Ø Chancellor Angela Merkel’s visit to India and her meetings with
Prime Minister Narendra Modi represented a much-needed dosis realitaet, or
“dose of reality”, for both India and Germany. The fact that Ms. Merkel came to
India despite a brewing refugee crisis back home that kept both her Economy
Minister and Defence Minister back in Berlin, shows the importance that she
accords to the relationship. Mr. Modi, during his third meeting with Ms. Merkel
in six months, demonstrated that he sees Germany as an important partner in
trade, a provider of technology and means to clean energy, and as a partner on
the UN stage. Their meetings in Delhi and Bengaluru were, however, shorn of the
kind of pomp, splendour, and joint photo-ops that were the hallmarks of other
bilaterals. This was for a reason: both countries seem to have realised it is
time to get down to business. As a result, Ms. Merkel spoke candidly of the
problems that German businesses have faced in operating in India, and hoped
that the new agreement for a special “fast-track” mechanism would help them
secure licences and clearances expeditiously. For his part, Mr. Modi must be
lauded for a grounded speech in Bengaluru, telling the Chancellor what India
hopes to become, rather than making any bombastic claims on where the Indian
economy has reached. “We’re committed to doing everything possible to convert
these analyses into reality,” the Prime Minister said about the recent positive
prognoses from the International Monetary Fund and the World Economic Forum
about India. He listed 11 initiatives taken in order to achieve the immediate
priorities of improving India’s ease-of-doing-business ranking, make a push to
take manufacturing to 25 per cent of GDP in order to increase jobs, and for
investment. Ms. Merkel’s response has been welcoming of the sentiments, but
watchful of delivery before making any big commitments. Even the German
announcements of €1 billion towards solar energy and a like sum for clean
energy constitute a fraction of India’s requirements, given the decision to
increase renewable energy capacity four-fold to 175 GW, for which India has
told the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change it needs $2.5 trillion by
2030. The realism was particularly welcome when it came to the Joint
Declaration on Intent on education: both reversed earlier positions on language
studies, to ensure that modern Indian languages would be available to German
students while Indian students would continue to be able to opt for German,
without giving up Sanskrit. It is to be hoped that the template of the visit is
an indicator of the future: of a government transitioning from the euphoria and
excitement of its bilateral forays in its first year, getting down to brass
tacks in the second.
Ø Hueseng Lee from S. Korea becomes the new chief of IPCC.
Ø The Nobel Prize 2015 in Chemistry jointly went
to Tomas Lindahl, Paul Modrich and Aziz Sancar. The Nobel was awarded
“for mechanistic studies of DNA repair”. Mr. Lindahl is from the Francis
Crick Institute. He demonstrated that DNA decays at a rate that ought to
have made the development of life on Earth impossible. This insight led him to
discover a molecular machinery, base excision repair, which constantly
counteracts the collapse of our DNA. Mr. Modrich is from the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute and Duke University School of Medicine. He has mapped nucleotide
excision repair, the mechanism that cells use to repair UV damage to DNA.
People born with defects in this repair sstem will develop skin cancer if they
are exposed to sunlight. The cell also utilises nucleotide excision repair to
correct defects caused by mutagenic substances, among other things. Their
work has provided fundamental knowledge of how a living cell functions and is,
for instance, used for the development of new cancer treatments. The
winners will share the 8 million Swedish kronor (about $960,000) prize money.
Each winner will also get a diploma and a gold medal at the annual award
ceremony on Dec. 10, the anniversary of the death of prize founder Alfred Nobel.
Ø yanmar can help India and China “overcome their problems”, says
opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. Speaking to journalist Karan Thapar on the
India Today TV programme?To The Point in her first interview in months, Ms. Suu
Kyi, whose party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), is expected to lead
general elections next month, said better India-China relations are “to the
benefit” of Myanmar as well.
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