Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Will Overpopulation and Resource Scarcity Drive Cannibalism?

Stanford professor Paul Ehrlich made headlines last month when he told journalists that overpopulation and resource scarcity would eventually drive hungry humans to cannibalism. Sensational as that sounds, it’s an old idea: Anthropologist Marvin Harris argued in his 1977 Cannibals and Kings that cannibalism has historically facilitated human population expansion by providing an important source of protein.
Cannibalism is not always about perverse inclinations (like the pair of Pakistani brothers who were sent to prison last week for cooking a young boy in a curry) or apocalyptic predicaments (like the victims of the 1972 Andes plane crash who survived by reluctantly eating the bodies of dead passengers). Many Amazonian, African, and Native American societies have traditionally practiced peaceful, cannibalistic mortuary rituals.
In the 1980s and '90s, South American anthropologist Aparecida Vilaca studied the phenomenon of “endocannibalism,” or the eating of “insiders”—members of the same family or community—among the Wari’ people of the Brazilian Amazon. Until Christian missionaries stamped it out in the 1960s, endocannibalism featured as one of the most important of the Wari’ funerary rituals. Vilaca draws a contrast between endocannibalism and “exocannibalism,” or the eating of “outsiders”: enemies captured in war and foreigners who wandered onto the tribe’s territory. The Wari’ ate outsiders with relish, roasting them and eating them voraciously, with their hands, just as they would consume a big kill. (In a new book, Savage Harvest, journalist Carl Hoffman claims that Michael Rockefeller—the son of Vice President Nelson Rockefeller—fell victim to exocannibalism when he was scouting objects for his father’s museum of primitive art in New York City.)
Vilaca did not witness funerary cannibalism herself, but she embedded with the Wari’ and spoke with people who had. Traditionally, when a member of the Wari’ passed away, the deceased person’s kinspeople would spend a few days rounding up the rest of the community; by the time the funeral took place, the corpse had begun to putrefy in the humid environment. The dead person’s family members would then wail elaborately as non-kin cut up the body. Finally, non-kin would delicately eat little pieces of the human meat, using small sticks as utensils and showing no signs of enjoyment. For the Wari’, eating the dead signifies that the deceased has really passed out of the realm of the living and releases the dead person’s spirit, allowing it to become an acceptable form of edible prey (a white-lipped pecary).
For the Wari', these rituals and the insider-outsider distinctions are important. Because they don’t consider outsiders full persons, and because they eat their own dead relatives only after they’ve been turned into something “other,” they don't consider themselves cannibals.

Exploring Lanzarote’s Nature — Volcanoes, Blowholes and Hidden Coves

We are walking in the mar de lava – sea of lava – where massive blankets of solidified lava lie at the foots of Montaña Blanca, Lanzarote. Since seeing hot molten lava flowing off Guatemala’s most active volcano, Volcan Pacaya, I’ve become somewhat of a volcano buff. Sadly, there’s no sign of red burning lava flowing here, the volcano has after all been dormant for the past three hundred years.
But there’s more to Lanzarote than bubbling lava. The volcanic activities have also created some of the island’s most interesting nature spots in the form of  outlandish formations, oddly-colored lagoons and savagely wild beaches. Here’s a look at some of my favorite natural attractions on the Spanish island of Lanzarote.

Timanfaya National Park

There’s nothing more thrilling for a volcano buff than seeing the remnants from an earth-shaking eruption: still covering the entire Timanfaya National Park with black, tar-like, earth bowels. Driving through the volcanic area, you’ll find yourself in the midst of ashes that stack up as tall as a tour bus, and grazing the top of a volcano crater.
In the 1700s, the ferocious volcano had exploded into life, spewing deadly lava, killing many and nearly destroying life on Lanzarote. Today, it is one of the most visited spots in Lanzarote, and rightfully so, with a rich geographical value that comes with it. The Restaurant El Diablo, once again designed by Cesar Manrique, sits at the park’s visitor center.
Timanfaya National Park

El Golfo

The volcanic black sand sprawling across a backdrop of edgy rocky cliffs is the setting for several futuristic films such as Enemy Mine and One Million YearS B.C..Here, you’ll also find El Charco de los Clicos, a lime-green lagoon creates a stark contrast to the sea and surroundings. The lagoon gets its greenish color from the algae that grows within the lake.
El Golfo

