. Rushdie was a white man in a native's body who went into the area of darkness and emerged with intelligence, often couched in excellent prose.

What Mr. Rushdie has derived from India and used successfully in his works is a melodramatic strain of story-telling that is alien to British and American literary traditions, where restraint is considered a superior art. In India, the entire nation is melodramatic, as is evident on the streets, on the floor of Parliament, at funerals and weddings and, of course, in cinema. In English-language literary fiction, Western critics observe any hint of melodrama with contempt, but they usually make an exception for writers of foreign origin.

A British translator of the Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk once described his prose as a “trance,” evidently deriving this compliment from the swirling dervishes of Istanbul's tourist lanes. I asked her, if an Anglo-Saxon writer from London employed an identical style of narration, would she still have called it a “trance”? She said with a chuckle that it would then be “probably purple prose.” Mr. Rushdie, too, is a beneficiary of hailing from a distant, alien land.

Most Indians learned of the existence of Mr. Rushdie not after he won the in 1981, but after the publication of “The Satanic Verses” in 1988, with the violent protests that followed and Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's fatwa in 1989 calling for his death, which sent him into hiding. That was also how most Indians learned of the Booker Prize.

Mr. Rushdie has written in his memoir that for many years after the publication of “The Satanic Verses” he believed that a review of the book in the magazine India Today, probably the first review of the book, was “the match that lit the fire.” The magazine had broken the “traditional publishing embargo” and printed the review nine days before the book's official release.

According to Mr. Rushdie, the journalist Madhu Jain, whom he “thought of as a friend,” met him in his home in London. “When she saw the thick, dark blue cover with the large red title she grew extremely excited, and pleaded to be given a copy.” The headline of the review was “An Unequivocal Attack on Religious Fundamentalism.”

Mr. Rushdie writes: “The last sentence of the article, “‘The Satanic Verses” is bound to trigger an avalanche of protests,' was an open invitation for those protests to begin.”

Ms. Jain told me that she remembers the episode a bit differently. She had met Mr. Rushdie at his home and as she was leaving she saw “a motorized wheelbarrow stop in front of his home.” The wheelbarrow carried several proof copies of “The Satanic Verses.” Mr. Rushdie, she said, picked up a copy, signed it and gave it to her.

India, where the protests against the book began, was the first country to act against the book. This was done not through an official ban, but through a government order making it illegal to import copies of the book.

As Indians could not read “The Satanic Verses,” they bought or borrowed “Midnight's Children.” The impact of this novel on a generation of young writers was extraordinary. In Madras, now Chennai, where boys were preordained to become engineers and literature was considered the refuge of the handicapped or the effeminate, the news of a rock star “Indian” writer made literature suddenly look respectable.

The first burst of Indian pride in response to the fame and infamy of an Indian-born writer erupted in a simpler age. Over the years, even though Mr. Rushdie has said several times that he does not need a visa to visit India, the writer, who continues to create political storms and needs state protection whenever he visits the country, has come to be considered a high-maintenance foreigner by the very people who once claimed him as their own. He has also become a reminder of that uncomfortable question: Among migrant artists, is identity actually a euphemism for branding?

Manu Joseph is editor of the Indian newsweekly Open and author of the novel “The Illicit Happiness of Other People.”



Wednesday, September 26, 2012

As Power Flows to Regional Bosses, Questions Rise on India\'s Economy

NEW DELHI - It seems like eons ago, but Prime Minister and his coalition government once inspired very high expectations. They were going to stoke 's economy, improve education, help the poor, build modern transportation and energy systems and, perhaps most improbably, prove that India, the most populous and messiest of democracies, could be successfully governed.

That was in 2009, when the governing coalition, led by the Indian National Congress Party, won an unexpectedly broad re-election victory. India's economy was motoring out of the global recession, and the country seemed to be moving from an era of fragmented politics to a new stage in which power resided with a stronger central government in New Delhi. To those who saw India as a rising global power, this was good news.

