Tag: India

  • Some Maggi Noodles With Unsafe Lead Level Exported To Singapore

    Some Maggi Noodles With Unsafe Lead Level Exported To Singapore

    New Delhi: Indian shopkeepers withdrew a popular brand of Nestle instant noodles from their shelves on Wednesday after tests revealed the snack contained unsafe levels of lead.

    India’s states have either ordered the withdrawal of Maggi noodles from shops or are carrying out further tests on noodle samples before taking action in conjunction with the federal government.

    Maggi sales have plunged in India since laboratory tests showed the noodles contained lead at levels far higher than the legal maximum. The tests also detected the chemical flavour enhancer monosodium glutamate, or MSG, which is not mentioned in the product’s list of ingredients.

    On Tuesday, the Delhi government said it had conducted tests on 13 samples of Maggi noodles and 10 were found to be unsafe with lead exceeding the allowable level. Earlier tests, performed by food safety authorities in Uttar Pradesh state, showed that samples contained 17.2 parts per million of lead, many times the allowable limits which range between 0.01 and 2.5 ppm.

    The Delhi government said it will take legal action against Nestle India, which is a subsidiary of Swiss-based Nestle SA, and was meeting Wednesday with company officials. It banned the sale of Maggi noodles in all state-run stores in the Indian capital for 15 days. Several major grocery chains in the city have also announced that they are taking the noodles off shelves.

    A Nestle spokesperson said a majority of Maggi noodles produced in India are sold in India but a limited amount are exported to the U.S. , Canada, the United Kingdom, Kenya and Singapore.

    Maggi noodles are a hot favourite with school and college students and Nestle’s “two-minute” advertising campaign stressing the ease of making the snack have made it a household name in India. The noodles are Nestle’s fastest selling food item in India, clocking around 15 billion rupees ($240 million) in sales annually.

    Excessive intake of lead can cause damage to the kidneys, bones and nervous system. It is particularly harmful to children and can cause learning disorders. Health experts say MSG, often used as a flavor enhancer in processed food and in some restaurants, can damage the nervous system with long-term use.

    The government of the southern state of Kerala has stopped the distribution of Maggi noodles and ordered more than 1,000 state-run grocery stores to withdraw the product. The state governments of Haryana, West Bengal and Maharashtra have begun the process of testing noodle samples for lead and MSG. — AP

    Our Mumbai correspondent adds: Maharashtra’s Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which has collected about 10 samples of Maggi noodles packets, has so far not encountered any negative reports relating to the product by multinational Nestle.

    According to FDA commissioner Harshadeep Kamble, the final test results are expected by Friday after which the regulator will decide on the future course of action. The FDA collected samples from Mumbai, Pune, Nagpur and a few other cities and is conducting tests at its laboratories. While the FDA and the state government have not imposed any ban on the sale of Maggi noodles in the state, there has been a sharp fall in the sale of the popular instant food, following widespread media coverage about actions being initiated by various states including Uttar Pradesh, Kerala and Delhi. The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India has also directed all states to check samples of the noodles and get them tested at laboratories.

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • IDA Says University Of Mumbai Is Reputable University

    IDA Says University Of Mumbai Is Reputable University

    Yesterday (16 Apr), TRE published a story about an Indian national turned Singaporean, Nisha Padmanabhan, who is employed by IDA (‘IDA defends staff who obtained MBA from degree mill‘).

    As it turns out, the MBA that Ms Padmanabhan obtained was from a degree mill, the Southern Pacific University (SPU).

    SPU is not accredited and it was closed in Hawaii by a court order. Subsequently, it started operating from Malaysia [Link]. A blogger also alerted that a group of “students” had made a police complaint against SPU for losing RM18,000 each “for the junk” [Link].

    Earlier this year, a Vietnamese News also mentioned SPU [Link]:

    [Google Translate of relevant paragraphs]:

    “It was bought by domestic and overseas buyers by. Fellows get doctorates abroad but do not learn, do not know a word of English double break. After the University of the South Pacific (Southern Pacific University) was uncovered, it was pouring through a PhD Philippines. PhD but is actually traveling, combined with purchase.