Los Hervidores

Along the coast from El Golfo, the enchanting cliffs of Los Hervidores are a collection of naturally formed caves and inlets, a result of the tumultous waters of the Atlantic Ocean. Gazing down at the blowholes in the volcanic rocks, you can spot the island’s semi-precious mineral Olivine in abundance.
Los Hervidores

Cuevas de los Verdes

This extensive underground volcanic tunnel, running over six kilometers long, is a result of the eruptive activity of nearby La Corona Volcano. The unique extra-terrestial-like interior of the tunnel awes visitors with sky-high ceilings and lava channels. Potholes are filled with waters so calm you can see the tunnel’s roof reflected immaculately on its surface.
Cuevas de los Verdes

Playa Papagayo

This assemblage of coves and virgin beaches can only be reached via a dirt road or hike – which perhaps is the reason why it’s kept in pristine conditions. The crystal clear waters and variety of hiking opportunities on the cliff’s edge makes the stretch of naturally formed beaches some of the best on the island.
Playa Papagayo


Getting there

It takes only four to five hours from the UK to reach the warm shores of the island and flights to Lanzarote  are frequent and cheap from most British airports. Budget airlines such as RyanairEasyjet andMonarch fly from various cities in the UK including London, Liverpool, Manchester, Edinburgh and Glasgow.

Where to Stay

There’s a great range of accommodation options on Lanzarote that caters to different types of travelers. I highly recommend basing yourself at Costa Teguise, a quiet and less touristy part of the island. A new hotel in Lanzarote worth checking out is the Barceló Teguise Beach, an adults only hotel, completely renovated to offer visitors an avant-garde style and calm, soothing environment. You can enjoy a panoramic view of the Atlantic Ocean from your balcony, as well as the Bay of Teguise and Cucharas Beach – just 150m away.Gran Hotel Atlantis Bahía REal 
Disclaimer: This post was brought to you by Barceló Hotels & Resorts.

The Tribes Around the world

The Huli is the largest ethnic group in the Highlands, with a population somewhere between 300,000 to 400,000 people, covering the whole of Tari. Huli men are best known for their custom of wearing decorative woven wigs, that are used as elaborate headdresses and decorated with bundles of multi-colored feathers during singsings (celebratory festivals). These wigs are specially made by a unique clan known as the Huli Wigmen, who attend wig schools and live together in isolation from the rest of the community. During my visit to Papua New Guinea, I met the teacher and students of Poroiba Akua wig school, and had an interesting lesson on how to grow wigs. According the Kupunu, the teacher, hair can only grow into a wig with the teacher’s spell.
A Huli wigman with face painting
Huli wigmen

Nomadic Maasai Warriors — Kenya and Tanzania

The Masai (also spelled as Maasai) are a semi-nomadic people from East Africa who are known for their unique way of life as well as their cultural traditions and customs. Living across the arid lands along the Great Rift Valley in Tanzania and Kenya, the Masai population is currently at around 1.5 million, with the majority of them living in the Masai Mara. They are reputed to be strong warriors who hunt for food and live closely with wild animals. Dressed in bright red Shuka cloth and colorful beaded jewelry, the warrior men proudly adorn themselves with what looks to Western eyes like women’s attire. According to the Masai people I met in Kenya, they have little interest in the supposed benefits of modern life.
The Masai doing their jumping dance
Making their own fire

Karen Women with Elongated Necks — Burma/Myanmar and Thailand

In the border mountains between Burma and Thailand live the Karen people, a tribal group related to the Tibetans. Today, their tribe numbers around 40,000 people as more and more of them are moving to the cities. The Karen people are most famous for the neck rings worn by the women of the tribe for beautification purpose. The first coil is applied when the girl is five years old and with the growing is replaced by a longer coil. Sadly, the number of Karen women who still practice this custom is dwindling and many people are exploiting them for tourism. We met a few Karen women at Inle Lake, Myanmar/Burma, who had traveled thousands of miles to live there to work in tourism.
Karen people in Myanmar/Burma
Karen women weaving cloth for visitors