If only.

Today, India's political calculus is again in flux. The economy is in a tailspin, Mr. Singh and his government are desperately trying to regain credibility, and power is now radiating to regional political chieftains, who are teasingly considering a new national political alignment, a so-called third front to compete with the two national powers, the Congress Party and the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party.

Regional bosses, once in decline, are becoming kingmakers again: the squat, sleepy-eyed Mulayam Singh Yadav, who oversees the powerful Samajwadi Party, is even publicly musing about himself as a future prime minister.

“The incentive for every single party from the opposition to the allies is to send a signal that the Congress can't govern,” said Pratap Bhanu Mehta, president of the Center for Policy Research in New Delhi. “That's the election plank.”

Had Mr. Singh's government met initial expectations, or even come close, the political landscape would undoubtedly be different. “They just blew it,” Mr. Mehta said. The rise of Mr. Yadav and several other regional bosses has many implications for Indian politics, but the trend also raises a broader question about the changing arc of the Indian economic story: If the old assumption was that India needed a strong central government to compete globally, and to avoid a competitive disadvantage with China, what will happen now that the opposite seems to be happening?

History does not provide much reassurance. In past decades, third-front governments have twice taken power and have twice collapsed because of internal bickering, a prospect of instability certain to be unappealing to those in New Delhi and Washington who are eager for India to become a stable and influential player in Asia. Most analysts are skeptical that a true third front will take power in the near future, but they agree that the clout of regional leaders is growing.

“Indian politics will have to live with bargains and negotiations with regional parties,” Ashutosh Varshney, a political expert, said in an e-mail interview. “A third front may or may not emerge, but both national parties will have to negotiate and bargain. That also means that India will find it harder to make firm assertions of power on the international stage, à la China. Its power will grow, but more gradually.”

Last week, Mr. Singh's coalition government nearly collapsed after he pushed through unpopular economic measures, including an increase in diesel fuel prices and a policy shift enabling global giants like Walmart to open retail stores here. Mamata Banerjee, the populist chief minister of the state of West Bengal, declared the moves “anti-poor” and withdrew her regional party from the governing coalition, potentially bringing down Mr. Singh's government. Until, that is, Mr. Yadav and another nonaligned regional leader, Mayawati, who uses only one name, stepped in to rescue the government, at least for now, by pledging “outside” support.

The machinations were hardly altruistic. For months, Mr. Yadav and other regional leaders have speculated - at times gleefully - about the possibility that the governing coalition might collapse, forcing early elections for Parliament, before the scheduled date in 2014. By allowing the government to survive, analysts say, the regional bosses made a cold calculation: keeping afloat a wounded central government was more advantageous, for now, than trying to pick up extra seats by forcing early elections.

The strategy is to pummel Mr. Singh's government like a piñata, if not yet knocking it completely to the ground, in hopes of inflicting even greater long-term damage to the Congress Party. Mr. Yadav, for example, is lending parliamentary support to the government, even as he plans to rally against Walmart and some economic measures.

India's economy has suffered in the lingering global downturn, but most analysts say India's current problems are disproportionately self-inflicted. The two-headed leadership structure of Mr. Singh and Sonia Gandhi, the Congress Party president, which worked earlier, is now seen as increasingly ineffective.



In Old Delhi, the Ancient Art of Kabootarbaazi (Pigeon Rearing) Lives On

By RAKSHA KUMAR

NEW DELHIâ€"One of the winding alleys of the Chitli Qabar neighborhood in Old Delhi leads to a four-story, narrow white house, where several cats hungrily ply the stairs almost constantly.

“We have to keep a strict vigil on these cats all the time,” says Mateel Qureshi. “They eye my pigeons.”

On the rooftop of the building live 700 pigeons in seven huge cages, one of the most diverse collections of the birds in Old Delhi, where the ancient art of kabootarbaazi, or pigeon rearing, is alive and well. Visitors will notice a distinct odor of pigeon droppings mixed with ittar, or perfume, but the perfume isn't for covering up the odor â€" it's an integral part of rearing pigeons in this part of Delhi.