    If the degree is not worth relating to the appointment, be promoted in the system state agencies, there is no degree trafficking as grocery shopping today.”

    Many netizens began to ask IDA if it knew about the matter. After weeks of silence, IDA finally replied.

    It said that her Bachelor’s degree is from a reputable university and she was recruited based on the Bachelor degree. Her MBA was “not a relevant certificate for her position in IDA”, it added.

    IDA’s full reply on its Facebook page [Link]:

    However, netizens are not convinced of IDA’s reply. Many are saying it’s a question of integrity even though she may have been hired based on her bachelor’s degree.

    University of Mumbai not in top 500

    In its reply, IDA has mentioned that Ms Padmanabhan’s basic degree is from a “reputable university” and she was recruited because of this.

    In her LinkedIn information, she said that she had graduated from University of Mumbai with a Bachelor’s degree in Electronics and Telecommunication.

    TRE did a check with regard to the world’s ranking of University of Mumbai.

    In the Times Higher Education Top 400 World University Rankings 2014-2015 [Link], University of Mumbai was not listed at all.

    In fact, only 4 Indian universities were ranked among the World’s top 400:

    • 276-300th, Indian Institute of Science
    • 276-300th, Panjab University
    • 351-400th, Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay
    • 351-400th, Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee

    Singapore, a much smaller country than India, had 2 universities ranked among the World’s top 400:

    • 25th, NUS
    • 61st, NTU

    In the QS World University Rankings, another popular ranking commonly cited, the University of Mumbai is ranked 551st in the world [Link].

    NUS on the other hand is ranked 22nd while NTU is 39th.

    So, do you think that University of Mumbai is a “reputable university” as stated by IDA?

    What do you think?

     

    Source: www.tremeritus.com

  • Hindu Party Shiv Sena Expressed Concerns Over Burgeoning Muslim Population, Suggests Better Family Planning And Ban On Burqa

    Hindu Party Shiv Sena Expressed Concerns Over Burgeoning Muslim Population, Suggests Better Family Planning And Ban On Burqa

    Two days after the Shiv Sena advocated scrapping the voting rights of Muslims, the party on Wednesday said there should be proper family planning in the community, expressing concerns that the Muslim population in India will soon be higher than Pakistan or Indonesia.

    In an editorial in the party’s mouthpiece Saamna, Shiv Sena parliamentarian Sanjay Raut said that the rising population of Muslims as compared to the falling population of Hindus in India will disturb the Hindu nation’s cultural and social balance.

    “There’s a threat to the country’s Hindus due to the rising population of Muslims and Christians in India,” the MP said in the editorial, adding though the term “vasectomy” could be incorrect, family planning and population is very much a problem.

    The editorial said that the state of the country is such that one can’t say a word even against stray dogs, who cannot be neutered by compulsion, due to excessive importance given to sympathy and human rights.

    “If Mr. Owaisi saheb cares so much about the development of his community, he should promote family planning and ban the burkha for women,” the editorial said, adding its argument is actually in favour of the Muslims who would be able to raise their children better with limited resources in a small family.

    “We are wasting our time in a silly argument of vasectomy or family planning. If Muslim leaders can’t manage anything else, they should at least save the nation by a vasectomy of their own communal thoughts,” the party said.

    Earlier this week, the Shiv Sena had drawn much ire from across political parties when it said the voting rights of Muslims should be revoked as the community is often used for vote bank politics. Targeting the All India Majlis-Ittehadul Muslimeen, led by the Owaisi brothers, the party said that the brothers were like poisonous snakes who spew venom to exploit the minority community.

