Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Sunday, September 15, 2013

The Middle East Party

Last night, Craig and Nicola hosted a Middle East party at their place.

It was a veritable feast of yummy foods to start with – Tania and I helping out with a selection of home-made dips, before the Sheeshas were brought out and the dancing started.
 
Here are photos of the yummy selection of foods to choose from:
 








 
A good night was had by all.
 

















 
Enjoying the taste of the Sheesha:
 






 
Then the dancing started:
 
Rocking on to some Guns n' Roses





I think the photo of the evening
Thanks to Craig and Nicola for organising it.
 

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Today's Newspaper articles

Today’s articles are from “The Australian” and “The Independent” and talk about the recent food bill passed in the Indian parliament:

Largest grain subsidy to combat malnutrition in India

  • by:Amanda Hodge, South Asia Correspondent
  • From:The Australian
  • September 04, 201312:00AM
AS India struggles to arrest its economic slide, its parliament has approved the world's largest subsidised food program, a $20 billion a year scheme that will benefit up to 870 million Indians.

The National Food Security Bill will provide 5kg of subsidised grain per person each month to 67 per cent of the population, and is widely seen as the ruling Congress party's last-ditch effort to woo voters ahead of elections in May. The program proposes free meals for pregnant women and lactating mothers, children aged between six months and 14 years, malnourished children, and destitute or homeless people.

However, the legislation has divided economists and poverty alleviation experts.

Its defenders say India has a moral obligation to ensure no citizen goes hungry, after almost a decade of record growth. But up to 40 per cent of subsidised grain under existing programs is said to be pilfered and sold for profit.

Some critics even fear the new policy could undermine India's fight against malnutrition by focusing on grain at the expense of other foods, reducing diversity in nutrients consumed by the poor.

India enjoyed an average annual growth rate of 8.5 per cent between 2003 and 2010, but still has one of the world's highest rates of child malnutrition and ranks 65th out of 79 on the Global Hunger Index.

On Friday, India posted its slowest quarterly growth rate, 4.4 per cent, since the global financial crisis bit in 2009. The rupee has tumbled more than 20 per cent since May.

Harsh Mander, a former member of India's National Advisory Council and key supporter of the bill, points to "the costs of not investing in the better nourishment of millions of our people", adding: "Growth cannot be sustained much longer on the thin shoulders of hungry people."

Another leading economic commentator told The Australian the program's underlying figures lacked rigour. Government figures suggest 22 per cent of the population lives below the poverty line, yet the new policy aims to provide subsidised grain to three times that number.

"Even if you double that poverty line to 44 per cent, you're still talking about an extra 300 million people," the commentator said.


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The biggest welfare programme in history: Indian government gives 800 million citizens a 'legal right' to cheap food in new bill

£13bn scheme immediately condemned by business community who claim the country cannot afford it


The Indian government has passed what has been described as the biggest welfare programme in history - a scheme to provide cheap food to more than 800m people. The project has immediately drawn condemnation from industrialists and critics who say country's fragile economy cannot afford it.

In a move intended to help the hundreds of millions of Indians whose lives are scarred by malnutrition and hunger, the Congress party-led government has passed a £13bn scheme to provide heavily subsidised wheat, rice and cereals to the very poor. Perhaps more importantly, the bill, which was passed by the upper house of parliament late on Monday evening, guarantees citizens a legal right to food.

Though the Indian economy has grown in the last 20 years to the point where it is now the third-largest in Asia, up to two-thirds of the population live in poverty. Unicef says that around half of all children in India suffer from malnutrition, something the country's prime minister, Manmohan Singh has termed a “national shame”.

“The question is not whether we can do it or not. We have to do it,” the head of the Congress party, Sonia Gandhi, said as the bill was being discussed.

The government's food minister, Kuruppasserry Varkey Thomas, said the bill was the first step toward improving food distribution in a country where poor transportation and lack of refrigeration mean an estimated third of grains and vegetables rot before they reach the market.

The Associated Press said under the scheme's regulations, those who qualify will be able to buy five kg of rice a month at just three rupees (about three pennies) per kg. One kg of wheat will cost two rupees while cereals will be made available for one rupee.

Even as the bill was being debated, a number of voices, including many senior figures from business, came out against the measure, saying that with India's growth slowing to around five per cent and the rupee falling to an historic low, the country could not afford it.

Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw, who heads the Bangalore-based biotechnology company Biocon, said: “It is no surprise that the food security bill went sailing through. The question is will it sink us financially?”

Many have said the scheme is designed to win the Congress votes in an upcoming election, due to be held before next May. Aware of the potential support the bill could secure for the government, the main opposition party, the Bharatiya Janata Party, has criticised it by saying it does not go far enough.

Prakash Javadekar, a party spokesman and member of parliament, told The Independent, the scheme underscored the inability of the Congress governments down the years to address poverty

“After 66 years, we still have people living in such poverty. This is why we are having to talk about food security,” he said. “This is testimony to the failings of Congress.”

The Congress party failed to respond to to repeated queries. However, supporters of the bill say it is of historic importance. Mridula Mukherjee, professor of modern history at Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi, said the scheme was not simply about giving out cheap food.

“It's different from a scheme or a plan. This is a legal entitlement,” she said. “It's a legal right.”

India has offered free midday school meals since the 1960s in an effort to persuade poorer parents to send their children to school. Though there have been repeated problems with it - this summer at least 20 children died in the state of Bihar after they ate contaminated food - the scheme now reaches 120m children.

The country gives a similar promise of a hot, cooked meal to pregnant women and new mothers. The new bill will extend that to include children between six and fourteen.

@independent.co.uk