Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Mon Mar 02, 2015 9:09 am
Abhijit wrote:
Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed courted controversy hours after taking oath today, saying the Hurriyat, militant outfits and "people from across the border" - construed as an oblique reference to Pakistan -- allowed conducive atmosphere for assembly polls.
എന്തായിരിക്കും മൂപ്പരുടെ പ്രസ്താവനയുടെ ഉദേശം??
midhun Forum Boss
Location : ktm
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Mon Mar 02, 2015 5:04 pm
The Most Arrogant CM Not at all funny, Mr. Siddaramaiah. Karnataka CM laughs it off, mocks your voice, says 'People will have to bear it'. Karnataka, is this why you voted for him? Times now breaking
Abhijit Forum Boss
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Mon Mar 02, 2015 7:15 pm
midhun wrote:
The Most Arrogant CM Not at all funny, Mr. Siddaramaiah. Karnataka CM laughs it off, mocks your voice, says 'People will have to bear it'. Karnataka, is this why you voted for him? Times now breaking
what is the big deal...arun jaitley told indian middle class to look after themselves
midhun Forum Boss
Location : ktm
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Mon Mar 02, 2015 7:36 pm
Abhijit wrote:
midhun wrote:
The Most Arrogant CM Not at all funny, Mr. Siddaramaiah. Karnataka CM laughs it off, mocks your voice, says 'People will have to bear it'. Karnataka, is this why you voted for him? Times now breaking
what is the big deal...arun jaitley told indian middle class to look after themselves
INC page photoshop news aanllo ethu
Abhijit Forum Boss
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Mon Mar 02, 2015 7:49 pm
midhun wrote:
Abhijit wrote:
what is the big deal...arun jaitley told indian middle class to look after themselves
INC page photoshop news aanllo ethu
uvvo Finance minister Arun Jaitley's Budget 2015-16 may have disappointed the masses, middle class and markets as he has not handed out sops as they expected. It would have been brave and bold of him to hand them out as expected. Several FMs, including P Chidambaram in his dream budget, did it excessively.
Jaitley did not play to the galley of expectations or the perceptions that says all is well. Sitting where he is he has belied the fancy numbers put out by the CSO of the revised GDP numbers and seconded the criticism of the CEA in the Economic Survey.
The FM has taken heed of the global slowdown and the inherent opportunity and risk that lie there. In a way, Jaitley has become a central banker whose move and words hide more than they reveal.
The opposition is alleging the Budget is pro-corporate and anti- farmer. There is little headroom on revenue front and no leeway on expenditure. So plan expenditure for most ministries is down, barring his own and couple of others. The investment environment has actually not changed much from 2013-14 with the private sector still waiting and watching.
The tax revenues show a lack of economic growth perception. The actual gross tax revenue in 2013-14 were Rs 11,38,733 crore and Jaitley's last budget had estimated this to grow to Rs 13,64,524 crores, a growth of almost 20 percent.
These were numbers that were carried forward from Chidambaram’s interim budget and not tinkered at all. It was an optimistic growth target and was fed by the same hype that is currently feeding the perception of high economic growth. Which is why he said ‘Phool khilane hai... par bagh kantein kai purine hain.’
Budgetary estimates are generally higher than actual receipts and are never fully accurate. But the revised estimates for 2014-15 show the tax revenues are at Rs 12,51,391 crores a growth of approximately 10 percent, that means a shortfall of almost 10 percent. If the fuel prices had not dropped we would have been staring at a very challenging situation.
He is still trying to project an upbeat perception of 8.5 percent growth in GDP and at the same time curtailing all big spending. This is the quandary that the finance minister expects the common man to understand, and this is what will not be in the noise that even the pink dailies will not explain on Page One.