     

    Source: http://indianexpress.com

  • Bus Driver In India Names Son Jeyaprakash Lee Kuan Yew After Singapore’s First Prime Minister

    Bus Driver In India Names Son Jeyaprakash Lee Kuan Yew After Singapore’s First Prime Minister

    MR B. Jeyaprakash, a bus driver working for a government transport company in India’s Tamil Nadu state, has never been to Singapore and, until last month, had never heard of Mr Lee Kuan Yew.

    But he was so moved by the outpouring of grief over the Singapore leader’s passing that he named his newborn son Jeyaprakash Lee Kuan Yew.

    Mr Jeyaprakash, 37, lives in the town of Mannargudi, which has a population of 70,000.

    Soon after Mr Lee’s death, placards with photographs of Mr Lee were put up across the town. On the day of his funeral in Singapore, more than 300 people from Mannargudi and nearby villages marched silently for 4km behind a wreath for Mr Lee. The procession stopped in the centre of town, where people bowed and prayed before a photo of Mr Lee.

    The tribute moved Mr Jeyaprakash so deeply that he decided on the spot to name his son after Mr Lee. “I wasn’t planning to give him that name. I had gone to the bazaar to buy milk and saw this procession and memorial for Mr Lee. So I stopped and heard people talking about all the great things he had done for Singapore. There was so much respect for him,” said Mr Jeyaprakash.

    “That was the first time I heard Lee Kuan Yew’s name. I didn’t even ask my wife, I just decided on the spot that my son should have an auspicious name. So I put Sir’s name in the hope that my son will do very well in life.”

    His son was born at 1pm on March 23, the same day Mr Lee died.

    In Tamil Nadu, parents sometimes name their children after international and historical figures, including Josef Stalin, Karl Marx, Nikita Khrushchev and Winston Churchill.

    Mr M. Karunanidhi, leader of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam party and former chief minister of Tamil Nadu, named his son M. K. Stalin.

    Mr Jeyaprakash’s mother is unable to pronounce her grandson’s name. But his wife, Ms Bhagiyalakshmi, 27, has no such problems.

    “It is the name of a great man and leader,” she said, smiling broadly. “Lee Kuan Yew!”

    The baby, dressed in pink, sleeps peacefully in his mother’s arms as people talk around him. “He doesn’t cry that much and he is much easier to take care of than my daughter at the same age,” said Ms Bhagiyalakshmi.

    Mr Jeyaprakash has been reading up on Mr Lee in the local Tamil newspapers.

    He cut out a photo of Mr Lee from a newspaper and plans to hang it on a wall.

    “If I have a photograph in the house, I can point to it and then tell people about my son’s name.”

    He is also donating 10,000 rupees (S$220), nearly his month’s salary of 12,000 rupees, for a museum being planned in town for Mr Lee.

    Still, the grandmother looks doubtful about being able to pronounce the name. “I just cannot pronounce the name. I call my son ‘thambi’, so I will call my grandson ‘thambi’ too,” she said. “Thambi” means “son” in Tamil.

    But Mr Jeyaprakash has a solution for that: “I told her to call him ‘Mr Lee’ for now, and then we will see.”

    NIRMALA GANAPATHY

    BACKGROUND STORY

    AUSPICIOUS NAME

    I heard people talking about all the great things he had done for Singapore. There was so much respect for him… I didn’t even ask my wife, I just decided on the spot that my son should have an auspicious name.

    – Mr Jeyaprakash, on naming his son Jeyaprakash Lee Kuan Yew, after the late Singapore leader

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Convicted New Delhi Rape Perpetrator Blames Victim

    Convicted New Delhi Rape Perpetrator Blames Victim

    NEW DELHI — In the months after the death of a young woman who was brutalized and gang-raped on a moving bus in New Delhi in 2012, thousands of politicians, activists and ordinary citizens crowded India’s airwaves and its public spaces to say their piece about the crime.

    But there was no comment from the six slight, ordinary-looking men accused of her murder. Whisked in and out of the courtroom past shouting crowds of journalists, they listened impassively to testimony and offered monosyllabic answers on the stand. Courtroom guards said they hummed Bollywood tunes under their breath. Their opinions were anyone’s guess.

