Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Sushant Singh Rajput - Ek Bihari Sab Par Bhari

Sushant Singh, EK BIHARI SAB PAR BHARI
Sushant Singh Rajput (Born in Patna, belong to Purnia), who has entered into Bollywood with a blast, what we call in Hindi is 'Dhamakedar Shuruat' is not looking back anymore. He has increased his rate for any on-stage performance. Where all other stars of recent times are asking for few lakhs of Rupees, Sushant has demanded 1 Crore rupees for one performance.
Sushant in Johar's next movie

As per sources, Sushant has demanded 1 Crore rupees for a performance on new year eve ceremony in Manali.

Sushant in Kai Po Che

Sushant Rajput made his film debut in Abhishek Kapoor's Kai Po Che!, an adaption of Chetan Bhagat's The 3 Mistakes of My Life.

Sushant Singh in Pavitra Rishta

In 2008, Rajput was spotted by Balaji Telefilms' casting team in one of his plays and asked to audition. He landed the role of Preet Juneja, the second lead in Star Plus' Kis Desh Mein Hai Meraa Dil. His popularity on the show led him to bag the role of Manav Deshmukh in Zee TV's Pavitra Rishta in June 2009.

Sushant Singh in P.K. 
He is co-starring with Amir Khan in his next movie P.K.

Apna Bihar team wishes Sushant Singh Rajput All The Best in all his future endeavors.



Sunday, October 13, 2013

Safety concerns move up to Bihar, Jharkhand post Cyclone Phailin

With flood warning issued in Bihar in the wake of Cyclone Phailin, the state government has sounded alert in 28 flood-prone districts and asked its officers to maintain constant vigil on embankments, canals and reservoirs to meet any eventuality.
Due to the impact of Phailin, light to moderate rains lashed different parts of the state since early morning and a heavy downpour has been forecast for the next three days that may trigger a flood-like situation in North Bihar.

"Light showers have been lashing Bihar since Sunday morning due to the atmospheric pressure created by cyclone Phailin. The sky had turned overcast since last evening and a thick layer of cloud enveloped atmosphere causing intermittent rains throughout the state," said Patna MET Director Ashish Kumar Sen.
He said that the depression created by cyclone Phailin would stay in Bihar till October 15 precipitating heavy rainfall in South and North Bihar. "While heavy rains lashed south Bihar on Monday, the upper catchment area of Kosi and Gandak in Nepal and north Bihar districts will witness heavy rainfall particularly on October 15 that may trigger a flood-like situation," Sen said.
In view of the flood threat, Bihar water resources minister Vijay Kumar Choudhary held an emergency meeting to draw up a contingency plan to tackle any eventuality. He said adequate precautionary measures have been taken to deal with any crisis.
"In view of the Phailing-induced heavy rains in Jharkhand and catchments area of major rivers in Nepal, an alert has been sounded to all officers to keep constant vigil on embankments, canals and reservoirs so that quick response be made in case of any crisis," Choudhary told HT.
The principal secretary of the disaster management department (DMD) Vyasji also held a meeting with the officers to review preparedness for a likely flood-like situation amid the weather office forecast of heavy rainfall in Bihar over the next three days.
Vipin Kumar Rai, the officer on special duty in DMD, said that the district magistrates have been directed to take all precautionary measures to deal with any flood-like situation. Two NDRF teams have been deployed in Supaul and one each in Darbhanga and Gopalganj districts with IMD predicting heavy rainfall in Nepal and north Bihar districts.
In addition, teams of State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) have been put in place at Begusarai, Bhagalpur, Bhojpur, Jehanabad and Patna districts, while a reserve SDRF team will remain stationed in the state capital.
Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar had held a meeting with senior officials, including the chief secretary and the state police chief three days ago to review flood preparedness. He had also directed district magistrates of the flood prone districts to take necessary action.
The government has already cancelled the leaves of doctors and energy department officials and asked them to remain on vigil.

Please click on the link below if you want to know more about Phailin:


Monday, September 2, 2013

Nitish Kumar attacks on Modi once again...

This time Nitish says that "It's the birds who tweets not the politicians".
I am not sure suddenly what has made Nitish to attack on BJP. In this situation of National crisis, Nitish should work with BJP, otherwise throwing congress out of power will be difficult.