Not tinkering with the tax rates for the middle class or asking them to ‘take’ care of themselves may not go down well. But some things will long be remembered - as the strokes of Chris Gayle - after the pink newspapers have become packing papers and the noise in the studios shift to a new controversy.
i) For instance, laying down a roadmap for reducing corporate taxes, and reforming the corporate tax structure by removing exemption. This is Jaitley’s 'saral' taxation attempt for the corporates. This will occupy centerstage in industry associations as they lobby heavily for retaining the exemptions. Tax consultants who position themselves as management consulting firms will be in the forefront of this charge, half a league, half a league at a time. Their tax advisories business will be hit and this makes up the bulk of their revenues.
ii) The move to create a super regulator through the merger of the Securities and Exchange Board of India and Forward Markets Commission will reduce regulatory positions, grey area between two derivative markets and also scams (remember Financial Technologies and National Spot Exchange). Moreover, Jaitley has elevated the Sebi to a status higher than the RBI as it will get more resources, people and powers. It also makes the finance ministry more powerful as the Sebi chairman finally reports to the finance minister. It also sets the roadmap for UK Sinha’s successor at SEBI. It creates so many possibilities, consolidation or mergers of exchanges. Resulting in a seamless market, arbitrage opportunities across exchanges, instruments, stakeholders, traders across the world would be rejoicing. Expect consolidation in trading teams in brokerage firms, etc.
c) By creating a national infrastructure fund, Jaitley is for the first time opening up the floodgates to long-term fund to participate in the India opportunity. Pension funds and sovereign funds will follow this development closely. Expect roadshows unlike the ones which the UPA government did in its first term. But it won’t be easy as any private equity fund manager will tell you. Don’t expect an immediate closure as it will easily take 12-18 months. It will take all the marketing skills, tax arbitration moves, sovereign guarantees to sell this fund. It won’t be easy, but it will be something just right for the minister of state for finance Jayant Sinha.
d) A bankruptcy law a first for the country that will ease the process of closure of NPAs. Kingfisher and several companies in the recent past have taught us that the banks need this law more than they need anything else. If it allows them to seize management control from dubious promoters and recover funds this law is needed asap. A tremor would have gone up the spine of several promoters who have siphoned off bank loans with impunity.
The author is is a senior journalist and policy commentator based in Delhi. He tweets @yatishrajawat
Abhijit Forum Boss
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Mon Mar 02, 2015 7:51 pm
Budget 2015: Govt has made no effort towards fiscal consolidation, says Jahangir Aziz, JPMorgan
In a chat with ET Now, Jahangir Aziz, Head of Emerging Asia Economics, JPMorgan, shares his macroeconomic outlook. Excerpts:
ET Now: Do you concur with that view that at 3.6%, slippage to 3.9% is actually not a very good thing or do you think it was necessary at this particular juncture?
Jahangir Aziz: Last year when the government delivered its budget, it said it was going to bring down the fiscal deficit from 4.1% to 3.6% - which is half a percentage point of consolidation effort from the part of the government. This was not conditional on oil prices doing anything or any other global variables turning in from headwinds into tailwinds. Therefore, if you believe that the government was supposed to do that much effort, the starting point of which was 3.6% of GDP, in addition to that you got about a 0.6% or 0.7% of windfall gain coming from lower oil prices and that means that the starting point in the budget should have been 3% of GDP. You could have then argued that should I pass on the entire 0.6% or 0.7% of savings from oil to reducing deficit or should I pass on part of that to infrastructure spending to support the economy.
Therefore, somewhere between 3.6 and 3% would have meant that the government has made the effort of fiscal consolidation of half a percentage point and has split the windfall gain between further fiscal consolidation and has supported the economy. Instead, they went for 3.9%. Therefore, essentially there has been almost no effort in consolidating.
In addition to that, there is no macro reason to provide the economy with any stimulus, since none of the global headwinds that we have had in the last two years exist today. The developed markets are growing faster, oil is going to be lower and global financial conditions are going to be easier. So I cannot really find the macroeconomic justification here.
ET Now: What is the fiscal stimulus that you see right now - is it the boost in public investment?
Jahangir Aziz: Let us take growth for an example. We have had controversies about where growth is headed, but let us take 7.5% as our estimate. 7.5% growth rate going towards 8% and the government wants to stimulate that economy. Let us take the case that the corporate investment is not picking up, but if you look at the binding constraints to corporate investment - environmental laws, the land acquisition, the poor risk sharing in PPP projects and the constraint in terms of high leverage of investment of infrastructure companies - none of this includes greater public investment.