The Ochre-Covered Himba People — Namibia

A group of indigenous people live in the harsh, dry deserts of the Kunene region, northern Namibia, and they’ve become well known throughout the world for their practice of covering themselves with otjize, a mixture of butter fat and ochre, to protect themselves from the sun. The mixture gives their skin a reddish tinge, symbolizing earth’s rich red color and life, and is consistent with the Himba ideal of beauty. Himba women like to braid each other’s hair which is also covered in the ochre mixture. There are now 20,000 to 50,000 people left and most of them making a living tending livestock or welcoming visitors into their villages. During my overlanding trip in southern Africa, I had the chance to meet a Himba family in Damaraland and it was definitely an experience talking to them and understanding their way of life.
A Himba lady

The Hardworking Hmong Women — Vietnam and China

Our visit to the Sapa region of northern Vietnam was so memorable mainly because of these strong and hardworking Hmong women we met along the way. Even though the Hmong culture is patrilineal i.e. allowing a husband’s family to make all major decisions, Hmong women have traditionally carried a large amount of responsibility in the family. The children learn gender expectations at a young age and young girls traditionally learned household skills from their female elders by the age of eight. Besides taking care of the household chores, the women also plant and harvest fields with their husbands. Many Hmong women now work in tourism, offering their houses to trekkers for homestays and also giving a helping hand during the hikes.
A Sapa lady weaving art work
Our Hmong host cooking in her home

Bush-hunting San People — Botswana

The San people (or Saan), also known as Bushmen or Basarwa are members of various indigenous hunter-gatherer peoples of Southern Africa (the most accessible groups are in Botswana’s Kalahari Desert). These indigenous hunter-gatherers were first made famous by the movie, The Gods Must be Crazy. Sadly, the San people were evicted of their ancestral land in the 1950s (which went all the way to the 1990s) and they were forced to switch to farming as a result. Banned from hunting, and forced to apply for permits to enter the reserve, they are now being pushed to the brink of extinction.
In Ghanzi, Botswana, we went out to the bush with a group of San people who showed us how they gathered herbs for medication and plants for food. It was really interesting to see the way they behave and speak (their dialect has a lot of click sounds) and learn how they’re using the same survival techniques as they have for centuries.
The San people showing us their way of life
The family
Have you met any of these tribes? How was your experience? What other tribes have you met?

THE CRPF COBRAS

1. The Govt. of India had accorded approval for setting up of Commando Battalions for Resolute Action (CoBRA) for guerilla/jungle warfare type operations for dealing with extremists and insurgents, etc.  vide U.O. NO. 16011/5/200-PF.IV dated 12/09/2008.  

2. The Govt. had accorded sanction of raising of 10 unattached battalions of CoBRA in CRPF, with a Sector Headquarter for these battalions headed by an Inspector General, in three years as per the raising schedule given below :-

           (i)      2008-09       :         02 (two) Battalions and Sector Hqrs, CoBRA

          (ii)      2009-10       :         04 (four) Battalions.

          (iii)     2010-11       :         04 (four) Battalions.

3. Accordingly, the CoBRA Sector started its functioning at Dte. Genl., CRPF, CGO Complex, Lodhi Road, New Delhi under the Command of Shri K. Durga Prasad, IG, CoBRA Sector.   Later, in  March, 2009,  the Sector HQ shifted to Pushp Vihar, New Delhi in a separate building and further on 11/11/2009  it has been shifted to Old Sectretariate, Civil Lines, Delhi.

4. All 10 CoBRA Bns had been raised in phased manner and started its functioning as follows:-
 
CoBRA BN
Place of Raising
Date of Operationalization
201 Bn
Jagdalpur (Chhattisgarh)
30/09/2009
202 Bn
Koraput (Orissa)
30/09/2009
203 Bn
Sindri, Jharkhand
31/03/2010
204 Bn
Jagdalpur (Chhattisgarh)
31/12/2009
205 Bn
Mokamaghat (Bihar)
31/03/2010
206 Bn
Gadhchiroli (Maharashtra)
31/03/2010
207 Bn
Durgapur (West Bengal)
31/12/2010
208 Bn
Allahabad (U.P.)
31/12/2010
209 Bn
Khunti (Jharkhand)
15/05/2011
210 Bn
Dalgaon (Assam)
31/12/2010
SIGNIFICANT MAJOR OPS  

Ops conducted in  Singamdgu  Dantewada  distt. on 17/09/2009 in which approx 30-40 Maoists were believed to have been killed .