Saturday, August 17, 2013

List of Chief Ministers of Jharkhand

NoName
(constituency)
TermPartyAssembly composition
1Babulal Marandi
Ramgarh
15 November 2000 – 17 March 2003
(852 days)
Bharatiya Janata PartyBJP: 32
JMM: 12
INC: 11
RJD: 9
JD(U): 8
Others: 9
2Arjun Munda
Kharsawan
18 March 2003 – 2 March 2005
(715 days)
3Shibu Soren
--
2 March 2005 – 12 March 2005
(10 days)
Jharkhand Mukti MorchaBJP: 30
JMM: 17
INC: 9
RJD: 7
JD(U): 6
Others: 12
(2)Arjun Munda
Kharsawan
12 March 2005 – 14 September 2006
(555 days)
Bharatiya Janata Party
4Madhu Koda
Jaganathpur
14 September 2006 – 27 August 2008
(709 days)
Independent
(3)Shibu Soren
--
27 August 2008 – 18 January 2009
(144 days)
Jharkhand Mukti Morcha
Vacant
(President's rule)
19 January 2009 – 29 December 2009
(344 days)
N/A
(3)Shibu Soren
--
30 December 2009 – 31 May 2010
(152 days)
Jharkhand Mukti MorchaBJP: 18
JMM: 18
INC: 13
JVM(P): 11
AJSU: 6
RJD: 5
Others: 10
Vacant
(President's rule)
1 June 2010 – 11 September 2010
(102 days)
N/A
(2)Arjun Munda
Kharsawan
11 September 2010 – 18 January 2013
(860 days)
Bharatiya Janata Party
Vacant
(President's rule)
18 January 2013 – 12 July 2013
(175 days)
N/A
5Hemant Soren
Dumka
13 July 2013 – present
(35 days)
Jharkhand Mukti Morcha

List of Chief Ministers of Bihar


NoNameTook officeLeft officePartyTenure
1Krishna Singh2 April 194631 January 1961Indian National Congress5419 days
2Deep Narayan Singh1 February 196118 February 196118 days
3Binodanand Jha18 February 19612 October 1963926 days
4K. B. Sahay2 October 19635 March 19671250 days
5Mahamaya Prasad Sinha5 March 196728 January 1968Jana Kranti Dal330 days
6Satish Prasad Singh28 January 19681 February 1968Indian National Congress5 days
7B. P. Mandal1 February 19682 March 196831 days
8Bhola Paswan Shastri22 March 196829 June 1968Indian National Congress (O)100 days
Vacant
(President's rule)
29 June 196826 February 1969N/A
9Harihar Singh26 February 196922 June 1969Indian National Congress117 days
(8)Bhola Paswan Shastri 22 June 19694 July 1969Indian National Congress (O)13 days
Vacant
(President's rule)
6 July 196916 February 1970N/A
10Daroga Prasad Rai16 February. 197022 December 1970Indian National Congress310 days
11Karpoori Thakur22 December 19702 June 1971Socialist Party163 days
(8)Bhola Paswan Shastri [3]2 June 19719 January 1972Indian National Congress222 days
(total 335 days)
Vacant
(President's rule)
9 January 197219 March 1972N/A
12Kedar Pandey19 March 19722 July 1973Indian National Congress471 days
13Abdul Gafoor2 July 197311 April 1975649 days
14Jagannath Mishra11 April 197530 April 1977750 days
Vacant
(President's rule)
30 April 197724 June 1977N/A
(11)Karpoori Thakur24 June 197721 April 1979Janata Party668 days
15Ram Sundar Das21 April 197917 February 1980303 days
Vacant
(President's rule)
17 February 19808 June 1980N/A
(14)Jagannath Mishra [2]8 June 198014 August 1983Indian National Congress (I)1133 days
16Chandrashekhar Singh14 August 198312 March 1985577 days
17Bindeshwari Dubey12 March 198513 February 19881068 days
18Bhagwat Jha Azad14 February 198810 March 1989391 days
19Satyendra Narayan Sinha11 March 19896 December 1989271 days
(14)Jagannath Mishra6 December 198910 March 199095 days
(total 1978 days)
20Lalu Prasad Yadav10 March 199028 March 1995Janata Dal1845 days
Vacant
(President's rule)
28 March 19954 April 1995N/A
(20)Lalu Prasad Yadav4 April 199525 July 1997Janata Dal, Rashtriya Janata Dal844 days
(total 2689 days)
21Rabri Devi25 July 199711 February 1999Rashtriya Janata Dal538 days
Vacant
(President's rule)
11 February 19999 March 1999N/A
(21)Rabri Devi [2]9 March 19992 March 2000Rashtriya Janata Dal359 days
22Nitish Kumar3 March 200010 March 2000Janata Dal (United)8 days
(21)Rabri Devi11 March 20006 March 2005Rashtriya Janata Dal1821 days
(total 2718 days)
Vacant
(President's rule)
7 March 200524 November 2005N/A
22Nitish Kumar24 November 2005IncumbentJanata Dal (United)1827 days