Therefore, if you wanted to get corporate investment going, the government could have taken the same amount of increasing capital expenditure and increased its share in the stalled PPP projects. The other part would be to increase the bank recapitalisation, so that the bank credit flows could be increased.
In other words, instead of actually start building additional roads or bridges, the government should have simply added write checks, because in the last 15 years, the government has never really managed to beyond one percentage point of capital spending.
ET Now: Are we excessively fixated on fiscal deficit and should we worry more about revenue deficit? What should we be looking at the fiscal deficit or the revenue deficit?
Jahangir Aziz: We should not be looking at 7.5% or 8%, we should be looking at the direction of high frequency indicators and none of them point to any real massive growth taking place close to 7.5-8%. But if we buy the argument, that growth is not really at 7% or 8.5%, then you cannot really even buy the argument that nominal GDP growth that has been assumed in the budget is 11.5%. So, nominal GDP growth in reality is much lower than 11.5% of GDP, which means that the tax-revenue bouncy that has been assumed in the budget is extremely high. Therefore, we cannot have it both ways. So, if we are going to buy the story that really growth is at 5-5.5%, then we also have to bring down the nominal GDP growth assumption in the budget, which they have not done.
We should need to worry about fiscal deficit not because rating agency will downgrade us and not, but simply because whether or not the government should be providing additional stimulus to aggregate demand at this point in time. The budget to me almost looked like two different parts stapled together. It was extremely strong on institutional reforms, on which point, it probably is one of the best budgets we have seen.
However, the RBI will now formally be asked to do inflation targeting which will be somewhere between 4% and 6%. The FM said below 6%. But suppose we really want the RBI to get to a 6% inflation target, should we be pushing the economy by doing things in the fiscal policy front? This is not really going to help the Reserve Bank of India to get to the target. If you look at prices and indirect taxes, they are all going up. So, I really do not understand the consistency between the institutional reforms which are extremely good and laid out, and the near-term fiscal policy stance that the government is adopting.
midhun Forum Boss
Location : ktm
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Mon Mar 02, 2015 7:55 pm
Abhijit wrote:
midhun wrote:
INC page photoshop news aanllo ethu
uvvo Finance minister Arun Jaitley's Budget 2015-16 may have disappointed the masses, middle class and markets as he has not handed out sops as they expected. It would have been brave and bold of him to hand them out as expected. Several FMs, including P Chidambaram in his dream budget, did it excessively.
Jaitley did not play to the galley of expectations or the perceptions that says all is well. Sitting where he is he has belied the fancy numbers put out by the CSO of the revised GDP numbers and seconded the criticism of the CEA in the Economic Survey.
The FM has taken heed of the global slowdown and the inherent opportunity and risk that lie there. In a way, Jaitley has become a central banker whose move and words hide more than they reveal.
The opposition is alleging the Budget is pro-corporate and anti- farmer. There is little headroom on revenue front and no leeway on expenditure. So plan expenditure for most ministries is down, barring his own and couple of others. The investment environment has actually not changed much from 2013-14 with the private sector still waiting and watching.
The tax revenues show a lack of economic growth perception. The actual gross tax revenue in 2013-14 were Rs 11,38,733 crore and Jaitley's last budget had estimated this to grow to Rs 13,64,524 crores, a growth of almost 20 percent.
These were numbers that were carried forward from Chidambaram’s interim budget and not tinkered at all. It was an optimistic growth target and was fed by the same hype that is currently feeding the perception of high economic growth. Which is why he said ‘Phool khilane hai... par bagh kantein kai purine hain.’
Budgetary estimates are generally higher than actual receipts and are never fully accurate. But the revised estimates for 2014-15 show the tax revenues are at Rs 12,51,391 crores a growth of approximately 10 percent, that means a shortfall of almost 10 percent. If the fuel prices had not dropped we would have been staring at a very challenging situation.
He is still trying to project an upbeat perception of 8.5 percent growth in GDP and at the same time curtailing all big spending. This is the quandary that the finance minister expects the common man to understand, and this is what will not be in the noise that even the pink dailies will not explain on Page One.