On 09/01/2010 under PS Jagargunda in distt. Dantewada, 04 Maoists were killed and 01 12 Bore Gun with 04 Cartridges  , 03 Muzzle Loading Gun, 02 Tiffin Bomb, 01 Country made bomb, Drum  and Maoists literature with photographs were recovered. 

Ops Jaws carried out by 08 teams of 203 CoBRA from 11 TO 15TH June in area of PS Sonua & Bandgaon Distt.- W/ Singhbhum, Jharkhand in which a full fledged Maoists camp was destroyed  and reportedly 12 Maoists cadres were neutralized.

During a special ops launched in Duli forest area in W/Midnapur  distt. (WB)  on 15-16/06/10 , 08 Maoists cadres were neutralized and a huge cache of arms/amns were recovered. 

During a special ops launched in Kayma forest area in W/Midnapur  Distt. (WB)  from 25-26/07/10 , 06 Maoists cadres were neutralized and a huge cache of arms/amns were recovered. 

In a special ops launched in Saranda forest area in Distt. -  W/Singhbhum, Jharkhand from 24-28/09/10 Cobra teams were able to penetrate deep in forest and neutralized one Maoist, apprehended 4 Maoists cadres, busted 12 Maoist camps and recovery of arms/amn/explosives.

CoBRA Sector is continuous winner of Best CRPF Anniversary Parade 2009, 2010 and 2011

CoBRA SECTOR IS PRIVILIGED TO HAVE 147 DG DISCs

134 Persl - DG Disc for Operational excellence
11 Persl   - DG Discs in Administration Purpose
04 Persl  - DG Discs in Training Purpose

CoBRA sector is proud to have 09 Gallantry Medal winners including a SHAURYA CHAKRA.
In the year 2010 & 2011 CoBRA has received highest number of DG Discs on operational front.
Shaurya Chakra Awardee Late CT/GD Asish Kr. Tiwari 
    CoBRA commando Ashish Kumar Tiwari is the lone policeman to be decorated with the SHAURYA CHAKRA posthumously this Independence Day and 2nd in CRPF for single-handedly pinning down a squad of Maoists which resulted in the killing of top Naxal leader Sidhu Soren in West Bengal last year.

    Tiwari, a commando of the elite 202 (CoBRA), suffered multiple bullet injuries during the assault but did not let the holed-up Maoists flee and kept firing from his INSAS rifle till he breathed his last. The operation on July 26 last year in the forests of Kayma village of West Midnapore district was hailed as one of the major successes for security forces conducting anti-Naxal operations in the area. 

Thursday, March 19, 2015

How the people's car was born and how it stayed that way

In 1981, Maruti was the tiniest outpost of the Suzuki empire; 33 years later, it is big enough to steer its parent's investment in emerging markets.

Image: in 1983, Maruti 800 was rolled out. Photograph: Courtesy, Maruti
When Indira Gandhi nationalised the assets of Maruti MotorsLimited in 1981 and formed a joint venture with Suzuki Motor Corporation to realise her son Sanjay's dream of making a small car in India, she could not have known that 30 years later, the Indian subsidiary would lead production, sales and product development for the Japanese company in emerging markets.