Sohail Hashmi, a historian, said pigeon rearing began in the Mughal period because the rulers felt the need to communicate with their aristocracy on a regular basis and found that sending messages through pigeons was the best way to do so. Mughal emperors maintained the pigeon-rearing tradition in Old Delhi. “Almost every noble man had a kabootarkhana (home for pigeons) in his house,” said Mr. Hashmi.

Old Delhi held pigeon competitions in January and February during the Mughal period and some decades thereafter as well. Owners of flocks of pigeons traditionally spent all year training their birds, as these competitions were very prestigious and the winners highly respected. According to Mr. Hashmi, that hobby has been carried on by many generations.

Today, there is only the distance-flying competition, in which the pigeon that flies the longest distance and returns to its owner wins, a sort of marathon for pigeons. Ow ners of pigeons gather at a specified place and set their pigeons free. The birds take to the sky and follow a rehearsed route within Old Delhi. Several organizers are stationed at specific points, taking stock of how far each pigeon has flown and within what time. The first pigeon that completes the route and returns to its proud owner waiting at the starting point is the winner.

It is here that the perfume plays a role. Owners bathe their pigeons in scented water so that it is easy to differentiate one pigeon from another. Small bands are also placed on the thin legs of the pigeons, which help the owner identify his bird.

When Mr. Qureshi, 27, opens one of the cages on his rooftop, several pigeons fly out and go straight for the grains that are scattered on the floor. Then, like clockwork, they return to their cages when he blows a shrill whistle.

Mr. Qureshi's neighbors say he has the largest variety of pigeons in his collection among the estimated hundr eds of families that still rear them. He doesn't sell the birds, Mr. Qureshi said, because “they have been our family's passion for over a hundred years now.”

His grandfather started kabootarbaazi with only about 200 pigeons, he said, and his uncle took the numbers up to 1,200. But Mr. Qureshi said he can only handle the 700 he has now because he also owns a famous sweet shop, Shireen Bhawan. He spends a couple of hours with the birds each day after he returns home from work.

For the distance-flying competitions, pigeons are trained to recognize the owner's voice as the owner teaches the birds the route. As Mr. Qureshi and his brother would drive, they would whistle or call to the pigeons as the pigeons flew alongside. On quiet mornings, sometimes the owners would drop grain on the streets for the birds to follow.

Once a pigeon has gone over a route a few times, Mr. Qureshi said, it knows where to go and how to get there, although some pigeons are bette r than others at memorizing the route.

The pigeons are like any other pets, he said. If you train them to listen to you, that is enough.

It is 5:30 p.m. and Mr. Qureshi pulls away the delicate net that covers the two cages of the birds he considers well trained, about 150 out of his collection. “Fly, my babies,” he said. “It is time for you to touch the skies.” The birds cooed loudly as they emerged from their cages, filling the sky with their gray-and-white bodies.

“They are like any other pets,” he said smiling. “They need to get out for a while. I am sure they will all return.”



India\'s Sahara-Massive, Splashy ... And Mysterious

KHALILABAD, India (Reuters) - Like millions of Indians, Jag Ram Chaudhary invested with the Sahara conglomerate - 1,300 rupees ($24) a month in his case - to put away money for a rainy day.

"My wife had an accident some years back. I don't have much savings, so I thought I'll be able to save some money by putting in a small amount every month," said Chaudhary, an office helper at a construction company in Uttar Pradesh state.

On August 31, India's Supreme Court ruled that finance schemes run by two Sahara companies were illegal and ordered it to repay as much as $4.5 billion to up to almost 30 million mostly small investors, plus interest. The final figures are still to be determined as some clients have already redeemed their investments, lawyers on both sides of the matter said.