Not tinkering with the tax rates for the middle class or asking them to ‘take’ care of themselves may not go down well. But some things will long be remembered - as the strokes of Chris Gayle - after the pink newspapers have become packing papers and the noise in the studios shift to a new controversy.
i) For instance, laying down a roadmap for reducing corporate taxes, and reforming the corporate tax structure by removing exemption. This is Jaitley’s 'saral' taxation attempt for the corporates. This will occupy centerstage in industry associations as they lobby heavily for retaining the exemptions. Tax consultants who position themselves as management consulting firms will be in the forefront of this charge, half a league, half a league at a time. Their tax advisories business will be hit and this makes up the bulk of their revenues.
ii) The move to create a super regulator through the merger of the Securities and Exchange Board of India and Forward Markets Commission will reduce regulatory positions, grey area between two derivative markets and also scams (remember Financial Technologies and National Spot Exchange). Moreover, Jaitley has elevated the Sebi to a status higher than the RBI as it will get more resources, people and powers. It also makes the finance ministry more powerful as the Sebi chairman finally reports to the finance minister. It also sets the roadmap for UK Sinha’s successor at SEBI. It creates so many possibilities, consolidation or mergers of exchanges. Resulting in a seamless market, arbitrage opportunities across exchanges, instruments, stakeholders, traders across the world would be rejoicing. Expect consolidation in trading teams in brokerage firms, etc.
c) By creating a national infrastructure fund, Jaitley is for the first time opening up the floodgates to long-term fund to participate in the India opportunity. Pension funds and sovereign funds will follow this development closely. Expect roadshows unlike the ones which the UPA government did in its first term. But it won’t be easy as any private equity fund manager will tell you. Don’t expect an immediate closure as it will easily take 12-18 months. It will take all the marketing skills, tax arbitration moves, sovereign guarantees to sell this fund. It won’t be easy, but it will be something just right for the minister of state for finance Jayant Sinha.
d) A bankruptcy law a first for the country that will ease the process of closure of NPAs. Kingfisher and several companies in the recent past have taught us that the banks need this law more than they need anything else. If it allows them to seize management control from dubious promoters and recover funds this law is needed asap. A tremor would have gone up the spine of several promoters who have siphoned off bank loans with impunity.
The author is is a senior journalist and policy commentator based in Delhi. He tweets @yatishrajawat
[You must be registered and logged in to see this link.] With Jaitley, you don't get grandiose statements. He is not P Chidambaram or Montek Singh Ahluwalia, who spent 10 years promising the moon. In the economic regime of Jaitley - and Modi - what you see is what you get. India will be glad of that.
Abhijit Forum Boss
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Mon Mar 02, 2015 7:58 pm
midhun wrote:
Abhijit wrote:
uvvo Finance minister Arun Jaitley's Budget 2015-16 may have disappointed the masses, middle class and markets as he has not handed out sops as they expected. It would have been brave and bold of him to hand them out as expected. Several FMs, including P Chidambaram in his dream budget, did it excessively.
Jaitley did not play to the galley of expectations or the perceptions that says all is well. Sitting where he is he has belied the fancy numbers put out by the CSO of the revised GDP numbers and seconded the criticism of the CEA in the Economic Survey.
The FM has taken heed of the global slowdown and the inherent opportunity and risk that lie there. In a way, Jaitley has become a central banker whose move and words hide more than they reveal.
The opposition is alleging the Budget is pro-corporate and anti- farmer. There is little headroom on revenue front and no leeway on expenditure. So plan expenditure for most ministries is down, barring his own and couple of others. The investment environment has actually not changed much from 2013-14 with the private sector still waiting and watching.
The tax revenues show a lack of economic growth perception. The actual gross tax revenue in 2013-14 were Rs 11,38,733 crore and Jaitley's last budget had estimated this to grow to Rs 13,64,524 crores, a growth of almost 20 percent.
These were numbers that were carried forward from Chidambaram’s interim budget and not tinkered at all. It was an optimistic growth target and was fed by the same hype that is currently feeding the perception of high economic growth. Which is why he said ‘Phool khilane hai... par bagh kantein kai purine hain.’
Budgetary estimates are generally higher than actual receipts and are never fully accurate. But the revised estimates for 2014-15 show the tax revenues are at Rs 12,51,391 crores a growth of approximately 10 percent, that means a shortfall of almost 10 percent. If the fuel prices had not dropped we would have been staring at a very challenging situation.