The project was deemed to be born in sin, amid charges of abuse of public policy, irregularities in land allocation and money laundering against the Gandhis.
Nor was Suzuki India's first choice as a collaborator for a people's car.
Renault, Volkswagen, MAN AG and Ford had expressed interest.
Talks proceeded with Renault but the price of the 1,647 cc engine Renault 18 at Rs 1,15,000, including import duty and sundry costs, put a spanner in the works.
Image: Maruti 800 was considered to be a people's car at the time of its launch and thereafter. Photograph: Courtesy, Photographs: Courtesy, India Autos Blog
The final agreements for technology transfer, supply of completely knocked-down units, components for a period of 10 years, and a joint venture agreement between the government and Suzuki was signed on October 2, 1982.
The partners had only 14 months to roll-out a small car.  
There was much to celebrate, writes Maruti Suzuki Chairman R C Bhargava in his book The Maruti Story but October 2 being a dry day (it is Mahatama Gandhi's birth anniversary), a suite had to be booked in the Ashoka hotel, champagne bottles somehow procured and uncorked.  
Initially, given the political connotations associated with the project, Japanese partner Osamu Suzuki was cautious.
This was despite the overwhelming response the Maruti 800 received.
A huge improvement over the tank-like proportions of Hindustan Motors' Ambassador and the unprepossessing appearance of Premier Automobiles' Fiat, Maruti made believers out of cynics, and outperformed both entrenched competitors, selling 100,000 cars within five years of inception, and turned in profits, a rarity among public sector undertakings.  
Image: When launched in 1983, Maruti 800 was sold for Rs 50,000. Photograph: Courtesy, Maruti
In 1981, Maruti was the tiniest outpost of the Suzuki empire; 33 years later, it is big enough to steer its parent's investment in emerging markets.
Suzuki had invested only about Rs 20 crore (Rs 200 million) for its 26 per cent stake in the small car project.
Maruti will now lead investments in future assembly plants in Africa, West Asia and some markets in South Asia for its parent. Suzuki will also dip into Maruti's Rs 9,000 crore (Rs 90 billion) cash pile for new investments.
There is little scope for growth in Japan and it is costly to export from there. Suzuki has to look at India for growth and also as a base for exports.
In hindsight, it is clear why Suzuki worked gradually to increase its stake in Maruti.
In the joint venture agreement, the Japanese company was given the option of raising its shareholding from 26 to 40 per cent at the end of five years.
Image: Wagon R. Photograph: Courtesy, Maruti
What helped Suzuki exercise the option in 1987 was a combination of this agreement, the realisation that it had a foothold in the Indian market and the first wave of liberalisation by Rajiv Gandhi in 1985.
But, clearly, these were not enough. A bruising battle for control intervened in the 1990s.  
Riding the popular mood after P V Narasimha Rao began economic liberalisation, Suzuki in 1992 pushed its stake in Maruti to 50 per cent from 40 per cent, which made it an equal partner in the venture, without making any new commitment.
This meant Maruti was no longer a public sector company, bound by government rules.  
It was agreed the government and Suzuki would take turns appointing the chairman and managing director.
This ensured R C Bhargava, Osamu Suzuki's trusted man who was to retire in 1992, would continue for five more years, this time as a Suzuki nominee.  
Bhargava brought in Jagdish Khattar, another former bureaucrat and a rank outsider, in 1993 as "officer on special duty", grooming him as his successor, so that when he retired and the government had to nominate the managing director, it did not name someone Suzuki was not comfortable with.  
Image: A worker cleans a Maruti Suzuki Swift Dzire at the company's stock yard at Sanand, Gujarat. Photograph: Amit Dave/Reuters
Two years on, however, K Karunakaran became industry minister and T R Prasad, an aggressive bureaucrat, industry secretary.
Prasad attacked Bhargava (see left) for getting Suzuki additional shares in 1992 at a throwaway price. Many in the government sided with Prasad.
They argued the deal was one-sided because Suzuki did not pay any premium to become an equal partner. Prasad foisted himself as chairman of Maruti - the post had been vacant, though it was up to the government to fill it.
It might also have remained vacant because Bhargava kept the government from appointing anyone by using his clout with the prime minister's office.
The situation worsened for Suzuki in 1997. The tough-as-nails Murasoli Maran had become industry minister in the United Front government.
And, Prasad was clearly out to assert the government's rights.
So, Khattar's candidature was rejected and R S S L N Bhaskarudu (who was director, production), was made managing director.
Suzuki found it difficult to work with Bhaskarudu. Privately, Suzuki's people said he was not competent to face the competition that was imminent in the car market.
Some insist Bhaskarudu's only crime was that he pushed Suzuki to give Maruti the crucial gearbox technology.
If the gearbox was indigenised, Bhaskarudu argued, cars would have more local and cheap content and that would take care of any competition.
He prodded the government to take up the issue with Suzuki and it became a bone of contention.  
But those in the know say the issue was blown out of proportion because at least 60 per cent of the components required for the gearbox were already being produced in India.