The case has shone a rare light on the unlisted giant whose interests range across finance, housing, media and entertainment

Sahara has accumulated a string of trophies in recent years, including a stake in a Formula One motor racing team and ownership of Grosvenor House hotel in London. In July, it agreed to buy a controlling stake in New York's Plaza Hotel.

But its core client base is the towns and villages away from the shiny cities of modern India. There, Sahara sells investment products to often poor people in amounts as small as 2 rupees (4 U.S. cents) a day. The company is a household name in India through its lead sponsorship of the national cricket team.

"Banks take eight years to pay what I get from Sahara in five years," Chaudhary, 40, said in Khalilabad, a town in Sant Kabir Nagar district in northern India. Like several Sahara customers interviewed nearly two weeks afterwards, he had not heard of the court ruling.

SPENDING POWER

Critics, including activist groups, say Sahara's investment products are designed to evade oversight by financial regulators and that it lacks transparency on the source and use of its funds, selling products to investors who do not understand the risks and plowing the proceeds into real estate projects.

Under the scheme rejected by the Supreme Court, two firms owned by Sahara had offered bonds to small investors, promising, in some cases, to return three times the face value after 10 years.

The court ruling that it raised money by "dubious" means follows another rebuke in 2008, when the central bank ordered a Sahara company to stop taking deposits from the public.

In a country where "black money", or undeclared wealth, is rampant, Sahara's size and spending power have long fuelled speculation over how the company operates.

Sahara, headed by Subrata Roy Sahara, its chairman and self-described "managing worker", says it helps small investors outside the banking system and that it has never defaulted on them.

"Sahara agents motivate people who would otherwise spend the money on liquor, gambling, etc," said Guddu Pandey, a school teacher and Sahara agent in Uttar Pradesh state, echoing an argument made by Sahara after the court verdict.

The company did not respond to several attempts by Reuters to get answers to written questions. Roy was not immediately available to be interviewed, Sahara said.

Sahara has not said how it will refund the money to investors, although it has said it is healthy and investors need not worry.

ALL IN THE FAMILY

The company's full name is Sahara India Pariwar, or family. Roy, 64, refers to himself as the guardian of the world's largest family, and espouses a philosophy of "collective materialism".

At its headquarters in the city of Lucknow, in Uttar Pradesh, staff greet visitors by putting their right hand to their chest and saying "Sahara Pranam". Pranam is a respectful version of hello.

Roy, often photographed wearing a black necktie and vest over a white shirt, is based nearby at the showpiece Sahara Shaher, a sprawling gated complex of low white buildings and lawns where he lives and where the group holds an annual mass wedding for 101 couples who could otherwise not afford it.

Starting with capital of 2,000 rupees in the late 1970s, Roy built Sahara into a giant that, according to its website, had assets of more than $21 billion as of April 2011.

Roy is often described as a billionaire but he is not on the Forbes list of rich Indians. Sahara's website says no dividend has been paid for 34 years and no profit has been taken out of the company.

From its north India base, Sahara has become a cashed-up global investor in hotels, sports and entertainment.

Last year, Roy teamed up with liquor baron Vijay Mallya of Kingfisher beer fame, paying $100 million for 42.5 percent of his Force India Formula One auto racing team. It paid $370 million for a franchise in cricket's Indian Premier League.

In 2010, Sahara considered buying English Premier League soccer club Liverpool and held talks to buy the debt of film studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Neither deal happened.

Still, Roy is not typically bracketed with a corporate elite led by Indian families such as the Tatas, Birlas and Ambanis.

"If you look at the orthodox business community, they have kept him at arm's length," said Ashok Prasad, a physician, lawyer and academic who taught overseas before returning to Gorakhpur, the Uttar Pradesh city where Roy started out.

Instead, Roy is associated with Bollywood celebrities and, like many tycoons, is seen as having good political connections.

Last year, K.M. Abraham, then a board member of India's capital markets regulator, which had ordered that the bonds be refunded in the case that ultimately went to the Supreme Court, wrote to the prime minister alleging "undue pressure" from the then-finance minister and his office to deal leniently with high-profile cases, including Sahara's.