    Now, one of the men on death row for the crime, Mukesh Singh, has told a British filmmaker that the young woman invited the rape because she was out too late at night and that she would have lived if she had submitted to the assault.

    “You can’t clap with one hand,” said Mr. Singh, who was convicted of rape and murder, though he denied taking part in the assault. “It takes two hands. A decent girl won’t roam around at 9 o’clock at night. A girl is far more responsible for rape than a boy. Boy and girl are not equal. Housework and housekeeping is for girls, not roaming in discos and bars at night doing wrong things, wearing wrong clothes. About 20 percent of girls are good.”

     Mukesh Singh, Credit Associated Press

    The comments, released as part of a publicity campaign for the film, called “India’s Daughter,” were met with outrage in India, in part over why the filmmaker, Leslee Udwin, had been permitted to interview the defendant in jail.

    After complaints by the home minister, an Indian court issued a restraining order, stating that Mr. Singh’s interview created “an atmosphere of fear and tension with the possibility of public outcry and law and order situation.” The order said the film violated four Indian statutes, including one against “intent to cause alarm in the public” and another banning acts “intended to outrage the modesty of a woman.”

    Ms. Udwin said the order amounted to a ban.

    “That means they have banned a film which is in the public interest without having seen it, without having requested a copy of it,” she said. The film will be distributed through social media, she added.

    “No intelligent person can watch this film and not understand that these remarks are not being promulgated,” she said.

    The woman, a 23-year-old physiotherapy student, had been to see “Life of Pi” with a male friend, and they boarded the private bus without realizing that it was off duty and that the six men aboard had been driving the streets in search of a victim. After knocking her friend unconscious, they took the woman to the back of the bus and raped her, then damaged her internal organs with an iron rod. An hour later, they dumped the pair on the roadside, bleeding and naked. The woman died two weeks later of her injuries.

    In the interview, for a film that will air Sunday on the BBC, Mr. Singh said the woman had provoked the deadly assault by resisting the rape.

    “When being raped, she shouldn’t fight back,” he told the filmmaker, Ms. Udwin, according to a transcript provided by the BBC. “She should just be silent and allow the rape. Then they’d have dropped her off after ‘doing her,’ and only hit the boy.”

    In footage from the film, Mr. Singh tonelessly narrates the assault, saying that he heard the woman screaming for help but that his brother instructed him to keep driving as they “dragged her to the back” and “went turn by turn.” Afterward, he said, he saw the youngest of the assailants, who was 17 at the time of the crime, withdraw something from her body.

    “It was her intestines,” Mr. Singh said. “He said: ‘She’s dead. Throw her out quickly.’ ”

    He called the killing “an accident.”

    Ms. Udwin, at a news conference in New Delhi, said the film crew had interviewed Mr. Singh for 16 hours and had seen no sign of remorse. “He is almost like a robot,” she said.

    According to police records, the men divided the pair’s possessions: Mr. Singh took one cellphone, and Vinay Sharma, 20, took the other. Pawan Gupta took the man’s watch and 1,000 rupees in cash, a little less than $20. Akshay Kumar Singh took the woman’s rings. The juvenile was given a bank card and some cash.

    Months before the trial, Mr. Singh’s brother, Ram Singh, hanged himself with his bedsheet in his prison cell. The juvenile defendant, whose identity has not been made public in accordance with Indian law, was sentenced to three years in a detention center, the heaviest sentence possible in India’s juvenile justice system. The remaining four men pleaded not guilty; they are appealing their death sentences.

    Mr. Singh told the filmmaker that he believed the harsh sentences, instead of acting as a deterrent, would drive more rapists to kill their victims. “Before, they would rape and say: ‘Leave her alone. She won’t tell anyone,’ ” he said. “Now, when they rape, especially the criminal types, they will just kill the girl. Death.”

    Source: www.nytimes.com