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   7  December 2014 National: HC nod for marriage of Muslim girls at 15 Observing that Muslim girls who attain puberty or co...

GK & Current Affair Updates: December 7- 2014



   7  December 2014
National:

HC nod for marriage of Muslim girls at 15
Observing that Muslim girls who attain puberty or complete 15 years of age are eligible for marriage under the Muslim law, the Gujarat High Court has upheld the marriage of a minor girl from the community.

Lok Adalat settles 1.25 cr. cases in a day
The Second National Lok Adalat held across the country on 6th December  amicably settled about 1.25 crore pending and pre-litigation cases and brought financial relief of over Rs. 3,000 crore to ordinary litigants in a single day. The Adalat held over the day and organised by the National Legal Service Authority (NALSA) has reduced backlog by about nine percent in all the States. Even in the Supreme Court, 28 out of 53 cases put up for settlement were disposed of and cheques were handed out at the time of settlement itself. The cases settled out of court include family disputes, matrimonial cases, motor accident claims, bank recoveries, petty criminal matters, revenue matters, disbursement of payment under the MGNREGA and other government welfare schemes.

Child marriages still rampant, says study
A majority of parents who get their children married before the legal age do not even seek their consent, and among those who do, the child not consenting does not stop the marriage, new data has shown. In 2011, the Planning Commission selected the G.B. Pant Institute of Studies in Rural Development, for a study on child marriage in India. The 2005-06 National Family Health Survey had shown that 46 per cent of young women were married before the legal age of 18, and the Planning Commission sought to understand why this was occurring. The institute recently submitted its report to the govt.


Vulture centres boast of healthy numbers
The decline in vulture populations in West Bengal and Assam has been arrested thanks to the efforts of the Vulture Conservation and Breeding Centre (VCBC) set up in these States. At the VCBC at Rajabhatkhawa in north Bengal, the number of vultures has crossed 100. From zero population in 2005, there are now 102 vultures at the five-acre breeding centre. Of the 102 birds at the centre, about 23 are young birds, which have been bred at the centre. Similarly at the VCBC in Assam in Rani, on the outskirts of Guwahati, there are about 70 vultures, including over a dozen young birds. Of the five threatened vulture species in India, the VCBC in West Bengal is home to three — white-backed vultures, slender billed vulture and long-billed vulture. The centre in Assam is home to white-backed vultures and slender-billed vultures. The Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) had set up these centres in 2005 and 2007 respectively when use of the painkiller, diclofenac, in cattle turned fatal for the scavenging birds resulting in an alarming decline in vulture population.

International:

Al-Qaeda chief dies in Pak military raid
The chief of al-Qaeda’s global operations, Adnan Shukrijuma, wanted by the United States over a 2009 plot to attack the New York subway system, was killed in a raid in Pakistan’s restive tribal region. Saudi-born Adnan Shukrijuma was killed in the Shinwarsak area of South Waziristan tribal district.

Ex-security chief felled by Xi’s anti-corruption drive
China’s anti-corruption campaign has targeted a former state security chief and a one-time Politburo member, who is now facing arrest after being sacked from the Communist Party of China (CPC). Global Times is reporting that the decision to expel Zhou Yongkang was taken by the Politburo of the CPC. Mr. Zhou is the highest-ranking official probed for corruption since 1949.

U.N. warns of rising costs to adapt
The first Adaptation Gap Report by the United Nations Environment Programme released at Lima says even with emissions cuts, costs of adapting to climate change are likely to be two to three times the current estimates of $70-100 billion per year by 2050. The report says that failure to cut emissions will dramatically increase costs and new finance will be required to avoid a significant funding shortfall after 2020. The report finds that despite adaptation funding by public sources reaching $23-26 billion in 2012-2013, there will be a significant funding gap after 2020 unless new and additional finance becomes available. If no action on cutting greenhouse gas emissions is taken, the cost of adaptation will increase as wider and more expensive action will be needed to protect communities from the intensifying impact of climate change such as drought, floods and rising sea levels, the report warns.

Britain to set up permanent military base in West Asia after 40-year gap
Britain will broaden its military footprint in West Asia with the establishment of a permanent military base at the Mina Salman Port in Bahrain. An agreement on this was signed in Manama by the United Kingdom’s Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond and Bahrain’s Foreign Minister Sheikh Khalid bin Ahmed bin Mohammed Al-Khalifa. It will be Britain’s first permanent military base in West Asia since it withdrew from the region in 1971, closing all bases east of the Suez. The naval base will become the springboard for Britain’s involvement in West Asia, most importantly its operations in Iraq as part of the U.S.-led collation against the Islamic State.

Typhoon slams into Philippines
Typhoon Hagupit slammed into the central Philippines’ east coast on 6th December, knocking out power and toppling trees in a region where 650,000 people have fled to safety, still haunted by the massive death and destruction wrought by a monster storm last year. Packing maximum sustained winds of 175 km per hour and gusts of 210 kph, Hagupit made landfall in Dolores, a coastal town facing the Pacific in Eastern Samar province, according to the Philippines’ weather agency.

Business and Economy:

Welspun Gujarat spinning mill goes on stream
Welspun India, part of the $3.5-billion Welspun group and among the world’s top three towel manufacturers unveiled one of the largest spinning mills at Ajnar (Gujarat) to support its growing home textiles exports business. This facility with 1.70 lakh spindles, the largest under one roof in India, has been inaugurated. One in seven towels sold in the U.S. is manufactured by Welspun, and the company supplies to 14 of the 30 global retailers, including Wal-Mart, JC Penney and Target.

AstraZeneca, Ranbaxy prevail in Nexium antitrust trial
A Massachusetts jury has found that an agreement between AstraZeneca Plc and Ranbaxy Laboratories to delay the launch of a generic version of AstraZeneca’s heartburn drug Nexium was not anticompetitive. The verdict, handed down in federal court in Boston, is the first time a jury has decided such a case since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that so-called ‘pay-for-delay’ settlements may run afoul of antitrust laws. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission estimates that pay-for-delay deals, in which a branded drugmaker pays a generic rival to stay off the market, cost consumers $3.5 billion each year.

Petrolight, Aratos tie up for pipeline security solutions
Russian oil pipeline company Petrolight has signed a long-term agreement with Aratos Technologies India to provide pipeline security solutions in the oil and gas sector.