So, the technology transfer would not have set off as dramatic a transformation as Bhaskarudu was making it out to be.  
So far as the vision to face competition was concerned, Bhargava, the Bhaskarudu camp said, did not show any interest during his tenure in pushing Suzuki to come out with new models.  
Also, Bhaskarudu was opposed to Suzuki's proposal to expand production capacity through fresh equity capital.
Image: Maruti is keen to expand business. Photograph: Amit Dave/Reuters
Since the government was in disinvestment mode at the time, there was no way it could have infused fresh capital.
This would have increased Suzuki's share further in Maruti. Instead, Bhaskarudu supported the government's stand that the project be financed through debt. Confrontation was bound to escalate.  
Suzuki opposed Bhaskarudu's appointment in Maruti's annual general meeting, forcing chairman Prabir Sen Gupta - he was the secretary for heavy industries, the new nodal ministry - to cast his vote to break the tie. Bhakarudu survived. Suzuki moved the Delhi High Court.
However, the government had a strong case. Suzuki's appeal was turned down and it sought international arbitration.  
Maran, never one to shy away from a fight, said Suzuki could opt out of Maruti, the government could always tie-up with American car makers, or even the Koreans.
To complicate matters, Osamu Suzuki said he would not give Maruti gearbox technology until the dispute was settled.
Image: Maruti SX4. Photograph: Courtesy, Maruti Suzuki
The government hinted it had nationalised companies in the past. It was assumed Japan would not jeopardise its relations with India over one company.
The Maruti story took another turn when Atal Bihari Vajpayee conducted a nuclear test in 1998. Several countries, including Japan, imposed sanctions.
But India was keen to rebuild bridges with its trading partners.
Thus, Sikander Bakht, Vajpayee's industry minister, endorsed talks and a motley group (Confederation of Indian Industry President Rajesh Shah and director-general Tarun Das from the government's side and low-profile Suzuki Motorcycle India chief Satya Sheel for Suzuki) byassed the bureaucracy and struck a compromise.
Suzuki withdrew arbitration and the government agreed Maruti's managing director would have to be endorsed by Suzuki.
The government also acknowledged that Suzuki would have a bigger say in deciding new models and technology.
Soon, Bhaskarudu was out and Khattar became managing director. Maruti was listed and Suzuki became the majority shareholder. Later, the government exited the company.  
Image: Maruti plans to roll out new models to beat industry competition. Photograph: Mukesh Gupta/Reuters
Maruti has mostly sailed through since. Of course, its market share has fallen from a peak of 80 per cent in the 1980s, when competition was limited, to around 45 per cent currently, but it remains India's largest car maker, with annual capacity of 1.2 million units.  
More than competition, it is labour that remains a tricky issue. It faced its first major test as early as 2000, when its powerful labour unions demanded a steep wage increase for the workforce, which the management turned down.
In fact, many say Bhaskarudu was able to wrest the managing director's post because he had strong union backing. But the relationship between the unions and management remained tense ever after.
Three labour unrests at Manesar in 2011 had resulted in revenue losses of around Rs 2,500 crore (Rs 25 billion) and shaved five percentage points from the company's market share.
The 2011 standoff was over allowing an independent union at Manesar.  
All these tensions came to a head in 2012, when deteriorating industrial relations at its Manesar, facility left 93 employees wounded and claimed the life of a senior executive on July 18. With administrative offices and portions of the shop-floor damaged beyond repair, the company declared a month-long lockout.
Maruti was booking losses of Rs 70 crore (Rs 700 million) daily, as assembly lines at the twin plants were shut.  
Things looked up after a peace plan was finally worked out with the unions.
Today, Suzuki depends on Maruti for its place in the world. "Unlike other Japanese car makers like Honda and Toyota, Suzuki is restricted primarily to India, Hungary and Thailand," says a Maruti veteran. After being present in the US for 30 years, Suzuki was forced to exit last year after sales plummeted.
Image: Maruti Ertiga. Photograph: Courtesy, Maruti
It is a small player in Japan: fifth in the pecking order after Toyota, Nissan, Mazda and Honda, with a share of less than 10 per cent. While Maruti sold 1.15 million cars in 2013-14, Suzuki sold 849,000 in Japan.
Maruti's Rs 2,453 crore (Rs 24.53 billion) royalty in 2012-13 was higher than Suzuki's profit that year. Suzuki today makes serious money in selling parts to Maruti.
Ironically, it is a Congress-born project that has proven a sterling example of Bharatiya Janata Party Prime Minister Narendra Modi's 'Make in India' ambition.  
India comes home in a Maruti
June 1971: Maruti Motors Limited incorporated with Sanjay Gandhi as first managing director
1981: The company is nationalised and a joint venture formed with Suzuki Motor Corporation of Japan to roll out an affordable small car
Dec 1983: Maruti rolls out the first M 800 car, bought by an Indian Airlines employee Harpal Singh
2003: Maruti is listed on BSE and NSE after an IPO that is subscribed 7.82 times. The government sells 25 per cent of its stake. The government’s stake falls to 17 per cent.
In 2006, government sells more stake and exits the company in 2007
2011: Three labour strikes between June and October rock the new Manesar factory and cripples production

