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The new 'G' order - G14

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The New Indian Express 10.07.2009

The new 'G' order - G14



Group of Eight and Group of Five leaders participate in a group photo at the G8 summit in L'Aquila, Italy on Thursday. (AP)

L'AQUILA: It can be termed as the new 'G' order of the world where the presence of various nations spells out their international political and economic status.

The latest to join the 'G' ranks is G14 - a term used for the first time at the G8-G5 summit being held in this quake-hit Italian town, about 100 km northeast of Rome.

G14 is the grouping comprising G8, G5 and Egypt. The joint declaration of the G8-G5 summit was actually that of the G14. Egypt was specially called for the summit outreach meeting between G8 and G5 and comes in Friday to make up the G14.

G7, the group of the world's most wealthy and industrialized countries founded in 1975, is now better known as G8 after it included the Russian Federation a few years ago.

G8's membership comprises the main industrialised countries. It is not an international organisation, nor does it have an administrative staff with a permanent secretariat. It is a process that culminates in an annual summit at which the heads of state and government of the member countries hold talks with a view to finding solutions to the main world issues.

Italy hosted the 2009 G8 summit as it holds the presidency of the grouping.

G5 is the grouping of emerging economies comprising Brazil, China, India, Mexico and South Africa.

Over the years, the G7/G8 duty presidencies began inviting a number of emerging countries for specific sessions of talks on an ad hoc basis, as the emerging economies' increasing weight on the world scene made it necessary to involve them in identifying solutions to major global challenges.

The L'Aquila summit and its joint declaration by G8 and G5 has shown that the G5 is taken quite seriously by the world's most developed countries.

A number of demands of G5 - including restructuring of international financial and other institutions, including the United Nations, keeping the interests of developing countries in mind while initiating action to overcome the global financial crisis and concerns on food security and climate change - were included in the joint document this time.

Another grouping, G20, founded in 1999, was in the news for its London summit in April this year. This one includes the developed and developing countries and is considered a broader international platform.

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has already expressed his reservations about these world groupings.

"The unworkability of the existing structures has led to greater reliance on plurilateral groupings. Some of these, such as G7, later expanded to G8, are to be seen as a group of countries with common interest, not necessarily representative of the global community," Manmohan Singh said in a vision document that forms part of a compendium on contemporary global issues at the summit here.

"The original rationale of G7 was the belief that it would evolve more effective consultation among the more powerful countries on one side of the bi-polar world of the 1970s and 1980s. Its expansion to G8 reflects the disappearance of that particular faultline by the collapse of the Soviet Union. However, while the group includes many of the economically powerful nations, it is obviously not representative as it does not include any developing country."

Though the prime minister has pointed out that these groupings do not have a special legitimacy under the UN system, he finds the G20 grouping more comprehensive of the present world order.

"Unlike the G8+5, this group has a composite identity since all member countries participate on equal terms, including in the preparatory process. However, the selection of countries remains arbitrary and can be questioned as to its representativeness," he stated in the vision document on how the world needs to be governed in the 21st century.

Last Updated on Friday, 10 July 2009 12:58
 

Children labour for drinking water too

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Source: Deccan Chronicle Date : 09.07.2009

Children labour for drinking water too

Chennai, July 8: Step out of your home and the crowd of images of child labour in manifest forms hit you hard, whether you are in a city or a village, even as you continue to nurse Dr Abdul Kalam’s dream of India emerging as a super power in 2020.

Shotu, barely ten and peddling pani-poori outside an IT park in Guindy, is one such among the millions not only denied the joy of childhood but also exposed often to dangerous vocations to stave off hunger. This kid from Orissa has been brought by an agent paying his family a tiny sum last year. There are quite a few younger than Shotu in his shanty of child labourers at Ambal Nagar.

“Our ‘owner’ has taught us a few Tamil words to be able to sell our wares, nothing more. I get Rs 800 a month as salary, which is sent to my parents directly. I get two meals a day,” Shotu told this newspaper. When he pleaded for a chance to speak to his mother over phone, the boss shooed him away saying that the cost of the call would exceed his salary.

“Child labour is rampant everywhere, city or village,” says a senior officer at an international child welfare outfit, who did not want to be named. “There is misconception that child labour only refers to kids in factories. What about the children employed as servants in homes or kids used by their families to roll beedis in Vellore or carpet-weaving in Kashmir?” In many cases, children are forced to work after their school hours.

Not all times does a child slog for money. In Salem, little girls must pick jasmine flowers in exchange for a pot of drinking water. “These girls are employed because they have slim and tender fingers; besides, the job is made easier as they are just as tall as the jasmine bushes,” says Prof R. Chandra, a child rights activist. In fact, large tracts of paddy fields have been converted to floriculture since it’s cheaper to employ kids to pick flowers than have adults for rice cultivation, she adds.

When contacted, a senior official of the state labor department first said that the Madurai blaze did not have child victims but later modified his stand. “We are verifying if that factory had employed children,” he said, pleading inability to explain any further “because the Assembly is in session”.

 

Training for government officials

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Source : The Hindu Date : 24.06.2009

Training for government officials

Staff Reporter

A total of 544 employees to attend it in four phases

Photo: N. Bashkaran

Corporate trainer Dr. M. Parivallal at a training programme for government officials at the Institute of Rural Employment Training centre on Tuesday. –

KRISHNAGIRI: Corporate training has been introduced to government officials and employees in Krishnagiri district.

The programme was chalked out by the district administration.

‘The Training People’ from Bangalore who has done the training programme in Sivaganga district will be providing the trainging here too.

The Additional Collector, Darez Ahmed, who was impressed by the programme in Sivaganga district took the initiative to implement it in Krishnagiri district.

About 644 district officers attended the programme in Sivaganga district.

A total of 544 officers and employees from various departments in Krishnagiri district will benefit from the programme named ‘Be … the Best.’

Aim

The aim of the programme is to make an individual face challenges and changes in a better manner.

Officers from Revenue, Education, Health, Social Welfare and other departments who are in direct contact with the public are given three day training in four batches.

The first batch was inaugurated by the Collector V.K. Shanmugam at the Rural Employment Training Centre, near the KRP dam.

‘The Training People’ is headed by Dr. M. Parivallal and has a tema of specialist trainers.

The programme which starts at 6 a.m. includes Yoga, meditation, pranayama behavioural management and management games.

The programme concludes at 11 p.m.

About 12 international trainers specialised are attending the programme. The training for first batch began here last Sunday. For the second batch the training will be from June 24 to 26, for the third batch from June 27 to 30 and for the last batch from June 30 to July 2.

Cost

Collector V.K. Shanmugam told The Hindu that when Mr. Darez Ahmed took this initiative the training firm readily accepted to conduct it at a reduced cost (60 per cent less than for the corporates). When we approached the UNICEF’s state-level coordinators over phone, they instantly accepted to fund the programme considerably, he added.

Dr. Parivallal told The Hindu that this was a psychological programme aimed at skill development.

“We will identify the hidden talents of the individuals at the programme and train them on how to exhibit in a purposeful manner,” he added.

He said the programmes were planned in a playful manner instead of class room lectures.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 24 June 2009 06:16
 


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