The Finance Ministry and the regulator denied the allegations.

SAHARA-SIZED

Sahara says its land holdings in India are more than 33,600 acres. Although not all is majority-owned, it amounts to more than any listed Indian developer.

The group has two small listed units, Sahara One Media and Entertainment Ltd and Sahara Housingfina Corp Ltd, whose combined market capitalization is $48 million.

In 2009 another group company, property developer Sahara Prime City Ltd, filed a draft prospectus for an IPO to raise up to 34.5 billion rupees ($645 million). The deal never took place but it came back to haunt Sahara when the prospectus attracted the attention of India's securities regulator to the fund-raising scheme ultimately banned by the Supreme Court.

While an IPO of that size in India would typically see top-tier investment banks scrambling for a piece of the action, it was managed by four local brokers and Japan's Daiwa Securities SMBC, a small player in India. Several bankers at global institutions said they would not work with Sahara given concerns about governance and transparency.

"Their business model is not transparent. There are some grey areas," said the CEO of a large Indian bank, who like many people interviewed for this story declined to be identified given the sensitivity of the matter.

"Sahara has a lot of cash but we don't know where all this cash is coming from."

Not that it seems to need bankers. Unlike many big, acquisitive groups, Sahara's in-built funding sources mean it does not rely on bank loans.

"Have you ever seen Sahara's balance sheet? Nobody has seen it," said a senior executive at another major Indian lender.

THE PEOPLE

Among many poorer residents of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state, Sahara has substance. Its sponsorship of the Indian cricket team in a country mad about the sport adds to its credibility in small towns.

"Sahara bank? That way," an elderly tea stall operator in Harraiya said when asked for the location of the Sahara branch office, erroneously referring to it as a bank.

The branch itself, up a flight of stairs in a nondescript grey concrete building, was bustling on a recent day.

Sahara customers interviewed in Uttar Pradesh said they trusted the company, which has been around more than 30 years. Some had reinvested in Sahara products when they matured.

Sahara operates through nearly a million agents, who sign up clients and collect payments, sometimes on a daily basis.

"I have never been to a Sahara office. The agent comes, does all the paperwork, and collects the money," said Anil Tripathi, a travel agent who said he had doubled his money with Sahara.

Sahara has built a large niche in a country where 90 percent of the workforce is informally employed, half of households do not have bank accounts and loan-sharking is rife.

"The smallest of the small, the poorest of the poor - the banking industry is not able to cater to them," said Arvind Mohan, a Lucknow University economist.

THE RULING

The issue with Sahara is transparency and regulation, critics and regulators say.

For example, it does not always publicize its investment plan terms. A newer scheme, Q Shop Plan H, which is built around the group's new initiative to sell household goods directly to consumers, promises returns of about 135 percent after 6 years, according to a term sheet that does not mention Sahara. Some agents said they were asked to try and convert holders of the outlawed bonds to the new plan.

Asked if the details of the scheme banned by the court were explained to customers, a long-time Sahara employee in Uttar Pradesh said: "We don't have to explain all that. The depositor only wants to know how much he would be paying and how much he will get back on maturity."

The court ordered the money be repaid within 90 days, with 15 percent annual interest, prompting speculation over how Sahara will scrape that kind of money together.

Sahara responded with a rambling, full-page newspaper ad assuring investors their money was safe. It also condemned any suggestion it had raised any so-called "black money" or sought any undue favor from any authority.

"People cannot accept Sahara's super-fast growth. All along we have been getting beatings and beatings from all authorities, whereas we should be appreciated," it said. ($1 = 53.5100 Indian rupees)

(Additional reporting by Sharat Pradhan in LUCKNOW and Sumeet Chatterjee and Swati Pandey in MUMBAI; Editing by John Chalmers, Alex Richardson and Dean Yates)