The world's craziest toilets

On November 19, the World celebrated World Toilet Day in attempt to spread awareness about the importance on toilets and urinals.
According to figures, despite the human right to water and sanitation, of the world's seven billion people, 2.5 billion people do not have access to toilets. 
Looking at the funnier side of things, here’s 12 of the kookiest urinals from across the world. 
 
Boring urinals became a thing of the past when a Dutch company came out with a wacky and fun line of urinals called the Kisses Urinals. Photograph: Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters
 
Why go to a plain, old white urinal when some hotels are providing you with more luxe options. The Robot Restaurant in Tokyo provides men with gold-coloured urinals. So if you fancy, the finer things in life, head to Tokyo’s Robot Restaurant. Photograph: Chris McGrath/Getty Images
 
This toilet is not for the poor. Decorated with crystal rhinestones, this one is surely for those who like bling. Photograph: Keith Tsuji/Getty Images
 
People tend to spend quite some time in toilets and have only the bare, white walls to look at. However, with this urinal that was set up during the Sochi Winter Games in February 2013, all this changed. The walls of the toilet were decorated with a mountain panorama wallpaper, giving the illusion that one was out skiing on the mountain tops. Photograph: Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters
 
And this toilet is not for the faint-hearted. This outdoor toilet looks out over the ice at the Swiss Camp research center on the Greenland ice pack
 
Specially designed urinals adorn a public toilet at the Foreigners Street in Chongqing Municipality, China. Photograph: China Photos/Getty Images
 
And where there are specially designed urinals, there are specially designed wash basins. These are sure to make a man blush. Photograph: China Photos/Getty Images
 
First came the igloo, then the ice hotel, and then came the ice toilet. Photograph: Truth Leem/Reuters
 
Why should your toilet be stationary? With the toilet scooter, you can travel and do your business at the same time. Photograph: Luca Teuchmann/Getty Images
 
Boring walls and walls filled with grafitti are old news. This Portugal toilet’s wall is adorned with female mannequins. Photograph: Jose Manuel Ribeiro/Reuters
 
Fed up of reading while in the toilet? Then this one is for you. It allows people to play video games. Speak about killing two birds with one stone. Photograph: Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters
 
And last but not the least, the open toilet. It might be a hit for those who like to defecate in the open. This mail toilet with no walls is equipped with a waist-level screen partly hiding the man from view. Photograph: Reuter

