MIRACLE BARGAD (Banyan) TREE in Pitath

The big Banyan tree which fell down in a strong strom some two years back. It was just a chance that I got it clicked and saved in my Mobile camera phone. I tried to convince many electronic media people about the MIRACLE but no one believed. One of them even said aesha ho hi nahi sakta. One TV jurno said Delhi ne mana karwa diya hai. Well the below pictures tell the real story. The mediamen who are visiting the spot saying aesha bhi hota hai kaliyug mein. The branches were taken away by innocent people of the village and only the heavy root and trunk was left. As it was too heavy to be lifted and one thing more with no bridge on the CHHERA river there is no way for taking the help of tractor or any other heavy motorised machine to lift the tree trunk. Its a MIRACLE.
Its a miracle. The above picture shows the tree in straight position. No physical power was used to lift it like that. Well the faith of the people is so strong that puja and hawan is going on from the day on ie 20 JUNE 2008, Friday.

The huge trunk from a close range shot. The picture tells the story.
Devotees offering puja. Now the news have spread to far of places first, thanks to the cellular companies for providing tele network in the remotest village Pitath. The scene is like lut sake to lut prabhu ki maya bat rahi hai. All relatives were informed and those living outstation and abroad are rushing in just to have the ashirvad. Most of the local people suffering from several diseases and ailments are cured by the grace of PRABHUJI and the number of devotees is increasing everyday.

NAMAH SHIVAY NAMAH SHIVAY NAMAH SHIVAY NAMAH SHIVAY NAMAH SHIVAY NAMAH SHIVAY NAMAH SHIVAY NAMAH SHIVAY NAMAH SHIVAY NAMAH SHIVAY NAMAH SHIVAY
DEAR ALL
Miracles do happen in this yuga also.

GREETINGS from Pitath, Bhojpur. May the greatest /blessings of MAHADEVJI be with you always I am writing this mail from PITATH a village some twenty kms west of Hari Gaon in Bhojpur district of Bihar , India. Pitath is 122 kms in west of Patna and about 55 kms from ARA the district HQs of Bhojp\ur. Bhojpur is in BIHAR, Bihar is ruled by Mr Nitish Kumar (Chief Minister). Earlier it was Mr Lalu Yadav and Mrs Rabri Devi managing the state of affairs in Bihar.
Interestingly the village is locted very near to Hari Gaon. Hari Gaon i srelated to Mauritius. The Honourable Prime Minister recently visited Hari Gaon. And just a little ahead of it the miracle has taken place. I am sending the report published in the local Hindi daily. The miracle__ there was an old banyan tree which fell down in a storm. The local people cut all its branches and took all the woods for cooking food. It so happened on Friday morning (JUNE 20, 2008) the tree all of a sudden got up on its own.
A boy who was sitting nearby saw it and ran away fearing something unusual was happening. He informed the villagers and it was a miracle.The people started doing puja and offering prashad.The local newspapers carried the report in the next day edition.
By that time the crowd started growing. I am also in possession of photo of the tree which was lying flat on the ground till Thursday(June 19, 2008).
I took the photo to highlight degrading environment.
The faith of people in miracle even in this kaliyuga is strengthened.
The people who don't believe in miracle should come and see the miracle on their own.
My purpose of sending mail to your excellency is to see for yourself the miracle of SHIVJI. Mahadevji's kind blessing is there and it will be very nice of your excellency to visit the place and get Prabhuji's blessings.
Thanking you with profound regards.
GANESH Upadhyay,
Journalist and Social Activist
+91 9835071205
+91 9334669833
+91 9431848786
Call me anytimePatna