He is still trying to project an upbeat perception of 8.5 percent growth in GDP and at the same time curtailing all big spending. This is the quandary that the finance minister expects the common man to understand, and this is what will not be in the noise that even the pink dailies will not explain on Page One.
Not tinkering with the tax rates for the middle class or asking them to ‘take’ care of themselves may not go down well. But some things will long be remembered - as the strokes of Chris Gayle - after the pink newspapers have become packing papers and the noise in the studios shift to a new controversy.
i) For instance, laying down a roadmap for reducing corporate taxes, and reforming the corporate tax structure by removing exemption. This is Jaitley’s 'saral' taxation attempt for the corporates. This will occupy centerstage in industry associations as they lobby heavily for retaining the exemptions. Tax consultants who position themselves as management consulting firms will be in the forefront of this charge, half a league, half a league at a time. Their tax advisories business will be hit and this makes up the bulk of their revenues.
ii) The move to create a super regulator through the merger of the Securities and Exchange Board of India and Forward Markets Commission will reduce regulatory positions, grey area between two derivative markets and also scams (remember Financial Technologies and National Spot Exchange). Moreover, Jaitley has elevated the Sebi to a status higher than the RBI as it will get more resources, people and powers. It also makes the finance ministry more powerful as the Sebi chairman finally reports to the finance minister. It also sets the roadmap for UK Sinha’s successor at SEBI. It creates so many possibilities, consolidation or mergers of exchanges. Resulting in a seamless market, arbitrage opportunities across exchanges, instruments, stakeholders, traders across the world would be rejoicing. Expect consolidation in trading teams in brokerage firms, etc.
c) By creating a national infrastructure fund, Jaitley is for the first time opening up the floodgates to long-term fund to participate in the India opportunity. Pension funds and sovereign funds will follow this development closely. Expect roadshows unlike the ones which the UPA government did in its first term. But it won’t be easy as any private equity fund manager will tell you. Don’t expect an immediate closure as it will easily take 12-18 months. It will take all the marketing skills, tax arbitration moves, sovereign guarantees to sell this fund. It won’t be easy, but it will be something just right for the minister of state for finance Jayant Sinha.
d) A bankruptcy law a first for the country that will ease the process of closure of NPAs. Kingfisher and several companies in the recent past have taught us that the banks need this law more than they need anything else. If it allows them to seize management control from dubious promoters and recover funds this law is needed asap. A tremor would have gone up the spine of several promoters who have siphoned off bank loans with impunity.
The author is is a senior journalist and policy commentator based in Delhi. He tweets @yatishrajawat
[You must be registered and logged in to see this link.] With Jaitley, you don't get grandiose statements. He is not P Chidambaram or Montek Singh Ahluwalia, who spent 10 years promising the moon. In the economic regime of Jaitley - and Modi - what you see is what you get. India will be glad of that.
Binu Forum Boss
Location : Kuwait
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Mon Mar 02, 2015 8:01 pm
Abhijit wrote:
Former Bihar CM Jitan Ram Manjhi floats a new party under the name 'Hindustan Awaam Morcha'.
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Tue Mar 03, 2015 9:14 pm
Abhijit wrote:
midhun wrote:
മഹാരാഷ്ട്രയിൽ ബീഫ് കൈവശം വയ്ക്കുന്നവർക്ക് 5 വർഷം തടവ്
Where farmers commit suicide daily & kids die hungry, they want to build a massive statue and ban beef! What a solution-oriented government
60 varsham congress bharichathinte bakki pathram
shamsheershah Forum Boss
Location : Thrissur
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Wed Mar 04, 2015 9:09 am
പ്രൊഫ. നൈനാന് കോശി അന്തരിച്ചു
തിരുവനന്തപുരം: പ്രശസ്ത നയതന്ത്രവിദഗ്ധനും രാഷ്ട്രീയചിന്തകനും എഴുത്തുകാരനുമായ പ്രൊഫ. നൈനാന് കോശി (81) അന്തരിച്ചു. തിരുവനന്തപുരത്തെ സ്വകാര്യ ആസ്പത്രിയിലായിരുന്നു അന്ത്യം.