should Bihar govt allow FDI in Bihar

yes they should. 

The volatile journey of Indian rupee since independence

The Indian rupee, which was at par with the American currency at the time of independence in 1947, hit a record low of 61.80 against the dollar recently. This means the Indian currency has depreciated by almost 62 times against the greenback in the past 66 years.

The currency has witnessed a large volatility in the past two years. This volatility became acute in the past three months affecting major macro-economic data, including growth, inflation, trade and investment.

Managing volatility in the currency markets has become a big challenge for the economic policy markers in the country. The central bank as well as the government has taken a series of measures to curb the volatility in the markets.

Despite those measures, the rupee continues to depreciate. And the trend is unlikely to reverse any time soon.

"We expect the rupee to depreciate further. It may touch 63 against a dollar in near-term (in a couple of months)," Reena Rohit, chief manager, non-agri commodities and currencies at Angel Broking, told IANS.

She said rupee depreciation was badly hurting Indian economy. It was fuelling inflation and has hurt economic growth.

The Indian currency has witnessed a roller-coaster journey since independence. Many geopolitical and economic developments have affected its movement in the last 66 years. Here is a broader look at the Indian rupee's journey since 1947:

- India got freedom from British rule on Aug 15, 1947. At that time the Indian rupee was linked to the British pound and its value was at par with the American dollar. There was no foreign borrowings on India's balance sheet.

- To finance welfare and development activities, especially with the introduction of the Five-Year Plan in 1951, the government started external borrowings. This required the devaluation of the rupee.

- After independence, Indian choose to adopt a fixed rate currency regime. The rupee was pegged at 4.79 against a dollar between 1948 and 1966.

- Two consecutive wars, one with China in 1962 and another one with Pakistan in 1965, resulted in a huge deficit on India's budget, forcing the government to devalue the currency to 7.57 against the dollar.

- The rupee's link with the British currency was broken in 1971 and it was linked directly to the US dollar. 
- In 1975, the Indian rupee was linked to a basket of three currencies comprising the US dollar, the Japanese yen and the German mark. The value of the Indian rupee was pegged at 8.39 against a dollar. 
- In 1985 it was further devalued to 12 against a dollar.

- India faced a serious balance of payment crisis in 1991 and was forced to sharply devalue its currency. The country was in the grip of high inflation, low growth and the foreign reserves were not even worth to meet three weeks of imports. Under these situation, the currency was devalued to 17.90 against a dollar.

- The year 1993 is very important in Indian currency history. It was in this year when the currency was let free to flow with the market sentiments. The exchange rate was freed to be determined by the market, with provisions of intervention by the central bank under the situation of extreme volatility. In 1993, one was required to pay Rs.31.37 to get a dollar.
- The rupee traded in the range of 40-50 between 2000-2010. It was mostly at around 45 against a dollar. It touched a high of 39 in 2007. The Indian currency has gradually depreciated since the global 2008 economic crisis.
- Former finance minister Manmohan Singh, who is now the prime minister, was instrumental in liberalising the currency regime. The move led to a sharp jump in foreign investment inflows and boosted the economic growth.

"India being a developing economy with high inflation, depreciation of the currency is quite natural," said Siddharth Shankar, an economic expert and advisor at brokerage firm KASSA.

Shankar said the sharp depreciation as witnessed this year was hurting the economy.

"Depreciation of rupee is good, so long as it is not volatile. A random depreciation that we have seen in the last few months is bad and it has hurt the economy," he said.

The Indian currency hit a record low of 61.80 against a dollar Aug 6. It closed at 61.28 Wednesday.
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