PITATH Banyan tree







MIRACLE_Banyan tree got up on its own

MIRACLE_Banyan tree got up on its own

CHAUTHAKHAMBA_Media outsourcing attracts ire of US brigade



Media outsourcing attracts ire of US brigade
Ravi Menon in Bangalore
June 03, 2008 13:24 IST
For instance, a digital advertising contract between India's second largest IT services provider Infosys Technologies and a major American newspaper group is threatening to become a rallying point for the brigade to regroup and renew attacks on outsourcing of management information systems (MIS) and key operations-related work to India.Infosys Technologies, according to sources, signed an advertising outsourcing deal with Missouri-based Kansas City Star sometime last month. The daily, a part of the McClatchy Company that also publishes the Miami Herald, will outsource advertising production work for its new media/digital business to Bangalore.
An industry source claimed that City Star would be outsourcing its entire digital advertising team to Infosys [Get Quote]. "While the deal is not substantial in terms of payback, over the next three to five years, City Star has been looking at gaining the economy of scale in its production set-up over the past year by outsourcing digital media production across a few of its publications to different vendors," the source said.
On the daily's website, City Star President and Publisher Mark Zieman said the move is expected to reduce the number of employees in the newspaper's advertising services department by up to nine.
"Given the historic transformation going on in our industry, the Star must continue to find ways to run more efficiently in every area," Zieman wrote, adding that all creative work for print and online advertisers would continue to be handled inhouse. "Of course, our advertising customers will continue to interact with our local sales and design representatives," Zieman said.
Zieman did not respond to an e-mailed questionnaire on the deal. An Infosys spokesperson, when contacted, refused to elaborate on the terms and duration of the agreement with the Star, saying that the company does not respond to queries on individual contracts.
Infosys is not the lone vendor in this case. Holdings of McClatchy, the third largest media conglomerate in the US, include the Miami Herald, the Star Tribune, Sacremento Bee, and the Raleigh News & Observer.
The first three dailies have outsourced a part of their advertising production to Express KCS, which runs a production centre in Gurgaon. A few publications owned by MediaNews Group Inc, including the San Jose Mercury News, are known to be among KCS' customers.
In February this year, publishing company Gannet Co Inc outsourced digital ad production work for group newspapers Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, and Press & Sun-Bulletin, among other papers, to 2AdPro, a division of Bangalore-based content services vendor Ninestars Information Technology Ltd. Ninestars has global delivery centres in Chennai and Kancheepuram with software development and R&D work done out of Bangalore.
Earlier, The Miami Herald and San Francisco Chronicle, a Hearst Communications Inc publication, briefly flirted with the idea of outsourcing a substantial portion of editorial design work, including copy editing and page layout, to New Delhi-based Mindworks.
Both were quick to drop the plan in the face of stiff opposition from their rank and file, and hyperventilation on the topic from the local press. Now, it's the turn of advertising executives, ad production designers and graphic artists to quake in their shoes at the thought of their jobs getting outsourced to India.
The global market for multimedia digitisation services, which includes digital advertising production, currently stands at $2 billion, growing at over 30 per cent annually, according to experts. Indian companies are targetting an addressable market of 8-10 per cent by 2010. Not big by the hefty software exports target of $50 billion for that year, though a good handle for the outsourcing doomsayers to clobber Indian tech vendors with.
http://www.rediff.com/money/2008/jun/03bpo1.htm

CHAUTHAKHAMBA_The problem that is the media



The problem that is the media
T C A Srinivasa-Raghavan


Between 1980 and 1997, I was a full-time journalist. Since then I have been a columnist for this newspaper. This takes up, on average, about three hours a day. In the remaining time, I do a bit of this and a bit of that and it is great fun.
But since my primary identity has been of a journalist, it is not surprising that people should complain to me about the media as if I can do something about it. Initially, I would defend my professional colleagues as being more sinned against than sinning. But not any longer because I think the journalists have a lot to answer for.
So I have decided to devote this article to the media, for two reasons. The first is that 11 years is a long enough time for me to be able to stop defending my former professional colleagues. Second, in the last few months, there has been a steep increase in the number of times people have voiced very deep dis-satisfaction with the media.
Thus, when people complain, it turns out very quickly that they are complaining about television. Print is usually less complained against.
Second, if you ask enough questions, it turns out that most of the complaints are occasioned by irritation rather than a factual mistake in reporting. That perhaps explains why there are fewer complaints against print, which irritates no one except those about whom it has got the facts wrong. They, of course, are incensed but it is only by chance that one gets to meet them when they are really angry. Some, of course, phone to protest.
Third, in the financial press � about which I can claim to know something � it is not mala fide (as is often assumed) but plain old fashioned ignorance that lies at the heart of the problem. This is not to say there are no bent journalists. But they are far fewer now than a decade ago.
Ignorance manifests in some strange ways. For example, a day before the RBI increased the interest rates, the largest circulated newspaper in the country reported that no such thing was even being contemplated. And when the increase was actually announced, the reporter on the largest-viewed business channel just lost it, saying the RBI had misled the markets because it had said that it "soothing" things just the previous day. Recently, a well-reputed newspaper carried a report on page one that every dollar that India accumulated between April and June cost it Rs 169 per dollar. The actual figure was less than Rs 43.
Fourth, there has been a staggering increase in the number of publications, and with it, a corresponding increase in the number of columnists, that is writers who have a fixed space reserved for them in the publication. The result is that persons with very little understanding, leave alone comprehension, have become pundits, writing pretty much what they please. (Many people believe I am one of them but a pox on them).
Fifth, with only a few exceptions, there has been a general devaluation of the editorial. Few papers ever took them seriously but now in most newspapers it has become just one more hole in the page to be filled. And, what is worse, many important newspapers, it has become a vehicle for airing the personal opinion of the editor, rather than that of some group or class interest, which is what the editorial used to do in the past. Two striking examples of this are worth citing.
One is the manner in which the nuclear deal has been written about by a leading newspaper from the south - India will become a US pawn in that country's battle against China. The other was the view, expressed repeatedly, in a BJP paper from Delhi that the exit of Nepal's monarch was a blow against Hindus, quite disregarding the fact that those who voted the monarch out were themselves Hindus. There has also been a steep decline in the intellectual quality of the persons charged with writing editorials because it costs so much to hire a clever, well-read and sensible writers.
Sixth, the proliferation of TV channels and its hit-and-run nature has meant the deployment of a vast army of the untutored persons who not only report the news but also, as they babble along, give opinions, usually in response to some inane question from the anchor. But, as I said, these persons are merely irritating. It is the print media that hurts more.
I can go on but the short point is clear: those who complain against the media have a much stronger case today than they did in the past. It is the media, particularly television, which has to take corrective steps. The policy only maximising viewership matters has resulted in people not watching the news as much as they used to - they read the ticker underneath instead.
In the old days they used to shoot the messenger who brought bad news. Now the messengers are shooting themselves.