1999 ല് മാവേലിക്കര നിയോജകമണ്ഡലത്തില് നിന്നും നിയമസഭയിലേക്ക് ഇടതുസ്ഥാനാര്ത്ഥിയായി മത്സരിച്ചിട്ടുണ്ട്. അന്താരാഷ്ട്ര കൂട്ടായ്മയായ ഡബ്യു.സി.സിസ് കമ്മീഷന് ഓഫ് ചര്ച്ചസ് ഓണ് ഇന്റര്നാഷണല് അഫയേഴ്സിന്റെ മുന് ഡയറക്ടറായിരുന്നു.
ഇംഗ്ലീഷ് സാഹിത്യത്തില് എം.എ ബിരുദം നേടിയ നൈനാന് കോശി കേരളത്തിലെ വിവിധ കോളേജുകളില് അധ്യാപകനായി. സെറാംപൂര് സര്വകലാശാലയില്നിന്ന് ദൈവശാസ്ത്രത്തില് ഓണറ്റി ഡോക്ടറേറ്റ് നേടിയിട്ടുണ്ട്. ആനുകാലികങ്ങളിലും ദൃശ്യമാധ്യമങ്ങളിലും സജീവസാന്നിധ്യമായിരുന്നു.
വാര് ഓണ് ടെറര്, റി ഓര്ഡറിങ് ദ വേള്ഡ്, സഭയും രാഷ്ട്രവും, ഇറാക്കിനുമേല്, ആണവഭാരതം : വിനാശത്തിന്റെ വഴിയില്, ആഗോളവത്കരണത്തിന്റെ യുഗത്തില്, ഭീകരവാദത്തിന്റെ പേരില്,ദൈവത്തിന് ഫീസ് എത്ര, ശിഥിലീകരിക്കപ്പെട്ട വിദ്യാഭ്യാസം, ചോംസ്കി നൂറ്റാണ്ടിന്റെ, മനസാക്ഷി, ഭീകരവാദവും നവലോകക്രമവും, പള്ളിയും പാര്ട്ടിയും കേരളത്തില് തുടങ്ങിയവ അദ്ദേഹത്തിന്റെ പ്രധാന കൃതികളാണ്
Ammu Forum Boss
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Wed Mar 04, 2015 9:11 am
shamsheershah wrote:
പ്രൊഫ. നൈനാന് കോശി അന്തരിച്ചു
തിരുവനന്തപുരം: പ്രശസ്ത നയതന്ത്രവിദഗ്ധനും രാഷ്ട്രീയചിന്തകനും എഴുത്തുകാരനുമായ പ്രൊഫ. നൈനാന് കോശി (81) അന്തരിച്ചു. തിരുവനന്തപുരത്തെ സ്വകാര്യ ആസ്പത്രിയിലായിരുന്നു അന്ത്യം.
1999 ല് മാവേലിക്കര നിയോജകമണ്ഡലത്തില് നിന്നും നിയമസഭയിലേക്ക് ഇടതുസ്ഥാനാര്ത്ഥിയായി മത്സരിച്ചിട്ടുണ്ട്. അന്താരാഷ്ട്ര കൂട്ടായ്മയായ ഡബ്യു.സി.സിസ് കമ്മീഷന് ഓഫ് ചര്ച്ചസ് ഓണ് ഇന്റര്നാഷണല് അഫയേഴ്സിന്റെ മുന് ഡയറക്ടറായിരുന്നു.
ഇംഗ്ലീഷ് സാഹിത്യത്തില് എം.എ ബിരുദം നേടിയ നൈനാന് കോശി കേരളത്തിലെ വിവിധ കോളേജുകളില് അധ്യാപകനായി. സെറാംപൂര് സര്വകലാശാലയില്നിന്ന് ദൈവശാസ്ത്രത്തില് ഓണറ്റി ഡോക്ടറേറ്റ് നേടിയിട്ടുണ്ട്. ആനുകാലികങ്ങളിലും ദൃശ്യമാധ്യമങ്ങളിലും സജീവസാന്നിധ്യമായിരുന്നു.