How a ship container solved the toilet problem in a TN village

Suresh Menon with his toilets

A used shipping container transforms the lives of women in a remote Tamil Nadu village. Shobha Warrier/Rediff.com reports.
'For the first time in our lives, we bathe before we head to school; that too, in a bathroom that has doors. We are as clean as the other children in our school. I cannot explain how difficult it was for us to bathe and relieve ourselves till now. Today, there are no words that suffice to express our happiness,' says a beaming schoolgirl, Sheela.
'Nobody who hasn't experienced it for herself can know what a woman feels when she has to relieve herself in the open. It was almost impossible to do so during the rainy season, but we had no other option other than to brave the rain and use open spaces to meet our private needs. I do not know how to thank you for the toilets we have in our village. I never imagined that I would have bathrooms and toilets in my lifetime,' says 75-year-old Pavuammal.
There are many more such women and children like Pavuammal and Sheela in Manjakkudi, a small village near Kumbakonam, Tamil Nadu.
The person to thank for installing toilets -- exclusively for the use of women and children in the village -- is Sheela Balaji, member of the TVS group and managing trustee of the Swami Dayananda Educational Trust.
Working for the educational trust at Swami Dayananda Saraswathi's birthplace in Manjakkudi, she has had first-hand experience of the difficulties women face here.
"It is a small village of around 1,500 people; around 400 families. But nobody from the farming community that constitutes the majority of the population had toilets in the house. Many of them do not have room within their houses to build toilets either," she says.
"Late in the evening on every single day, these women had to walk half a mile in order to relieve themselves. I felt terrible after having witnessed this pathetic situation and wanted to build toilets for the women. That was when I bumped into Suresh Menon and came to hear of the toilets he has designed."
Unlike many armchair critics, filmmaker Suresh Menon believes in action. If he found traffic congestion in a place was too bad, he would think of ways to reduce congestion and see to it that the city traffic police implemented his suggestions. "After I started coordinating traffic arrangements with the Chennai police, I found that quite a few of my suggestions were implemented," he says.
Similarly, when he saw there were no public toilets in the city, he started thinking of designing one that was mobile.
"This was much before the prime minister spoke about toilets and the Swachch Bharat Abhiyaan," says Menon. "My idea was to take these mobile toilets to places where crowds gather, like the beach, say, and take it back at night to clean it. I was talking about this idea to the mayor and corporation officials. But nothing came out of it."
That was when he found out about a shipping container that was on sale for Rs 50,000. He bought it. "As it is sturdy, easily transportable and has a lifespan of 30 to 40 years, I thought it would be ideal as a mobile toilet in Indian conditions. I also wanted a simple, inexpensive solution to this problem."
He decided to fit five 4x8 feet toilets in the 8x20 feet container. "I decided not to separate them into bathrooms and toilets. Each unit has a commode, a sink, a shower unit, water taps, a mirror over the sink, lights and an exhaust fan. There are three Western (sit-down) and two Indian (squat) toilets in each container. I want women, especially those bereft of indoor plumbing in villages, to bathe in dignity."
When Balaji had that chance meeting with Menon nine months ago, the conversation veered to the toilets that he was putting together. She was impressed with the prototype and felt the sturdy steel container would be useful for the women in villages to use.
Balaji does not like to call them toilets. "I prefer to describe them as public conveniences. I was also impressed to see the inside of each bathroom/toilet," she says.
As the trust had already built a community hall for the villagers, she decided to place the container-toilet near the hall. They also built a septic tank and connected the toilets to it, and powered it using a nearby electricity pole. She also employed a person to clean them every day.
"We decided that these bathrooms and toilets were meant only for women and children, and not men! I thought women needed the toilets much more than men did. I installed it in July, a month before the prime minister spoke about toilets on Independence Day."
In spite of the simple design, it cost Menon Rs 700,000 to build the five toilets and a month to finish making them. "In Manjakudi, they have connected the toilets to a sock pit; alternately, this can be connected to the drainage system in a city. Or else, you can have bio-tanks like you do in Kerala houseboats (where the water used is recycled and used to water plants)."
After a lifetime spent bathing under a public tap or in the Kaveri river, the women were so happy they could bathe in the privacy of a bathroom. So much so that they expressed the desire to have one more, as a result of which Balaji has ordered one more unit for the same village.
"An old lady told us that more than them, it was the young that had a hard time because of the absence of bathrooms. Similarly, a schoolgirl told me that she now bathed every day and went to school very clean. I am happy because they are happy."
Menon says this idea can be replicated anywhere -- from villages to cities. "It is a good idea to install them by the beach for the fishing community, who currently use the beach as open toilet. Power can be drawn from the grid or a solar panel on top."
"I feel such toilets can be installed by MLAs and MPs in their constituencies using their development funds. That is why I have sent all of the details to the Prime Minister's Office; I hope this idea will gain traction, especially since Narendra Modi has spoken of the need to have toilets in order to safeguard the dignity of women," he adds.
Menon describes what he has designed as something akin to the Ambassador cars of yore that were famously easy to repair. "There is no rocket science involved in my design; it is quite simple. Unlike more complex designs like the e-toilets, my toilets have no GPS or automatic flushes. Any plumber can repair it in case of a problem. I was just following what Mahatma Gandhi said: 'To be the change you want to see in the world'."

Posibilities pf Mergers: India & Maldives

  There are a number of reasons why the Maldives might merge with India in the future. These include: Cultural and historical ties: The Mal...