Chauthakhamba_India's poor pay Rs.9 bn in bribes for basic facilities

India's poor pay Rs.9 bn in bribes for basic facilities

Sat, Jun 28 06:54 AM

New Delhi, June 28 (IANS)
India's poor paid nearly Rs.9 billion in bribes over only three months to avail basic public utility services, a new study said Saturday.
NGO Transparency International India (TII) found in its survey conducted between November 2007 and January 2008 that Rs.8.83 billion was paid as bribes by those living below the poverty line (BPL) to avail 11 types of services.
The survey found that the police department was the most corrupt, with two out of every five people seeking its help forced to pay bribes.
According to the survey conducted by the Centre for Media Studies and issued by TII, those involved in land records and registration services took the second spot in the list of bribe takers.
The ambitious National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (NREGS) launched by the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government is also plagued by corruption, it said.
Even though the 'school education up to Class 12' was the least corrupt service, it was found that BPL households paid Rs.120 million in bribes to put their children to school.
'This kind of corruption that denies people their entitlement to basic and need based services, many of which may be 'free' by law, results in the poor finding themselves at the losing end of the corruption chain,' said TII chairman Admiral (retd.) R.H. Tahiliani.
'This increases disparity in income and deepens poverty,' he added.
For the poor who have no option but to go to government hospitals fo healthcare, the situation is disappointing.
'Almost four million BPL households had to bribe hospital staff to get services like getting admission in the hospital, getting a bed, diagnostic services and getting an OPD card,' the report said.
The total amount of bribe paid to the hospital staff by the poor in the last one year is estimated to be Rs.870 million.
Nearly one million households were denied hospital services simply because they either refused to pay bribes or could not afford to do so.
The study also revealed that 5.36 million BPL families had to pay bribe or use a contact to avail public distribution service (PDS) that is meant for them.
A majority pointed out that they bribed officials in order to get a ration card.
The survey further revealed that people have to bribe officials in order to get an electricity connection or to get faulty electricity meter rectified.

Dhaka media carries routine reports on Manekshaw death

Dhaka media carries routine reports on Manekshaw death

Sat, Jun 28 01:22 AM

Dhaka, June 28 (IANS)

The Bangladesh media Friday carried wire service reports about the death of former Indian Army chief Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw, but there were no commentaries or editorials on the man who scripted Bangladesh's liberation from Pakistan in 1971.
This was in sharp contrast to the rich tributes that were paid to Lt. Gen. Jagjit Singh Aurora, who commanded the ground offensive Dec 3-16 that culminated in the surrender of 93,000 Pakistani troops and the creation of Bangladesh. That was on the 25th anniversary of the liberation in 1996 and again when Aurora died May 3, 2005.
Manekshaw was India's army chief in 1971. The joint India-Bangladesh forces led by Lt. Gen. Aurora, then head of the Indian Army's Eastern Command, and Bangladesh's Col. M.A.G. Osmany carried out the military campaign.
The nitty gritty of the campaign had been planned by Maj. Gen. J.F.R. Jacob, chief of staff of the Eastern Command.
The low-key reaction to Manekshaw's death is not surprising because at the political level, Bangladesh has been generally wary of acknowledging the role the Indian armed forces played in its liberation. India lost over 4,000 soldiers in the process.
For Bangladesh, its heroes are the sector commanders who led the forces during the December campaign.
One of them, Ziaur Rahman, later went on to become the army chief and then the president.
Bangladesh's heads of state and governments have, however, at the diplomatic level, expressed appreciation of India's role in the creation of the nation.
The Chief of Bangladesh Army Gen. Moin U. Ahmed was in India earlier this year after which a 11-member delegation of former Indian Army soldiers who took part in the 1971 war visited Bangladesh.
Led by Jacob, they were well received by Ahmed and other top brass and by the public at several receptions held in their honour.
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I am a journalist and a social activist with a strong rural background. I work with a national level media house that has its publication from New Delhi, Mumbai, and Patna and caters to the news need of the State. I am always willing to work for the economically underprivileged people of the nation. bihardesk@gmail.com