വാര് ഓണ് ടെറര്, റി ഓര്ഡറിങ് ദ വേള്ഡ്, സഭയും രാഷ്ട്രവും, ഇറാക്കിനുമേല്, ആണവഭാരതം : വിനാശത്തിന്റെ വഴിയില്, ആഗോളവത്കരണത്തിന്റെ യുഗത്തില്, ഭീകരവാദത്തിന്റെ പേരില്,ദൈവത്തിന് ഫീസ് എത്ര, ശിഥിലീകരിക്കപ്പെട്ട വിദ്യാഭ്യാസം, ചോംസ്കി നൂറ്റാണ്ടിന്റെ, മനസാക്ഷി, ഭീകരവാദവും നവലോകക്രമവും, പള്ളിയും പാര്ട്ടിയും കേരളത്തില് തുടങ്ങിയവ അദ്ദേഹത്തിന്റെ പ്രധാന കൃതികളാണ്
parutty Forum Boss
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Wed Mar 04, 2015 9:19 am
shamsheershah wrote:
പ്രൊഫ. നൈനാന് കോശി അന്തരിച്ചു
തിരുവനന്തപുരം: പ്രശസ്ത നയതന്ത്രവിദഗ്ധനും രാഷ്ട്രീയചിന്തകനും എഴുത്തുകാരനുമായ പ്രൊഫ. നൈനാന് കോശി (81) അന്തരിച്ചു. തിരുവനന്തപുരത്തെ സ്വകാര്യ ആസ്പത്രിയിലായിരുന്നു അന്ത്യം.
1999 ല് മാവേലിക്കര നിയോജകമണ്ഡലത്തില് നിന്നും നിയമസഭയിലേക്ക് ഇടതുസ്ഥാനാര്ത്ഥിയായി മത്സരിച്ചിട്ടുണ്ട്. അന്താരാഷ്ട്ര കൂട്ടായ്മയായ ഡബ്യു.സി.സിസ് കമ്മീഷന് ഓഫ് ചര്ച്ചസ് ഓണ് ഇന്റര്നാഷണല് അഫയേഴ്സിന്റെ മുന് ഡയറക്ടറായിരുന്നു.
ഇംഗ്ലീഷ് സാഹിത്യത്തില് എം.എ ബിരുദം നേടിയ നൈനാന് കോശി കേരളത്തിലെ വിവിധ കോളേജുകളില് അധ്യാപകനായി. സെറാംപൂര് സര്വകലാശാലയില്നിന്ന് ദൈവശാസ്ത്രത്തില് ഓണറ്റി ഡോക്ടറേറ്റ് നേടിയിട്ടുണ്ട്. ആനുകാലികങ്ങളിലും ദൃശ്യമാധ്യമങ്ങളിലും സജീവസാന്നിധ്യമായിരുന്നു.
വാര് ഓണ് ടെറര്, റി ഓര്ഡറിങ് ദ വേള്ഡ്, സഭയും രാഷ്ട്രവും, ഇറാക്കിനുമേല്, ആണവഭാരതം : വിനാശത്തിന്റെ വഴിയില്, ആഗോളവത്കരണത്തിന്റെ യുഗത്തില്, ഭീകരവാദത്തിന്റെ പേരില്,ദൈവത്തിന് ഫീസ് എത്ര, ശിഥിലീകരിക്കപ്പെട്ട വിദ്യാഭ്യാസം, ചോംസ്കി നൂറ്റാണ്ടിന്റെ, മനസാക്ഷി, ഭീകരവാദവും നവലോകക്രമവും, പള്ളിയും പാര്ട്ടിയും കേരളത്തില് തുടങ്ങിയവ അദ്ദേഹത്തിന്റെ പ്രധാന കൃതികളാണ്
Ammu Forum Boss
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Thu Mar 05, 2015 7:10 pm
ചാരക്കേസ്: ഉദ്യോഗസ്ഥര്ക്കെതിരെ നടപടി വേണ്ടെന്ന് ഹൈക്കോടതി
Binu Forum Boss
Location : Kuwait
Subject: Re: പ്രധാന വാര്ത്തകള്! part - VIII Thu Mar 05, 2015 9:16 pm